EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
- Picture of the Week
- 'The Gilded Age' Statistics Corporations Don't Want Workers, or Anyone, to See
- As Death Toll Rises Beyond 500, Garment Factory Disaster 'Worst in World History'
- Report: Toxic Chemicals Found in Thousands of Children's Products
- Bradley Manning is Off Limits at SF Gay Pride Parade, but Corporate Sleaze is Embraced
- Report: Toxic Chemicals Found in Thousands of Children's Products
- Move Over, Koch Brothers: A Bigger, Darker Rightwing Funder Is Out to Destroy Public Education
- The Life and Death of Words, People, and Even Nature
- You and Your Family Are Guinea Pigs for the Chemical Corporations
- Spreading Community and Love of Books 'Little Free Libraries' Sprout Worldwide
Popular content
Today's Top News
Companies Begin Quest for Oil, Gas Off Florida
PENSACOLA, Fla. - Oil companies once viewed drilling in the deep waters off Florida as cost prohibitive. Politicians feared even the slightest sign of support would be career suicide.
No more. Record crude oil prices are fueling support for oil and natural gas exploration off the nation's shores. In Florida, movement was underway even before President Bush called on Congress last month to lift a federal moratorium that's barred new offshore drilling since 1981.
The early activity here stems from a 2006 Congressional compromise that allows drilling on 8.3 million acres more than 125 miles off the Panhandle - an area that had been covered by the moratorium, which was enacted out of environmental concerns. In exchange, the state got a no-drilling buffer along the rest of its beaches.
Florida may turn out to be a prelude for other coastal states. If oil or natural gas deposits are found in the newly opened region, experts say it could further the push to explore other once-protected areas everywhere. It also could be a rallying point for critics, who say the new exploration isn't a license to expand exploration.
With gas topping $4 a gallon, recent polls show Americans, Floridians included, more supportive of drilling in protected areas. Some politicians - including Gov. Charlie Crist - have switched sides.
"We think the public is way out ahead of the politicians on these issues. People are more open to (offshore drilling) now," said Tom Moskitis, spokesman for the American Gas Association, a trade group.
At the same time, oil companies, driven by the record energy price, are more willing to risk $100 million or more to begin exploring new regions. The Interior Department estimates there could be 18 billion barrels of oil and 77 trillion cubic feet of natural gas beneath the 574 million acres of federal coastal waters that are now off-limits.
Drilling activity off the Florida Panhandle has started and sputtered for decades. Some companies had leases to drill off the Panhandle before the 1981 moratorium. They were grandfathered in when the moratorium passed because they were already actively exploring in their lease areas. They continued their activity off and on into the early 1990s.
In March, four companies - Australia-based BHP Billiton Petroleum Deepwater Inc., Houston-based Anadarko E&P Co., Shell Offshore Inc. and Italian oil and natural gas company Eni SpA - purchased leases on 36 Gulf of Mexico tracts under the 2006 compromise.
Jeb Bachmann, an analyst with New Orleans energy consultant Howard Wiel, said the four understand the shifting political and financial realities.
"It gives you an indication that some of these companies believe there is some light at the end of the tunnel," Bachmann said. "There is higher pricing and a belief that higher prices are going to ultimately drive some changes."
Anadarko bought seven of the recently opened tracts south of Pensacola because of their proximity to its Independence Hub, a major natural gas field off Alabama that supplies 1.5 to 2 percent of the natural gas consumed in the U.S. every day, said Stuart Strive, the company's vice president of exploration for the eastern Gulf. The newly leased tracts are between 50 and 75 miles east of the Independence Hub.
But finding and producing natural gas in the new site will be expensive. Three-dimensional mapping of the ocean floor, which must happen before any drilling, could take up to two years, Strive said. If a promising site is found, engineers must drill up to three miles below the ocean surface to extract the oil or natural gas.
And it will take years before the company begins producing anything at the site - and there is no guarantee of success. A company can have as much as $4 billion invested and a wait of up to five years before seeing any return on the investment, Strive said.
"We typically will have $100 to $200 million invested in a project before we know if it is an economic venture or not," he said. "Then, if you know you have made an economic discovery, you spend a billion dollars or more on a facility."
The 1981 moratorium - enacted out of environmental concerns in response to a massive oil spill off the Santa Barbara coast a decade earlier - has prevented the Interior Department from spending money on offshore oil or gas leases in virtually all coastal waters outside the western Gulf of Mexico and in some areas off Alaska.
But politicians who once supported the ban are changing their minds.
