Skip to main content
Back to Show
Earth Focus

Fueling Change: Alaskan Communities Divided Over Oil Drilling

Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge is the largest national wildlife region in the United States. It’s home to a large variety of plants and animals, including the polar bear and the caribou. It’s also home to as much as 16 billion barrels of recoverable oil. In 2017, Congress voted to open the pristine wilderness to oil and gas drilling, an area that has been off-limits to petroleum exploration for more than three decades. Some locals, including those working with the Arctic Slope Regional Corp. — one of 13 corporations created under the 1971 Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act — are in favor of the plan and its economic opportunities for community investment. However, a growing number of Inupiaq people are joining a national opposition concerned about serious environmental implications, loss of habitat and impact on Indigenous subsistence lifestyles. 

Support Provided By
Season
Aerial image of island off Louisiana coast. | Nicky Milne/Thomson Reuters Foundation
25:30
Forecasts are dire for Louisiana to experience the second-highest sea level rise in the world. How is the region adapting?
blue planet coral seas.jpg
26:40
“Vanishing Coral” presents the personal story of scientists and naturalists who are working with local communities to protect coral reefs that are being destroyed by warming seas, pollution, and destructive fishing practices.
Oil and Gas Well
33:46
"Earth Focus" looks at three countries on the new fracking frontline: South Africa, Poland, and the UK.
Active loading indicator