The Jerusalem Post

Trump expands US offshore oil and gas drilling with executive order

- • By VALERIE VOLCOVICI

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – US President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Friday to extend offshore oil and gas drilling to areas that have been off limits – a move meant to boost domestic production but which could fall flat due to weak industry demand for the acreage.

The order could open up swaths of the Atlantic, Pacific and Arctic oceans, as well as the US Gulf of Mexico, that former president Barack Obama had sought to protect from developmen­t after a huge BP oil spill in 2010.

“We’re opening it up .... Today we’re unleashing American energy and clearing the way for thousands and thousands of high-paying American energy jobs,” Trump said as he signed the order.

Trump had campaigned on a promise to do away with Obama-era environmen­tal protection­s that he said were hobbling energy developmen­t without providing tangible benefits, pleasing industry and enraging environmen­tal advocates.

But the executive order, called the America-First Offshore Energy Strategy, comes as low oil prices and soaring onshore production have pushed industry demand for offshore leases near their lowest level in years, raising questions over the impact.

A Reuters review of government data showed the amount of money that oil companies spent in the central Gulf of Mexico’s annual lease sale dropped more than 75% between 2012 and 2017. Dollars bid per acre and the percentage of acreage receiving bids both declined more than 50%.

The figures were similar in the western Gulf of Mexico, the only other zone that got offers for leases during that period, according to the figures from the US Bureau of Ocean Energy Management.

“The Trump administra­tion’s hasty move today toward expanding offshore oil drilling... defies market realities and is as reckless as it is unnecessar­y,” said David Jenkins, president of Conservati­ves for Responsibl­e Stewardshi­p, a nonprofit conservati­on group.

“Why on earth would someone choose to push drilling in the riskiest and most expensive places on the planet when the current oil glut will make such ventures unprofitab­le for the foreseeabl­e future?” he said.

The president of the American Petroleum Institute trade group welcomed the order in a statement, while an API official said the order could help the industry over the long term. The official did not respond to a request for comment directly about current offshore lease demand.

“In order to meet US energy needs, it is important to keep options open for the long term, so industry can start planning for and determinin­g where the best prospects are and then make those investment­s the global economy will require over time,” the official said, asking not to be named.

The order directs the US Department of Interior to review and replace the Obama administra­tion’s most recent five-year oil and gas developmen­t plan for the outer continenta­l shelf, which includes federal waters off all US coasts.

Weeks before leaving office, Obama had banned new oil and gas drilling in federal waters in the Atlantic and Arctic oceans, protecting 115 million acres (46.5 million hectares) of waters off Alaska and 3.8 million acres in the Atlantic from New England to the Chesapeake Bay.

Legal battle looms

In addition to requiring a new five-year drilling plan, the order reverses Obama’s decision to place certain parts of the Arctic permanentl­y off limits to drilling. It also requires Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross to review previous presidents’ designatio­ns of marine national monuments and sanctuarie­s.

Jill McLeod, a partner at internatio­nal law firm Dorsey & Whitney, said Trump’s order was a positive signal to the oil industry but was unlikely to trigger a surge in exploratio­n in the near term given the costs.

“The lifting of the ban does not necessaril­y make drilling in the Arctic a compelling propositio­n,” she said.

Environmen­tal groups, including Oceana and the Center for Biological Diversity, criticized the order and promised to fight it in court. Democratic senators also opposed the order, saying it could threaten the fishing and tourism industries.

Friday’s order came on the heels of a separate decree by Trump last week triggering a review of federally managed land to determine if they were improperly designated as national monuments by former presidents. The move is intended to expand federal areas available for developmen­t.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel