How Biden Tried to Protect the Bering Sea
And how his Hail Mary to protect our coastlines may or may not work
In early January, as one of his last acts in office, former U.S. President Joe Biden banned future offshore oil and gas drilling on more than 625 million acres of U.S. coastal waters including the entire East Coast, West Coast, and the eastern Gulf of Mexico โ as weโll continue to call it โ as well as the northern Bering Sea. (listen to our recent Rising Tide Ocean Podcast on this with long-time anti-drilling activist Richard Charter).
Biden did this using presidential powers granted under the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act of 1953, which in 2019 a federal judge in Alaska ruled cannot be rescinded by a future president. This means, despite his day one executive order reversing Bidenโs order, President Donald Trump will likely have to get Congress to pass legislation negating this drilling ban. Three Republican congressmen from Louisiana and Texas have already introduced legislation to do that, but may have a hard time getting fellow Republicans from states like South Carolina and Floridaโwhere anti-drilling sentiment is strongโto go along.
Itโs pretty clear why Biden did what he did, first to thwart Trumpโs โDrill Baby Drillโ energy plan and to burnish his own environmental legacy. What is less clear to most people is why he included 44 million acres of the Northern Bering Sea off of Alaska in the drilling ban.
As a Biden White House fact-sheet explained it: โThe Northern Bering Sea Climate Resilience Area was established in 2016 and includes one of the largest marine mammal migrations in the worldโbeluga and bowhead whales, walruses, and sealsโฆ the health of these waters is critically important to food security and to the culture of more than 70 coastal Tribes, including the Yupโik, Cupโik, and Inupiaq people who have relied on these resources for millennia.โ
So, whatโs the Northern Bering Sea Climate Resilience Area? Established by President Barack Obama in December of 2016, it was an attempt to meet the concerns of both Alaska Natives and environmental scientists studying the rapidly changing conditions they were witnessing. Alaska and its waters are today warming two to three times faster than the rest of the world due to a climate phenomenon known as โArctic amplification,โ linked to vanishing sea ice. As the Arctic Ocean ice cover that reflects solar radiation back into space has retreated, the dark ocean waters exposed absorb ever greater amounts of heat leading to 2024 being listed as the hottest year on record going back to 1850. 2023 was the previous hottest year. The 10 warmest years have all occurred in the last decade.
This has led to dramatic changes for the fish and wildlife and for the subsistence-based communities of the Arctic who depend on these creatures for their survival. For example, a study published last month found that 4 million common murres, a seabird that frequents the area, recently died as the result of a marine heatwave. This was about half the state of Alaskaโs population, and may be the largest documented die-off of a single species of wild bird.
The Bering Seaโs Alaska Native communitiesโsome 70 federally recognized tribesโfirst requested action under Obama and got both a ban on destructive bottom trawl fishing in the 113,000-square-mile resilience area and a ban on oil drilling in about half the area (rescinded by Trump during his first term and now fully protected by Biden under the Lands Act), also a commitment for the Coast Guard to restrict shipping channels in areas where native communities are involved in fishing, hunting, and whaling (still not finalized by the Coast Guard) and a pledge to consult with these same communities moving forward. Three leading Alaska Native organizationsโKawerak, Inc., the Association of Village Council Presidents, and the Bering Sea Elders Groupโreleased a joint statement on the day Biden acted expressing their โdeepest appreciation and gratitudeโ to him for protecting waters that President Trump hopes to reopen to oil drilling.
I recently interviewed two women from St. Paul Island in the Pribilof Islands, about 300 miles off the Alaskan mainland in the Bering Sea. Destiny Bristol Kushin is a 20-year-old college student working toward an associate degree in environmental sciences, and her grandmother Zinaida Melovidov is an elder who has lived on the island, with a population of just under 400 people, most of her life. They both talked about the decline of the murres that were hunted for meat and whose eggs were collected on a nearby island where theyโve all but disappeared since the die-off.
โEverythingโs declining, even our (summer) moss berries, cloud berries, everything,โ Melovidov worries.
โEven in the last 20 years since I was born, you can see the differences in the environment, especially with the seasons. Our summers will be later and foggy where they used to be sunny,โ Kushin notes. โOur winters arenโt as snowy. Itโs mostly wet now, like rain and snow all during the winter time.โ
Iโve heard similar concerns about climate impacts on lives and livelihoods from Alaska Natives in the Aleutians and Southwest Alaska whose villages are also at risk from erosion, flooding, and thawing permafrost.
Even if Bidenโs drilling ban in the Bering Sea stands the test of Trump, other threats will remain including oil spills from Russian tankers passing through the 55-mile-wide Bering Strait between Alaska and Russia delivering oil to China via Russiaโs Northern Sea Route of retreating Arctic ice. Russiaโs oil trade with China has increased since Western sanctions were imposed following its 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Reflecting these tensions around oil, in 2023 the Russians refused to participate with the U.S. Coast Guard in a joint oil spill response exercise.
Even with drilling protections for coastal America, the U.S. will remain the worldโs leading oil and gas producer, including the 14% of national production that comes from the western Gulf of Mexico where the 2010 BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill disaster took place.
And, with President Trumpโs commitment to produce ever more fossil fuels that drive climate disruption and contribute to extreme weather events from heatwaves in the Arctic to the Los Angelesโ firestorms, our problems with oil and gas remain far from over.
Fascinating. The Berring Sea is surprising shallow. This makes it more fragile, especially to oil spills and ship traffic.