With the departure of a Spanish oil company from the Chukchi Sea, only Shell still holds a drilling lease in US Arctic waters. Here’s why an Arctic oil boom never happened and why it probably never will.

Activists in a tribal canoe hoist a "Save The Arctic" message as they stand in the way of Shell's Polar Pioneer drilling rig as it attempts to depart Elliott Bay for Alaska. 15 Jun, 2015  © Marcus Donner / Greenpeace

Now that Spanish oil company Repsol has relinquished the last of its 93 leases in the Arctic’s Chukchi Sea, only one leaseholder is left in US Arctic waters – Shell. Why the company is holding onto a single lease after losing billions of dollars and any reputation for competence it might have had is anybody’s guess.

But the fact remains: drilling in the Arctic is dangerous and expensive for oil companies, catastrophic for the environment and unwelcome by the communities who live there.

A Little History

Once upon a time, way back in the 1980s and 1990s, oil companies rushed to purchase leases to explore and drill in the US Arctic. It looked like a gold rush. The companies vied rabidly for parcels in the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas north of Alaska, expecting gushing oil wells and massive piles of money. But within a couple years, all the oil companies were gone. No gushers, and definitely no piles of money, unless you count the billions of dollars the oil companies wasted on their abandoned leases. 

Kulluk drill rig runs aground in Alaska. 1 Jan, 2013  © The United States Coast Guard

Fast forward to early 2008, with oil companies once again lined up ahead of a giant lease sale. Industry giants like Shell, Conoco Phillips and Statoil, as well as lesser knowns like Repsol and Eni Petroleum, again shelled out to the tune of $2.8 billion just to purchase leases. They then spent millions maintaining those leases for years, exploring and bungling any effort to find – let alone extract – oil in US Arctic waters.

The most famous of all the mishaps in the Arctic is Shell’s horrendous effort in 2012, a $7 billion debacle that ended up with a grounded rig, a stranded crew being rescued by the Coast Guard and not a single drop of oil. It would have been comical if the stakes hadn’t been so high.

And then, of course, there was this:

Activists in Portland blockade a Shell ship from joining its fleet in 2015. The activists remained suspended from the St. Johns Bridge for 48 hours, capturing the world’s attention and putting the focus on the movement to stop Shell from drilling in the Arctic. 29 Jul, 2015  © Robert Meyers / Greenpeace

After millions of people took action, Shell announced it was abandoning its Arctic drilling plans for the “foreseeable future” in September, 2015. And just this week, the company gave up its drilling permits in the Canadian Arctic, too.

But Shell is still holding onto a drilling lease in the Chukchi Sea.

A Party of One

From the start, oil companies have whined that US rules and regulations have stood in their way in the Chukchi Sea. And now that oil prices have stalled at half of what they were a couple years ago, going through the costly and complicated effort of finding and drilling for oil in a place covered by ice nine months a year doesn’t make much sense. 

The fact is, it never has made sense, and it never will.

As companies like Shell and BP have proved time and time again, oil spills are not preventable, and a spill in the Arctic – with its rough seas, extreme conditions and ice cover – would pretty much be impossible to clean up.

Furthermore, as people who call the Arctic home have said for years, they don’t want oil companies coming in and potentially destroying their livelihoods. And drilling for oil anywhere is dangerous to us all, as climate change continues its march to catastrophic levels. Why would we spend billions of dollars to access oil from the most extreme environments on the planet when we could – and should – be investing in the renewable energy sources of the future?

Right now, we have the power to end new leases in the US Arctic. We can tell President Obama that it’s time to stop new offshore drilling in American waters. It’s up to us to raise our voices for Arctic protection.

Now that Repsol has joined almost everybody else in getting out of the US Arctic, it’s a party of one up there, with Shell acting all weird and dancing alone on its one tiny lease.

Hey Shell, can we call you a cab?

Jason Schwartz is an media officer at Greenpeace USA. 

A version of this blog was originally posted by Greenpeace USA.