H. JOSEF HEBERT | February 10, 2009 07:32 PM EST |
WASHINGTON — Interior Secretary Ken Salazar has rejected a Bush
administration plan to open vast waters off the Pacific and Atlantic
coasts to oil and gas drilling, promising "a new way forward" in
offshore energy development including new wind projects.
Salazar at a news conference Tuesday criticized "the midnight
timetable" for new oil and gas development on the country's Outer
Continental Shelf proposed by the Bush administration four days before President Barack Obama took office Jan. 20.
The
secretary said the previous administration's plan did not take into
consideration the views of states and coastal communities, nor a need
to better understand what energy resources are at stake, especially off
the Atlantic coast where oil and gas estimates are more than three
decades old.
"We need to ... restore an orderly process to our offshore energy
planning program," declared Salazar, criticizing "foot dragging" by the
Bush administration in pushing for renewable energy development in
coastal waters.
Salazar did not rule out expanded offshore drilling, but criticized
"the enormous sweep" of the Bush proposal, which envisioned energy
development from New England to Alaska including lease sales in areas
off California and in the North Atlantic that have been off-limits for
a quarter century.
Congress last fall ended the broad drilling ban, dating back to
1981, that has kept energy companies from even exploring or conducting
seismic studies across 85 percent of the offshore federal waters.
But it remains up to the Interior Department to issue specific plans
for drilling leases. And Salazar indicated Tuesday he is in no rush to
open vast expanses of long-protected waters, promising "to create our
own timetable."
Salazar directed Interior Department scientists to produce new
reports on how much oil and gas might be found off the Atlantic and
Pacific coasts and extended the public comment period on a new
five-year leasing plan to September. He said he will hold regional
meetings to get comments from the public before continuing with an
offshore energy plan.
Offshore drilling became a contentious issue during the presidential campaign as Republican John McCain
made it a pivotal part of his energy agenda. Obama has said he's not
opposed to drilling in some waters that have been off limits, but
insisted it should be part of a broader energy plan.
Salazar said any offshore energy plan must include a push for more renewable energy, principally wind power.
"The Bush administration was so intent on opening new areas for oil
and gas offshore that it torpedoed offshore renewable energy efforts,"
maintained Salazar. "It was not their priority."
He promised to move aggressively to complete a new regulation on
offshore renewable energy programs including wind, solar and wave
energy projects.
But Salazar did not rule out an expansion off offshore oil and gas
drilling. Some issues such as revenue sharing from offshore energy
development must still be worked out in Congress, which also is likely
to have a say on what specific waters might again be put off limits.
Salazar, however, has not abandoned a proposal for oil and gas
leasing off Virginia, which is included in the current drilling plan
scheduled to expire in 2012, nor has he indicated a desire to cancel
leasing plans off Alaska including in the Chukchi Sea and Bristol Bay
where drilling leases are facing court challenges.
Nevertheless, Salazar's announcement was hailed by environmentalists
and some drilling opponents in Congress as a new direction in U.S.
offshore energy development.
It's "a new way of doing business" at the Interior Department, said
Wesley Warren at the Natural Resources Defense Council, citing
Salazar's emphasis on renewable energy development.
Rep. Edward Markey, D-Mass., said Salazar was "bringing ... regulatory sanity back into our energy policy.
But Jack Gerard, president of the American Petroleum Institute, which represents the large oil companies, said Salazar's announcement "means that development of our offshore resources could be stalled indefinitely."
At an energy conference in Houston on Tuesday, BP chief executive
Tony Hayward and Royal Dutch Shell CEO Jeroen van der Veer urged the
government to open more offshore regions to exploration and production.
"We have the know-how and technology to tap these resources safely and
with minimal impact to the environment," Hayward said.
The Interior Department estimates _ using 30-year-old studies _ that
offshore waters recently lifted from drilling bans contain at least 18
billion barrels of oil, about half of it off California.
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AP reporter John Porretto in Houston contributed to this story.