Thursday, November 10, 2005

Great Victory !

As some of you know, the bad people have been trying to get approval for oil drilling in the Alaska National Wildlife Refuge by sneaking it into the budget, which is immune to fillibuster. Last week, it was approved by the Senate (including a senator from Alaska!) and it seemed like all hope was lost. However, yesterday, good smart members of the House threw out the ANWR provision, and Alaska is safe once again, at least for now. It is high priority for the Bush admin to get approval for the drilling somehow, and who knows what they'll try next. Thanks to all of you who ever clicked my links and signed petitions. It is a happy day today for me, the native people of Alaska, polar bears, caribou, arctic birds and other wildlife, and good people who don't want more beautiful places destroyed for oil, rather than looking for alternative energy solutions.

UPDATE: Details below

Dear NRDC Action Fund Supporter,
Fantastic news! Late last night, after months of intense pressure from millions of pro-environment activists like you, the House leadership dropped its plan to allow oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge as part of the budget bill.In the end, they were forced to retreat after some 22 courageous Republican Congressmen stood their ground and promised to vote against their own party's budget if it sacrificed America's greatest wildlife refuge. With every single Democrat also opposing the budget, the leadership blinked.It was the kind of showdown at high noon that restores one's faith both in democracy and the sanctity of America's natural heritage.Make no mistake: we must now remain vigilant. Senate and House negotiators could still revive the Arctic drilling provision when they hammer out a final budget measure next month (the Senate version of the budget includes Arctic drilling).If that happens, we'll be calling on you to shore up Republican moderates in the House who have promised to oppose and defeat any such last-ditch ploy to sneak Arctic drilling into the final budget legislation.But last night's development is a stunning setback for President Bush, for Congressional leaders, and for the oil lobby -- all of whom vowed that 2005 would be the year they finally pried the Arctic Refuge out of the clenched hands of the American people.And it is a huge -- and I mean HUGE -- victory for all of us in the environmental community.Just one year ago, Washington insiders were saying that Arctic drilling was a done deal. President Bush was claiming a post-election mandate to industrialize the Arctic Refuge, and the pro-oil contingent of the Republican Party had just tightened its majority grip on both houses of Congress. You couldn't find a pundit anywhere who would give us a wisp of a chance.But millions of people like you did the impossible! Petition by petition, phone call by phone call, contribution by contribution, you helped us turn the tide in one of the toughest uphill political battles of the past decade.Although this battle may not be over, yesterday was a red letter day for the Arctic Refuge -- the greatest day since it was first protected by Congress 25 years ago -- but it is much more than that, too. It is a triumph for America. November 9, 2005 was the day that nature prevailed over corporate greed, that beauty triumphed over a dead-end energy plan. It was the day we reminded Washington that preserving wilderness is a core American value -- and that we intend to keep it that way.I know we can count on your help next month if Senate and House leaders dare to bring Arctic drilling back to the floor for a vote.
Sincerely,
John H. AdamsNRDC Action Fund. . .

2 comments:

tschy said...

I'm afraid I have to shake my head at this one. Here are a few interesting facts:

ANWR is 19 million acres – larger than Massachusetts, New Jersey, Hawaii, Connecticut and Delaware combined. If oil is found, less than 2,000 acres would be directly affected – this is a limit placed on Area 1002, which was established by Jimmy Carter and a democratic controlled congress in 1980. By my calculation that represents 0.0105% of ANWR’s acreage.

Area 1002 is not designated as wilderness; contains no trees, deepwater lakes or mountain peaks.

Area 1002 could produce 1 million barrels of oil per day – or approximately 20% of our current daily consumption. 58% of our current oil supply is from foreign sources.

When oil exploration began in Alaska's Prudhoe Bay 30 years ago, environmentalists claimed it would yield only a "few months' supply" of oil and would wreck the ecosystem. Prudhoe Bay turned out to be the largest deposit of oil ever found in North America. Caribou frolic and play by the pipeline. The pipeline is warm – and the caribou love it. In 20 years, the caribou population has skyrocketed, from 3,000 to almost 27,100.

Majority of Americans, Alaskans and Kaktovik residents support opening the 1002 Area for energy production (Sources: Harris Poll, 1/27/05, Dittman Research Corp., 3/05, kaktovik.com). Kaktovik is located inside 1002 area.

My perspective: I wish that environmentalists would focus on the things that are important and more impactful. There are certainly areas where the environement is being destroyed - ANWR would not be one of them.

Tara said...

Tony. Boy, you are really pushing a hot button now. Please see article at this link:

http://www.nrdc.org/land/wilderness/artech/farc2000.asp

ANWR is CERTAINLY one of them, although you are right about one thing, there are many others. And I will continue to do whatever I can to help preserve whatever I can.

I know I won't change your mind about this, so I'm not going to argue with you.

I think it is sad though, that the term "environmentalists" even exists, especially when it is used with such a disdainful tone. The only thing every single human has in common is the planet we live on, and that should make us all environmentalists.

Go Team Earth!

I'm gonna get out my flag.