(This post is from our new blog: Unofficial Sources.)
The promotional video above opens with a crescendoing tune as the words “National Petroleum Council” appear from behind neon green and blue Northern lights, shimmering in a starry sky.
Collaboration. Prudence. Traditional knowledge. All values that guided members of the National Petroleum Council — or NPC — as they responded to Secretary of Energy Ernest Moniz’s request for advice on how the government could “ensure prudent development” of the U.S. Arctic’s largely untapped fossil fuel reserves.
Back in October 2013, Moniz had penned a letter to the NPC, opening with a reflection on what it might take to build “a clean energy economy,” “tackle the issues of climate change” and “protect our environment.” And since a “core component” of the Obama’s administration policy for the Arctic includes “responsibly developing Arctic oil and gas,” Moniz wanted the NPC’s suggestions on how to do that.
The result was a several-hundred-page document titled “Arctic Potential: Realizing the Promise of U.S. Arctic Oil and Gas Resources.” The gist: any risks associated with extracting offshore oil in remote Arctic waters are manageable using “existing, field-proven technology.” Also, the U.S. should lengthen the drilling season and lease durations so that it’s easier to start making money.
You might assume the NPC is an industry lobbying group. But as I explained last week, the National Petroleum Council is one of hundreds of “federal advisory committees.” Such committees aren’t always dominated by industry, but the NPC certainly is: it’s member-funded and its 210 members are largely drawn from the fossil fuel business. So while the official lobbyists for the oil and gas industry may have to tug at Moniz’s sleeve to get him to listen to their suggestions, the dynamic is reversed with the NPC: Moniz goes to the group for help. And its more than happy to provide advice on issues that impact its members’ bottom line — as well as the security and well-being of everybody else on the planet (who, of course, do not have representation at the NPC).
The video’s burbling soundtrack continues, sounding like a for-profit college ad that runs at 3 a.m. on a Tuesday, guaranteeing you job security in the field of your dreams if you just sign up. To the NPC’s talking heads, it’s all about balance.
“There’s a lot of balancing interests. There’s the balance between conservation and resource development. There’s the balance between traditional knowledge and what we call ‘Western science and engineering,’” says Richard Glenn, executive vice president for the Arctic Slope Regional Corporation, a company owned by Alaskan Iñupiat shareholders that holds title to huge tracts of Alaskan land with oil and gas reserves.
Glenn does not mention the balance between the multimillion dollar investments of the NPC’s members and the scientific evidence that burning more fossil fuels will lead to climate chaos. Nor did Rex Tillerson, Exxon Mobil CEO and chair of the NPC’s Committee on Arctic Research, in an interview with the Associated Press on the report. According to Tillerson, “There will come a time when all the resources that are supplying the world’s economies today are going to go in decline … [Arctic oil reserves] will be what’s needed next. If we start today it’ll take 20, 30, 40 years for those to come on.” In other words, Exxon has moved smoothly from spending millions of dollars to deny that climate change is happening, to saying that it’s here, and we have to let the company take advantage of the melting ice to burn more fossil fuels.
Yet it’s Shell President Marvin Odum who takes the prize as the NPC member with the most obvious interest in justifying Arctic oil extraction. Shell is pushing to gain the permits necessary to become the only company drilling offshore in the U.S. Arctic this summer, in Alaska’s Chukchi Sea.
Not to worry, though, NPC Director Marshall Nichols assures viewers of the promo video: “The council is not an advocacy group, it is not involved in any of the usual trade association activities, and it does not lobby.”
Apparently the Energy Department agrees. At the March 27 annual NPC meeting, Deputy Energy Secretary Elizabeth Sherwood-Randall helped unveil the report and declared, “The study’s recommendations align with the Department of Energy’s mission, the president’s strategy for the Arctic and the president’s all-of-the-above approach to developing.”
She said the industry group’s advice may influence the department as research agendas are set in 17 national laboratories, as policy is developed by the new Arctic Executive Steering Committee and as the U.S. steps into its leadership role in the international Arctic Council. It took only three weeks for the report to be cited in the Energy Department’s Quadrennial Energy Review.
“The result of this warming is a new frontier with increasingly accessible resources,” she told the council members, adding later, “Your leadership and cooperation will position us to lead in the Arctic.”
Coal, oil, cng, nukes must go! And the complicit front organizations & politicians (& the so-called scientists, too)! Disgusting group!
NO one over the age of 25 should be making any decisions about the future of the planet.
In 5 years, in 2020 it seems like we will be sharing a dead planet with an ocean full of jellyfish since every other life form will be dead.
None of the gat cat oil people will have to live in the future nightmare of Earth, so why should they decide anything?
Maybe that’s why zombies became so popular; the only thing left to eat and drink will be bloated plutocrats.
A sidebar. Francis:
“We must do what we can so that everyone has something to eat, but we must also remind the powerful of the earth that God will call them to judgment one day and there it will be revealed if they really tried to provide food for Him in every person and if they did what they could to preserve the environment so that it could produce this food.”
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/may/12/pope-environmental-sinners-will-face-god-judgment
A major encyclical on the environment is in the works. For whatever it’s worth.
Pope Francis also doesn’t like war profiteers.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/05/12/pope-francis-weapons-war_n_7266688.html
1/- Obama administration gives Shell conditional OK to explore for oil off Alaska coast.
