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Home Front: Economy
Senate Votes to Allow Arctic Drilling
2005-03-16
Amid the backdrop of soaring oil and gasoline prices, a sharply divided Senate on Wednesday voted to open the ecologically rich Alaska wildlife refuge to oil drilling, delivering a major energy policy win for President Bush. The Senate, by a 51-49 vote, rejected an attempt by Democrats and GOP moderates to remove a refuge drilling provision from next year's budget, preventing opponents from using a filibuster — a tactic that has blocked repeated past attempts to open the Alaska refuge to oil companies. The action, assuming Congress agrees on a budget, clears the way for approving drilling in the refuge later this year, drilling supporters said. The oil industry has sought for more than two decades to get access to what is believed to be billions of barrels of oil beneath the 1.5 million-acre coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in the northern eastern corner of Alaska. Environmentalists have fought such development and argued that despite improved environmental controls a web of pipelines and drilling platforms would harm calving caribou, polar bears and millions of migratory birds that use the coastal plain.

Bush has called tapping the reserve's oil a critical part of the nation's energy security and a way to reduce America's reliance on imported oil, which account for more than half of the 20 million barrels of crude use daily. The Alaska refuge could supply as much as 1 million barrels day at peak production, drilling supporters said. "We won't see this oil for 10 years. It will have minimal impact," argued Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., a co-sponsor of the amendment that would have stripped the arctic refuge provision from the budget document. It is "foolish to say oil development and a wildlife refuge can coexist," she said. Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., argued that more oil would be saved if Congress enacted an energy policy focusing on conservation, more efficient cars and trucks and increased reliance on renewable fuels and expanded oil development in the deep-water Gulf where there are significant reserves. "The fact is (drilling in ANWR) is going to be destructive," said Kerry.

But drilling proponents argued that modern drilling technology can safeguard the refuge and still tap the likely — though not yet certain — 10.4 billion barrels of crude in the refuge. "Some people say we ought to conserve more. They say we ought to conserve instead of producing this oil," said Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M., "But we need to do everything. We have to conserve and produce where we can."

The vote Wednesday contrasted with the last time the Senate took up the ANWR drilling issue two years ago. Then, an attempt to include it in the budget was defeated. But drilling supporters gained strength last November when Republicans picked up three additional seats, all senators who favored drilling in the refuge. Opponents of drilling complained that Republicans this time were trying "an end run" by attaching the refuge provisions to the budget, a tactic that would allow the measure to pass with a majority vote. "It's the only way around a filibuster" which requires 60 votes to overcome, countered Stevens. The 19-million-acre refuge was set aside for protection by President Eisenhower in 1960, but Congress in 1980 said its 1.5 million acre coastal plain could be opened to oil development if Congress specifically authorizes it. Bush, who has urged Congress repeatedly to allow oil companies to tap the refuge's crude, said Wednesday it's "a way to get some additional reserves here at home on the books."
About damm time
Posted by:Steve

#25  Caribou is tasty. My son got three this fall in NW alaska. Brought me some good meat, heart, and tongue. Good stuff. Lived off of caribou meat for 20 years. PETA all the way, heh!
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2005-03-16 11:23:45 PM  

#24  Asedwich - Elk up there too? They taste good!
Posted by: 3dc   2005-03-16 9:27:44 PM  

#23  Ate caribou three years ago and loved it. My brother and I thought that might be enough to get us to leave Europe for good. I've done it, still waiting for him...
Posted by: Kalle (kafir forever)   2005-03-16 9:22:12 PM  

#22  As an Alaskan for the past 15 years, it's about dang time. The piece of ANWR they propse drilling represents less than 1% of the entire refuge. The total BS vomited by the dimocratic propaganda machine is incredible.

Currently the Porcipine Caribou herd (that migrates east-west through the Alyeska pipeline) is at an all-time high number. Truth-bells should go off in the heads of all but the criminally insane LLL-dimocrats.

The actual footprint of the drill/pumping sites will likely be measured in hundreds of acres in that postage stamp sized portion of ANWR where they will drill.

As for 8-20 billion barrels of recoverable ...Prudhoe Bay/North Slope was only thought to have a tad less than 10 billion recoverable when they drilled in the 70s. More than 14 billion barrels (nearly 550 billion gallons)have moved through the Pipeline System since start. The volume of oil flowing through the pipeline has decreased from a peak of 2.1 million barrels per day in 1988 to about 1 mbpd today. That still represents 20% of domestic oil production in the US.
Posted by: anymouse   2005-03-16 8:29:18 PM  

#21  Asedwich - The Captain Cook in Anchorage? I stayed there for 3 weeks in '79... Still have the 5-egg King Crab Omelet for $15? Lol! Did you ski at Alyeska? Do you have to go up over Turnagain Pass to get to it? I was there on biz - back in the pipeline daze - and my memory is of 20 hour days and sleeping on an office floor about half the time I was there, heh.
Posted by: .com   2005-03-16 8:29:15 PM  

#20  Had Reindeer sausage with eggs for breakfast every day for a week when I was last up at the Hotel Captain Cook! Was seriously great! Didn't have any sauce at breakfast, but we washed it down with peppermint schnapps at the ski course.
Posted by: Asedwich   2005-03-16 8:07:56 PM  

#19  "We won't see this oil for 10 years. It will have minimal impact," argued Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash
So my representative finally admits what we have known about her all along: she is a short-sighted Democratic snatch.
Funny how they rant and rave about the necessity of more pollution controls and environmental regulation for the future, but when it comes to having energy or food on the table a few years down the line--it's something we can do without. What a strange mentality.

