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The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has fined units of Royal
Dutch Shell more than $1 million over violations of the company’s Clean
Air Act permits related to their Arctic drilling program in the Chukchi
and Beaufort Seas, off the North Slope of Alaska.
The EPA said that based on their inspections and Shell’s excess
emission reports, EPA documented numerous air permit violations for
Shell’s Discoverer drillship (23 violations in total) and the Kulluk
conical drilling unit (11 in total), along with the associated fleets,
during the two months the vessels operated during the 2012 drilling
season.
Shell’s Kulluk and Discoverer rigs set sail for the Arctic in July 2012
from Vigor Industrial’s Seattle shipyard. Image courtesy Vigor
Industrial
As part of the settlement, Shell has agreed to pay a $710,000 penalty
for violations of the Discoverer air permit and a $390,000 penalty for
violations of the Kulluk air permit.
The EPA issued the Clean Air Act Outer Continental Shelf permits for
Shell’s operations in early 2012, setting emission limits, pollution
control requirements and monitoring, recordkeeping, and reporting
requirements on the vessels and their support fleets of icebreakers,
spill response vessels, and supply ships.
The EPA violation notices for Shell’s Discoverer and Kulluk air permits were first issued in January 2013.
Shell did not operate in 2013 under the air permits due to a series
of mishaps that culminated in the Kulluk running aground on an
uninhabited island in Alaska on Dec. 31, 2012 while being towed to
Seattle for maintenance, forcing the rigs back to Asia for repairs.
It is estimated that Shell has spent nearly $5 billion on its Arctic drilling program so far.
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On Tuesday, September 10, 2013
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