Indigenous Peoples and Human Rights

November 3, 2012

ALASKA GROUPS CHALLENGE STATE APPROVAL OF BUCCANEER OIL SPILL PREVENTION PLAN

 
ALASKA GROUPS CHALLENGE STATE APPROVAL OF BUCCANEER OIL SPILL PREVENTION PLAN
 
Alaska's Big Village Network
Center for Water Advocacy
Published at Censored News
 
ANCHORAGE --  Several conservation and Alaskan Native groups submitted a Request for Adjudicatory Hearing today related to the State of Alaska Division of Spill Prevention and Response (Division) Final Decision of the Plan Approval for Buccaneer Alaska, Inc.’s Oil Discharge Prevention and Contingency Plan (C-plan) for oil and gas exploration activities in Northern Cook Inlet.
 
The Groups which include the Center for Water Advocacy, Alaska’s Big Village Network (ABVN), Alaska Inter-Tribal Council, Cook Inlet Marine Mammal Council said that the Appeal is necessary because the C-Plan fails to protect the unique natural resources of Cook Inlet as required by the State’s Best Available Technology (BAT) standards as it applies to secondary relief well capacity.
The Request is an opportunity for local and statewide conservation groups, and fishing and hunting communities to address the public process and effectiveness of C-Plans in response to oil spill or blowout. Alaskacommunities need assurance that the State of Alaska accepts adequate C-plans that protect aquatic habitat, multi-use fisheries of Cook Inlet, and species like the endangered Cook Inlet beluga whale.
The State of Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation (ADEC) maintains that it has the strongest oil and gas spill prevention and clean-up standards in the United States; however, the ADEC Division which retains oversight authority for oil spill clean-up, often fails to enforce such standards and works to weaken them.
 
CWA Board member, Nikos Pastos says “the Final Decision of approval guts the C-Plan regulations and Best Available Technology (BAT) standards by deferring to Buccaneer's discretion for on-the-ground decision-making regardless of the commitments and standards listed on paper, and hides critical decision-making from public view. We don’t want another BP Deepwater Horizon disaster in Alaskawaters."
 
With the recent expansion of oil and gas drilling in Cook Inlet, the risk to the unique marine habitat and natural resources of the Inlet, from oil and gas spills and blowouts, is greater than ever.
 
Carl Wassilie, Alaska’s Big Village Network’s subsistence rights coordinator and biologist, says, “We want to ensure the Division’s approval of C-Plans do not have loopholes in decision-making authority in response to oil spills. We need a rigorous public process in blowout prevention plans so that Cook Inlet’s subsistence resources and bio-productivity of the unique ecosystem isn’t harmed like the on-going effects of the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill 23 years ago.”
 
Contact: Carl Wassilie, Alaska’s Big Village Network 907-382-3403 carlwassilie.acyn@gmail.com
Nikos Pastos, Center for Water Advocacy 907-764-2561nikospastos@hotmail.com

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