McCain's Cruel Offshore Drilling Hoax
The GOP and McCain/Bush keep insisting that an end to the federal moratorium on (some) offshore drilling is a major solution to America's oil woes, even though Bush's own energy analysts make clear it is not (see EIA bombshell: Offshore drilling "would not have a significant impact on domestic crude oil and natural gas production or prices").
That Energy Information Administration analysis is, however, a couple of years old, so I called up the author today and asked if it was being updated. Turns out a new version will be published in a couple of days, but she explained to me that the "answers are not very different" -- no significant impact for the duration of the analysis (through 2030) -- for reasons I will discuss below. First, however, it wasn't until I talked to her and looked closely at the original analysis -- Impacts of Increased Access to Oil and Natural Gas Resources in the Lower 48 Federal Outer Continental Shelf -- that I understood what a cruel hoax this whole issue is.
The oil companies already have access to some 34 billion barrels of offshore oil they haven't even developed yet, but ending the federal moratorium on offshore drilling would probably add only another 8 billion barrels (assuming California still blocks drilling off its coast). Who thinks adding under 100,000 barrels a day in supply sometime after 2020 -- some one-thousandth of total supply -- would be more than the proverbial drop in the ocean? Remember the Saudis couldn't stop prices from rising now by announcing that they will add 500,000 barrels of oil a day by the end of this year!
Here is the key data from EIA:
Look closely. As of 2003, oil companies had available for leasing and development 40.92 billion barrels of offshore oil in the Gulf of Mexico. I asked the EIA analyst how much of that (estimated) available oil had been discovered in the last five years. She went to her computer and said "about 7 billion barrels have been found." That leaves about 34 billion still to find and develop.
The federal moratorium only blocks another 18 billion barrels of oil from being developed. But, as you can see, most of that is off of California, which has bipartisan opposition to drilling from Republican Governor Schwarzenegger -- who, unlike McCain, seems serious about his commitment to greenhouse gas reduction -- and the Democratic legislature, which remembers all too well the devastating 1969 oil spill off the coast of Santa Barbara. Indeed, Karen Bass, the newly appointed speaker of the State Assembly, said, "The idea of increasing offshore drilling off the coast of California I think is absurd, and I can't even imagine we would entertain that." Why would they, given the risk to their beautiful coasts and their commitment to reduce statewide greenhouse gas emissions 80% by midcentury?
So that only leaves about 8 billion barrels, which is about what the world uses in three months. Not bloody much. And that assumes every other state, including Florida, goes aggressively with offshore drilling, which is exceedingly unlikely.
You may ask why big oil hasn't gotten around to the 34 billion barrels already available to them offshore, given the staggering price for oil? The answer is pretty much the same reason why the EIA analyst told me that ending the federal moratorium is "certainly not going to make a difference in the next 10 years": It ain't easy being non-green off-shore.
As she explained, the constraints on offshore drilling have little to do with the price of oil, but a lot to do with timing. Once the leases are available, it is a 5 to 10 years before you get to exploratory drilling. There is a tremendous shortage of drilling rigs and manpower. Plus, offshore drilling is so expensive, you don't want to make any mistakes. So you spend do a lot of seismic analysis to minimize your chances of a dry well.
And it is probably another five or more years from drilling your exploratory well to getting significant production from the area -- and that assumes you didn't dig a dry well. If you did, then you are probably going to be even more cautious. And all that assumes you have developed a pipeline infrastructure for delivering the oil. But the Atlantic Coast lacks such an infrastructure, so who knows how long it would take to get its oil?
Here are the assumptions EIA makes:
Assumptions about exploration, development, and production of economical fields (drilling schedules, costs, platform selection, reserves-to-production ratios, etc.) in the OCS access case are based on data for fields in the western Gulf of Mexico that are of similar water depth and size. Exploration and development on the OCS in the Pacific, the Atlantic, and the eastern Gulf are assumed to proceed at rates similar to those seen in the early development of the Gulf region. In addition, it is assumed that local infrastructure issues and other potential non-Federal impediments will be resolved after Federal access restrictions have been lifted.
And here is what EIA projects would happen to offshore oil production if the federal moratorium were eliminated and none of the states block drilling and if exploration and development of resources in those areas begin in 2012:
Essentially no extra oil beyond the reference case until 2020. And then from 2020 to 2030, the extra oil production averages about 150,000 barrels of oil a day.
