Email: mheiman@pewtrusts.org
Address:
Washington
Marilyn Heiman joined the Pew Environment Group in January 2009 as director of the U.S. Arctic Program, which works to protect the U.S. Arctic Ocean and its marine life from rapid industrialization made possible by the warming climate and the melting ice cap.
Before joining Pew, Heiman was campaign manager for the International Boreal Conservation Campaign, which works to protect one of the largest forest ecosystems on Earth. She served as the Secretary of Interior’s Alaska policy advisor during the Clinton administration. In that capacity, she coordinated activities of the Bureau of Land Management, the Minerals Management Service, the National Park Service, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the U.S. Geological Survey in Alaska. As Alaska representative to the Secretary of Interior, she served on the six-person Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council.
Previously, she was special assistant on natural resources and oceans for Alaska Gov. Tony Knowles and was director of his statewide transition team after his election in 1994. Prior to that she worked as an aide to the House Resources Committee in the Alaska legislature during the Exxon Valdez oil spill and was staff to the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Commission.
Heiman holds a bachelor’s degree from the University of California, Berkeley. She currently serves on the board of the Puget Sound Keeper Alliance.
Blog: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/marilyn-heiman
News Room
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Marilyn Heiman responds to Michael Bromwich's blog What More Can Be Done to Ensure Safe Offshore Drilling? on NationalJournal.com.
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(National Journal) Oil prices will be at the center of our nation’s energy debate in 2012. Some will use rising prices as an opening to push for drilling in sensitive areas like the Arctic Ocean, even though the challenges of oil exploration in such a harsh, remote, and fragile place are unprecedented.
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There are no quick fixes for the nation's energy needs. Although oil plays a role in President Obama's energy plan, the government must ensure proper oversight and planning before drilling, especially in such extreme, remote and fragile areas as the Arctic Ocean off of Alaska's northern coast.
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This nation needs a long-term, comprehensive energy plan that incorporates renewable energy and emphasizes conservation along with conventional sources of energy. A policy that meets these requirements is more likely to pass the test of Congress, even in this intense political climate.
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Before this country even thinks of expanding drilling in the remote and fragile Arctic Ocean reforms must ensure that oil companies can respond to significant spills in ice, hurricane-force winds, stormy seas and long periods of fog and darkness. The United States should aspire to be the world’s leader in safe drilling standards, prevention and response.
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Marilyn Heiman, Pew's director of Offshore Energy Reform and the U.S. Arctic Program, responds to Amy Harder's blog "How Should Obama React to Spiking Oil Prices?" on NationalJournal.com.
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Marilyn Heiman, Pew's director of Offshore Energy Reform and the U.S. Arctic Program, discusses what the anniversary of the Exxon Valdez oil spill means as we consider Arctic drilling and approach the first anniversary of the Deepwater Horizon explosion in the Gulf of Mexico.
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The State of the Union address is an opportunity for President Obama to champion the recommendations of the National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill, coming just weeks after the release of its report. During his address, the President should call on the United States to become the world’s leader in safe drilling standards, spill prevention, and response.
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Here are three steps the United States should take today to address the rapid changes already underway in the Arctic.
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Science, not politics, needs to guide decision-making in America’s extreme, remote, and fragile Arctic Ocean. If we are to avoid irreparable harm to an ecosystem found nowhere else in the country, we need to develop a comprehensive research and monitoring plan and set aside significant areas for protection.
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