|
On its last business day in office, the Bush
administration proposed a new five year plan for offshore oil and gas
leasing to follow the current plan, in effect through 2012. Today,
Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar put the brakes on this
"midnight action" in favor of building a framework for
offshore renewable energy development to incorporate "the great
potential for wind, wave, and ocean current energy into our offshore
energy strategy."
At
a news conference in Washington, Salazar said he will move to slow
the "headlong rush" to "drill, drill, drill."
"The
Bush administration was so intent on opening new areas for oil and
gas offshore that it torpedoed offshore renewable energy efforts,"
said the secretary.
One
the world's largest offshore wind farms, HornsRev, has 80 turbines
spinning in the North Sea 10 miles west of Denmark. It produces
enough energy for 150,000 households. Over 20% of Denmark’s
electricity today is provided by offshore wind facilities, and on
windy days Denmark sells excess power to its neighbor Germany.
Other
countries, mainly in Europe and China, have developed offshore wind
farms and wave energy turbine arrays, but the United States has yet
to permit any offshore renewable facilities.
Salazar
said Bush's midnight five year plan, which covers the years from 2013
through 2017, accelerated by two years the regular process for
creating a new plan for the outer continental shelf. It "was a
process rigged to force hurried decisions based on bad information,"
he said. "It was a process tilted toward the usual energy
players while renewable energy companies and the interests of
American consumers and taxpayers were overlooked."
"It
opened up the possibility for oil and gas leasing along the entire
eastern seaboard, portions of offshore California, and the far
eastern Gulf of Mexico - with almost no consideration of state,
industry, and community input and, in the case of the Atlantic coast,
with very limited information about the nature of offshore
resources," the secretary said.
Despite
the sweeping proposal to open up as many as 300 million acres to new
offshore oil and gas leasing, the Bush administration's notice called
for the completion of scoping meetings and public hearings on the new
plan for the outer continental shelf by March 23 - less than 45 days
from today.
Instead,
Salazar said he is taking four steps to change the way the Interior
Department does business in order to fulfill President Barack Obama's
commitment to "a government that is open and inclusive and that
makes decisions based on sound science and the public interest."
First,
he will add 180 days to the time period for public comment on the
2013-2017 five year plan, extending the comment period to September
23.
Second,
he is directing the Minerals Management Service and the U.S.
Geological Survey to assemble a report, within 45 days from today, of
all the information we have about our offshore resources to determine
where gaps in information exist.
Third,
in the 30 days that follow the report, the secretary will hold four
regional meetings around the country to gather the best ideas for how
we move forward. One meeting will be held in Alaska, one on the
Pacific Coast, one on the Atlantic Coast, and one on the Gulf Coast.
So
that potential developers know the rules of the road, Salazar said
that in the next few months he will issue a final rulemaking for
offshore renewables as required by the Energy Policy Act of 2005,
which the secretary says he helped to craft while he was in the
Senate representing Colorado.
"That
bill, which President [George W.] Bush signed on August 8, 2005,
required the Department of the Interior to move quickly and issue,
within nine months, rules and regulations to guide the development of
offshore energy resources like wind, wave, and tidal power," he
said.
"Yet
it took three years for the Bush administration to prepare a proposed
rule for offshore renewable energy development, Salazar said. "They
left office without putting any final regulations in place because it
was not their priority, notwithstanding the requirement of the law.
For them, it was oil and gas or nothing."
"This
rulemaking will allow us to move from the oil and gas only approach
of the previous administration to the comprehensive energy plan that
we need," he said.
Meanwhile,
the department will stay with the current five year plan and there
will be oil and gas lease sales offshore, the secretary said.
The
American Petroleum Institute was quick to criticize Salazar's moves.
API
President Jack Gerard said, "The accelerated Outer Continental
Shelf five-year plan process, which the secretary placed on hold
today, was designed to address the critical energy concerns facing
Americans. The draft plan already received a record 120,000 comments
from states, environmental groups, industry, labor groups and members
of the public - with 87,000 of those comments supporting expanded and
expeditious development."
"Secretary
Salazar's announcement means that development of our offshore
resources could be stalled indefinitely," said Gerard. "That
would delay Americans' access to nearly 160,000 new, well-paying
jobs, $1.7 trillion in revenues to federal, state and local
governments and greater energy security."
But
environmentalists are pleased with the Obama administration's new
approach to offshore energy resources.
Wesley
Warren, director of programs for the Natural Resources Defense
Council, said, "By committing to a thorough review, Salazar is
demonstrating bold leadership that will offer America a new energy
future that provides clean domestic energy and cuts our dependence on
foreign oil."
"We
are encouraged by Salazar's commitment to a new approach to offshore
energy - harnessing the power of the wind, sun and oceans - which
will provide America with a full range of energy resources,"
Warren said.
"New
offshore drilling would risk oil spills from Florida to Maine, and
all along the Pacific Coast," he said. "This would not only
cause tremendous economic damage to fishing and tourism communities,
but it would destroy habitat for wildlife, and hurt all of us who
live, work and vacation in these places."
The
Department of the Interior oversees 1.7 billion offshore acres - an
area roughly three-fourths
of the size of the entire terrestrial United States.
|