But of course that's not going to happen since, as noted, absent the federal moratorium, California is not going to allow drilling off its cost. So we are almost certainly talking under 100,000 barrels a day sometime after 2020. And yet Senator McCain said:
"Tomorrow I'll call for lifting the federal moratorium for states that choose to permit exploration," McCain said. "I think that this and perhaps providing additional incentives for states to permit exploration off their coasts would be very helpful in the short term in resolving our energy crisis."
It is cruel to mislead the public on a subject that matters so much to all Americans. If only we had a politician willing to engage in straight talk on this important issue.
Dr. Joseph Romm is a Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress, where he oversees the blog ClimateProgress.org. He is author of Hell and High Water: Global Warming-The Solution and The Politics (William Morrow, January 2007).
Copyright © 2008 HuffingtonPost.com, Inc.
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6 Comments so far
Show AllThis article uses real estimates (not facts) yet still manages to come to a stunningly stupid conclusion. It's almost like the reporter already had his mind made up and used the "facts" to fit his pre-ordained conclusion. My God, would a good liberal, progressive, objective reporter ever do such a thing ?
Finding the oil is a bit like searching for coins that have been thrown from an airplane. You are not quite sure how many coins have been thrown. They are scattered all over. There are many places where you find no coins. And being coins, none of them are worth more than 25 cents, with most of them pennies. Your job is to find $10.
In the middle of your search for $10 of coins, some boy genius like Joseph Romm will come along and tell you its all a cruel hoax, to be blamed on the presidential candidate he doesn't like, because there is no $10 coin there, only quarters and dimes, nickles and pennies.
The high price of oil is a $10 problem, and all the solutions only come in penny and nickle sizes. More oil and gas exploration will only solve part of the problem and only in penny and nickle sized bites. And it will take a long time to collect the exploration pennies and nickles. Energy conservation will only solve part of the problem and only in penny and nickle sized bites. And it will take a long time to collect the conservation pennies and nickles. Alternative fuels (wind, solar, biofuels and coal conversions) will only solve part of the problem and only in penny and nickle sized bites. And it will take a long time to collect the alternate energy pennies and nickles. Restricting your search for some of the coins (no exploration per Mr. Romm, others have suggested no alternate fuels, or no conservation) only means it will be even longer until you can find $10 worth of coins.
Political hit jobs disguised as objective reporting, such as Joseph Romm's article, will do nothing to help anyone with their energy problem. He only raises the noise level and attempts to divert and confuse his audience. He meets my definition of a sad sorry little man.
M i M i C c S,
I wonder where we can find …some _ P R I C K _
to _ B U R S T _ this _ B U B B L E _
__________ ¿ __ ? __________
3 comments. Wow. I guess this article does not fit CD'ers world view.
But it is complleing evidence there is no shortage of oil. Ask yourself why they/McCain is asking now that Democrats control congress and Obama has been annointed President. They had 6 years where they could have just forced the issue and opened it. The fact is Big Oil does not need more oil, and they find imported much more profitable since they can hide profits in the tax havens and avoid taxes, despite their record "reported" profits.
McCain asking to open up more territory for drilling, pretending the price of oil is a supply issue, is a cover for the speculators. After all, they have to recover their sub-prime losses.
On June 1, 2007 the Dubai Mercantile Exchange opened (NYMEX set it up). Oil was at 60 dollars per barrel.
Today it has jumped 140% in price over June 1, 2007 levels. The euro has strengthened 17%. So explain the other 123% given there is no supply interruptions. The price of oil would be 70 dollars a barrel without the speculation, maybe even lower.
In fact, "in a recent hearing held by the Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, four industry experts, representing energy consultants, all agreed, under questioning, that oil prices could quickly be cut in half, with no harm to producers, just by removing the speculative aspect of the market. One, Michael Masters, (who has recently testified for other Committees) even said that if the CFTC (Commodities Futures Trading Commission) would simply enforce their rules as written, a big portion of the speculative bubble could be immediately contained."
http://www.larouchepub.com/pr/2008/080623halve_oil_prices.html
Do a google search on light sweet crude versus sour heavy crude . Prepare to be disgusted !
McCain can only delude people who are willing to be deluded or too intellectually lazy to seek facts for themselves. Unfortunately that includes, apparently, most Americans.
Assuming the numbers are correct, McCain and many of the Republicans are deluding themselves and others. Thanks for the analysis. Now I need to pass this on to my repub. friends.