BOEMRE Issues
Conditional Approval for
Shell Exploration
Plan for Beaufort Sea
All Proposed
Activities Must Meet New Rigorous Safety and
Environmental Standards
ANCHORAGE, Alaska - The
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and
Enforcement (BOEMRE) today issued conditional
approval for a revised Exploration Plan (EP)
submitted by Shell Offshore Inc. (Shell). The plan
outlines Shell’s proposal to drill up to four
shallow water exploration wells in Alaska’s Beaufort
Sea beginning in July 2012. The leases to be
explored under the current EP were acquired by Shell
as part of Beaufort Sea Planning Area Oil and
Natural Gas Lease Sales 195 and 202 held in 2005 and
2007 respectively.
The
conditional approval of the EP follows the bureau’s
completion of a site-specific Environmental
Assessment (EA) to examine the potential
environmental impacts of the plan. Among the
conditions of approval is the requirement that Shell
obtain all necessary permits from other agencies,
including the Environmental Protection Agency, the
U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, and the National
Marine Fisheries Service.
“We
base our decisions regarding energy exploration and
development in the Arctic on the best scientific
information available,” said BOEMRE Director Michael
R. Bromwich. “We will closely review and monitor
Shell’s proposed activities to ensure that any
activities that take place under this plan will be
conducted in a safe and environmentally responsible
manner.”
An
EP describes all exploration activities planned by
an operator on a specific lease or leases, including
the anticipated timing of these activities,
information concerning drilling vessels, the
location of each planned well, and other relevant
information. In addition to gaining approval of an
EP, a company must submit
applications
for permits to drill (APDs) for every well
proposed. Each APD is analyzed based upon
the unique characteristics of the proposed well, and
must fully comply with rigorous safety and
environmental standards. These standards address
issues ranging from well design and workplace
safety, to requiring that operators demonstrate that
they are prepared to deal with the potential for a
blowout and worst-case discharge.
The
EA considered new scientific information that had
not been previously available for consideration or
analysis, including the U.S. Geological Survey’s
June 2011 report, “An
Evaluation of the Science Needs to Inform Decisions
on Outer Continental Shelf Energy Development in the
Chukchi and Beaufort Seas, Alaska.”
Based on its review of the plan, new information
that included extensive input from stakeholders, and
previous
National Environmental Policy Act
analyses, BOEMRE found
no evidence that the proposed action would
significantly affect the quality of the human
environment. Therefore, BOEMRE determined that an
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) was not
required, and issued a Finding of No Significant
Impact (FONSI), a key step in the approval of the
EP.
BOEMRE
received Shell’s proposed exploration plan on May 4,
2011, and deemed it submitted on July 5, 2011.
Consistent with federal regulations, an EP is deemed
“submitted” once all supporting materials and
documentation have been provided, and have met
regulatory requirements. Once a plan is deemed
submitted, BOEMRE has 30 calendar days to analyze
and evaluate it.
For more information,
go to:
http://www.alaska.boemre.gov/ref/ProjectHistory/2012Shell_BF/2012x.HTM
Contact: BOEMRE
Public Affairs