Last May, four months before the oil giant Royal Dutch Shell suspended exploration in offshore Alaska, Christopher Putnam needed to get something off his chest.
Putnam is 44, originally from Texas, a trained wildlife biologist who also served as an Army infantry sergeant during the Iraq War. For almost six years he has worked in Alaska for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, protecting marine mammals. It has been his job to ensure that Shell鈥檚 plans to drill more than 60 miles offshore in the Chukchi Sea鈥攖he wild Arctic water between Alaska and Siberia鈥攚ouldn鈥檛 harm Pacific walruses, particularly the juveniles, calves, and nursing mothers that dominate the Chukchi during the drilling season.
Putnam鈥檚 relationship with Shell had always been amicable鈥攗ntil the company began insisting that walrus protection should take a backseat to economics and efficiency, and making it clear that it would fight any regulatory speed bumps placed in its way. That kind of determination made Shell a regular caller at the White House: Company president Marvin Odum was a guest there at least six times in the administration鈥檚 first two and a half years, and lobbyist Sara Glenn visited even more frequently, according to . In light of his 鈥渁ll of the above鈥 strategy to foster energy independence, President Obama obliged by creating a task force to help clear Shell鈥檚 path through the bureaucracy, the Times reported.
with then-presidential counselor John Podesta to discuss Chukchi drilling, though the exact details are unknown. The following year Putnam began noticing leaders within the USFWS鈥檚 parent agency, the Department of the Interior, discussing in conference calls how to accommodate Shell鈥檚 demands. 鈥淪ome people were working on various options鈥攈ow we could interpret our regulations in such a way that were favorable that would allow Shell to do what they wanted to do,鈥 he says. 鈥淲hen there鈥檚 discussion about changing the meaning of the regulations specifically to accommodate a company like Shell, then that started to become concerning for me.鈥 By law, rulemaking is a public process. 鈥淭hese discussions that were taking place behind the scenes, with no input or public accountability, were getting to the point that I simply wanted to put on the record that I had concerns.鈥
In a , Putnam unloaded. 鈥淪hell has clearly stated that they think minimizing disturbance to walruses is irrelevant,鈥 he wrote to his then-boss, Mary Colligan, who is now the USFWS鈥檚 Alaska assistant regional director. 鈥淪hell insists it is not they who must comply with Federal regulations, but we who should change the regulations to accommodate Shell.鈥
Putnam then addressed the 鈥渧oices鈥 within the Interior Department that he says wanted to reinterpret the rules without involving the public. 鈥淚 think it would be disingenuous, mendacious, and unethical,鈥 he wrote. 鈥淪uch a course of action may even be illegal.鈥 If Shell were successful at skirting walrus-protection measures, what would come next? Would oil companies quietly try to lift industrial noise limits in the Arctic? Or weaken measures protecting denning polar bears? 鈥淲here,鈥 he wrote, 鈥渨ould it end?鈥
After Shell received its approvals and started drilling in July, its first well came up dry, leading the company to withdraw from offshore Alaska 鈥渇or the foreseeable future.鈥 In its , Shell laid some of the blame on the 鈥渃hallenging and unpredictable federal regulatory environment.鈥
But an 约炮视频 investigation based on government documents鈥攕ome filed in court and others obtained by Earthjustice, a nonprofit environmental law organization, through the Freedom of Information Act鈥攑oint to a regulatory system that, while tougher than before the 2010 Deepwater Horizon explosion and BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, still cut corners and stretched its own capacity in order to accommodate Shell鈥檚 drilling timeline. While USFWS scientists fought to protect marine mammals, they did so under crushing time constraints and at the expense of other conservation efforts. Meanwhile, at the Interior agency tasked with approving Shell鈥檚 oil leases and exploration plan, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM), decision makers authorized overtime, weekend, and holiday work to deliver Shell a speedy decision, while failing to keep pace with climate and ecosystem science.
These findings mirror, in part, a , released December 7 by Interior鈥檚 Inspector General鈥檚 office. It detailed how some BOEM employees considered the agency鈥檚 timeline so aggressive that, in the words of one professional, a key environmental analysis was 鈥渁bsolutely compromised鈥 and 鈥渇ull of errors.鈥
These efforts to accommodate a multinational energy company happened under the watch of President Barack Obama, who is reviled, ironically, by drilling advocates and eager to cement his legacy as a climate warrior.
