Hillary Clinton said on Tuesday that she opposes exploring for oil and gas in the Arctic Ocean, a move that puts her at sharp odds with President Obama, who just this week gave Shell a green light to drill.
“The Arctic is a unique treasure,” the Democratic presidential candidate wrote in a Twitter post. “Given what we know, it’s not worth the risk.”
Related: Shell Oil faces long odds with Arctic drilling
The Arctic is the largest untapped oil reserve on Earth, geologists say, and Shell has spent more than 10 years and $7 billion in pursuit of that prize. With a newly modified permit from the Obama administration, the company plans to drop a drill bit more than a mile beneath the Chukchi seabed, a move that activists say will recklessly endanger wildlife and put the planet on a path to catastrophic climate change.
.@HillaryClinton Wrong. Being more-anti energy than Obama is extreme. We should embrace energy revolution to lower prices & create US jobs.
— Jeb Bush (@JebBush) August 18, 2015
GOP presidential candidate Jeb Bush responded to Clinton’s tweet within hours, calling her “wrong.”
“Wrong. Being more-anti energy than Obama is extreme. We should embrace energy revolution to lower prices & create US jobs,” Bush tweeted.
Clinton’s opposition set off the electronic equivalent of hard-claps and two-finger whistles on social media, where Greenpeace and Moms Clean Air Force hailed the news. It comes little more than two weeks after Clinton pledged to “heed the warnings” of climate change, offering the first peg of a promised six-point policy meant to make America “the clean energy superpower the world needs.”









