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Stop Drilling In Alaska From Threatening Polar Bears
Final signature count: 6,447
6,447 signatures toward our 30,000 goal
Sponsor: The Animal Rescue Site
New Arctic drilling plans could disrupt polar bear dens and fragile ecosystems. Tell federal officials to act before irreversible harm occurs.
Federal officials are advancing new oil and gas leasing across Alaska’s North Slope, including areas in and around the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska and the Coastal Plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.1,2
These are fragile Arctic habitats that support polar bears, caribou, migratory birds, seals, walruses, and other wildlife already under pressure from climate change and industrial activity.3,4
Polar bears depend on sea ice and quiet coastal denning areas to survive and raise cubs. Oil and gas operations can bring aircraft, vehicles, seismic work, roads, pipelines, drilling pads, and other disturbances into areas where denning mothers may be hidden beneath the snow.5
Polar Bears Are Already At Risk
Polar bears in Alaska are already losing habitat as the Arctic warms and sea ice declines. Less sea ice means less access to hunting grounds and more pressure on land-based denning areas.6
For denning mothers, disturbance can be especially dangerous. Polar Bears International warns that oil and gas activity in the Arctic Refuge threatens polar bear families, and that den-detection technology can miss dens. A mother forced from her den may not be able to protect her newborn cubs.4
Expanding drilling in these areas increases the risk of habitat disruption, human-wildlife conflict, and harm to cubs at a time when polar bears need stronger protection.
Federal Officials Have The Authority To Act
The Department of the Interior and Bureau of Land Management oversee leasing, permitting, and environmental review for oil and gas activity on federal lands. Even after leases are sold, drilling, seismic operations, road construction, pipelines, and other surface activity require additional federal authorization.7
That means federal officials still have the power to halt, deny, or restrict projects that would put threatened wildlife and fragile Arctic ecosystems at unacceptable risk.
Environmental and Indigenous-aligned groups have already challenged Arctic drilling approvals, arguing that federal reviews have failed to fully account for threats to wildlife, habitat, and local communities.8
Approving more drilling in polar bear habitat sends a clear message that short-term extraction is being prioritized over the long-term survival of Arctic wildlife.
Sign now to urge the Department of the Interior and Bureau of Land Management to halt Arctic drilling projects that threaten polar bears and protect the fragile ecosystems they depend on.
The Petition
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