4.7 Article

Current practices and knowledge supporting oil spill risk assessment in the Arctic

Journal

MARINE ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 141, Issue -, Pages 289-304

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marenvres.2018.09.006

Keywords

Arctic; Comparative risk assessment (CRA); Oil spill response; Net environmental benefits analysis (NEBA); Spill impact mitigation assessment (SIMA)

Funding

  1. International Association of Oil & Gas Producers (IOGP) - Arctic Oil Spill Response Technology Joint Industry Programme

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Oil spill response (OSR) in the Arctic marine environment conducted as part of operational planning and preparedness supporting exploration and development is most successful when knowledge of the ecosystem is readily available and applicable in an oil spill risk assessment framework. OSR strategies supporting decision making during the critical period after a spill event should be explicit about the environmental resources potentially at risk and the efficacy of OSR countermeasures that best protect sensitive and valued resources. At present, there are 6 prominent methods for spill impact mitigation assessment (SIMA) in the Arctic aimed at supporting OSR and operational planning and preparedness; each method examines spill scenarios and identifies response strategies best suited to overcome the unique challenges posed by polar ecosystems and to minimize potential long-term environmental consequences. The different methods are grounded in classical environmental risk assessment and the net environmental benefit analysis (NEBA) approach that emerged in the 1990s after the Exxon Valdez oil spill. The different approaches share 5 primary assessment elements (oil physical and chemical properties, fate and transport, exposure, effects and consequence analysis). This paper highlights how the different Arctic methods reflect this common risk assessment framework and share a common need for oil spill science relevant to Arctic ecosystems. An online literature navigation portal, developed as part of the 5 -year Arctic Oil Spill Response Technologies Joint Industry Programme, complements the different approaches currently used in the Arctic by capturing the rapidly expanding body of scientific knowledge useful to evaluating exposure, vulnerability and recovery of the Arctic ecosystem after an oil spill.

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