Last month, the Trump administration approved the first offshore oil drilling development in federal Arctic waters, which environmentalists fear will ramp up carbon pollution that fuels climate change.
Hilcorp Alaska's project—which involves building a 9-acre artificial drilling island in the shallow waters of the Beaufort Sea—has been delayed because of the effects of climate change.
Hilcorp's Liberty Energy Project requires land-fast sea ice or ice that's attached to the coastline each winter, as a foundation for the artificial island. The process involves pouring gravel through holes in the ice and through the water column to the seafloor and building the island structure from the bottom up.
But the region's unusual warmth has caused ice to form later and break up earlier.
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