Shell declined several requests for interviews for this article. 鈥淭his story is not relevant anymore,鈥 wrote spokesman Curtis Smith.
In fact, though, the story is just as relevant as ever. In October鈥檚 third-quarter earnings call, Shell CEO Ben van Beurden emphasized that while the first foray proved unpromising, 鈥渢here are of course other potential prospects in our Chukchi leasehold, as well as other areas offshore of Alaska.鈥 And after the current leases expire in four years, there could be more to come. A calls for new Arctic lease sales starting in 2020. Legislation pending in Congress at press time would require regular sales starting in 2023, even as new science cautions against Arctic drilling. Things might be quiet off the Alaskan coast right now, but that tranquility could very well prove temporary.
When Shell won the vast majority of the drilling rights in the 2008 Chukchi lease sale鈥攁.k.a. Lease Sale 193鈥攊t called its $2.1 billion acquisition a victory for energy independence. 鈥淭his is an opportunity to develop a proven and prolific basin to supply energy security for North America,鈥 company vice president
Conservationists couldn鈥檛 imagine a worse place to drill, a place more fertile, more unspoiled, more vulnerable to climate change. Along with walruses, the Chukchi teems with polar bears, ringed seals, and bowhead and beluga whales. 鈥淐oming from the Lower 48, you don鈥檛 see areas like this, that are untouched by development,鈥 says Leah Donahey, senior campaign director for the Alaska Wilderness League. Donahey recalls flying over the Chukchi in 2011 and watching thousands of belugas swimming below her. Inland she saw bears running on the tundra, and massive herds of caribou. There were no roads, no infrastructure鈥斺渏ust these small communities and then vast ocean.鈥
Those communities rely on the ocean鈥檚 bounty: Subsistence hunting of marine mammals feeds many native Alaskans. 鈥淚f we don鈥檛 have the animals to provide for our nutritional needs, we won鈥檛 survive,鈥 says Faith Gemmill, executive director of Resisting Environmental Destruction on Indigenous Lands (REDOIL), a grassroots organization. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not just about food security. We鈥檙e talking about our entire way of life.鈥 In I帽upiat villages, during traditional whale hunts, she says, 鈥渢he stories are taught. The values are taught. Knowledge is passed down from the elders to the younger people.鈥
Even before Shell bought its leases, REDOIL and the Alaska Wilderness League joined other groups, including the 约炮视频, in suing the Bush administration to stop the sale. The , filed by Earthjustice, noted that rising temperatures are already stressing polar bears and walruses. (The Arctic is warming twice as fast as the planet as a whole.) The Interior Department, said the plaintiffs, was selling leases without fully gauging the impacts on climate change, the likelihood of a spill, or the damage to wildlife caused by the deafening air guns used during seismic surveys. Nor, they added, did the government adequately consider harm to Steller鈥檚 and Spectacled Eiders, both threatened ducks.
It was the first of several hard-fought legal cases over drilling in the Chukchi鈥攃ases that continue today, outlasting Shell鈥檚 pullout announcement.
As the litigation meandered through the courts, two disasters gave ammunition to critics of Arctic drilling. First, the BP oil spill exposed lethal flaws in the regulatory system. It prompted new safety regulations and President Obama鈥檚 dissolution of BOEM鈥檚 predecessor, the Minerals Management Service, where staffers infamously from, and indulged in with, their energy-industry contacts. Second, Shell itself threw the perils of Arctic drilling into focus when it suffered a series of setbacks during its first season of exploration in 2012, culminating in the grounding of the drill ship Kulluk on Sitkalidak Island as it was towed through the Gulf of Alaska during a storm.
