Deutsche Welle, 26 October 2012
Arctic
experts are calling for more research as British energy giant BP and Russian
oil company Rosneft eye new offshore drilling opportunities in the fragile
north.
Drilling
for oil offshore is risky anywhere, but conditions in the Arctic make this kind
of work particularly complicated. John Farrell is a marine geologist and the
director of the US Arctic Research Commission. In an interview with DW, he
explained that drilling or spill cleanup in the Arctic is complicated by
extreme cold, strong winds, breakaway ice blocks and, in the winter, limited
daylight.
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| Clean-up crews train in places like the Baltic sea and are unprepared for Arctic challenges |
Farrell
also pointed out that the sea ice is melting rapidly, making it extremely
difficult to build a comprehensive understanding of the physical, chemical, and
biological environment. This means it is almost impossible to track damage to
the environment as Arctic oil drilling initiatives expand. "With the
diminishment of the Arctic sea ice extent, and the warming up there, there is
no baseline ecosystem anymore," Farrell said.
Opening the
Arctic
Scientists
and environmentalists have turned their focus northwards following an
announcement on October 22 that British oil giant BP was selling its Russian
holdings to Rosneft, the Russian state oil company. Under the terms of the
deal, Rosneft will become the biggest publically traded oil company in the
world, with BP controlling 20 percent. For environmentalists, the key component
here is that the new deal will give the British firm access to Arctic reserves
through Rosneft.
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| With Russia's oil reserves depleting, the Arctic presents the promise of billions of barrels within Russia's northern boundaries |
According
to the US Geological Survey, as much as 13 percent of the world's undiscovered
oil reserves lie beneath the rapidly melting northern ice cover. Rosneft
already has drill sites in the Arctic but they are now exploring how to do it
offshore. It's a marriage of convenience: BP will bring its expertise to the
table and Rosneft has licenses.
In Russia,
oil explorers are eyeing the Kara Sea. This water is so remote that the Soviets
used it as a dumping site for nuclear waste for more than 25 years. There are
17,000 containers of radioactive waste and a sunken nuclear submarine on the
ocean floor. The nuclear waste and the potential for a polar oil spill has
prompted environmental action group Greenpeace to seek a ban on arctic
drilling.
The
environmentalists aren't alone in their concern. Last month, French
multinational oil and gas company Total warned against drilling in the Arctic.
The company said the risks were too high and an accident would be detrimental
to the company's image.
Learning
from experience
Russian
environmental auditor Alexei Bambulyak works in the field of Arctic exploration
in Norway and Russia. He told DW that research still needs to be done before
drilling can start. He explained that there is a lack of knowledge about the
Kara Sea, compared to what drilling experts know about bodies of water in more
southern regions.
![]() |
| This Brown Pelican was rescued after the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico |
"We
know some general patterns, but we cannot confirm we know enough to really do
proper assessments of environmental risks and environmental impact," he
said. "As we move further to the north and to the east in the Arctic, from
the Barents Sea eastward, then knowledge is decreasing."
But he
added that having BP at the table, may actually improve the safety standards in
Arctic oil exploration. BP's image was seriously damaged after the 2010
Deepwater Horizons oil spill off the Gulf of Mexico, the worst offshore oil
spill in American history. That episode is far from over: there are still more
than 200 million gallons of oil in the water. But Bambulyak said this will make
the company far more cautious in its work in the future.
"They're
knowledge has extreme value. We can expect that when they go to the Arctic,
they will have a precautionary approach," Bambulyak said. "And we can
hope for more investment in environmental research. I look positively to what
happened, but we should wait and see."




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