The Mercury News

Brown blocks Trump’s plans

Blunting the president’s efforts, new laws will make it virtually impossible for companies to expand drilling off California coast

- By Paul Rogers progers@bayareanew­sgroup.com

In a move aimed at stopping President Trump’s plans to expand offshore oil drilling along the California coast, Gov. Jerry Brown on Saturday signed two laws that prohibit constructi­on of new pipelines that could bring the oil and gas to shore.

“Today, California’s message to the Trump administra­tion is simple: Not here, not now,” Brown said. “We will not let the federal government pillage public lands and destroy our treasured coast.”

Brown signed SB 834 and AB 1775, two measures that ban the State Lands Commission from approving permits for new wharfs, piers, pipelines and other facilities anywhere in state waters along the entire California coast from the shoreline out to three miles offshore that could be used to expand new offshore oil and gas production.

The bills — which were modeled on a local law passed by Santa Cruz city voters in 1985 aimed at stopping oil drilling during the Reagan administra­tion — were a top priority for environmen­talists in Sacramento this year. A similar proposal was blocked last year by oil industry opposition.

But the effort gained new momentum, largely because Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke and other Trump officials announced in January that they would seek to open 90 percent of the offshore areas in the United States that are not already in national marine sanctuarie­s to new oil and gas drilling. That could happen as soon as 2020 in Southern California and 2021 in Northern California

waters, overruling moratorium­s that the Obama administra­tion had imposed.

“We are extremely pleased,” said Kim Delfino, California program director of Defenders of Wildlife, on Saturday. “The bills are intended to make it difficult to bring any new oil to shore, so it makes any new offshore oil drilling unlikely. They put up a pretty significan­t obstacle. They don’t make it economical­ly feasible for an oil company to do new drilling.”

California is the nation’s third-largest oil-producing state, behind Texas and North Dakota. Most of its oil is produced from inland wells in Kern County and other Southern California areas. New offshore drilling in state waters out to three miles offshore was banned

in 1994 by former Gov. Pete Wilson, a Republican.

But there are still 32 offshore platforms and artificial islands where oil is produced, all located in federal and state waters off the coasts of Santa Barbara, Ventura, Los Angeles and Orange counties. Many date back to the 1950s, and no new ones have been constructe­d in more than 30 years. The new laws Brown signed Saturday do not affect that existing drilling.

Local officials and environmen­tal groups were concerned that Trump’s plans could bring new pressures to drill off the Sonoma and Mendocino areas, along with La Jolla and Malibu.

The oil industry opposed the bills Brown signed, which were authored by two Democrats, State Sen. Hannah-Beth Jackson of Santa Barbara and Al Muratsuchi of Torrance.

“Bans are not the answer,”

Catherine ReheisBoyd, president of the Western States Petroleum Associatio­n, a leading industry trade group, said late last month.

She said the oil that California­ns consume when they drive their cars has to come from somewhere.

“Demand for fuel is not decreasing,” Reheis-Boyd said. “Every barrel of oil not produced in California will be replaced by a barrel produced and shipped in from a region that doesn’t have our state’s stringent environmen­tal laws.”

But California­ns have increasing­ly turned against new drilling.

A poll in January by the non-partisan Public Policy Institute of California found 69 percent of California­ns oppose new offshore oil drilling, while 25 percent support it.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ARCHIVES ?? A brown pelican flies over the oil slick at Refugio State Beach in Goleta in 2015. An oil pipeline ruptured dumping oil near Santa Barbara, the US Coast Guard said.
GETTY IMAGES ARCHIVES A brown pelican flies over the oil slick at Refugio State Beach in Goleta in 2015. An oil pipeline ruptured dumping oil near Santa Barbara, the US Coast Guard said.

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