Energy: An administration never enthusiastic about
offshore drilling is using the Gulf oil spill as an excuse to suspend
Arctic exploration. Who could've seen that coming? Now we'll be more
dependent on foreign oil.
Suspicions in some quarters that the administration was being
deliberately lax in its response to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in
the Gulf of Mexico in order to pursue a larger, anti-domestic energy
agenda were met with derision. But if not deliberate, the effect is the
same as the administration prepares to shut down our search for new oil.
President Obama on Thursday announced a suspension of offshore
drilling in the Arctic until the causes and solutions to the Gulf spill
are found. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said in a report delivered to
the White House on Thursday that he will not consider applications for
permits to drill in the Arctic until 2011. Shell Oil was poised to begin
exploratory drilling this summer on leases as far as 140 miles offshore.
The irony here is that it's been the reluctance of Congress and the
White House to allow more onshore development of our vast untapped oil
and natural gas energy reserves that has forced oil companies such as
Shell and British Petroleum to go farther and farther offshore to drill
deeper and deeper in riskier waters.
"I am frustrated that this decision by the Obama administration to
halt offshore development for a year will cause more delays and higher
costs for domestic oil and gas production to meet the nation's energy
needs," Sen. Mark Begich, D-Alaska, said in a statement. As with nuclear
power, domestic oil exploration will now be consigned to the "study
forever, develop never" category.
As we noted recently, this is another energy crisis that
environmentalists will not let go to waste. The nonfatal accident at
Three Mile Island in 1979 and the Soviet disaster at Chernobyl conspired
to deprive the U.S. of a non-polluting form of power generation —
nuclear power. The danger here is that similar overblown fears of
offshore oil production will doom the U.S. to being the Bangladesh of
domestic energy production.
Other nations continue to build new nuclear power plants, build new
coal plants and build new offshore oil rigs (including China, in the
Gulf of Mexico). They know that despite the risks and dangers, their
economies and their people need the energy. The U.S., uniquely among
industrial nations, will stick its head in the tundra.
A recent study by Science Applications International Corp. shows that
the U.S. economy will suffer $2.3 trillion in lost opportunity costs
over the next two decades, monies that would go a long way to reining in
runaway deficits and creating economic growth we sorely need.
The net effect of our energy inaction will be a reduction in gross
domestic product by $2.36 trillion cumulatively through 2029, or by
0.52% annually. We would also be forgoing hundreds of thousands of
high-paying energy and construction sector jobs here in the U.S. as well
as missing a golden opportunity to sharply cut our trade deficit.
Alaska's Chukchi Sea holds more oil and gas than anyone thought —
1,600 trillion cubic feet of undeveloped natural gas, or 30% of the
world's supply, and 83 billion barrels of undeveloped oil, 4% of
estimated global resources. You can be sure the Russians won't be as
reluctant.
We'll become ever more dependent on the world's petrotyrants,
including Russia's Vladimir Putin, Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and
Venezuela's Hugo Chavez, who are all too willing to use their energy
wealth as a weapon.
This will make neither our wildlife nor our country more safe and
secure.