Deccan Chronicle

US to relax Arctic Ocean oil drilling safety rules

Proposal will revise Obama-era rules crafted to improve safety

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MUCH OF the US portion of the Arctic Ocean is off-limits to new oil and gas leasing under a 2019 judge's order that overturned President Donald Trump's effort to open vast areas of the Arctic and Atlantic oceans to oil leasing.

● PESIDENT-ELECT Joe Biden has also vowed to ban all new drilling in federal lands and waters once he takes office.

Nov. 22: The Trump administra­tion on Thursday proposed to loosen Obama-era safety regulation­s for the oil industry in the Arctic Ocean off Alaska to ease the way for petroleum extraction in the region, an effort that Presidente­lect Joe Biden will likely throw out once in office.

A polar bear sow and two cubs are seen on the Beaufort Sea coast within the 1002 Area of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in this undated handout photo provided by the US Fish and Wildlife Service Alaska Image Library on December 21, 2005. U. Fish and Wildlife Service/Handout via Reuters.

Arctic,

The proposal would revise a suite of Obamaera rules crafted to improve safety in the extreme conditions of the Arctic after a Shell drilling rig ran aground in the Gulf of Alaska in 2012. The company later abandoned oil exploratio­n in the Arctic and there are no active drilling operations there.

Now, much of the US portion of the Arctic Ocean — the Chukchi Sea and part of the Beaufort Sea — is off-limits to new oil and gas leasing under a 2019 judge's order that overturned President Donald Trump's effort to open vast areas of the Arctic and Atlantic oceans to oil leasing. Biden has also vowed to ban all new drilling in federal lands and waters once he takes office. The US Department of Interior, which oversees the government's offshore oil and gas program, said in a Thursday statement that the revisions would "remove unnecessar­y, burdensome provisions" in the 2016 rules.

It would specifical­ly eliminate a requiremen­t that oil operators submit a detailed operations plan before filing an exploratio­n request, according to a fact sheet published by the Bureau of Safety and Env ironmen ta l Enforcemen­t.

The administra­tion would also roll back a rule requiring operators to demonstrat­e they can quickly deploy containmen­t equipment in case of spills, such as capping stacks or domes.

The changes were welcomed by the top oil industry trade group, which said developing Arctic resources is critical to U.S. national security.

"We look forward to reviewing a proposal that seeks to correct shortsight­ed restrictio­ns to research and exploratio­n of the world's largest remaining convention­al, undiscover­ed oil and natural gas resources," American Petroleum Institute Senior Vice President of Policy, Economics and Regulatory Affairs Frank Macchiarol­a said in a statement. Alaska Wilderness League, an environmen­tal group, said in a statement that the rollback increases the risk that an oil spill in the region would endanger wildlife and coastal communitie­s.

"There simply are no effective means to respond to or clean up an oil spill in the Arctic's harsh and remote conditions," Leah Donahey, legislativ­e director for AWL, said.

Before it can be finalised, the proposal will undergo a 60-day public comment period that will begin once the rules are published in the Federal Register. A spokesman for BSEE could not say when that will happen.

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