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Home Front Economy
Lawsuits Stop Offshore Drilling in Its Tracks
2008-11-24
Oil and gas companies appeared to score an all-out victory over the summer when President Bush lifted an executive ban on offshore drilling and congressional Democrats let a moratorium expire soon after. But those who think nothing stands between oil rigs and the outer continental shelf are dead wrong.

"Every lease that has been granted in the last several years has been immediately challenged in the lawsuits, 100 percent," said Rep. Virginia Foxx, R-N.C.

When the ban was lifted, the federal government was permitted to sell drilling leases three miles off the nation's coastlines, free of state objections.

The Interior Department has already started surveying the water and has drawn up maps for lease sales. So far, the government has collected $8.4 billion from the five-year leasing plan that covers 2007 to 2012. Another round of sales will be held next March.

But several environmental groups have sued the federal government over the offshore plans, arguing that the Interior Department failed to consider drilling's impact on endangered marine life such as bowhead whales and polar bears.

"It is something that has put a cloud over the lease sales," said Erik Milito, general counsel of the American Petroleum Institute, which has filed a brief in support of the government. "There's a lot of money at stake in terms of the government receiving the bonus bids already, and there's also the potential for delay in oil and gas activity."

The lawsuits were brought by a wide array of plaintiffs, the majority of which are conservation groups. The rest include state governments, businesses and individuals.

In February 2008, the administration issued 487 leases in Alaska's Chukchi Sea. The Sierra Club, the Center for Biological Diversity and Alaskan Native groups challenged all of them in court. That's on top of 108 cases filed against federal agencies over drilling permits in 2006.

Supporters of the lawsuits don't see themselves as litigation-happy. "Over the history of the offshore drilling program, litigation has been generally brought only as a last resort, where the Interior Department is trying to proceed in drilling in a very sensitive area," said Richard Charter, who lobbies on behalf of Defenders of Wildlife, a conservation group.
And every location is a 'sensitive area', don't you know ...
Defenders of Wildlife sued the Bush administration in 2005 over the government's decision to extend 37 undeveloped oil and gas leases off the central California coast.

Charter said he prefers to fight against oil and gas drilling in Congress, rather than in the courts. Last November, he helped fend off an 11th-hour move by Republicans to lift the offshore oil and gas drilling ban. This year, however, the line of defense against offshore drilling crumbled in Congress. The 27-year-old drilling moratorium is now gone, and conservationists like Charter are eying the court as the next possible battleground.

"We are kind of entering a new era here," Charter said, "Without the congressional oversight the moratorium has brought, I think litigation will become more frequent. It could become more protracted."
How can one have 'oversight' in the face of a moratorium? Oversight implies that some go forward and some don't. A moratorium kills everything.
Court decisions have swung both ways in the past, with the majority of the results favoring the defendants. Charter acknowledged that litigation is an imperfect but necessary tool, as "it generally in the past has resulted in delays, but has never successfully stopped drilling."
But it's the only tool he has now so that's the one he'll use, at least until Bambi and the Dhimmicrats re-implement the moratorium.
But delays are costly to oil and gas companies. "The litigation has thrown a lot of uncertainty into the business," said Milito of the API. "We've seen many projects that have been delayed, if not stopped, causing companies to lose hundreds of millions of dollars that have been invested."

Congressional Republicans have sought to limit lawsuits against oil exploration. South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint, for example, introduced a bill last month that would allow only 90 days to submit a legal case.
Posted by:GolfBravoUSMC

#9  I think we should sue to enforce drilling in 'sensitive' areas becase extinction is a completely natural and evolutionary process which enriches the envronment as new species move to take over from extinct species who were, frankly, to specialized and/or and 'weak' to compete.

Like the Bowhead Whale and the Polar Bears of the Gulf of Mexico.
Posted by: CrazyFool   2008-11-24 14:33  

#8  Oil companies should begin suing "environmentalists" and demand that they PROVE, not just "believe" that drilling will harm wildlife in the area. The same kinds of environmental noises were made about drilling in the Gulf off the coast of Texas and Louisiana. The real result was that these oil platforms actually INCREASED the quantity and diversity of marine creatures. The "environmentalists" are now suing to stop oil platforms from being removed when they are no longer producing - something they DEMANDED in earlier litigation.

Most major oil companies have an environmental impact study group, and know more about the environmental impact of drilling than any of the conservation groups. This is litigation in order to stop something the rest of us want. It should be stopped, immediately. If the "environmentalists" persist in trying to stop oil exploration and production, they should be branded as "terrorists" and treated accordingly. No minority group should be able to dictate to the nation at large, just because they're doing it "for the childrenenvironment".
Posted by: Old Patriot   2008-11-24 14:31  

#7  Let the people be heard. We want secure oil.
Posted by: Richard of Oregon   2008-11-24 14:12  

#6  1) But delays are costly to oil and gas companies - actually, I think consumers pay for all of it.

2) I'm not worried. Under President-elect Obama's recovery bill we won't need any more carbon based energy. We'll be moving into the green age, with reliable solar and wind energy heating our homes, running our computers and powering our affordable electric cars.
Posted by: DoDo   2008-11-24 14:08  

#5  Would suggesting a Rwanda style purge of these dickweeds be 'over the top'?
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2008-11-24 13:57  

#4  While in the real world: Russian firms plan to drill for oil off Cuba, envoy says

Perhaps fed up people should organize as pirates to hijack oil tankers going to the west and east coasts.
Posted by: ed   2008-11-24 13:23  

#3  well this should give the russina and other firms ready access down there in Cuba for the go ahead
Posted by: chris   2008-11-24 13:15  

#2  Can we start a class action lawsuit against all these groups for higher gas prices? They are taking money out of my wallet. Not only that, I find them offensive and creating a hostile environment to my peace of mind.
Posted by: Silentbrick   2008-11-24 13:12  

#1  that the Interior Department failed to consider drilling's impact on endangered marine life such as bowhead whales and polar bears.

I was not aware that we had Endangered Polar Bears in the Gulf of Mexico?
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2008-11-24 12:42  

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