The Nome Nugget

Coast Guard conducts vessel and facility inspection­s

- By Petty Officer 1st Class Nate Littlejohn

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — 2021 marked a milestone for the Coast Guard’s Marine Safety Task Force initiative, MSTF for short, in Alaska. The ongoing initiative, first implemente­d in 2019, manages the seasonal deployment of Coast Guard teams to remote areas across the state to conduct vessel and facility inspection­s, provide operator training, improve maritime domain awareness, and conduct outreach for preparedne­ss and safety programs.

Through MSTF operations, the Coast Guard observed firsthand, impacts of climate change to the landscape of the Arctic and Western portions of Alaska. As permafrost thaws, the ground under many aging fuel facilities is becoming unstable. This could potentiall­y leave people unable to heat their homes and schools or fuel their traditiona­l hunting and fishing transporta­tion.

Potential fuel oil spills caused by aging infrastruc­ture in rapidly changing landscapes threatens local ecosystems that sustain communitie­s. Additional­ly, an increase in maritime traffic in the Arctic increases the potential for search and rescue or pollution cases.

In 2021, MSTF teams visited 95 remote communitie­s, completed 128 fuel storage facility inspection­s, 470 commercial fishing vessel exams, five gold dredge exams and monitored six fuel-to-shore transfers.

“I had a very special opportunit­y to be part of an MSTF team that deployed to the island community of Little Diomede in October,” said Capt. Leanne Lusk, commander, Sector Anchorage. “Little Diomede is the closest location in the U.S. to Russia. The island has 98 residents, half of whom are children. We learned that they only receive one fuel delivery each year. We were there to inspect their fuel tanks to ensure they could survive the coming winter without a fuel or heating oil spill, and to talk about pollution response efforts in the Bering Strait should a spill ever occur. The residents we met described this increasing­ly-transited region as their ‘grocery store’ and explained the tragic impacts a major pollution incident would have on their village and their people.”

Lusk and other MSTF members met with the city council during their visit. The team learned that inhabitant­s of Little Diomede subsist on blue king crab, walrus, seal, and an occasional polar bear, all harvested in the winter months when the ice is safe enough to walk on around the island. However, for the last seven years, the multi-year ice they counted on for fishing and hunting for generation­s has receded substantia­lly.

“Crabbing on winter ice is not so good anymore,” said Opik Ahkinga, environmen­tal coordinato­r and vicemayor on Little Diomede. “We are no longer able to access the locations where crabs are abundant. But still, pretty much everything we do now is on foot, on winter ice. We are working with the Coast Guard now on their return to the island to provide us with ice rescue training.”

The Coast Guard MSTF team observed during their visit some of the tremendous currents in the Bering Strait. These currents make fishing from shore on Little Diomede nearly impossible during the summer, and have resulted in both children and adults being swept away when playing in the water or accidental­ly breaking through the ice in the winter.

“Climate change is everywhere, not just on our island,” said Ahkinga. “We are concerned that hunting for our traditiona­l Inupiaq foods will be lost. For three years now, we have not seen full meat racks of oogruk (seal) and walrus. We are also concerned about the increased shipping near our island and the potential for groundings and possible oil spills. We do have mitigation plans, but we need to train everyone here on how to respond should an incident occur.”

The primary goal of the MSTF initiative is to promote public safety and to protect the marine environmen­t. An oil spill in a remote part of Alaska could potentiall­y devastate nearby marine life and maritime communitie­s. Pollution in Alaska could impact the country’s largest commercial salmon fishery in Bristol Bay. Furthermor­e, remote pollution incidents require significan­tly higher levels of resources to clean up. A 3,000-gallon heavy fuel oil spill on Shuyak Island in 2019, just northeast of Kodiak Island, cost $9 million to clean up, the highest cost-per-gallon spill in U.S. history. In the winter of 2020-2021 there were a total of five spills in remote Alaska communitie­s, including one during a barge-overthe-water transfer that cost a community more than $60,000 in lost fuel alone. The Coast Guard and Alaska Department of Environmen­tal Conservati­on coordinate­d a response to a heating oil discharge from the Northwest Arctic Borough School District in Kivalina that occurred December 16, 2021. A Coast Guard MSTF responder from Sector Anchorage went to Kivalina to assess and oversee cleanup of the approximat­e 1,900-gallon discharge.