In January 2014 the Ninth Circuit issued a in Earthjustice鈥檚 lease-sale challenge鈥攁nd highlighted the government鈥檚 efforts to help clear Shell鈥檚 path. The judges noted that BOEM based its environmental analysis on the 鈥渓owest possible amount of oil that was economical to produce.鈥 By estimating just one billion barrels, the agency lowballed the possible impacts on habitat, climate, and bird populations. 鈥淏OEM considered only the best case scenario for environmental harm,鈥 the court wrote. The decision led BOEM to revise its studies. For the environmental impact statement (EIS) finalized in February 2015, it chose a new and more reasonable estimate of 4.3 billion barrels鈥攁nd, based on that, calculated a of 鈥渙ne or more large spills鈥 during the 77-year Chukchi production cycle.
that such an accident would probably not be 鈥渃atastrophic鈥 in scale; its 鈥渓ikely鈥 projected large spill from a production platform, based on the median size of similar spills, is 214,200 gallons, or less than 1/600th the volume of the BP disaster. But experts note that cleaning any discharge in the Chukchi would be a formidable, even impossible, task. Unlike the Gulf Coast, the region lacks basic infrastructure: There are no roads connecting villages or even rooms to house cleanup workers. The nearest Coast Guard station is a thousand miles away. There鈥檚 little research about how to keep marine mammals away from a spill鈥攁nd only enough equipment to clean five oiled polar bears at a time. And, perhaps most alarming, there鈥檚 no comprehensive method for ridding icy water of oil; most cleanup studies have focused on temperate climates.
鈥淲e鈥檙e talking about killing the environment,鈥 says Robert Bea, a professor emeritus of civil and environmental engineering at the University of California-Berkeley, who spent decades working for Shell and other energy companies. 鈥淛ust think about an ice slushie with oil, with beluga and bowhead whales swimming around. If you do harm, it鈥檚 going to be extensive and it鈥檚 going to be long-term.鈥
With delays piling up, Shell was nonetheless resolute about resuming exploratory drilling in 2015. Two months after the Ninth Circuit ruling, in April 2014, company president Odum , whose department oversees BOEM. He asked her to 鈥渄evote the resources necessary to removing, expeditiously, any current regulatory obstacles鈥 that might slow down his company鈥檚 plans. Odum encouraged Jewell to 鈥渙btain any necessary additional resources to complete the work鈥 on Shell鈥檚 schedule, which the company outlined in a one-pager called 鈥淕etting to Yes 2015鈥擬ust Have Timeline.鈥
Numerous internal agency emails and memos suggest that BOEM鈥攚hile not promising Shell a specific outcome鈥攄id its Chukchi drilling evaluation at a breakneck pace. 鈥淲e are keeping to this schedule to allow Shell the opportunity to make a decision about next year鈥檚 open water drilling season,鈥 Assistant Interior Secretary Janice Schneider said in August 2014, .
The agency drew up its own timetables, filled with various notations. 鈥淭his schedule includes working overtime and weekends and holidays,鈥 said one footnote. Requests for annual leave, training, and even office visitors would face 鈥渃ritical review.鈥 Environmental analyses would receive 鈥渃ompressed review time.鈥 And the hastened process, noted an agency document, might interfere with other major tasks like developing new air-quality regulations.
In August Kendall sent to BOEM deputy director Walter Cruickshank. 鈥淵es, its [sic] Saturday night and I鈥檓 in the office. . . . But I鈥檓 not alone, others are here as well,鈥 he wrote. Kendall reported on a conversation with Assistant Secretary Schneider, aboard a government airplane, about the plan for completing the environmental impact study on time. 鈥淪he . . . expressed her view (repeatedly) to me of just how absolutely difficult this was, almost bordering on impossible . . . and that it was obvious that there is absolutely NO WIGGLE room.
鈥淔olks are exhausted, blurry eyed, working long hours,鈥 Kendall continued. 鈥淭here are a number of folks on the floor with me as I type this. Emotions are running high. . . . Given the fact that folks will now have to run a marathon at a sprinters [sic] pace for some months now, we are working out a strategy for crossing the finish line on time.鈥
Not everyone crossed the finish line. According to the recent Inspector General鈥檚 report, Interior knew of at least six BOEM employees who quit or retired early because of the EIS race. One fish biologist said the process was so 鈥渃rushed鈥 that she didn鈥檛 have time to review her own work for consistency or to peer-review others. She retired early, in October 2014, to preserve her own 鈥減ersonal and scientific integrity.鈥 Another biologist said his collaboration with colleagues was limited to 15 to 45 minutes for a 700-page document. A sociocultural specialist said her section on public health was 鈥済utted.鈥
The Inspector General concluded that BOEM officials did not alter scientific findings. But the attorneys at Earthjustice, , nonetheless identified two fundamental flaws in the EIS that was released in 2015 after the Ninth Circuit decision.
