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2008-09-29 Home Front Economy
U.S. Senate votes to lift ban on offshore drilling
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Posted by Fred 2008-09-29 00:00|| || Front Page|| [4 views ]  Top

#1 Are there other obstacles?
Posted by Richard of Oregon 2008-09-29 07:18||   2008-09-29 07:18|| Front Page Top

#2 Lotsa state laws.
Posted by Nimble Spemble 2008-09-29 07:19||   2008-09-29 07:19|| Front Page Top

#3 It's a start.
Posted by DarthVader 2008-09-29 09:43||   2008-09-29 09:43|| Front Page Top

#4 Lotsa state laws.

Federal laws supecede state always.
Posted by Redneck Jim 2008-09-29 09:56||   2008-09-29 09:56|| Front Page Top

#5 ...but only 50 or more miles out to sea and only if states agree.

The Nancy Pelosi plan to address gas shortages and long lines where there is gas.

I thought our territorial waters had a 12 mile limit. So why couldn't drilling occur at say 12.1 miles off our shores without any approval?
Posted by JohnQC 2008-09-29 10:34||   2008-09-29 10:34|| Front Page Top

#6 Federal law supercedes state always.

I don't think it applies in this case - unless this measure explicitly opens off-shore drilling then state law would be in force in the absence of Federal law.

OTOH I can imagine states having their eyes on the tax revenue possibilities.
Posted by CrazyFool 2008-09-29 10:36||   2008-09-29 10:36|| Front Page Top

#7 There's a 12-mile territorial limit and then there's a 200-mile maritime limit (which I understand is mainly for security and inspection interests). After that it's international waters.

The limits get sticky in places like Cuba and Key West, for example, and the US's failure to enforce its own maritime limits is one of the reasons why China is drilling in what could, technically, be called US waters under Cuban auspices.

I don't think the states have any authority outside of 12-miles, however, but the limit has previously extended out to the maritime areas due to Congressional and Presidential edict. The lifting of the ban probably means it's open season on drilling 12 miles or more away from a coastline.

Posted by FOTSGreg">FOTSGreg  2008-09-29 13:43||   2008-09-29 13:43|| Front Page Top

#8 While the oil industry has done a lot to clean up their operations over the last thirty years all it will take is one significant spill that washes ashore to get the ban put back in place. Lets hope nobody gets sloppy.
Posted by Cheaderhead 2008-09-29 16:55||   2008-09-29 16:55|| Front Page Top

#9 Cheader: Santa Barbara, among other sites, have natural oil seeps, sending oil globs to the beaches now....
Posted by Frank G">Frank G  2008-09-29 21:52||   2008-09-29 21:52|| Front Page Top

#10 In Santa Barbara, the Chumash natives used to caulk they boats with the oily stuff they found. They talked about it in a display at the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History.
Posted by Alaska Paul 2008-09-29 22:00||   2008-09-29 22:00|| Front Page Top

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