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Arctic Folly
By Jimmy Carter
Tuesday, September 13, 2005
Congress is about to make
one of those big decisions that marks an era. Unless wiser
heads prevail, it may do it badly -- making the wrong
decision in the wrong way and about the wrong place. At
stake is America's greatest wildlife sanctuary, the Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge. To dissuade Congress from this
environmental tragedy, Americans must rally, and quickly.
Congress had its Pyrrhic
energy victory this summer, with a new energy policy that
ignores much-needed conservation measures and gives the
oil industry large new tax breaks regardless of where it
drills and pumps. Surely Congress has done more than
enough to increase the profits of the oil industry.
Yet now, in a separate
decision, the White House and Big Oil are pressuring
Congress to allow drilling rigs to rip into the ecological
heart of America's preeminent wildlife sanctuary. We must
not confuse this with Prudhoe Bay, which lies west of the
Arctic refuge and is already an industrial landscape
resembling Houston more than Yellowstone.
With increasing gasoline
prices bringing economic hardship and concern to many
Americans, we must not be misled by oil lobbyists who are
trying to convince us that our energy security is
singularly dependent on sacrificing the Arctic refuge.
They promote the false premise that development will touch
just a few thousand acres when, in fact, it would
introduce roads and pipelines spider-webbing across
hundreds of thousands of acres on the fragile coastal
plain.
We cannot drill our way
to energy security or lower gasoline prices as long as our
nation sits on just 3 percent of world oil reserves yet
accounts for 25 percent of all oil consumption. An obvious
answer is to increase the fuel efficiency of motor
vehicles, at least to the level we set more than a
quarter-century ago.
Instead, the
administration recently proposed a tiny increase in gas
mileage for SUVs, minivans and pickups. Not effective
until the 2011 models, this would save about one month's
current consumption of fuel over the next 20 years -- far
less than will be saved in just one state by a new
California law. The new ruling offers automobile makers an
opportunity to avoid the reductions by modifying the size
of various models as they persist in manufacturing gas
guzzlers. It is not a coincidence that Moody's has just
downgraded the debt of General Motors and Ford to junk
status, while makers of efficient vehicles prosper.
I have been to the
coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to
study the wilderness wildlife. Far from being the frozen
"desert" some suggest, this is a rich,
Serengeti-like haven of life: nursery for caribou, polar
bears, walruses and millions of shorebirds and waterfowl
that migrate annually to the Lower 48. To sit, as Rosalynn
and I did, watching a herd of musk oxen circle-up to
defend their young and then to find yourself literally in
the midst of thousands of caribou streaming by is to touch
in a fundamental way God's glorious ark of teeming
wildlife.
We Americans use a lot of
energy, and millions of us want to do so in a more
efficient way that also allows us to cherish our
disappearing wilderness heritage. In the Arctic refuge we
cannot have it both ways. In the next few months Americans
could lose this special and amazing place through a
backdoor legislative maneuver.
Each fall Congress
endeavors to combine budgetary directives covering the
nation's $2.5 trillion dollar annual budget in a single
"reconciliation" decision. In a tricky ploy to
avoid full debate, drilling advocates have buried their
despoil-the-Arctic goal in this mammoth measure. So,
conservation-minded Americans must ask our elected
representatives to vote down any final budget
reconciliation bill that would allow the sacrifice of our
Arctic sanctuary.
Now is the time to speak
up for the ecological integrity of this unsurpassed
18-million-acre wilderness. Many Americans will be in
Washington on Sept. 20 for the Arctic Refuge Action Day
rally on the Mall and to contact congressional
representatives personally.
If we are not wise enough
to protect the Arctic refuge, future generations will
condemn us for needlessly sacrificing the wilderness of
their world to feed our profligate, short-term and
shortsighted energy habit. The pathway to a better, more
sustainable energy future does not wind through the Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge.
Former President
Carter is the founder of the Carter Center in Atlanta.
© 2005 The
Washington Post Company
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