[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 12 (Thursday, January 26, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S112-S113]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NOME REFUELING SITUATION
Mr. BEGICH. Madam President, I seek to speak on the floor to speak of
my residence of Alaska, a State that constantly overcomes adversity in
its tough winters. This year has been an especially tough winter.
Alaska's history is marked by stories of people coming together to
overcome extreme hardships and save their communities. None is more
memorable than the 1925 Serum Run, when diphtheria ravaged the remote
Arctic community of Nome. The needed vaccine was raced to the community
by a team of 20 mushers and some 150 sled dogs. They faced brutal
February weather and extreme cold, with winds and snowdrifts, and
carried their precious cargo--the vaccine--some 700 miles in just 5\1/
2\ days. It is a speed record that has never since been broken, and it
saved the community. The feat is memorialized by the 1,000-mile
Iditarod sled dog race known as the last great race on Earth.
This year, the city of Nome faced a 21st-century challenge: the need
for energy. The fall fuel barge--the last scheduled before winter set
in--was blocked first by a mammoth October storm which swept up western
Alaska and then by heavy sea ice. The barge had to turn back, but
without the delivery Nome would run out of fuel by March. Nome is not
connected by road, and the earliest the next barge would arrive would
be this June. Flying in 1.3 million gallons of fuel would have taken
300 flights and would have boosted the cost of an already expensive
gasoline and home-heating fuel to over $9 a gallon. As you can see
here, the price of fuel in the community right now is over $5 a gallon.
The Sitnasuak Native Corporation and Vitus Marine proposed to do what
has never been done before: bring over 1 million gallons of diesel fuel
and gasoline to Nome in the dead of winter. They contracted with a
Russian-flagged tanker, the Renda, which was ice-capable and double-
hulled.
To ensure the safety of the delivery, the Coast Guard immediately
recognized it had a mission and the right equipment. The Coast Guard
icebreaker Healy had just completed a lengthy scientific tour off the
Arctic. Rather than return home, they stayed on the job as winter set
in, breaking open lanes through the ice to allow the tanker to arrive.
The Healy and the Renda encountered conditions more severe than
anticipated, with colder temperatures, stronger winds, and thicker ice.
Some days their progress was frozen, literally, but the Healy pressed
on through the ice. With the determination that is the hallmark of the
U.S. Coast Guard, they succeeded. They did not make it to Nome Harbor,
which was frozen solid, but close enough to top off the city's fuel
tanks through a half-mile-long hose. Now they are on their way back
home but not out of the ice yet. The Healy and the Renda still have
several hundred miles before they reach open water.
I take to the floor today to offer my thanks and congratulations to
Captain Beverly Havlik and the men and women aboard the Healy for a job
well done and also the crew of the charter tanker, the Renda, and many
others who helped ensure that the transfer of fuel was safe, workers
from the Sitnasuak Corporation, Vitus Marine, the city of Nome, State
of Alaska, and others who have played their part, even the University
of Alaska researchers who flew aerial drones to inspect ice conditions
in advance of the approaching vessels. Together they proved that winter
operations are possible even in the most challenging circumstances.
I speak today not just to congratulate all those who pitched in to
help refuel this community but to consider its broader implications and
lessons.
First, America is an Arctic nation. The residents of cities such as
Nome and Kotzebue and Barrow and numerous smaller villages thrive in
the often challenging but rich Arctic environment. The Alaska Native
peoples have thrived for generations and for thousands of years, living
off the resources of the land and the sea.
Second, the Arctic offers much to our Nation. Its offshore oil and
natural gas is our most promising energy province, which is actively
being considered by industry. Trade routes over the top are
increasingly being explored by shippers eager to cut up to 40 percent
off trade routes between the east and the west.
