Morrow County Sentinel.com

Senate blocks GOP bid to speed offshore drilling

MATTHEW DALY

Asso­ci­ated Press

WASHINGTON — A GOP bid to expand and has­ten off­shore oil drilling in the face of $4-a-gallon gaso­line prices suf­fered an over­whelm­ing defeat in the Sen­ate on Wednes­day, four days after Pres­i­dent Barack Obama directed his admin­is­tra­tion to ramp up U.S. oil production.

Five Repub­li­cans joined 52 Democ­rats or inde­pen­dents in reject­ing a bill writ­ten by Sen­ate GOP leader Mitch McConnell to speed up decision-making on drilling per­mits and force pre­vi­ously sched­uled lease sales in the Gulf of Mex­ico and off the Alaska and Vir­ginia coasts. The Obama admin­is­tra­tion sus­pended sev­eral lease sales after last year’s mas­sive BP oil spill.

The bill was sup­ported by 42 Repub­li­cans, well short of the 60 needed to advance it. Sev­eral GOP sen­a­tors com­plained that the bill gave too much ground to the Obama admin­is­tra­tion, includ­ing a pro­vi­sion that would require inde­pen­dent reviews of oil com­pa­nies’ plans for respond­ing to major oil spills before they could get drilling permits.

Sen. David Vit­ter, R-La., said McConnell’s bill did not go far enough to expand drilling in the east­ern Gulf of Mex­ico near Florida and off the Pacific coast. He said it also “increases the bur­dens and require­ments and hur­dles of even the new Obama reg­u­la­tions that have been put in place since the BP disaster.”

Vit­ter and fel­low Louisiana Sen. Mary Lan­drieu, a Demo­c­rat, also com­plained that the bill wouldn’t direct roy­al­ties from off­shore drilling to states where drilling occurs.

After the House passed sim­i­lar leg­is­la­tion last week, Obama on Sat­ur­day directed the Inte­rior Depart­ment to extend exist­ing leases in the Gulf and off Alaska’s coast and hold more fre­quent lease sales in a fed­eral petro­leum reserve in Alaska.

Both par­ties say that despite the BP spill, they want to allow respon­si­ble oil and gas drilling off the U.S. main­land and in Alaska. But they crit­i­cize each other’s approach.

Democ­rats assailed the GOP bill as unnec­es­sary and a give­away to big oil com­pa­nies, while Repub­li­cans said the mea­sure would spur pro­duc­tion that would reduce U.S. depen­dence on for­eign oil and cre­ate thou­sands of jobs.

Today’s vote shows that ‘Drill Baby Drill’ may be a catchy slo­gan, but it is not an energy pol­icy,” said Sen. Robert Menen­dez, D-N.J., who is opposed to drilling off the Atlantic coast.

McConnell called the bill a “mod­est approach” that takes con­cerns of both par­ties into account to achieve a prac­ti­cal result. “By unlock­ing our own domes­tic resources, and speed­ing up the per­mit­ting process, our plan would actu­ally do some­thing to increase sup­ply, putting down­ward pres­sure on price” at the pump, the Ken­tucky Repub­li­can said.

White House spokesman Clark Stevens said the Sen­ate bill was unnec­es­sary, not­ing that the Obama admin­is­tra­tion has already taken many of the steps advo­cated in the bill, includ­ing a one-year exten­sion of leases in the Gulf of Mex­ico and cer­tain areas of Alaska.

What remained in the GOP bill “would have under­cut the impor­tant safety stan­dards put in place fol­low­ing the largest oil spill in U.S. his­tory,” Stevens said. “These are the very stan­dards that are allow­ing the admin­is­tra­tion to expand drilling safely, and indus­try has clearly demon­strated that they can meet them.”

The Inte­rior Depart­ment has issued 53 shallow-water per­mits since last June, when new safety stan­dards were imposed, Stevens said. Per­mits for 14 deep­wa­ter wells have been approved since late Feb­ru­ary, when indus­try demon­strated it could meet new stan­dards on con­tain­ing oil spills.

Inte­rior Sec­re­tary Ken Salazar said this week that Con­gress should change the law to allow leases onshore to be shorter than 10 years to pres­sure com­pa­nies to drill sooner. Cur­rently, 41 mil­lion acres of pub­lic lands are leased, but only 12 mil­lion acres are pro­duc­ing oil and nat­ural gas, Salazar said.

Off­shore, the Inte­rior Depart­ment already has the abil­ity to extend or shorten the length of a lease.

AP News Posted by on May 18 2011. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

Comments are closed

Search Archive

Search by Date
Search by Category
Search with Google

Open M-F 8am to 5pm | 419-946-3010 | 46 S. Main Street, Mt. Gilead, Ohio 43338

We use third-party advertising companies to serve ads when you visit our Web site. For more information click here.
Click on the following for legal information: Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions
Copyright © 2010 - 2011, Ohio Community Media