Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Once more time: No oil drilling.

- Editorials are the opinion of the Sun Sentinel Editorial Board and written by one of its members or a designee. The Editorial Board consists of Editorial Page Editor Rosemary O’Hara, Andy Reid and Editor-in-Chief Julie Anderson.

Like red tide, the push for more drilling near Florida’s beaches is relentless and dangerous.

The latest effort comes from the American Petroleum Institute in the form of a “coalition” called Explore Offshore. In a lame attempt to deflect criticism, the group claims that it wants merely to find out what oil and gas might be available in areas that currently are off-limits.

Those areas include almost any site within 125 miles of Florida’s coast on the Gulf of Mexico and anywhere off the coast on the Atlantic Ocean. Protection for the beaches on which Florida’s tourism industry relies long has been one of the few bipartisan causes in this state. The Department of Defense also supports the gulf prohibitio­n so it can conduct national security tests.

Yet the industry won’t give up. Three weeks ago, Explore Offshore rolled out a campaign that presumes Floridians have short memories.

Jeff Kottkamp is co-chairman in Florida for Explore Offshore. The former state legislator was Charlie Crist’s lieutenant governor in April 2010, when BP’s Deepwater Horizon rig exploded off Louisiana.

Yet Kottkamp claimed that no oil reached Florida. That statement would surprise residents of the Panhandle, where heavy oil arrived in late June. Tarballs hit beaches. Local boaters had been skimming oil. Families planning trips after the school year canceled. So did June brides. Fishing bans further hurt tourism. BP’s settlement with Florida totaled $3.2 billion.

In an interview with the Sun Sentinel Editorial Board, Kottkamp – who said he is receiving no compensati­on from Explore Offshore – tried to walk back that comment. “We got some oil,” Kottkamp said, “but the pictures in the coverage just made it look horrible.”

For those directly affected, it was horrible. And to refresh Kottkamp’s memory, what remains the world’s largest accidental oil spill could have been catastroph­ic for much of Florida.

Oil from the Deepwater Horizon explosion got to within 30 miles of the Gulf of Mexico Loop Current. It moves five times faster than other waters in the gulf. Had oil reached it, the current would have carried the oil to the Florida Keys and South Florida. In May 2010, Palm Beach County officials were preparing for such a scenario.

We asked Kottkamp about that close call. He said, “I used to be more in touch with all those facts.”

Explore Offshore’s campaign comes amid controvers­y about President Trump’s plan to open almost all federal water to drilling and whether Florida would receive an exemption. In January, during a staged event in Tallahasse­e meant to look spontaneou­s, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke declared Florida “off the table.”

We were suspicious of that pledge and remain so. Zinke held the event with Gov. Rick Scott, who is running against U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson. It came just five days after Trump announced his plan. Scott has favored expanded offshore drilling. Nelson sponsored the legislatio­n that extended the 125-mile Gulf of Mexico ban until 2022.

Here’s more reason for suspicion. Politico reported last month that “Zinke and Scott were careful to ‘not say the entire Eastern Gulf,’ was off the table” in January. “There are some Republican­s who are prepared to make a deal. Seventy-five miles is the expected buffer, but folks might be willing to throw it a little further.”

Kottkamp said he would not support any plan that makes oil rigs visible from the shore. He added, “The industry has learned a whole lot from the (BP) spill. There is improved safety.”

Actually, the industry seems to have learned nothing. After hearing from lobbyists, Trump proposed weakening two safety rules that emerged from the work of a commission that studied the BP spill. One was designed specifical­ly to prevent another blowout similar to the Deepwater Horizon.

Though Kottkamp maintains that he supports just an investigat­ion of what oil might be accessible, Explore Offshore’s website gives away the group’s goal. A fact sheet lists the supposed economic benefits over 20 years of increased oil and gas drilling in the Eastern Gulf of Mexico.

Fortunatel­y, at this point, opposition remains bipartisan. Democrat Nelson wants to extend the 125-mile limit until 2027. So does Florida’s other senator, Republican Marco Rubio. Matt Gaetz, the Republican who represents the Panhandle in Congress, fears the threat expanded oil and gas exploratio­n would pose for the military’s Gulf Test Range.

Further drilling, Gaetz said, “would be devastatin­g to our national security. I don’t have a nuanced view on this. I am opposed.”

The industry cites national security as a reason for expanded drilling. We believe Florida’s security is the reason to say no.

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