Help Commemorate The 60th Anniversary Of The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge By Taking Action To Save Wildlife
Karen Lapizco
In 1960,President Dwight D. Eisenhower created the Arctic National Wildlife Range “for the purpose of preserving unique wildlife, wilderness, and recreational values.” Twenty years later, President Jimmy Carterexpanded the range and renamed the area as the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
The Arctic refuge has existed as a haven for migratory birds. They return to the refuge each summer to nest, raise their young, feed, rest, and then migrate to the United States and beyond.
The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge is a critical birthing place and nursery for the Porcupine caribou herd that travels thousands of miles to the coastal plain to calve and seek refuge—shielded by the Brooks Range and protected from pests thanks to the winds blowing off the Arctic Ocean. The refuge’s coastal plain is also the most important onshore maternal denning habitat for Southern Beaufort Sea polar bears, where they give birth.
“The Southern Beaufort Sea population is considered one of the most imperiled of the nineteen polar bear populations found throughout the circumpolar Arctic, and will be further harmed by oil and gas development in the coastal plain of the Arctic Refuge. Industrializing this area could be the end of these imperiled polar bears,” said Nicole Whittington-Evans, Alaska program director for Defenders of Wildlife, in a statement.
The Arctic refuge is vital to the Gwich’in peoplewho make their home on or near the migratory route of the Porcupine caribou herd and have depended on caribou for their way of life for thousands of years. The Gwich’in call the coastal plain “Iizhik Gwats’an Gwandaii Goodlit” or The Sacred Place Where Life Begins, yet it remains vulnerable to development and has been proposed for oil drilling. Tradition indicates that the Gwich’in have occupied this area since time immemorial, or, according to conventional belief, as long as 20,000 years.
The integrity of the National Wildlife Refuge System is under assault from a congressional mandate to lease the refuge’s coastal plain for oil and gas development and an all-out-effort by the Trump administration to allow these activities, which would destroy it. The administration announced that it will hold an oil and gas lease sale for the coastal plain of the Arctic refuge on January 6, 2021. Despite the extreme legal and political pressures, industrializing one of the nation’s greatest wildlife refuges is becoming increasingly difficult for the companies that would do so.
Just days before the Arctic refuge’s 60th Anniversary,holdout Bank of America Corpannounced that it would not finance Arctic National Wildlife Refuge drilling or exploration. It was the only major U.S. bank of six that had not ruled out financing for the destruction of the refuge. Bloomberg reported this week that, “The Trump administration is racing against legal deadlines and a merciless regulatory calendar in its last-ditch effort to sell drilling rights in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge before President-elect Joe Biden is sworn in at noon on January 20th.
As we continue the fight for polar bears, the integrity of the National Wildlife Refuge System and the culture of the Gwich’in people, let’s be heartened by these wins!
Here are six actions you can take to celebrate the 60th Arctic National Wildlife Refuge Anniversary:
Call or write your representative and senator to show your support for the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and ask them to protect the coastal plain.