Arctic National Wildlife Refuge

Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge

Stop oil and gas development

The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, in Alaska’s far northeast, is one of the world’s last truly intact wilderness landscapes. Its mountains, tundra, rivers, and coastlines form a naturally functioning Arctic and subarctic ecosystem, and nowhere else in North America does such a wide range of habitats exist within a single protected place.

For decades, the Refuge has faced pressure to open to oil and gas development, putting Alaska Native communities, wildlife, and climate at risk. As the Arctic warms, protecting this landscape is essential, because it stores vast amounts of carbon, but only if it remains intact.

Map of Arctic National Wildlife Refuge

WHAT’S AT STAKE

Plant and animal life

Plant and animal life

The Porcupine Caribou Herd, denning polar bears, muskoxen, wolves, and nearly 200 species of migratory birds rely on the abundant, wild region.
The Gwich’in Nation

The Gwich’in Nation

The Gwich’in people’s lives and culture are inseparable from the land they have called home for thousands of years. They have long relied on the animals around them, especially the caribou, for subsistence and cultural continuity.
Climate disaster

Climate disaster

The Refuge's vast lands store enormous amounts of carbon. Disturbing them through industrial activity risks releasing this carbon as greenhouse gases, accelerating global warming. Not to mention, drilling there would extract and burn more oil, directly pumping new carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
Victories Victories

Years of relentless advocacy by Indigenous leaders, climate advocates, and determined community members have shown the world that Arctic drilling threatens communities, harms the climate, and makes no economic sense.

Here’s what we've accomplished

KEEP FIGHTING

The fight to protect the Refuge is about standing up for the future the Gwich’in people and all Americans deserve.

JOIN ALASKA’S DEFENSE
Protecting Alaska’s sacred, vast, and fragile lands and waters is our shared responsibility. Every dollar you give helps us defend the cultures, communities, and climate that depend on them.
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