The Union Democrat

As oil and dead wildlife wash up, state seeks end to offshore drilling

- By DALE KASLER

As dead birds wash ashore on Southern California beaches, the victims of a major oil spill, environmen­talists are calling on Gov. Gavin Newsom to reduce the state’s ties to the oil industry.

But the oil spill fouling Orange County’s shoreline occurred outside the state’s jurisdicti­on.

Once the oil industry moves more than three miles offshore, into waters controlled by the federal government, California’s power shrinks considerab­ly — a point that’s been driven home dramatical­ly by the massive oil spill that occurred over the weekend south of Long Beach.

The spill has dumped gooey oil deposits on the Orange County coastline, as witnesses reported dead birds and fish washing up on Huntington Beach. An estimated 120,000 gallons of oil have leaked out.

The tragedy began Saturday with a leak in a pipeline connected to an oil platform called Elly that sits in federal waters about 17 miles off the California coast. Executives of Houston-based Amplify Energy, parent of the platform operator, said the leak probably developed about four miles offshore, according to the Los Angeles Times. The pipeline connects the platform to a pump station in Long Beach.

“This is a platform in federal waters, licensed by the federal government,” said Sean Hecht, a UCLA environmen­tal law expert. “The existence of these federally permitted platforms lowers the ability of the state to address this.”

That hasn’t stopped some environmen­tal groups from urging Newsom to act. At the very least, says Laura Deehan of the group Environmen­t California, the state can do more to lessen its demand for oil and gas.

Offshore oil drilling exists in order to meet “our current demand and dependence on oil and gas,” she said.

The state has moved to shrink the industry’s footprint. After the historic Santa Barbara oil spill of 1969, which helped trigger the modern environmen­tal movement, the state hasn’t approved a single lease for offshore oil and natural gas production within its territoria­l waters. However, the state has permitted new drilling on existing leases, to the dismay of environmen­talists.

The latest spill comes two weeks after the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s banned new oil drilling in unincorpor­ated areas of the county. The board also initiated the process of phasing out existing production.

But the county’s authority doesn’t extend into the ocean waters.

Some California Democratic members of Congress are trying to put an end to new offshore drilling. After President Joe Biden imposed a temporary moratorium on new offshore permits, Sen. Dianne Feinstein and Rep. Jared Huffman introduced bills to make the ban permanent on the West Coast. The legislatio­n has been rolled into the budget reconcilia­tion bill that’s struggling to get through Congress.

“When you drill you spill, and once again the inevitable has happened,” Huffman tweeted, arguing that the legislatio­n must pass. Feinstein and U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla, a co-sponsor of the bill, also issued statements saying the oil spill is further evidence of the urgency of their legislatio­n.

The spill illustrate­s a dual personalit­y in California’s economic landscape: A state trying to wean itself from fossil fuels relies on oil production for thousands of jobs.

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