Shell Oil Should Not Get Special Treatment from EPA

In a letter to the Environmental Protection Agency sent today, a coalition of conservation organizations asked the agency to uphold the requirements of the Clean Air Act and refuse Shell Oil鈥檚 request for a waiver that would allow the company exceed air pollution limits in the Arctic.

Shell previously said it could meet permit limits for its drilling operations in the Arctic. Now, with its drillship poised to begin drilling, Shell suddenly admitted that it cannot comply. At the eleventh hour, Shell asked EPA for a 鈥渃ompliance order鈥 that would allow the oil giant to violate the Clean Air Act. The conservation groups said that Shell鈥檚 request for a compliance order would allow Shell to skirt the law and go back on its promises.

This request is the latest of a litany of last-minute problems that call into question Shell鈥檚 readiness and the government鈥檚 oversight.
In addition to seeking permission to violate the terms of its air permit, Shell has said that it will not recover most spilled oil, but only 鈥渆ncounter鈥 it. It argued with the Coast Guard about building its response barge strong enough to withstand Arctic storms. And last week, it lost control of its drillship in Dutch Harbor, Alaska.

Following is a statement from the above-listed organizations:
鈥淪hell wants to break the law and violate the Clean Air Act in order to begin drilling in America鈥檚 Arctic Ocean this summer. No company should be allowed to do this 鈥 especially not in the Arctic, one of the most sensitive and important undeveloped places we have left on our planet.

This is just one more broken promise from Shell, one more reason why the company can鈥檛 be trusted to drill in the Arctic.

Not only has Shell admitted that it cannot meet its current permit limits, it has proposed revisions that would also violate the Clean Air Act. EPA should turn down Shell鈥檚 request for special treatment.

In this country, we have clean air and clean water because we established safeguards to protect our health, welfare, and environment. A corporate giant like Shell should not be granted an exception to these requirements simply because it wants to use equipment that does not comply.

Shell Oil is clearly not ready to begin drilling for Arctic oil this summer. We call upon EPA to revoke Shell鈥檚 existing air permit and proceed carefully to determine whether a new or modified permit can be issued that meets the requirements of the Clean Air Act before allowing Shell to drill.鈥

CONTACTS
NATIONAL AUDUBON SOCIETY鈥 David J. Ringer, (212) 979-3062, dringer@audubon.org

ALASKA WILDERNESS LEAGUE 鈥 Emilie Surrusco, (202) 544-5205, emilie@alaskawild.org
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY 鈥 Rebecca Noblin, (907) 274-1110,
rnoblin@biologicaldiversity.org
EARTHJUSTICE 鈥 Kari Birdseye, (415) 217.2098, kbirdseye@earthjustice.org
GREENPEACE 鈥 Travis Nichols, (206) 802-8498, tnichols@greenpeace.org
NATURAL RESOURCES DEFENSE COUNCIL - Bob Keefe, (202) 289-2373, bkeefe@nrdc.org
NORTHERN ALASKA ENVIRONMENTAL CENTER - Pamela A. Miller, 907-452-5021 x24,
pam@northern.org
OCEANA 鈥 Michael LeVine, (907) 723-0136, mlevine@oceana.org
OCEAN CONSERVANCY 鈥 Andrew Hartsig, (907) 229-1690, ahartsig@oceanconservancy.org
OCEAN CONSERVATION RESEARCH 鈥 Michael Stocker, 415-488-0553, mstocker@OCR.org
PACIFIC ENVIRONMENT 鈥 Colleen Keane, (206) 734-9300, ckeane@pacificenvironment.org
RESISTING ENVIRONMENTAL DESTRUCTION ON INDIGENOUS LANDS (REDOIL) 鈥 Faith
Gemmill, 907-750-0188, redoil1@acsalaska.net
SIERRA CLUB 鈥 Virginia Cramer, (804) 225-9113 x 102, virginia.cramer@sierraclub.org
THE WILDERNESS SOCIETY - Nicole Whittington-Evans, (907) 272-9453, x103, nicolewe@