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Posts Tagged ‘environmental organization’



Environmentalists: Why T-Ridge is a Bad Deal

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

oilrigsunsetToday Calbuzz posts a piece by three leading California environmentalists making their case against the Tranquillon Ridge offshore oil drilling project. The project, about which you can find some of our reporting and analysis here, here and here, has emerged as one of the most contentious environmental issues in the state, and is expected to remain the center of controversy next year. Environmental leaders Penny Elia, an Orange County coastal advocate; Fran Gibson, board president of Coastwalk California; and Mark Massara, director of the Sierra Club’s coastal programs, respond to Tuesday’s piece by attorney Linda Krop, who negotiated the proposed agreement with the Houston-based PXP oil company.

By Penny Elia, Fran Gibson and Mark Massara
Special to Calbuzz

The proposal by PXP for the first new off shore oil drilling in State waters in over 40 years has been touted as “an end to drilling off Santa Barbara”. Unfortunately, the hype is misleading and disingenuous at best.

The proposal will not end drilling because the so-called deal is not only not enforceable, it will set a precedent for new federal off shore oil drilling off Mendocino, and from Santa Barbara through the Southern California coast to La Jolla.  One reason this sounds so tempting is that the Environmental Defense Center, which signed a secret agreement with PXP, makes claims that are untrue.  The funds promised to the state over the next 14 years are not worth the risks. Here are the facts:

This project would set a precedent for new federal drilling

Allowing new drilling in state waters makes a statement it is okay to drill in federal waters because California considers financial contributions to its general fund a benefit that outweighs the risk to its coastline.  Lawmakers have said that approval of  new drilling in state waters will make it difficult to prevent new drilling in federal waters.

Allowing new drilling does not end drilling

It is perverse logic to say that allowing new drilling in T-Ridge will end drilling at T-Ridge early.  If this proposal is denied, NO drilling into T-Ridge will occur.  Other oil companies, with existing operations in state waters, are seeking to make PXP-like deals so they can expand their drilling.

Promised end dates on the project are  not enforceable

The State Attorney General and the State Lands Commission attorneys concluded the terms of the agreement that relate to the cessation of oil production were offshoreunenforceable.  The ability to enforce the end dates is hampered by such things as the ability of the federal government to exercise eminent domain, interference with the federal government’s right to use pipelines in interstate commerce and interference by the state with the contract between PXP and Minerals Management Service (MMS).  The state and Santa Barbara County could also opt out.

MMS has final say over the end date

Federal law requires MMS to extract all available oil.  MMS may agree to a termination of the PXP lease if PXP agrees to pay the federal government for any oil not extracted.  Such a requirement serves as an incentive for PXP to break its commitment.  Equally important, the ability to buy out of its lease does not prevent MMS from reselling the lease to another oil company.

EDC-PXP agreement is confidential and is NOT a settlement of a lawsuit

The confidetemp_logontial agreement between PXP and EDC is between private parties. If PXP decided to continue to drill it might, at best, result in the payment of damages to EDC but would be very unlikely to result in a requirement for PXP to cease operations, particularly if the State agreed it could continue.

There is no  requirement to remove the platforms

PXP/EDC claim this will result in shutting down operations from four platforms.  Even if the end dates were enforceable, PXP does not own three of the four platforms and there is no evidence their partners will cease operations (and pay the government penalties) as claimed.

The land deal is questionable

PXP’s submission to the lands commission says some of the land may have “insurmountable title issues”.  Because the agreement is confidential there is no ability to review the terms and conditions that run with the land or any  benefits of this. Who will hold title, how and when will the lands be conveyed,  what restrictions will be placed on the use of or future sale of the land how and by whom might it beoilspillsign managed?

More than 100 environmental groups oppose this project

In spite of what the oil industry would have you believe, offshore oil drilling is not safe.  A major spill could destroy our ocean, beaches, and coastal economy.  Spills happen on a regular basis. One-quarter of all oil spills in the past 44 years have occurred in the last decade.  Most recently, a spill in Australian waters  lasted 72 days, in spite of using the latest technology.  This spill had devastating impacts on marine life.