U.S. Sen. John McCain supports lifting the ban and allowing states to decide whether to approve drilling of their shores. Crist, Florida's Republican governor and a possible vice presidential candidate, reversed his long-standing opposition to lifting the ban last month.
The ban won't be lifted without a fight.
U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, who has led opposition to offshore drilling among the state's Congressional delegation, criticized the governor for reversing his position, accusing Crist and McCain of putting oil company profits before protecting the state's $65 billion annual tourism industry.
"Oil companies and their allies are using the shockingly high price of oil and gasoline, which largely is the result not of a supply problem but speculative fever, to scare the public into thinking coastal drilling offers a real solution to our dependency on oil," he said in an e-mailed statement.
The 2006 Senate compromise opening up the Panhandle tracts made sense and should be honored by the oil companies, said Dan McLaughlin, Nelson's spokesman. Instead, the companies and Congressional Republicans are pushing to open more acreage, he said. Nelson helped broker the compromise.
"It was a compromise allowing them to go where they wanted to go, where there were some proven reserves, while also keeping them at a distance to save the economy, the environment and protect our military training areas," McLaughlin said.
"That compromise closed the door and kept the moratorium in place. Now you see the governor doing an about face, but we are confident we are going to fight it back again."
© 2008 Associated Press
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...

11 Comments so far
Show AllYES! YES, lets fight chevron, exxon and and any other US oil company tooth and nail to stop them from drilling off the coast of Florida. After all it will take YEARS to see any oil and it's just not worth it. BUT lets sit by passively and do absolutely nothing as China the country with the worse environmental pollution record in the world drills 50 miles off the coast of Florida. Or do any of you keyboard heroes plan on going to China for the protest marches?
That's right, there will be NO protest marches in China, so you all can sit safely behind your keyboards and type your moronic missives and entertain yourselves while one of the worlds greatest environmental catastrophes hits the shores of Florida. Maybe one of you can figure out how to blame this mess on bushy-boy.
bushy-boy is going to the olympics in China, to protest drilling you think?
Does that mean I can drive the length of A-1-A on ten bucks worth of gas again? Maybe get beer at a roadside joint for ten cents a mug? Oh, boy, the good old days.
Cheney "misspoke". His "urban myth" debunked.
http://www.crooksandliars.com/2008/07/03/giuliani-peddles-debunked-china-drilling-off-florida-myth/
Seriously, this is an example of the political giveaways that this administration has planned all along for the last few months of its administration.
Wolf123 is right. It would take years to see any of the oil, if there even is a substantial amount. In the meantime our pristine coatal waters are at risk to the sloppy oil drilling process and its messes in Florida and Alaska.
Opening up the panhandle tracts did make sense, but the greedy oil conglomerates will always want more - isn't that what corporations do?
We need to take the blinders off and continue to invest seriously in alternative energy sources and free ourselves from this dependency on a dirty commodity that has had us by the knickers for all too long!
The oil companies scare tactics will no longer work as we, the public, become better informed. There are a number of alternative energy resources available even now. We don't have to wait, just become informed and speak up!
Yes, let's see if we can mess up Florida's coast the way that we have messed up Alaska.
But why do they feel this is even necessary since we already have enough oil in Alaska to supply ALL of our energy needs for at least 200 years! Without importing one drop.
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=3340274697167011147&hl=en
Considering America's banana republic, Florida, ushered in the reign of Dubya, Cheney, & Co., they in a perverted way, are receiving their just reward with the sprouting of off-shore oil platforms. Of course, a spill on par with the 1969 disaster off of Santa Barbara, California (which kick-started the anti off-shore oil platform movement in the USA) is in the offing. While I despair of the innocent wildlife that would be negatively impacted by this event, poetic justice would have the oil slick drift on to the properties of the ultra-rich scum who financed the Bush crime family.
They are trying to get the oil out before the ocean gets deeper from melting ice caused by burning fossil fuels.
Hey geo:
I don't know who this fool Lindsay Williams is, but Prudhoe Bay is in sharp decline.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/06/AR2005060601742.html
The other finds (ANWR, Chukchi Sea) are drops in the bucket.
Deep water drilling is one of the last refuges of the oil companies.
It is technologically demanding, dangerous, VERY expensive, and has only a 'probable' expectation of actually hitting a previously untapped pocket of petroleum.
In other words, the oil companies are getting hysterically desperate.
in other news, Saudi Arabia just announced that there would be no respite from high oil prices.
Peak Oil is here folks. Get used to doing without.
The USA has had a government of Big Oil, by big Oil, and for Big Oil during the past eight years. Power to the people! Change is on the way!