Showing posts with label offshore drilling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label offshore drilling. Show all posts

Monday, August 11, 2014

Obama to okay oil drilling off the Atlantic coast?

ObamatookayoildrillingofftheAtlantic

Obama to okay oil drilling off the Atlantic coast?

posted at 2:01 pm on August 11, 2014 by Ed Morrissey

Will an administration that has dragged its feet for years on an oil pipeline suddenly transform the Atlantic coast into an active oil field? The Hill’s Laura Barron-Lopez reports that the Interior Department appears ready to approve drilling off the East Coast, a major change in policy for the Obama administration, and one likely to create a civil war within the Democratic Party.

Anyone want to take odds that this White House will do that? Anyone? Anyone? Bueller? Bueller?

President Obama is moving toward opening the Atlantic Ocean to drilling, a major shift in U.S. policy that cuts against the administration’s efforts to reduce global warming. …

All signs point toward the administration giving the thumbs up to Atlantic drilling.

In June, the administration gave its strongest signal to date that the Atlantic will likely be included in Interior’s five-year lease plan for 2017-2022, by opening it up to new oil and gas exploration for the first time in 30 years.

That decision followed the Interior Department’s release of an environmental review in February, setting guidelines for seismic surveys to test Atlantic waters for potential energy sources.

“It does not look good because if he weren’t going to allow drilling then he wouldn’t have opened the Atlantic to seismic tests,” said Sara Young, a marine scientist for Oceana, a conservation group.

The politics of this push are complicated, to say the least. Interior isn’t touching the West Coast, where Democratic governors all oppose any drilling for oil despite the known reserves that exist there. The governors on the Atlantic seaboard have a mixed attitude toward it. Republican Chris Christie opposes oil exploration in offshore New Jersey, but Democrat Terry McAuliffe wants to encourage the oil industry in his state, as do both governors from the Carolinas, according to Barron-Lopez. The expansion would make sense for those governors, and would create a lot of jobs — good paying union jobs, actually, which means that the labor movement will want action on this just as it wants the Keystone XL pipeline.

However, that would pit two critical constituencies against one another, and just in time for the midterm elections. Environmental groups are working overtime to stop progress on exploration, and so are their allies in the Democratic Party:

Legislators from New Jersey and other Atlantic Coast states are pushing the Obama administration to reverse a decision to allow geologic exploration of the ocean floor from Florida to Delaware as a step toward seeking underwater oil and gas reserves.

In a letter to the head of the agency that oversees oil and gas drilling, 37 House members – all Democrats – cite the risk of an oil spill and the damage it could cause to those who make their living in commercial fishing or tourism along the coast as a reason not to drill for oil or gas.

“We are simply unwilling to accept the tremendous risks of an oil spill in the Atlantic, which would vastly outweigh any potential gains from drilling,” states the letter to Walter Cruickshank, acting director of the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management.

“I strongly disagree with President Obama’s push to increase drilling off the East Coast,” said Rep. Rush Holt of Mercer County, one of those who signed the letter. Holt, the ranking Democrat on the House subcommittee that oversees domestic drilling, said an accident could endanger 320,000 jobs and $18.5 billion associated with New Jersey’s fishing and tourism industries.

Let’s put aside the relative value of the policy itself. Most people who hold opinions on it won’t be swayed with a couple of bon mots in a political analysis anyway, although it’s worth pointing out that support for offshore drilling has always been more bipartisan than its opposition. Instead, consider the idea that this administration will approve actual drilling when it has stalled the construction of a pipeline for the last several years. The Keystone XL pipeline is not only less environmentally risky than drilling, it would replace (at least in part) the much more dangerous transportation method currently in use for crude, by rail. Derailments create a big environmental impact and are much more lethal than an occasional leak from a pipeline, while a pipeline isn’t even in the same category of risk as an offshore rig.

Now, with that context, why would anyone expect the Obama administration to approve offshore drilling before the Keystone pipeline? Obama can mollify the same groups with an approval of Keystone without generating the outrage that offshore drilling would create among his base. That would also help repair some of the damage Obama has done to the US-Canada relationship as well as deny China easy access to Canadian crude. Keystone is a much easier political lift than Atlantic oil exploration, with much less chance for political blowback.

Even holding the question open, and perhaps floating a trial balloon about approval, doesn’t make a lot of sense politically. Maybe the White House is worried about Kay Hagan’s chances in North Carolina and the challenge to Mark Warner by Ed Gillespie in Virginia in attempting to show that it’s giving serious thought to offshore drilling off the coasts of those states, but it’s more likely to discourage their environmental activists if they proceed or their labor activists if they don’t. Either way, it’s a popcorn-ordering opportunity for Republicans as Obama puts more stress on a Democratic fault line just a couple of months ahead of the midterms. Just don’t expect anything else but more can-kicking from Interior, especially before the midterms, and probably for the rest of Obama’s term.