EDC claims that the overall risk for the PXP project is low because it will end drilling in 14 years.  This ignores that the greater the amount of oil being removed, the greater the likelihood of a spill with the chances of a spill  greatest in the early years.  These claims are contrary to every position EDC has taken in the past.  Innovation is good but it must be designed to work.

Fran Gibson

Fran Gibson

Mark Massara

Mark Massara

No: Arnold’s Plan is a Quick and Dirty Power Grab

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

Garamendi PhotoBy Lt. Gov. John Garamendi
Special to Calbuzz

The Schwarzenegger Administration, through the California Department of Finance, wants to “drill baby drill” off the Golden State’s coastline, and they’re willing to undermine 70+ years of checks and balances to do it. Will we let them get away with it?

In late January, I joined California Controller John Chiang in a two-to-one vote of the California State Lands Commission (SLC) to reject what would have been the first new oil lease in California waters in more than 40 years.

As chair of the SLC, I take my responsibility as a steward of the environment very seriously, and I did not think the proposal was in the best interests of the state. Beyond the inherent environmental risks posed by all new drilling projects, I did not think assurances included in the proposal to decommission oil platforms decades down the road were enforceable.

Unfortunately, the Department of Finance is unable to take “No” for an answer. For the first time in our commission’s 70-year history, their proposal is to bypass the SLC and permit the Department of Finance to authorize the oil lease off the Santa Barbara coast. Let’s keep in mind it was 70 years ago that a major scandal (link) at the Department of Finance led to the State Lands Commission having the authority to issue leases.

What is wrong with this picture? Plenty, and at the expense of California.

The Schwarzenegger Administration refuses to tax Big Oil companies that now extract oil in California to fund critical health care services, children’s programs and education. This tax would generate $1.2 billion dollars annually.  On Monday, the Governor warned he will veto the budget bill package including an oil production tax.

Instead the administration is taking the quick and dirty way out. Big Oil has offered to California $100 million dollars to seduce the state into granting the first new oil drilling lease in California since the Santa Barbara oil spill 41 years ago, a spill that covered hundreds of miles of ocean and over 30 miles of sandy beaches with more than three million gallons of crude oil.

Learning from history means not blindly repeating the mistakes of the past.
At an open hearing of the SLC last month in Santa Monica, Controller Chiang and I again joined together to voice our opposition to this power grab, backing a resolution calling on the legislature to reject the Department of Finance’s proposal. During public comment, 12 environmentalists agreed with our position – including representatives from the Sierra Club and Environmental Defense Center – while not a single individual rose in support of the Department of Finance’s end-run around the SLC.

”We cannot get away from the fact that this is the first new offshore oil lease in 40 years, and if I sound upset, it’s because I am,” said Susan Jordan, director of the California Coastal Protection Network. “I have never seen such a blatant power grab.”

“We don’t always agree with the decisions made by this body, but we recognize and support the hard work of your staff and the public process designed to enforce the protection of our precious state lands,” added Joe Geeber, California Policy Coordinator for the Surfrider Foundation.

The science is clear; drilling for new oil now exposes our coast to the potential devastation caused by an oil spill and contributes to the greenhouse gases that chill our ability to combat global warming. As I’ve said in the past, California must focus on becoming a renewable energy leader and leave the extraction of new sources of fossil fuels to the 20th century.

But you don’t have to agree with me to appreciate the larger issues at stake.
To bypass the SLC and give the Department of Finance authority to approve this oil lease threatens the independence of the SLC, a commission designed to be an independent environmental watchdog.

More than 35 environmental organizations are opposed to the Department of Finance’s plan, including some that were initially supportive of the oil lease proposal. To allow the Department of Finance to usurp the independent commission responsible for protecting our state lands and waters means we will lose one of the most important safeguards available to California ‘s natural habitats.