And now:Ish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Tue, 29 Jun 1999 01:37:15 EDT
Subject: Oil Drilling on Reservation Fuels Dispute

Oil Drilling on Reservation Fuels Dispute

http://www.latimes.com/HOME/NEWS/NATION/UPDATES/lat_oil990628.htm
Ecology: Activists fight plan to tap huge field on Montana wildlife site.
 Indian chief says group desperately needs revenue, vows to protect land. 
By FRANK CLIFFORD, 
Times Environmental Writer

EAST GLACIER, Mont.--At one of nature's grand intersections, where the
northern Great Plains roll up against the soaring battlements of Glacier
National Park, the federal government is paving the way for an industrial
development of potentially dominating proportions. If it can be
successfully tapped, a huge oil and natural gas field on the Blackfeet
Indian Reservation just east of the park could convert more than 200 square
miles of largely open country and wildlife habitat into a maze of wells,
pipelines and power lines, pumping stations, processing plants, equipment
yards and a network of new roads. 
Exploratory drilling on the reservation is scheduled to begin this summer,
although officials insist that there will be no drilling close to the park
any time soon. Much of the land targeted for exploration is a haven, at
least part of each year, for many of the national park's most valued
wildlife, including bears, wolves, elk and eagles. 
The U.S. Department of the Interior's approval of a 50-year lease agreement
between the Blackfeet Tribe and a Canadian oil company has caused a rift
within the tribe and had pitted different arms of the federal government
against each other. On one hand is a remote reservation with nearly 70%
unemployment trying to make the most out of a land base that has been
repeatedly chipped away--at one point to carve out Glacier National Park. 
"We have the right to determine the destiny of our land, and no one knows
its value or cares more about it than we do," said William Old Chief,
chairman of the Blackfeet Tribal Council. 
On the other hand is the Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem, a
spectacular and biologically rich landscape that surrounds the park but is
being hacked away by population growth to the west and by Canadian logging
and oil and gas operations to the north. 
The Interior Department's Bureau of Indian Affairs has approved the tribe's
plans and has refused, so far, to prepare an environmental impact
statement. But federal Environmental Protection Agency officials, in
letters to the Indian bureau, have warned that the oil and gas project
could result in "significant impacts on important tribal cultural
resources, wetlands, endangered species and Glacier National Park."
Ironically, the rest of the eastern Rocky Mountain front is a region that
the Clinton administration has taken great pains to shield from industrial
incursion. In the last two years, the U.S Forest Service has put nearly
half a million acres off-limits to energy and mineral development on
non-tribal lands next to the reservation to protect wildlife habitat. A
number of Blackfeet were outspoken in their support of the government's
action in that case, and earlier this year some members of the tribe filed
a lawsuit against the government for not conducting a comprehensive
environmental review before approving the tribal project. Meanwhile, tribal
leaders say that they resent outsiders trying to tell them how to manage
their lands. "I can't overly stress how protective this council feels
toward the land," Old Chief said. "These mountains are a source of
spiritual strength. We need to have areas that are pristine." At the same
time, Old Chief said the reservation desperately needs new sources of
revenue, and he said more members of the tribe favor the oil and gas
project than oppose it. Standing with the tribe's leaders, the Indian
bureau, which is responsible for minimizing the project's environmental
damage, has dismissed EPA concerns about wetlands and endangered species
such as the grizzly bear as "arbitrarily concocted scenarios." Rick
Stefanic, the Indian bureau's environmental specialist overseeing the
Blackfeet project, said it has placed the bureau "in a very difficult
position." "We are obliged to assist the tribe in economic development," he
said. "We also have a trust responsibility to the land, and we must abide
by the environmental laws." According to the terms of the agreement, the
tribe is being paid $3 million for drilling rights by K2 Energy Corp.,
which is based in Calgary. The company has agreed to give tribal members
first crack at jobs and contracts generated by the operation. Critics of
the project fear a repetition of what happened at an oil and gas field just
north of Glacier Park and next door to Canada's Waterton Lakes National
Park. "There are roads and pipelines leading up every canyon outside of
Waterton," said park biologist Kevin Van Tighen. "The activity up there has
driven wildlife out in great numbers." Livingston of K2 Energy insists that
the comparison with the aging Waterton field is unfair. "The technology is
completely different today," he said. "You can rely on helicopters instead
of trucks to do your seismic work. So you don't need as many roads. With
horizontal drilling, you don't need as many wells, and with computers to
check on operations, you don't have to be driving in there all the time."
Livingston added that drilling along the boundary with Glacier Park could
be several years away and "might never take place." "The chances of success
out there are about 1 in 10," he said. K2 signed the exploration and
development deal with the Blackfeet in 1997. The firm was later joined by
Miller Petroleum Co. of Houston, Livingston said. The drilling rights
acquired by the two companies allow them to explore a geologic zone that
has yielded more than 4 trillion cubic feet of natural gas less than 50
miles away, in Canada. The U.S. Department of Energy has estimated that
there is a 50-50 chance of finding more than 6 trillion cubic feet on the
U.S. side of the border in an area that includes the Blackfeet Reservation
and large amounts of surrounding territory. If natural gas is produced from
wells on the reservation, the Blackfeet will be entitled to a generous
share of the return--35% of gross revenues, according to Livingston. Still,
tribal critics of the deal remain uneasy. They point to statements
published on K2's Web site boasting that the firm secured reservation
drilling rights at a rate "362 times less per acre" than the price paid by
competing companies for non-reservation land just across the Canadian
border. "The oil companies keep dangling promises of huge royalties, but
what we're getting upfront is a very small amount of money for the rights
to our land," said Clarence Hirst, a member of the tribe who ranches on the
reservation and worked in the oil and gas business for 15 years. He is one
of the tribal members who filed suit against the Indian bureau and the
Department of the Interior. But Livingston said the Canadian lands are
commanding higher prices because they contain proven reserves. At the
reservation, "we are going to have to spend millions of dollars just to
find out if there is something down there," he said. But Hirst also faults
the federal government for approving the deal without first assessing all
of the environmental risks. "We don't have very much land left, and the
[Indian bureau] should be looking out for it," he said. What Hirst, the EPA
and non-Indian environmentalists want is an environmental impact statement,
produced by a comprehensive investigation into the likely effects of a
fully developed oil and gas field on air and water quality, wildlife,
Native American sacred sites and human health on the reservation and in the
park. Environmental impact statements have been standard procedure in many
other places where the government has sought to learn the effects of
commercial enterprise on a valuable ecosystem. But the assessments can be
expensive and time-consuming and can lead to strict guidelines to protect
natural resources. The absence of such guidelines has prompted concerns on
and off the reservation. "There are a lot of issues that haven't been
addressed," said Dan Carney, a wildlife biologist employed by the tribe.
"Timing is one. . . . Do you stop drilling in an area if wildlife are
wintering there. Where do you put the roads, and do you close them when you
are done? There is better habitat in some places on the reservation than
there is in the park, and we need to know how we are going take care of it."

Copyright Los Angeles Times


 
Reprinted under the fair use http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html
doctrine of international copyright law.
           &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
          Tsonkwadiyonrat (We are ONE Spirit)
                     Unenh onhwa' Awayaton
                  http://www.tdi.net/ishgooda/       
           &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
                             

Reply via email to