The Guardian (USA)

Big oil's answer to melting Arctic: cooling the ground so it can keep drilling

- Nat Herz

The oil company ConocoPhil­lips had a problem.

It wanted to pump 160,000 more barrels of oil each day from a new project on Alaska’s North Slope. But the fossil fuels it and others produce are leading to global heating, and the Arctic is melting. The firm’s drilling infrastruc­ture could be at risk atop thawing and unstable permafrost.

A recent environmen­tal review of the project describes the company’s solution: cooling devices that will chill the ground beneath its structures, insulating them from the effects of the climate crisis.

The oil developmen­t that is fueling climate change continues to expand in the far north, with companies moving into new areas even as they are paying for special measures to protect equipment from the dangers of thawing permafrost and increasing rainfall – both expected outcomes as Arctic temperatur­es rise three times as fast as those elsewhere.

Countries from Norway to Russia are advancing new Arctic oil developmen­ts. But under Donald Trump’s administra­tion, Alaska has emerged as a hotbed of Arctic oil extraction, with big projects moving forward and millions of acres proposed to be opened to leasing.

The administra­tion recently finalized its plan to open a piece of the Arctic national wildlife refuge to the oil industry. And drilling is expanding at an Indiana-sized region next door: the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska, which, despite its name, also contains treasured subsistenc­e areas for locals.

Critics of Arctic oil expansion argue that while companies can use technology to temporaril­y and locally dampen climate disruption­s, the region’s indigenous residents cannot. And even some who support oil developmen­t in the region argue that the Trump administra­tion’s plans go too far.

At the start of Trump’s term, the mayor of the oil-rich North Slope borough, an Iñupiaq whale hunter named Harry Brower Jr, endorsed the federal government’s plans to push developmen­t forward in the Arctic refuge and in the petroleum reserve.

Taxes on infrastruc­ture at the huge Prudhoe Bay oilfield help generate nearly $400m a year for the 10,000person borough, which is almost all of its revenue.

Three years after Brower’s endorsemen­t, the administra­tion released a rewritten management plan that would vastly expand the share of the petroleum reserve open to oil companies: four-fifths of the area would be available, up from roughly half now.

But the proposal also would allow oil and gas leasing at Teshekpuk Lake, which Brower had asked the Trump administra­tion to keep off-limits. The lake, in tandem with nearby wetlands, is considered one of the most important animal habitats in the entire Arctic, and the region’s indigenous residents harvest its abundant fish and wildlife.

“It’s like God’s country,” said George Ahmaogak Sr, a former mayor of the North Slope borough, who has built three subsistenc­e fishing cabins not far from the lake. “I’ve lived there, I’ve seen it and I subsisted on it, and it’s beautiful – resources are bountiful there.”

The lake hosts birds that come from all seven continents. Molting geese, unable to fly, try to avoid predators by forming rafts in the middle of lakes, sometimes by the thousands. And hundreds, even thousands, of migrating caribou travel along Teshekpuk Lake’s shore.

“I’m not an environmen­talist or anything like that – I’ve been pro-developmen­t all these years,” Ahmaogak said. “But Teshekpuk is a concern of mine, and I wanted to see it protected.”

The North Slope is already warming at disconcert­ing speed. Utqiagvik, the region’s hub town, is one of the fastestwar­ming communitie­s in the nation, withits five record warmest winters all coming since 2014.

Amid record high temperatur­es and record low sea ice last year, crews in Utqiagvik had to wait weeks longer than usual for the arrival of the bowhead whales that they hunt – and which make up a substantia­l portion of North Slope residents’ diets.

Amid that rapid change, the oil industry is enjoying a renaissanc­e in the region, in part thanks to technologi­es enabling infrastruc­ture to withstand climatic shifts. Such technology is decades old, but veterans of the oil industry say that demand for it is becoming more ubiquitous and intense as the Arctic heats up.

One Alaska company, Beaded-Stream, sells equipment that measures and transmits tundra temperatur­e data, so that the oil industry can know as soon as it is frozen solid enough to transport equipment, according to National Public Radio. Another firm,Arctic Foundation­s,is doing increasing­ly brisk business selling thermosiph­ons – the tubes that pull heat out of the ground to keep permafrost from thawing underneath oil infrastruc­ture.

ConocoPhil­lips plans to make use of these devices at its massive Willow project in the National Petroleum Reserve, and it’s also building taller bridges and wider culverts to accommodat­e larger spring floods.

The backers of another new project, meanwhile, see opportunit­y in the thaw. The melting of Arctic sea ice removes an obstacle from shipping liquefied natural gas off Alaska’s North Slope, according to the Anchorageb­ased company, Qilak LNG.

“Our reliabilit­y quotient goes up,” said Mead Treadwell, the Republican businessma­n and former Alaska lieutenant governor who has helped to spearhead the project. “Climate change, the changing compositio­n of sea ice, has made this more economic.”

At Teshekpuk Lake, the Trump administra­tion says it can protect the region’s caribou, birds and fish with tight restrictio­ns and time frames for drilling and developmen­t. No infrastruc­ture would be allowed on or next to the lake itself; companies would have to drill horizontal­ly to access it.

That’s not enough for conservati­on groups, which sued to block the rewritten plan in August.

“Out of all the places in the world, the Arctic is changing the fastest,” said Natalie Dawson, the head of the Audubon Society’s Alaska branch. “So, we might want to give ourselves a little bit of room to figure out what we want to protect.”

Qaiyaan Harcharek, a 38-year-old Iñupiaq hunter, fisherman and trapper, said he is disgusted by the Teshekpuk proposal. He called the area a “guaranteed food source” that his ancestors turned to in times of starvation.

Opening Teshekpuk, Harcharek said, is “absolutely reckless and dangerous”.

 ?? Photograph: Bonnie Jo Mount/The Washington Post via Getty Images ?? An oil pipeline stretches across the landscape outside Prudhoe Bay in North Slope borough, Alaska.
Photograph: Bonnie Jo Mount/The Washington Post via Getty Images An oil pipeline stretches across the landscape outside Prudhoe Bay in North Slope borough, Alaska.
 ?? Photograph: Orbital Horizon/Copernicus Sentinel Data 2020/Gallo Images via Getty Images ?? Satelite imagery of the Prudhoe Bay oilfields in North Slope borough, Alaska.
Photograph: Orbital Horizon/Copernicus Sentinel Data 2020/Gallo Images via Getty Images Satelite imagery of the Prudhoe Bay oilfields in North Slope borough, Alaska.

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