“The Obama administration on Monday gave conditional approval to Shell to explore for oil and gas in the Chukchi Sea off the coast of Alaska this summer, dealing another blow to environmentalists just months after President Obama announced the opening of parts of the Atlantic Ocean for drilling… Shell had won prior approval to start drilling in 2012, but ran into a series of mishaps and was told by the government to re-submit its drilling program plan… “Once again, our government has rushed to approve risky and ill-conceived exploration in one of the most remote and important places on Earth,” said Susan Murray, Oceana Deputy Vice President, Pacific. “Shell’s need to validate its poorly planned investment in the U.S. Arctic Ocean is not a good reason for the government to allow the company to put our ocean resources at risk. Shell has not shown that it is prepared to operate responsibly in the Arctic Ocean, and neither the company nor our government has been willing to fully and fairly evaluate the risks of Shell’s proposal.”.”
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2015/may/11/obama-administration-gives-shell-conditional-appro/
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/04/30/us-shell-arctic-idUSKBN0NL14L20150430
http://home.myhughesnet.com/front_controller.php/news/read/article/afp-obama_approves_drilling_in_arctic-afp
2/- Corruption is Legal in America : https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=13&v=5tu32CCA_Ig&hd=1
3/- Resolute Bay, Nunavut Recovery of Body of Missing Researcher
> Police File: 2015-482749
> DATE: 2015-05-08
> Resolute Bay, NU; On Wednesday April 29th, 2015, Resolute Bay RCMP
> were advised that a distress call had been sent out by two scientific
> expedition members from the Netherlands traveling on sea ice near
> Bathurst Island, approximately 200 kilometers north of Resolute Bay.
http://coldfacts.org/news/47/rcmp-recovery-mission-update
Cold Facts supports scientific research in the Polar Regions and shares scientific insights as a way to promote fact based perspectives on these changing environments.
Our main focus is on sea ice research in the Arctic. In the Northern hemisphere, sea ice extent and thickness has been decreasing significantly over the last decades. Monitoring these changes is critically important.
We need to prepare for an Arctic with less ice and more access to natural resources. Increased accessibility will offer more opportunities for shipping, fisheries, mining and oil and gas exploration.
http://coldfacts.org/about-coldfacts/themes
How should this be articulated with ExxonMobil’s joint venture with Rosneft to drill for oil in Siberia… as well as in the Arctic region ? And how are the 2016 candidates positioning themselves on this issue ?
The industry obviously can’t be trusted to look after our own interests, but it doesn’t make sense not to listen to it at all. What we need are politicians who would actually make decisions in the public interest, taking into account the environmental risks, the public nature of the assets involved, the economic benefits, and the sociopolitical benefits. There is very good reason to fear disaster in the Arctic, but that doesn’t mean there can be no way to go forward; just that it shouldn’t be a crooked deal.
If we don’t want to keep getting dragged into things like the House of Saud’s brutal carpet-bombing and starvation of a civilian population, we need to be able to supply the fuel we need domestically and put prohibitive tariffs on fossil fuel import and export, until what goes on in the Middle East is no longer something we have to think about.
Reading this article only confirms that anything short of a massive(beginning to loathe that word) popular uprising in opposition to this planet killing business model, will allow “them” to plunder “us” all to extinction. Them and us are living on the same planet, yet “them” acts as if they can safely escape the coming calamities. Are “them” braindead? How can such purported braniacs think that catastrophe on a planetary scale is somehow magically, selectively going to fall only on the poor huddled masses? Gotta hand it to “them”, though. If an award were given for singleness of purpose or tunnelvision or delusional thinking, “them’ would take it hands down.
The oil can be extracted “safely”? Bang goes that report’s credibility. We already have 5 times as much oil as we can burn without causing global catastrophe — virtually no-one disputes this. So looking for even more is just crazy. According to the widely-quoted Stern Report from the UK government, the cost of damage caused by CO2 will be around US$70 per tonne that we release. Unfortunately the market isn’t reflecting the real costs, since they will be paid by our children and grandchildren. Start levying a carbon tax at point of extraction and distribute the funds equally as a citizen’s dividend. Then market forces will sort the rest out just fine.
An eminently straightforward idea. I am utterly sick of the bogus capitalist-utopian schemes where people are supposed to “trade credits”, which basically means that the existing companies get issued a right to control fossil fuel burning that they can sell to you if they want. The emissions trading scheme is only made tolerable by adulteration – there are so many places where carbon credits will be created because someone plants some trees around their parking lot or cuts a deal on paper with a defunct factory in Burma, that what was designed to be an intolerable cession of public rights to private owners soon becomes nothing but a paper farce.
For those interested in the science, something unusual (though not unexpected at all) is occurring this year in Arctic. See the graph on the right here: http://nsidc.org/arcticseaicenews/
Basically, sea ice extent for 2015 is considerably lower than it was in 2012, which was the year with the all-time record low. While 2012 was kind of high in sea ice until about June, it should be noted that 2015 is largely producing lower measurements than all previous years. There’s a good chance we’ll see a new record low this year around September, and an ice-free summer Arctic is not far off.
This is practically movie-villain type of evil.
And let us not forget the debacles perpetrated by Shell in the Arctic and few winters ago. Obama is such a flaming hypocrite.
I was looking at the video. At 1:00, they show the globe and the Arctic region. There’s no Poloar Ice Cap in it. They’ve already removed it. So in the future, when it actually all melts, they’ll say “what Polar Ice Cap?”
These people…
Yes, moral leadership and cooperation, good one!