Oil Company Lease Stirs Revolt in Green Seattle
Oil Company Lease Stirs Revolt in Green Seattle
By KIRK JOHNSONMARCH 13, 2015
SEATTLE The environmental messaging never stops here, whether from a city-owned electric utility that gets nearly 98 percent of its power from sources untainted by carbon (and is not about to let residents forget it) or the fussy garbage collectors who can write tickets for the improper sorting of recyclables.
So when a lease was signed allowing Royal Dutch Shell, the petrochemical giant, to bring its Arctic Ocean drilling rigs to the citys waterfront, the result was a kind of civic call to arms. A unanimous City Council lined up alongside the mayor to question the legality of the agreement with the Port of Seattle, a court challenge was filed by environmental groups, and protesters, in bluster or bluff, vowed to block the rigs arrival though the exact timetable is secret, for security reasons with a flotilla of kayaks in Elliott Bay.
You have signed a lease that will amount to a crime against the planet, said Zarna Joshi, 32, a Seattle resident who was first to speak at a raucous three-hour public meeting this week before the ports commissioners. The meeting was packed mostly with opponents and punctuated by the occasional dissenter, pointing out the hypocrisy of protesters who had arrived to denounce Shell in vehicles running on gasoline.
Officials at the publicly owned port, which has branded itself as a global maritime gateway where a sustainable world is headed, have strongly defended the lease, saying the two-year contract would bring in millions of dollars of revenue and create hundreds of good jobs on 50 acres that Shell would use just west of downtown. The decision to allow oil exploration in Arctic waters is in any case federal policy, noted Peter McGraw, a port spokesman, not anything that the port or the city or the State of Washington can alter.
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