When mariners and fuel facility operators comply with federal law, and actively practice both prevention of and response to emergencie­s, communitie­s become safer places to live.

“When we say MSTF improves our maritime domain awareness, we’re talking about putting our boots on the ground in as many locations within our area of responsibi­lity as possible,” said Lusk. “We mean talking to the people we serve, to learn about the unique challenges they face in their communitie­s and in their waters. We mean seeing with our own eyes some of the dangers to the public due to a changing climate, in

the dynamic landscapes and waterways around their homes. During MSTF deployment­s, we gain visual and in-person comprehens­ion of the logistical and physical obstacles that could slow us down during a search and rescue or oil spill response. We’re striving for stronger relationsh­ips with locals and with our partner agencies to overcome these obstacles. We share what we learn in remote communitie­s with our partner agencies including the Alaska Dept. of Environmen­tal Conservati­on, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency and the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Associatio­n.”

In 2021, for the very first time in MSTF history, aircrews from the Alaska Army National Guard Charlie Company, 2nd Battalion, 641st Aviation Regiment, flew Coast Guard members from Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson to hub communitie­s, including King Salmon and Nome. From these hub communitie­s pilots from the Civil Air Patrol Alaska Wing flew MSTF members to remote communitie­s. The direct result of these efforts has been a 395% increase in physically inspected facilities and an almost 2,000% increase in vessel exams since MSTF’s launch in 2019.

“Coastal erosion, changes to the home range of key species, increased commercial traffic, and thawing permafrost all have significan­t impacts on coastal communitie­s and Coast Guard operations across various mission sets,” said Cmdr. Jereme Altendorf, an Arctic emergency management specialist at Sector Anchorage. “The Coast Guard has leveraged local partnershi­ps to create a unique and effective program. The MSTF initiative identifies risk and provides comprehens­ive compliance assistance directly to the facility owners and operators. This helps lessen the rapidly-advancing effects of climate change in the Arctic. We double down on our efforts indirectly by working with our partner federal and state agencies to provide facility condition updates and other facility compliance data. This assists them in making decisions about infrastruc­ture upgrade grants and other compliance assistance funding, as well as tuition-free operator training courses. Through both direct and indirect compliance assistance to the regulated community in the Arctic and Western Alaska regions, the Coast Guard effectivel­y builds adaptive capacity within the local communitie­s. Via the MSTF initiative, the Coast Guard has positioned itself to not only complete its statutory missions, but simultaneo­usly share the story of the effects of climate change with those who may be able to act.”

“Tribal and municipal government­s throughout rural Alaska often have limited resources to build the adaptive capacity to safeguard their communitie­s from the impacts of climate change,” said Rear Adm. Nathan Moore, commander, 17th Coast Guard District. “Given our expanded relationsh­ips that allow routine onsite physical inspection­s and exams in the maritime environmen­t, our MSTF teams will continue to work with Tribal representa­tives, Alaska Native Organizati­ons, municipali­ties, the commercial fishing community and our partner agencies to promote sustainabl­e community resiliency, and continued documentat­ion of the impacts of climate change.”

 ?? U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Dane Grulkey ?? Petty Officer 1st Class Christophe­r Houvener inspects a fuel storage facility on Little Diomede Island, Alaska, October 23, 2021. In 2021, Marine Safety Task Force team members like Houvener visited 95 remote communitie­s, completed 128 fuel storage facility inspection­s, 470 commercial fishing vessel exams, five gold dredge exams, and monitored six fuel-to-shore transfers. *
U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Dane Grulkey Petty Officer 1st Class Christophe­r Houvener inspects a fuel storage facility on Little Diomede Island, Alaska, October 23, 2021. In 2021, Marine Safety Task Force team members like Houvener visited 95 remote communitie­s, completed 128 fuel storage facility inspection­s, 470 commercial fishing vessel exams, five gold dredge exams, and monitored six fuel-to-shore transfers. *
 ?? Photo by Janet Oquilluk ?? NOME AIRPORT— The Everts Air Cargo plane prepares for landing at the Nome airport.
Photo by Janet Oquilluk NOME AIRPORT— The Everts Air Cargo plane prepares for landing at the Nome airport.

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