Yet, while we are an artic nation, we lack the basic infrastructure
to serve its people, to fulfill our responsibilities and take advantage
of its opportunities. But it is not just me saying it. Just today the
Northern Waters Task Force released a report calling for a better
Arctic infrastructure. The Healy is our Nation's only operational polar
icebreaker, and it is only rated as a medium-duty vessel. Our two
heavy-duty icebreakers are both idle. The 36-year-old Polar Star is
being retrofitted and should be operational again soon, but it has been
proposed to send her sister ship, the Polar Sea, to the scrap heap.
Since taking office, I have repeatedly called for recapitalizing the
Nation's icebreaker fleet. A comprehensive Coast Guard study recently
found that 6 to 10 icebreakers are needed just to meet the Coast
Guard's statutory responsibilities. Until we have a firm plan to meet
these needs, I have introduced legislation with Senator Cantwell to
halt the dismantling of the Polar Sea until all options can be
considered. Without icebreakers, we can neither meet our
responsibilities nor take advantage of our opportunities as an Arctic
nation. We are falling behind Arctic nations such as Russia, China--
which is not an Arctic nation but is building icebreakers--Canada and
others as well. Russia is building a year-round Arctic port. Canada is
conducting military operations. And, as I mentioned, China is building
new icebreakers.
America must build its Arctic infrastructure, such as a deepwater
port to maintain our national presence as other nations make their
claims to the
[[Page S113]]
Arctic. We need to maintain spill response capabilities, enhance
communications, track the increasing vessel traffic using polar routes,
strengthen communications and the base scientists who are researching
the changing Arctic ecosystem.
In addition, we need the legal framework to support our Arctic
presence, and that means ratification of the Law of the Sea Treaty. We
need a robust scientific program to track changes in the Arctic which
in the past has operated like a global air-conditioner.
But scientists say, and the residents of the region confirm, that the
Arctic is warming. As its ice pack diminishes, it is changing our
weather. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, NOAA,
says there were a record 12 weather disasters in the United States
costing more than $1 billion each in 2011. The hurricane force storm
that blocked the fuel delivery to Nome isn't the only unusually severe
weather facing my State. South central Alaska has had--and I will
repeat this when I say it--24 feet of snow--24 feet of snow so far this
winter. The cities of Cordova and Valdez know a thing or two about
heavy winter snowfalls, but this is an unusual one for them.
In Cordova, buildings collapsed and avalanches cut the town off from
its airport. That is a true concern since, like 80 percent of the rest
of Alaska, Cordova is not connected by roads to the rest of the State.
The Army and Air National Guard sent soldiers and airmen to the
scene, and the State of Alaska sent over 100 State responders and heavy
equipment to the town by the State ferry system. The whole town, along
with the Guardsmen and the State workers, pitched in and worked around
the clock to clear the snow off the streets and roofs as another snow
and rain system was about to hit. The only problem: Alaskans can be
rather enthusiastic and kept breaking every single one of those snow
shovels. Eventually they ran out and had to have more snow shovels
shipped in from out of State.
Other parts of the State are affected as well. Boats capsized in the
fishing port of Kodiak due to the heavy snow. Yesterday, once again,
the Coast Guard came and performed their duty--not only one but two
rescues of the crews of fishing vessels that sank near Kodiak Island.
NOAA is closely watching the heaviest sea ice in decades in the
Bering Sea, which threatens to close the important crab fisheries and
destroy millions of dollars in fishing gear.
Some politicians downgrade public service and say government can't do
anything right. I am grateful for the government's response. I am
grateful to the Coast Guardsmen on the Healy who gave up their holiday
with their families to ensure Nome got its fuel, and I am grateful to
the Alaska National Guard and State and local governments working to
help dig out Cordova and Valdez.
I know my time has expired, but I wish to say there is no question in
my mind that the work the Coast Guard did, the National Guard, and many
others, set us on a course to again recognize the incredible people who
are doing incredible things in our State and around the country. As we
continue to look at the vast resources of the Arctic, more of these
resources will be necessary, and I know one thing about Americans,
about Alaskans, and that is we will be ready to take on the challenges
of the future.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Utah.
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