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Norton ignored crucial data in ANWR testimony

Caribou feed and rest near an Arctic oil facility.
By Cat Lazaroff
Washington, DC, Oct. 19 (ENS)— Interior
Secretary Gale Norton substantially altered biological findings
from the US Fish and Wildlife Service concerning effects of
oil development in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge before
she transmitted them to Congress, according to documents released
today by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility.
On May 15, 2001, Senator Frank Murkowski, the
Alaska Republican who then chaired the Senate Energy and Natural
Resources Committee, asked Norton for the Interior Department’s
official assessment of the impacts of oil drilling on the Porcupine
caribou herd in the Arctic Refuge (ANWR). Secretary Norton asked
the US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), the agency responsible
for managing ANWR, with developing answers to those questions.
The resulting USFWS findings were transmitted
to Norton’s office. However, Norton’s official reply to Senator
Murkowski on July 11 was markedly different from the scientific
input she had received, show the documents obtained by Public
Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER), a national
alliance of local, state, and federal resource professionals.
Murkowski sent Norton a series of questions to
“help Congress analyze this issue” - the proposal raised by
the Bush administration that a portion of the coastal plain
of the Arctic Refuge - a site known as the 1002 Area - be opened
to oil and natural gas exploration.
Four of the questions relayed to Norton concerned
the 130,000 member Porcupine caribou herd, which calves in and
around the coastal plain. The region is considered sacred by
the Gwich’in nation, a native Arctic people which depend on
the caribou herd as a traditional source of food, skins, and
other necessities.
Questions relating to caribou included: What is
the Porcupine caribou herd’s historic calving range? Are there
portions of the 1002 area where core calving does not historically
occur? What has been the impact of development in Prudhoe Bay
on the Central Arctic caribou herd? Over 1,000 miles of seismic
exploration was conducted in the 1002 area during the winters
of 1984 and 1985. Concurrently, a well was drilled on Native
lands over two winters in the area. Did this exploration have
any negative impact on the Porcupine caribou herd? The variations
in the answers provided to Norton by the USFWS, and those which
Norton transmitted to the Senate, tell a story about the disagreements
between the Interior Secretary and the Interior Department’s
prime wildlife agency -- which does not yet have a Bush administration
appointed leader.
For example, while the USFWS did not provide any
figure for the size of the herd’s calving range, Secretary Norton
told Congress that the “calving range of the Porcupine caribou
herd (PCH) covers an area of approximately 8.9 million acres.”
In response to the question regarding calving
within the 1002 Area, the USFWS noted that “there have been
PCH [Porcupine caribou herd] calving concentrations within the
1002 Area in 27 of the last 30 years.” The Interior Department
changed those numbers to say “Concentrated calving occurred
primarily outside of the 1002 Area in 11 of the last 18 years.”
Norton spokesperson Mark Pfeifle said that Norton
simply made an error in her testimony - saying “outside” when
she meant to say “inside.”
Yet Norton also told Congress that “surveys indicate
that no calving occurred in the 1002 area in 2001.” The USFWS
did not provide that information; in fact, surveys for the year
2001 had not yet been conducted by the time that Norton testified
before Congress, PEER says.
Norton told Congress that the herd’s core calving
area “varies from year to year depending on snow melt conditions....
Furthermore, since 1983, the concentrated calving area has never
extended to the undeformed area west of the Marsh Creek anticline
in the 1002 Area” -- the primary region where oil exploration
is being considered.
The USFWS, however, told Norton that “calving
concentrations have not occurred on a relatively small portion
(Canning delta and northern coastal margin) of the Arctic Refuge
‘1002 Area.’ Portions of the eastern segment of the Central
Arctic Herd use the Canning River delta area for calving.”
The USFWS also emphasized that the “calving and
early summer seasons (late May to early July) are the periods
of greatest sensitivity of caribou.”
The agency provided figures to Norton showing
concentrations of caribou in the 1002 Area. Norton did not pass
these figures on to Congress, instead offering a different figure
showing only figures for a time period in which the caribou
used less of the 1002 Area.
Norton testified, “In years when the snow melt
occurs late in the spring, as it did this past year, the concentrated
calving area tends to be further to the south and east into
Canada outside the 1002 area entirely.”
However, the USFWS warned, “Snow melt conditions
and associated plant phenology vary annually. Therefore, caribou
require free passage to these variable areas before giving birth,
and maternal females with young must be able to freely move
to optimal forage throughout the early summer season.”
In fact, fewer caribou calves are born and fewer
survive in years when the majority of calves are not born in
the ANWR coastal plain, the USFWS noted.
Regarding the effects of oil development in Prudhoe
Bay on the Central Arctic caribou herd, Norton testified, “The
Central Arctic Herd has grown since the beginning of oil field
development from an estimated 5,000 animals in 1975 to 20,000
animals in 1997.”
The USFWS noted that the herd actually declined
during the early 1990s, then rebounded. During periods of severe
weather, the portions of the herd living near oil development
areas declined far more than the portions of the herd living
far from human development, the agency emphasized.
The agency also detailed a shift in caribou range
and calving grounds - away from the industrial zone created
by the oil drillers.
Regarding Senator Murkowski’s fourth question,
concerning the effects of seismic exploration on the Porcupine
caribou herd, Norton claimed , “There is no evidence that the
seismic exploration activities or the drilling of the Kaktovik
Inupiat Corporation exploratory well on Native lands have had
any significant negative impact on the Porcupine caribou herd.”
But the USFWS noted, “No studies were conducted
to determine the effects of the above activities” on the herd.
While the agency said “it is unlikely that there have been significant
or direct effects” to the herd, “This does not necessarily mean
that future exploration activities would have the same consequences.
Rather, these activities must be evaluated on a case-by-case
basis.”
Norton’s spokesperson, Pfeifle, noted that Secretary
Norton relied not only on the information provided by the USFWS,
but also on input from non-agency sources.
One source Pfeifle cited was a peer-reviewed study
by the Wildlife Society Bulletin, which concluded that oil development
has had little impact on caribou in Prudhoe Bay. The study was
funded in part by oil company BP Exploration.
“Secretary Norton is fully committed to using
peer reviewed science in determining the best course of action
regarding issues such as ANWR,” Pfeifle said.
PEER charged today that the extensive changes
made by Norton belie her repeated promises during her Senate
confirmation hearings to “provide [Congress] the best scientific
evaluation of the environmental consequences...[of] any exploration
and production” in the Arctic Refuge.
“It appears Secretary Norton misled Congress
and broke her pledge to faithfully convey the best science on
the Arctic Refuge,” said PEER national field director Eric Wingerter.
“Unless Ms. Norton was the victim of her own overzealous staff,
she should have the decency to resign.”
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