DEG a Resource for All Members

Poised to Offer Help

The Division of Environmental Geosciences' primary mission is to help educate the Association about environmental issues — and in my opinion, we are being underutilized.

DEG members are poised to offer help to any AAPG member wanting more information or direction for a particular environmental topic or problem.

Articles about environmental strife, sustainability and the increasing role of globalization occur regularly. Depending upon the writer's frame of reference, the facts can be torqued in various ways to fit the image the publication desires — both positive or negative, from "our" point of view.

Please log in to read the full article

The Division of Environmental Geosciences' primary mission is to help educate the Association about environmental issues — and in my opinion, we are being underutilized.

DEG members are poised to offer help to any AAPG member wanting more information or direction for a particular environmental topic or problem.

Articles about environmental strife, sustainability and the increasing role of globalization occur regularly. Depending upon the writer's frame of reference, the facts can be torqued in various ways to fit the image the publication desires — both positive or negative, from "our" point of view.

A recent article about the Alaska Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and oil exploration that I read became an exposition on why there should or should not be development based on environmental concerns for the tundra. This particular article would have benefited from an environmental geology perspective. As it was written, the casual reader would have been left with the impression that the oil and gas companies have no interest in or practices in place to protect the environment beyond complying with minimal governmentally imposed regulations.

The planning and incorporation of environmental concerns during exploration, extraction or maintenance of oil, gas and water are rarely discussed or highlighted. If these articles would provide the steps that the industry takes to preserve the environment, they then might help to educate the average reader about the complex problem of balancing exploration for and development of our petroleum resources while protecting the environment.

An understanding of various aspects involved in exploration might help to resolve the extensive debate over wilderness preservation and proposed petroleum exploration in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

The general public is always in need of reassurance and sound information about the geologist's concern for the environment during every project.


My point in introducing this topic is to remind AAPG members about one of the reasons why DEG was formed. We evolved from an AAPG ad hoc Committee on Environmental Geology. The membership, currently at slightly less than 2,000 members, comprises at its very core a cadre of seasoned geologists experienced with a kaleidoscope of environmental projects.

Our mission is to offer AAPG members an opportunity to increase their knowledge about the environment. We support approaching basic environmental issues from a geological perspective so that professionals dealing with the environment use and apply principles from geology, chemistry, geophysics and hydrogeology to help solve environmental problems.

Our publication, Environmental Geosciences, offers peer-reviewed articles on diverse issues affecting the environment, often with respect to petroleum exploration and extraction but also encompassing broader themes.

You do not have to be a DEG member to tap into our human resources or our knowledge base. Look at our Web site at deg.aapg.org, or call up our committee chairs and officers. Just ask and you will find a network of resources to provide you with viable and potentially valuable information.

If you know of someone in your company or clientele who needs environmental information, let him or her know about DEG.


AAPG should be the main source of information globally about the issues relating to the oil industry's role in protecting the environment. The DEG is here to do our part in making this happen.

You may also be interested in ...