First, BOEM decided, because of its fast-tracked schedule, not to place certain sectors of the Chukchi, which scientists had recently identified as ecologically important, off-limits to drilling. Interior had begun its first environmental review a decade ago, when 鈥渋nformation about the Chukchi Sea environment, habitat, and marine life was starkly limited,鈥 wrote the lawyers. Since then the research has evolved, particularly about Hanna Shoal, a large, shallow area where the ice persists late into summer. Bowhead whales feed there, and great herds of walruses forage for clams. BOEM itself calls the shoal a 鈥渂iological oasis,鈥 and last year President Obama protected some of it from future, but not current, lease sales. Yet in its court-ordered update to the EIS, BOEM decided not to consider a new drilling footprint that would exclude Hanna Shoal. The agency said 鈥渟ufficient protections鈥 exist to safeguard marine mammals. Earthjustice points out in its brief that there鈥檚 a big difference between reducing harm and barring drilling from an area altogether.
Second, Earthjustice charged that BOEM all but ignored what advances in climate science have revealed about the impact of drilling. It insisted there was 鈥渘o reliable methodology鈥 to determine how Lease Sale 193 would affect global energy consumption. The EIS didn鈥檛 mention, even in its 69-page bibliography, a January 2015 paper from the journal concluding that 鈥渁ll Arctic resources鈥 must stay in the ground to keep the planet within two degrees Celsius of pre-industrial temperatures. 鈥淭he impact of a single discrete project鈥檚 contribution to climate change cannot be covered in more detail due to scientific uncertainty,鈥 the EIS said, adding that recent papers calling for undiscovered hydrocarbons to remain undeveloped 鈥渁re noted.鈥
Contacted for an interview, BOEM referred questions to the Interior Department, which declined the request without offering a reason. In a short emailed statement, BOEM spokeswoman Connie Gillette said her agency conducted a 鈥渞obust and rigorous鈥 environmental review 鈥渃onsistent with a court-ordered timeline.鈥 In fact, the court did not impose a timeline but rather directed BOEM to develop its own. In the Inspector General鈥檚 report, Interior officials acknowledged the rush. They said it wasn鈥檛 designed to help Shell but rather to shield the department from 鈥渂lame鈥 if Shell missed out on drilling in 2015.
Former and current Interior staffers say BOEM鈥檚 efforts to accommodate Shell are not unusual. 鈥淥nce you鈥檝e granted a lease, there is internal pressure to propagate the regulatory process,鈥 says Paul Bledsoe, who was an aide to Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt during the 1990s and more recently advised President Obama鈥檚 national commission on the BP oil spill. 鈥淭here鈥檚 certainly pressure from the industry.鈥 Others say the agencies regulating offshore production tend to draw employees sympathetic to drilling鈥攅nvironmentalists rarely study petroleum engineering. Add to that President Obama鈥檚 support for Arctic oil, and his desire not to be seen as stifling production, and the scale ends up being tipped.
BOEM, according to those who interact with it, is a more responsible operation than its predecessor, the Minerals Management Service, where former staff scientists say their work was suppressed and where, in 2010, Alaska employees enjoyed a cake decorated with the words Environmental protection is, in fact, written into the agency鈥檚 mandate. Still, 鈥渟cience-based鈥 energy management鈥攍easing fossil fuel reserves and approving drilling plans鈥攁re at that mandate鈥檚 core.
鈥淓ven though some of the names shifted around, a lot of the culture of the agency remains the same,鈥 says attorney Miyoko Sakashita, oceans director at the Center for Biological Diversity, a plaintiff in the Earthjustice case. 鈥淭he deep reforms that a lot of us were hoping to see after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill were in name but not actually in practice.鈥
One of Shell鈥檚 hardest-fought battles in the Chukchi was over the rules protecting Alaska鈥檚 estimated 129,000 Pacific walruses. According to the USFWS鈥檚 Mary Colligan, concentrated industrial activity can cause grave harm to marine mammals, including walruses. 鈥淎t the extreme, if they avoid an area because the disturbance is so high, and have to feed somewhere else, maybe the prey base isn鈥檛 as calorie-rich,鈥 she says. That, in turn, can jeopardize survival or reproduction. Industrial noise can damage hearing and impede vocal communication.