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Source from: hotair

Monday, February 24, 2014

McAuliffe joins coastal governors pushing Interior Department for offshore drilling exploration

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McAuliffe joins coastal governors pushing Interior Department for offshore drilling exploration

posted at 7:31 pm on February 24, 2014 by Erika Johnsen

The Obama administration has been decidedly stingy in their permitting allowances for offshore oil-and-gas drilling; in 2012, they released a five-year drilling plan that only allowed for drilling in the Gulf and some limited drilling in the Arctic pending environmental review, and they’ve been pretty hostile to the overtures from lawmakers and companies proposing that they allow for some deviation from that plan. Mid-Atlantic and Southern governors particularly have been trying to convince the Interior Department that it’s in the country’s best interest to reevaluate, especially in the face of the many and obvious economic benefits coming from the shale boom in states like Texas and North Dakota, and it sounds like Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe is ready to tie his energy-wagon to that group, via WaPo:

Governors from Mid-Atlantic and Gulf Coast states, including Virginia’s Terry McAuliffe (D), urged Interior Secretary Sally Jewell on Monday to finalize rules that will eventually allow dramatically expanded offshore oil and gas drilling, bringing new industry — and millions in new tax revenue — to some states that have been shut out of the U.S. energy boom.

Jewell and senior Interior Department officials met with McAuliffe, North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory (R), Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley (R) and Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant (R) on Monday. The Interior Department is expected to release a Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement within days that would allow oil and gas companies to begin surveying the outer continental shelf for natural resources.

Once the PEIS is issued, seismic surveys for oil and gas deposits could begin within a matter of months. …

McCrory heads the Outer Continental Shelf Governors Coalition, a group of mostly Republican governors pushing to expand offshore oil drilling. McAuliffe told The Washington Post he would join the coalition — the first Democrat to do so — as he sped out of the meeting  Monday.

It would be tough for McAuliffe not to join in, and he said he would support offshore drilling back when he was still campaigning — Virginia and other eastern seaboard states have way too much to gain to pass up the opportunity to lobby the Obama administration to get their collective rear in gear — and thankfully, it finally sounds like the Obama administration is feeling a little more amenable to the prospect of at least sizing up what’s out there.


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Source from: hotair

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Southern lawmakers, energy companies starting the offshore-drilling slow clap

Southernlawmakers,energycompaniesstartingtheoffshore-drillingslow

Southern lawmakers, energy companies starting the offshore-drilling slow clap

posted at 2:31 pm on December 24, 2013 by Erika Johnsen

Over the past few years, various groups of bipartisan lawmakers have tried and tried again to somehow break through the Obama administration’s bureaucratic barrier of determinedly stingy offshore-drilling allowances and convince them to permit energy companies to start up exploration and drilling again on both the east and west coasts, but to no avail. In the five-year drilling plan the administration rubber-stamped in 2012, they allowed only for limited offshore lease sales for new areas in the Gulf Coast region and perhaps off of the Alaskan coast in later years, pending environmental review.

The paltriness of their plan was not a welcome development for energy advocates, and with several states currently raking in the chips with the shale revolution in the heartland, mid-Atlantic and southern lawmakers and industries might are starting to press the issue again in earnest. So reports the AP:

Southern politicians and energy industry groups are increasing the push to allow drilling off the U.S. Atlantic Coast for oil and gas deposits that could be puny or mean big cash to a part of the country where it’s now largely absent.

Although drilling, refineries and the jobs that could accompany them are at least a decade away, the Obama Administration is weighing a decision expected to be announced in the next three months on whether to take an important early step: to allow seismic testing of the sea bottom. The tests could firm up estimates of how much hydrocarbon deposits may be out there.

Also next year, the Obama administration is expected to ramp up work preparing the country’s 2017-2022 ocean energy exploration plan. Companies that specialize in deep-water drilling want the roadmap to include selling leases that allow companies to explore, saying thousands of new jobs, economic growth and reduced foreign imports would follow.

The administration signaled last summer they that it would certainly not be amenable to any such adjustments to their deliberately lame plan, no matter how fantastically wealth- and job-creating those adjustments might be. The Obama administration more or less lucked out with the shale oil-and-gas boom being driven by the private sector on private and state lands and its subsequent helpfulness to our otherwise battered economy, and yet they seem perfectly content to continue to spend our money and resources on financially unproven but politically profitable pet projects while simultaneously stalling on allowing more industries that can create economic and energy prosperity to get in on the action. For example:

North Carolina juts east almost to the Gulfstream and near likely drilling grounds, has a long coastline and two ports, so it should expect the greatest job creation, followed by South Carolina, the groups said. The groups see the offshore industry creating about 20,000 jobs in North Carolina in 15 years if exploration is allowed starting in 2017, with thousands more jobs resulting as those paychecks circulate through the economy.


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Source from: hotair