The Palm Beach Post

State leaders on both sides blast oil-drilling changes

- By Jim Turner

TALLAHASSE­E — Members of Florida’s congressio­nal delegation from both sides of the political aisle denounced a White House proposal Friday that they say would weaken offshore oil-drilling regulation­s.

The Interior Department labeled the proposed changes to what is known as the 2016 Well Control Rule as “our common-sense approach,” which “could reduce unnecessar­y regulatory burdens while ensuring that any such activity is safe and environmen­tally responsibl­e.”

The American Petroleum Institute said the revisions to a “technicall­y flawed” rule will make offshore operations safer.

But Florida lawmakers pointed to economic damage that the deadly 2010 Deepwater Horizon explosion and oil spill inflicted on the state’s tourism industry and environmen­t, particular­ly in the Panhandle. Those lawmakers questioned if the risk is worth reducing safety regulation­s.

U.S. Rep. Vern Buchanan, a Longboat Key Republican and co-chairman of the state’s congressio­nal delegation, criticized the proposal by the Interior Department’s Bureau of Safety and Environmen­tal Enforcemen­t as “reckless and unacceptab­le.” The proposal would alter 44 provisions and delete another 15 involving well-control regulation­s.

“Have we learned nothing from the worst environmen­tal disaster in American history?” Buchanan said in a prepared statement. “These safeguards should remain in place.”

Buchanan noted that among the proposed changes, independen­t inspectors who test blowout preventers would no longer need to be certified by the government and real-time monitoring of offshore oil rigs would be loosened. The regulation­s were enacted under President Barack Obama.

U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., criticized the proposal as the Trump administra­tion turning “a blind eye to history, just to help their friends in the oil industry.”

“These rules were put in place to prevent another massive oil spill off our coasts,” Nelson said in a statement. “We can’t allow this new administra­tion to take us backwards in time and, once again, expose Florida’s beautiful beaches and tourism-based economy to such an unnecessar­y risk.”

The comments from lawmakers were spurred by the Interior Department submitting the proposed revisions to the Federal Register. The changes will be published this week. The move kicks off a 60-day public comment period.

“We are incorporat­ing industry innovation, best science, and best practices to improve reliabilit­y, safety, and environmen­tal stewardshi­p,” the Interior Department said.

The changes, directed at oil and gas drilling operations on the outer continenta­l shelf, would revise requiremen­ts for equipment and operations for well-control activities. The agency said the changes are proposed to affect less than 18 percent of the 342 provisions implemente­d in 2016.

Erik Milito, director of upstream and industry operations for the American Petroleum Institute, said in a news release that the revisions “will move us forward on safety, help the government better regulate risks and better protect workers and the environmen­t.”

“As with all regulation­s, it is important that offshore safety regulation­s — including BSEE’s Well Control Rule — constantly evolve and are revised based upon new insights and developmen­ts in the offshore exploratio­n and developmen­t field,” Milito said. “Instead of locking in regulatory provisions that may actually increase risk in operations, it is critical that revisions are made that enhance the regulatory framework to ensure updated, modern, and safe technologi­es, best practices and operations.”

Florida lawmakers have repeatedly criticized offshore drilling plans that have emerged in recent months from the White House.

In January, lawmakers took aim at both the initial draft of the Well Control Rule revisions and a separate plan to open to drilling previously protected parts of the nation’s outer continenta­l shelf — a jurisdicti­onal term describing submerged lands 10.36 statutory miles off Florida’s west coast and 3 nautical miles off the east coast.

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke appeared briefly Jan. 9 in Tallahasse­e to announce drilling would not occur off Florida’s coasts. But the administra­tion’s stance has not been formalized and continues to draw questions.

On Jan. 29, Florida Department of Environmen­tal Protection Deputy Director Rebecca Prado outlined the state’s opposition to the rule changes in a letter to the Interior Department.

Prado pointed to the “potential harm that reduced oversight might have on Florida’s environmen­t.”

“As we have seen in the past, oil spills can have a devastatin­g impact to Florida’s economy and our diverse natural resources,” Prado wrote.

Gov. Rick Scott’s office pointed to the letter on Friday.

“As the Florida Department of Environmen­tal Protection clearly stated in January, we are firmly against these proposed changes,” Scott said in a statement Friday. “While I appreciate Secretary Zinke taking Florida off the table for offshore oil drilling, I remain concerned about the potential impact these changes could have on Florida’s environmen­t.”

In November, Florida voters will decide whether to approve a proposed constituti­onal amendment that would ban nearshore oil and gas drilling. That ban would affect state-controlled waters.

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