Sign up to get e-mail alerts

Parks, Open Spaces, Wild Places Reports

SearchRSS Feed

BP Special Resolution 2004 - Protected Areas

3/4/2004

BPSpecialResolution2004.pdf Download the full report.

News Release

Executive Summary

Environment America is the new home of U.S. PIRG's environmental work.

"In some places, such as the Arctic Refuge, the wildlife and natural values are so magnificent and so enduring that they transcend the value of any mineral that might lie beneath the surface. Such minerals are finite. Production inevitably means changes whose impacts will be measured in geologic time in order to gain marginal benefits that may last a few years."
– Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus, in a 1978 speech before the Outdoor Association of America.

During the month of December 2003, the U.S. Public Interest Research Group (U.S. PIRG) Education Fund organized a coalition of concerned organizations, investors, and active shareholders to co-file a Special Resolution with BP to be voted upon at the Annual General Meeting in London on April 15, 2004. This Special Resolution relates to BP operations within protected and sensitive areas, in particular the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, and the possibility of adopting a no-go zone policy for such areas of importance.

U.S. PIRG Education Fund has composed this memorandum to educate investors and concerned individuals about our Special Resolution, as well as our campaign to protect the Arctic Refuge. Included you will find an explanation of why we have chosen to file a Special Resolution with BP on the issue of drilling in protected areas such as the coastal plain of the Arctic Refuge, as well as provide individuals the following information: background information on the Arctic Refuge, documentation of BP’s poor record on Alaska’s North Slope, the text of the 2004 Special Resolution and Supporting Statement, and a list of co-filers.