You Can Help Stop Offshore Oil Drilling
By Mark J. Palmer
The US Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) has issued a new 5-year plan to lease the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) of the US for offshore oil drilling and seismic testing for oil, using extreme sound punched into the ocean bottom.
Basically, the proposal would open up virtually ALL of the country’s OCS to leasing, testing, and drilling (with some areas protected at the insistence of Republicans in Congress) in keeping with the administration’s state policy of “energy dominance.”
This includes opening National Marine Sanctuaries, like the Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary offshore southern California, to oil drilling despite the ban on drilling in the Sanctuary established by law.
Similarly, the proposal also ignores California’s state Marine Protected Areas (MPAs). The MPAs were set up specifically to protect fish populations and biodiversity along the California coast.
Critical areas in the Arctic Ocean off Alaska’s coast would be opened to oil leasing and seismic testing using intense noise from air-gun arrays towed over the ocean bottom. In the Gulf of Mexico, oil drilling would be offered in the habitat of the endangered Rice’s whale, a species discovered only in 2021.
The administration is bent on “Drill, Baby, Drill”, but what we see happening is “Spills, Baby, Spills”.
Offshore oil drilling poses many dangers to the marine environment, including whales and dolphins:
Seismic testing consists of towed powerful air-guns that make ear-piercing noise levels, shot into the ocean bottom. The returning echoes can indicate where oil reserves are present in the underlying sediment. In the meantime, the home of whales and dolphins is filled with huge noise pollution for days on end that can travel for hundreds of miles.
Once areas are leased to oil companies, drilling can commence. The construction of oil platforms and pipelines, and drilling produce yet more ocean noise. Oil spills on a small scale are regular occurrences.
Drilling muds, which contain toxic heavy metals and can contaminate large areas of the ocean bottom, are sometimes simply dumped over the side of the drill platform.
Fracking is now occurring in some offshore areas to increase oil production by injecting a devil’s mix of chemicals and hot water to crack sedimentary rocks, allowing the oil to be pumped out. But if any of the fracking fluids should escape the sediments, it would poison large areas of the coast.
Large-scale oil spills have occurred when things go wrong with offshore oil platforms, pipelines, and tankers, causing billions of dollars in damage to tourism, fisheries, and the marine ecosystems – damage that can last for years. Oil and water do not mix.
In 1989, when the Exxon Valdez tanker crashed into a reef and leaked oil all over Prince William Sound in Alaska, an estimated 2,800 sea otters and as many as 22 orcas died as a result of oil contamination and poisoning.
The explosion and oil leak of the Deepwater Horizon oil platform, in addition to killing oil workers, also killed, just from March 2010 to July 2014, an estimated 1,141 dolphins and still has adverse impacts to this day on the Gulf of Mexico.
And of course, the burning of oil obtained from offshore contributes to global warming. Oil, gas, and coal must be replaced by green energy alternatives, like solar and wind.
What You Can Do:
The BOEM, during a narrow window, is asking for comments from the public about their reaction to offshore oil drilling virtually everywhere.
TO COMMENT, GO TO: https://www.savemycoast.org
This website, set up by environmentalists, will give you access to the BOEM comment record so you can state your views.
URGE THE BOEM TO REJECT THIS 5-Year-Plan and BAN OFFSHORE OIL DRILLING.
DEADLINE FOR COMMENTS: January 23, 2026
Thank you for your support for our oceans and their inhabitants!
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