Skip to content
Oil Change International | Data Driven, People Powered. Oil Change International | Data Driven, People Powered.
  • About
    • Our Work
    • Values
    • Team
    • Jobs at OCI
    • Ways to Give
  • Program Areas
    • Africa
    • Asia
    • North Sea
    • United States
    • Global Industry
    • Global Public Finance
    • Global Policy
  • Blog
  • Press Releases
  • Publications
Donate
  • Get Updates
    • Share on Bluesky Share on Bluesky Bluesky (opens in a new window)
    • Share on Twitter Share on Twitter Twitter (opens in a new window)
    • Share on Instagram Share on Instagram Instagram (opens in a new window)
    • Share on LinkedIn Share on LinkedIn LinkedIn (opens in a new window)
    • Share on Facebook Share on Facebook Facebook (opens in a new window)
Donate
  • About
    • Our Work
    • Values
    • Team
    • Jobs at OCI
    • Ways to Give
  • Program Areas
    • Africa
    • Asia
    • North Sea
    • United States
    • Global Industry
    • Global Public Finance
    • Global Policy
  • Blog
  • Press Releases
  • Publications
    • Get Updates
    • Share on Bluesky Bluesky
    • Share on Twitter Twitter
    • Share on Instagram Instagram
    • Share on LinkedIn LinkedIn
    • Share on Facebook Facebook
Go to OCI Homepage
Current Affairs
Published: March 24, 2014

Exxon Valdez: 25 Years on, the “Dead Zone” Remains

Today is the 25th Anniversary of the Exxon Valdez disaster and although a quarter of a century has passed since the disaster, its effects are still being felt today.

  • Latest from OCI
  • Blogs listing
  • Exxon Valdez: 25 Years on, the “Dead Zone” Remains
    • Arctic Oil and Gas Current Affairs Exxon Valdez Oil oil spills Pollution
Andy Rowell

When not blogging for OCI, Andy is a freelance writer and journalist specializing in environmental issues.

[email protected]

exxon_valdezToday is the 25th Anniversary of the Exxon Valdez disaster and although a quarter of a century has passed since the disaster, its effects are still being felt today.

It was on the 24 March 1989, that the Exxon Valdez ploughed into rocks in Prince William Sound in Alaska spilling million gallons of oil into the pristine, cold waters.

The official estimate was some eleven millions gallons of oil spilt, but unofficially many more millions of gallons of oil are believed to have poured out of the tanker’s ripped hull.

Due to its landmark status, today’s 25th Anniversary has made some headlines, but slowly but surely the oil spill is seen as yesterday’s news.

But the events of that fateful night and the dreadful days and years that followed still haunt this beautiful coastline and its resilient people. And there are crucial lessons from the disaster which are being ignored as the oil industry pushes to open up the Arctic to oil drilling.

“There is a lot of bitterness still to this day,” argues Steve Rothchild from the Prince William Sound Regional Citizens’ Advisory Council. He complains that Exxon never fulfilled its promise to “make the people whole,” after the disaster.

The tragic sense of loss at the time was conveyed by one Alaskan Native elder, who said simply:  “what we see now is death. Death, not of each other but of the source of life — the water … Never in the millennium of our tradition have we thought it possible for the water to die. But it is true.”

And Prince William Sound continues to slowly die. As Marybeth Holleman, the author of “The Heart of the Sound,” argues: “The sound’s coastal ecosystem is permanently damaged. Thousands of gallons of Exxon Valdez oil still pollute the beaches; this oil is still toxic and still hurting the ecosystem near the shore.”

Even now you can still find oil buried in the shores and on the islands of Prince William Sound.

One local fisherman, Dave Janka, who collected an oil sample from one of the islands in the Sound last month is outraged at the lack of action. “Looks like oil, smells like oil. It’s oil,” Janka says. “If you or I, in our backyard or at our mom and pop gas station, had a fuel tank leak, we would be held to the point of bankruptcy to clean that up.”

Many species affected by the oil spill, such as orcas, and Pacific Herring are “not recovering”. The pod of orcas, who live in the area, have not produced a calf since the spill, and scientists believe they are heading for extinction. “There appears to be no hope for recovery,” argues the government.

The Pacific herring industry – once a vibrant part of the local community – has never reopened after the spill.  One of those who was preparing for the spring herring season when disaster struck was Michelle Hahn O’Leary.

“It just felt like I’d been kicked in the stomach,” says O’Leary now. “This was one of those turning points in life, where you measure things before and after.”

She has not fished since.

Another ex-commercial fisherman, native Alaskan Tom Andersen, can no longer make a living from the sea either. “You can’t fix it. Once you break that egg, sometimes that’s it,” he says. He did though work on the clean up. “You could smell [the oil] before you ever saw it,” he recalls.

After the oil spill, Prince William Sound was eerily silent, he recalls. “There was no fish, no birds chasing fish. You could sit there and it’d just be dead quiet. So everybody called it the dead zone.”

On this Anniversary surely it is time to reappraise the risks of allowing oil drilling in the Arctic. The “dead zone” lingers as the oil continues to poison the local environment. Oil continues to bioaccumulate  up the food chain.

In the intervening years, there has also been a realisation that crude oil is highly toxic, and that you can never adequately clean up an Arctic oil spill.

There is also a huge amount of evidence that dispersants caused more harm than good both with the Exxon Valdez and with the Deepwater Horizon.

And for those who believe that BP’s spill in the Gulf of Mexico is no longer polluting the environment, with near perfect timing as many as 300 pounds of tar balls were discovered on the Mississippi Barrier Islands on Friday.

Scientists believe that they are from the Deepwater Horizon.  BP’s lethal legacy continues too.

Oil Change International | Data Driven, People Powered.
Donate Get Updates
Back to the top
  • Keep in touch

  • Oil Change International
    714 G St. SE, #202
    Washington, DC 20003
    United States

    +1.202.518.9029

    [email protected]

    • Share on Bluesky Bluesky (opens in a new window)
    • Share on Twitter Twitter (opens in a new window)
    • Share on Instagram Instagram (opens in a new window)
    • Share on LinkedIn LinkedIn (opens in a new window)
    • Share on Facebook Facebook (opens in a new window)
  • Quick links

  • About OCI
  • Our Values
  • Jobs at OCI
  • Ways to Give
  • Media Centre

  • Publications
  • Press
  • Associated websites

  • Big Oil Reality Check
  • Energy Finance Database
  • Permian Climate Bomb
  • Site map
  • Privacy policy

Copyright © 2025 Oil Change International. Web design by Fat Beehive