In 2013 the USFWS developed regulations governing exploratory drilling in the Chukchi. One rule mandated a minimum 15-mile separation between active rigs. That buffer would help reduce the risk of hearing loss among walruses and give them safe passage if they needed to escape. Christopher Putnam, the wildlife biologist and Iraq vet鈥攁nd Colligan鈥檚 colleague鈥攈elped craft that rule.
Shell fought the 15-mile rule. The Chukchi well sites were tightly clustered within a 300-square-mile prospect, and the company wanted to position its rigs at the two most promising sites鈥攋ust nine miles apart. It would already be spending the resources for a second rig because, in its exploration plan filed with BOEM, Shell had agreed to have a backup vessel in the vicinity to drill a relief well in the event of a blowout. According to Robert Dillon, a senior adviser to Alaska鈥檚 senior senator, Republican Lisa Murkowski, Shell didn鈥檛 want that rig sitting idle when it could be drilling for oil.
However, if the activity would affect certain marine mammals, Shell couldn鈥檛 drill until the USFWS issued a letter of authorization. Like their colleagues at BOEM, Fish and Wildlife staffers felt compelled to make their decisions in time for the 2015 drilling season. 鈥淲e understood how important it was for Shell,鈥 says Colligan. 鈥淭hey certainly communicated that to us very clearly.鈥 Colligan calls this a courtesy the USFWS extends to all drillers because of the complex timing of their operations. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e got ships staging here and there,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e got decisions they have to make. That鈥檚 the environment that we were in.鈥
The company conceded that drilling two wells located within nine miles of each other would flood more of the sea with noise, but pushed to prioritize other considerations. 鈥淰arious distances may be required between rigs to effectively, efficiently, and economically explore the geological positioning of the oil and gas resources,鈥 said an analysis Shell filed with the USFWS in April 2015. 鈥淪pacing of the rigs needs to be determined by these characteristics rather than an attempt to further minimize potential behavioral disturbance of walruses.鈥
With that the oil company put its foot down. 鈥淪hell, as part of their 2015 proposed drilling operations, indicates it is not willing to comply with all required mitigation measures,鈥 said . The company鈥檚 absolute stance struck Putnam as odd. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not their decision,鈥 he says. 鈥淣ot to put too fine a point on it, but we鈥檙e the federal government.鈥
Shell claimed, in an April 2015 letter to Fish and Wildlife, that a nine-mile separation would have 鈥渘egligible impact鈥 on the animals. USFWS biologists remained unconvinced. They said Shell had undercounted the walrus population and failed to factor in such disturbances as the Sikorsky S-92 helicopters flying by 40 times a week. 鈥淭he S-92,鈥 Putnam , 鈥渋s one of the loudest helicopters on earth.鈥
With that much air traffic, Putnam says, a helicopter could startle thousands of animals resting on the ice. 鈥淭hey stampede into water, and you鈥檝e got how many dead or injured walruses.鈥 Chronic stress from loud noise could potentially trigger hormonal changes that threaten population size, he adds.
Dealing with Shell鈥檚 insistence became a full-time job for Putnam. 鈥淚 lost half a year,鈥 he says. "Our entire department was almost exclusively focused on that one company, that one issue, for the entire period of time.鈥
Putnam says he was supported by his Alaska colleagues in holding firm to the regulations. 鈥淲e were reaching up the chain to make sure everyone was aware,鈥 he says. 鈥淎s you go higher and higher up, people become less and less aware of the details and nuances of the issue.鈥 Hence the conference calls where Interior officials were groping for new interpretations of the rules, he says.
He found one call particularly upsetting. An Interior staffer he had never met suggested that the Alaska office was misinterpreting the intent of the mammal-protection rules鈥攔ules that Putnam himself had helped author. 鈥淚t was a little bit offensive,鈥 he says, 鈥渇or someone who鈥檚 never been involved to tell me what I was thinking at the time when I wrote them.鈥
Shell would not be deterred by the USFWS鈥檚 scientists. It enlisted Senator Murkowski, a drilling advocate, whose staff contacted the Interior Department to press the case. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 our job: to be the advocates for Alaska,鈥 says Murkowski spokesman Dillon.
