Edmonton Journal

Aerial survey for Arctic oil scrapped amid risks to polar bears

- Jennifer a. dlouhy

A company abandoned plans to conduct an aerial survey of potential oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge following stern warnings from U.S. government scientists the work could harm polar bears.

The risk to polar bears “is high enough that it cannot be discounted,” Interior’s Fish and Wildlife Service told CGG Canada Services Ltd. in a June 7 letter obtained by Bloomberg News.

Company representa­tives did not answer requests seeking comment. CGG SA told the New York Times it “is not considerin­g that kind of work” in the Arctic refuge now.

The decision is a blow to Trump administra­tion officials who had hoped fresh geological data about oil and gas riches would stoke bidding and interest in a government auction of Arctic drilling rights later this year. Oil companies rely on data about subterrane­an rock formations to discern the most promising locations to drill and how much they should bid on tracts, but they now will be forced to use limited informatio­n from threedecad­es-old seismic research.

The potential CGG survey would have been conducted with low-flying planes making repeated, parallel passes over the refuge, while sensors measured the density of the ground below.

Interior Department officials concluded the proposed aerial research did not require a geophysica­l permit, since it would take place above federal land — not on it.

But agency experts also warned CGG that noise from the low flights could disturb animals in the refuge. The Fish and Wildlife Service urged CGG to apply for a so-called “incidental harassment authorizat­ion” that would permit CGG to disturb polar bears while conducting the survey.

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