I had a discussion yesterday with a local surveyor who objected to the pipeline on the grounds that it would (intentionally) be built so low to the ground that elk and caribou wouldn't be able to get under it, thereby disrupting migrations and causing them all to die. It apparently didn't cross his mind that it would be silly for maintenance vehicles to have to drive hundreds and hundreds of miles down the pipeline to get to the other side to do routine inspection and maintenance, which isn't the case anyhow. If you can get a dumptruck under the pipeline, I'm damned certain you can get an elk under it.
Posted by: Asedwich   2005-03-16 8:04:20 PM  

#18  Wine with game...I'd go with a Zinfandel or good Pinot. But then, they go good with anything - even corn flakes.
Posted by: Rex Mundi   2005-03-16 7:13:09 PM  

#17  Not Moosehead?

sorry.
Posted by: eLarson   2005-03-16 6:53:53 PM  

#16  Molson
Posted by: Mrs. Davis   2005-03-16 6:34:14 PM  

#15  So, what wine goes with caribou?
Posted by: DMFD   2005-03-16 6:31:27 PM  

#14  RWW, any way to tell'em apart?
Posted by: Sobiesky   2005-03-16 5:46:00 PM  

#13  Caribou is OK, but reindeer is seriously tasty.
Posted by: RWV   2005-03-16 5:32:53 PM  

#12  Juniper and Saskatoon Caribou
Two - Three ounce boneless Caribou Medallions, broiled, then glazed with a Saskatoon Juniper Berry Game Sauce


mm... .mmmm..... mmm... good!
From the Lampost Diner in Waterton Park (Glacier Park)
Posted by: 3dc   2005-03-16 5:32:20 PM  

#11  do a Caribou census now, so when the lefty liars spin this in 10 years, there will be proof the population hasn't declined
Posted by: Frank G   2005-03-16 5:03:03 PM  

#10  "We won't see this oil for 10 years. It will have minimal impact..."

Well, perhaps if you and your kind haven't blocked this for a decade with this same stupid argument we would already be seeing the benefits from it, you ignorant slut.
Posted by: Jackal   2005-03-16 4:47:33 PM  

#9  Followed a link from LGF on this topic to the Koz Kidz and the panic was wonderful.

I also found what might be the most extreme example of ego-centrism in the entire world...

"...but what this particular drilling rider is really about is being a big ole' F-YOU to us, from them, with love, just because they can."

In other words the whole purpose of the Repubs in the senate is to piss off the kiddies.

ROFLMAO!!!!!!!
Posted by: AlanC   2005-03-16 4:40:31 PM  

#8  Barb, PETA also means People Eating Tasty Animals. Just saying...
Posted by: Sobiesky   2005-03-16 4:19:26 PM  

#7  There's room for all of gods creatures (including caribou), right next to the mashed potatoes!
Posted by: Gir   2005-03-16 4:15:15 PM  

#6  BUT WHAT ABOUT THE CARIBOU???????

They'll love it. Ditto Barb.
Posted by: Sobiesky   2005-03-16 4:05:13 PM  

#5  
ecologically rich Alaska wildlife refuge
Not the part that will be drilled; that looks like a moonscape.

Of course, in a few years, once the pipeline is in, the area will be more "ecologically rich" than it was before, as the caribou and other arctic animals move in to live around the pipeline's warmth, just as they have around the original pipeline.

Whatever "journalist" wrote this is either lazy, a propagandist for the far left, or a lying sack of shit. But I repeat myself.

Oh, by the way - I'll have my caribou rare with plenty of garlic, skip the steak sauce. Take that, PETA!
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2005-03-16 3:58:48 PM  

#4  My backyard is ecologically rich, can we drill there? Away from the shrine area of course.
Posted by: Fr. Kolac   2005-03-16 3:53:46 PM  

#3  BUT WHAT ABOUT THE CARIBOU???????

I'll have mine rare with a SIDE of steak sauce.
Posted by: badanov   2005-03-16 3:36:50 PM  

#2  BUT WHAT ABOUT THE CARIBOU???????

I'll have mine rare with a size of steak sauce.
Posted by: badanov   2005-03-16 3:36:07 PM  

#1  BUT WHAT ABOUT THE CARIBOU???????
Posted by: Yosemite Sam   2005-03-16 3:34:11 PM  

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