Bush calls on Congress to lift oil drilling ban White House also wants plan to develop oil shale, speed refinery permitting
Monday, July 14, 2008
(msnbc.com)WASHINGTON - Putting pressure on congressional
Democrats to back more exploration for oil,
President Bush on Monday promised to lift an
executive ban on offshore drilling that his
stood since his father was president.
But the move, by itself, will do nothing unless
Congress acts as well to lift its own drilling
ban. There are two prohibitions on offshore
drilling, one imposed by Congress and another
by executive order signed by the first
President Bush in 1990.
“When Congress lifts the legislative ban, I
will lift the executive prohibition,” Bush said
in a statement in the Rose Garden.
The president, trying to ease market tensions
and boost supply, called last month for
Congress to lift its prohibition before he did
so himself.
"The only thing standing between the American
people and these vast oil resources is action
from the U.S. Congress," Bush said. "Now the
ball is squarely in Congress' court."
Bush criticized Congress for failing to lift
its own ban on offshore drilling.
"For years, my administration has been calling
on Congress to expand domestic oil production,"
Bush said. "Unfortunately, Democrats on Capitol
Hill have rejected virtually every proposal.
And now Americans are paying at the pump."
The issue of offshore drilling has been debated
by Congress in each of several rounds of
deliberation over national energy policy, which
culminated in passage of the Energy Policy Act
of 2005.
Congressional Democrats, joined by some GOP
lawmakers from coastal states, have opposed
lifting the prohibition that has barred energy
companies from waters along both the East and
West coasts and in the eastern Gulf of Mexico.
A succession of presidents, from Bush's father
-- George H.W. Bush -- to Bill Clinton, have
sided against drilling in these waters, as has
Congress each year for 27 years. Their goal has
to been to protect beaches and coastal states'
tourism economies.
But since oil prices have surged above $140 a
barrel in recent months, the White House
believes that the political mood may have
shifted since Congress last took up the idea of
lifting the drilling ban. A poll last month by
the Pew Research Center found that 47 percent
of respondents said energy exploration and
drilling were a top priority – up from 35
percent in February. Other polls have also
found increased popular support for expanded
drilling since oil prices have surged.
The bid for expanded drilling has also gained
momentum last month when the governor of
Florida, Charlie Crist, said that states should
be allowed to decide for themselves whether to
permit drilling in their coastal waters.
Offshore drilling had been opposed by his
predecessor, former Gov. Jeb Bush, the
president’s brother.
Given its proximity to existing oilfields in
the Gulf of Mexico, and the pipelines and other
infrastructure already in place in the region,
Florida offers some of the more promising lease
prospects for new oil development.
Bush's proposal echoes a call by Republican
presidential candidate, Sen. John McCain, to
open the Outer Continental Shelf for
exploration. Democrat Barack Obama has opposed
the idea and instead argued for helping
consumers with a second economic stimulus
package including energy rebates, as well as
stepped up efforts to develop alternative fuels
and more fuel-efficient automobiles.
"If offshore drilling would provide short-term
relief at the pump or a long-term strategy for
energy independence, it would be worthy of our
consideration, regardless of the risks," Obama
spokesman Bill Burton said in a statement. "But
most experts, even within the Bush
administration, concede it would do neither. It
would merely prolong the failed energy policies
we have seen from Washington for thirty
years."
Congressional Democrats Monday renewed
opposition to lifting the drilling moratorium,
accusing the president of hoping the U.S. can
drill its way out a problem.
"Once again, the oilman in the White House is
echoing the demands of Big Oil," said House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi. "The Bush plan is a hoax.
It will neither reduce gas prices nor increase
energy independence. It just gives millions
more acres to the same companies that are
sitting on nearly 68 million acres of public
lands and coastal areas."
"This proposal is something you'd expect from
an oil company CEO, not the president of the
United States," said Sen. Barbara Boxer,
D-Calif., chairwoman of the Senate Environment
Committee. "The president is taking
special-interest government to a new level and
threatening our thriving coastal economy."
It’s not clear how much oil and natural gas lie
offshore in areas currently covered by the
drilling ban. In any case, it would be years
before new production would be brought online,
offering no short-term relief to high gasoline
prices. Bust also called for a streamlined
permitting process to help speed construction
of new refining capacity in the U.S.
Bush said offshore drilling could yield up to
18 billion barrels of oil over time, although
it would take years for production to start.
Bush also says offshore drilling would take
pressure off prices over time. In addition, the
president has proposed opening the Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge for drilling, lifting
restrictions on oil shale leasing in the Green
River Basin of Colorado, Utah and Wyoming and
easing the regulatory process to expand oil
refining capacity.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.,
and other lawmakers have backed legislation to
allow offshore exploration. Their measure would
pursue other ways to expand energy sources,
too.
"Now the only thing standing between consumers
at the pump and the increased American energy
they are demanding is the Democrat leadership
in Congress," McConnell said. "We should act
and act now."
Sen. John McCain, the presumptive Republican
presidential nominee, called Bush's move "a
very important signal" and said his Democratic
rival, Sen. Barack Obama, should drop his
opposition to offshore drilling.
Environmental groups repeated their opposition
to expanding offshore drilling.
"President Bush has once again ignored the wise
precedent set by his father and taken reckless
action that has neither hope of reducing gas
prices nor concern for long-term consequences,"
said Gene Karpinski, president of The League of
Conservation Voters.
Asked if Bush's action alone will lead to more
oil drilling, White House press secretary Dana
Perino said, "In terms of allowing more
exploration to go forward? No, it does not."