Then, in May, Allyson Anderson, associate director of Interior鈥檚 Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement, about a phone call with an Alaska colleague. 鈥淪hell intends to take the wildlife issue all the way up through the White House via murkowski [sic],鈥 she wrote.
Dillon says that, to his knowledge, Murkowski did not take the walrus issue that far. 鈥淚 believe they [Shell] may have raised it with the White House,鈥 he says鈥攁 plausible notion given the company鈥檚 past access鈥攁dding that that鈥檚 how Washington works: 鈥淓nvironmental groups clearly take their case directly to the White House on a regular basis. The right to seek the assistance of one鈥檚 government without fear of punishment or reprisals is enshrined in our Constitution.鈥
What eventually preserved the 15-mile mandate in Shell鈥檚 drilling authorization, Colligan says, was 鈥減rocedural鈥: There was no system for waiving the rule. Fish and Wildlife did promise to 鈥渃onsider making appropriate changes鈥 to the rule through a public process, though that wouldn鈥檛 come in time for the 2015 season.
In the end, notes Putnam, Interior officials narrowly defined 鈥渁ctive鈥 rigs as those actually drilling. As a result, Shell was allowed to locate its rigs nine miles apart as long as they didn鈥檛 drill simultaneously. The problem, according to Putnam, is that a non-drilling rig is still staffed and 鈥渁ctive鈥: It requires helicopter support, noisy anchoring operations, icebreakers, and generators. In other words, there were still two industrial operations within nine miles of each other.
In a bigger sense, though, the 15-mile rule might have been a deciding factor in Shell鈥檚 decision to pull out of offshore Alaska鈥攂ecause the Arctic鈥檚 short drilling season ended up limiting the company鈥檚 activity to a single well in 2015, and that one was a dud. After seven years of political and legal wrangling, countless raucous grassroots protests, and $7 billion in Arctic investments, Shell鈥檚 foray into Lease Sale 193 halted rather suddenly. Drilling supporters like Lisa Murkowski placed the blame for Shell鈥檚 pullout partly on the Obama administration鈥檚 鈥溾 toward energy production. 鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing decisions out of the Interior that are really destroying our hope to be independent as a state,鈥 Murkowski of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, which she chairs. She was displeased with Interior鈥檚 cancellation of two upcoming Alaska lease sales because of low industry interest, and with its refusal to extend Shell鈥檚 current leases.
The federal government plans oil and gas lease sales in five-year increments. The next plan, set to be finalized this year, will cover 2017鈥22. The current draft calls for sales in the Beaufort in 2020 and the Chukchi in 2022. Beyond that, Murkowski鈥檚 proposed Offshore Production and Energizing National Security Act of 2015 () would require Interior to sell three Chukchi and three Beaufort leases during every five-year program, starting in fiscal year 2023.
But drilling opponents see Shell鈥檚 withdrawal as a chance to take a breath and rethink the country鈥檚 approach to the Arctic鈥檚 energy reserves. They consider it a window of time available to overhaul the regulatory system further to reflect a post-BP world, and to examine whether the industry鈥檚 Arctic drilling ambitions should be scaled back or abandoned altogether. 鈥淭he United States has been myopic for far too long in making decisions about the Arctic,鈥 says Peter Van Tuyn, an Alaska attorney who has represented environmental and native Alaskan groups in challenging drilling. 鈥淲hy not take the opportunity for the Obama administration to do a big-picture planning effort in the next year?
鈥淲e have a fresh opportunity,鈥 Van Tuyn continues. 鈥淔or the first time in the Obama administration鈥檚 seven years in office, they do not have to make a decision about the future of the Arctic with some existing weight on the development side of the scale.鈥 The $7 billion that Shell invested to drill a single well made for quite a heavy weight. 鈥淣ow,鈥 Van Tuyn says, 鈥渢hat scale can be leveled.鈥
Correction: An earlier version of this story stated that under the Interior would be required to sell the Chukchi and Beaufort leases starting in fiscal year 2022鈥攊t is in fact 2023.