To the outrage of environmentalists, Shell’s window for drilling in the Arctic Ocean officially opened on Wednesday, setting off a high stakes race to start pumping the largest untapped oil reserve on Earth.
Under the terms of the plan, approved in May by the Obama administration, the company has from July 15 to September 28 before it has to retreat ahead of plunging temperatures and heavy weather. In that time Shell hopes to sink at least one drill bit through the icy water, confirm the presence of oil, and prepare a wellhead for production – before the company’s leases start expiring in 2017.
The exploration is already among the costliest, most complicated, and controversial in the history of hydrocarbon fuel. Three years ago Shell’s flotilla of rigs and support vessels chugged confidently toward the Chukchi Sea, about 70 miles off the untamed coast of northern Alaska. Even before they arrived, however, problems developed.
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The company’s special spill containment system failed a test run. One of its rigs lost anchor and drifted. Another rig, the Kulluk, later ran aground and was totaled. The contractor in charge ultimately plead guilty to eight felony charges related to the wreck. But worst of all, Shell drilled just two of its five planned exploratory holes, and those only to a partial depth.
Since then, Shell has shaken up its Arctic team and tightened controls on a smaller number of contractors. But the challenges continued last week. A gash opened on the hull of one of the company’s ice breakers, forcing the ship all the way back to Oregon for repairs. Shell is also awaiting at least one more drilling-specific permit from the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement, the wing of the Interior Department responsible for offshore drilling.
But after investing ten years and six billion dollars just to get to this moment, Shell says it’s poised for success this summer. The company’s two rigs—the Polar Pioneer and the Noble Discoverer—are in Dutch Harbor, Alaska, along with dozens of support vessels and seven aircraft. They’ll depart “in the days to come to commence drilling on our Chukchi leases on or about the third week in July,” according to spokesperson Curtis Smith.
The Chukchi Sea is already ice free this year, almost three weeks earlier than average over the last decade. Shell points to this as a stroke of good fortune, but others see it as an ironic, unfunny sign of the apocalypse. Like most drilling in the Arctic, Shell’s effort is partly a controversy about polar bears and vulnerable undersea wonders. A spill could be especially deadly for the environment. The help is further away. The weather is more challenging. Plus, the cold complicates every aspect of a clean-up.
In a series of protests this past spring, however, activists framed the issue in much broader terms. This isn’t about polar bears anymore, they argued. It’s about the survival of the planet. It’s about the need to change everything in the face of catastrophic climate change. A research letter published in the journal Nature brought the point home. To avert some of the worst outcomes, the authors concluded “all Arctic resources should be considered as unburnable.”
“We need a broad social revolution,” said Ahmed Gaya, who helped organized several large scale protests this spring in Seattle, where Shell staged for the Arctic. “Shell’s irresponsible efforts in the Arctic are the most potent symbol we have of the climate crisis and of the kind of corporate capitalism that is driving the climate crisis system.”
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Under that intellectual banner, thousands of protesters turned out this past May and June, waving “Shell No” flags at the entrance to the company’s terminal. Other protesters slipped into kayaks and swarmed the company’s massive rigs. They never expected to stop Shell’s progress north, but the campaign put a brighter bulb in the spotlight on Shell’s work— and the Obama administration’s decision to approve it.
“The Obama administration seems to be leaving the fate of the Arctic up to Shell this summer,” said Travis Nichols, an organizer for Greenpeace. “But that doesn’t mean the future of the Arctic has to be in Shell’s hands.”








