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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Bill would allow more drilling

Richard Simon and Kenneth R. Weiss Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON – Citing hurricane damage to the oil and gas industry in the Gulf of Mexico, key lawmakers are trying to relax a decades-old federal ban on new drilling off California and the Atlantic Seaboard and to encourage energy prospecting in the Rocky Mountains.

Congressional proposals also aim to waive some air pollution rules to encourage expansion of oil refineries and would authorize oil drilling beneath Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

“Mother Nature proved just how vulnerable America is to supply disruption,” said House Resources Committee Chairman Richard W. Pombo, R-Calif. “We must do more to increase and to diversify domestic supplies.”

The legislation, likely to be voted on soon in the House, comes as oil- and natural-gas-dependent manufacturers have urged Congress to reopen the “85 percent of all federally controlled coastal waters (that) are currently off-limits to energy production.”

Yet opponents in Congress point to the 191,000 barrels of oil that have gushed into the gulf from ruptured pipelines and hurricane-battered oil facilities as a reminder of the difficult-to-contain disaster that can accompany offshore production. Spills brought by Hurricane Katrina add up to about 80 percent of the oil that despoiled Alaskan waters when the Exxon Valdez tanker ran aground in 1989.

Some lawmakers, including Sen. Mel Martinez, R-Fla., worry that hasty federal policy changes could expose fragile coastal environments, fisheries and beach-dependent tourism to disaster risks. “It keeps getting more threatening all the time,” Martinez said.

Others are incensed at what they consider raw opportunism to exploit high gas prices and hurricane damage.

“This just looks like the oil and gas industry are shamelessly using the tragedy of Katrina and Rita to try and push their special interest agenda through Congress,” said Rep. Lois Capps, D-Calif., who represents a Santa Barbara district that experienced a devastating oil platform blowout in 1969. “We need to address our energy needs, but we don’t need to jeopardize our environment and economy to do it, and we shouldn’t use a national tragedy as cover for bad policy.”