Companies Begin Quest For Oil And Gas Off Florida Coast

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MELISSA NELSON | July 5, 2008 08:56 AM EST | AP

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In this March 28, 2006 file photo, the Discoverer Deep Seas drill ship sits on station off the coast of Louisiana as Chevron drills for oil in the Gulf of Mexico. If oil or natural gas deposits are found in the newly opened region off Florida's Panhandle, experts say it could further the push to explore other once-protected areas everywhere. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File)

PENSACOLA, Fla. — Oil companies once viewed drilling in the deep waters off Florida as cost prohibitive. Politicians feared even the slightest sign of support would be career suicide.

No more. Record crude oil prices are fueling support for oil and natural gas exploration off the nation's shores. In Florida, movement was underway even before President Bush called on Congress last month to lift a federal moratorium that's barred new offshore drilling since 1981.

The early activity here stems from a 2006 Congressional compromise that allows drilling on 8.3 million acres more than 125 miles off the Panhandle _ an area that had been covered by the moratorium, which was enacted out of environmental concerns. In exchange, the state got a no-drilling buffer along the rest of its beaches.

Florida may turn out to be a prelude for other coastal states. If oil or natural gas deposits are found in the newly opened region, experts say it could further the push to explore other once-protected areas everywhere. It also could be a rallying point for critics, who say the new exploration isn't a license to expand exploration.

With gas topping $4 a gallon, recent polls show Americans, Floridians included, more supportive of drilling in protected areas. Some politicians _ including Gov. Charlie Crist _ have switched sides.

"We think the public is way out ahead of the politicians on these issues. People are more open to (offshore drilling) now," said Tom Moskitis, spokesman for the American Gas Association, a trade group.

At the same time, oil companies, driven by the record energy price, are more willing to risk $100 million or more to begin exploring new regions. The Interior Department estimates there could be 18 billion barrels of oil and 77 trillion cubic feet of natural gas beneath the 574 million acres of federal coastal waters that are now off-limits.

Drilling activity off the Florida Panhandle has started and sputtered for decades. Some companies had leases to drill off the Panhandle before the 1981 moratorium. They were grandfathered in when the moratorium passed because they were already actively exploring in their lease areas. They continued their activity off and on into the early 1990s.

In March, four companies _ Australia-based BHP Billiton Petroleum Deepwater Inc., Houston-based Anadarko E&P Co., Shell Offshore Inc. and Italian oil and natural gas company Eni SpA _ purchased leases on 36 Gulf of Mexico tracts under the 2006 compromise.

Jeb Bachmann, an analyst with New Orleans energy consultant Howard Wiel, said the four understand the shifting political and financial realities.

"It gives you an indication that some of these companies believe there is some light at the end of the tunnel," Bachmann said. "There is higher pricing and a belief that higher prices are going to ultimately drive some changes."

Anadarko bought seven of the recently opened tracts south of Pensacola because of their proximity to its Independence Hub, a major natural gas field off Alabama that supplies 1.5 to 2 percent of the natural gas consumed in the U.S. every day, said Stuart Strive, the company's vice president of exploration for the eastern Gulf. The newly leased tracts are between 50 and 75 miles east of the Independence Hub.

But finding and producing natural gas in the new site will be expensive. Three-dimensional mapping of the ocean floor, which must happen before any drilling, could take up to two years, Strive said. If a promising site is found, engineers must drill up to three miles below the ocean surface to extract the oil or natural gas.

And it will take years before the company begins producing anything at the site _ and there is no guarantee of success. A company can have as much as $4 billion invested and a wait of up to five years before seeing any return on the investment, Strive said.

"We typically will have $100 to $200 million invested in a project before we know if it is an economic venture or not," he said. "Then, if you know you have made an economic discovery, you spend a billion dollars or more on a facility."

The 1981 moratorium _ enacted out of environmental concerns in response to a massive oil spill off the Santa Barbara coast a decade earlier _ has prevented the Interior Department from spending money on offshore oil or gas leases in virtually all coastal waters outside the western Gulf of Mexico and in some areas off Alaska.

But politicians who once supported the ban are changing their minds.

U.S. Sen. John McCain supports lifting the ban and allowing states to decide whether to approve drilling of their shores. Crist, Florida's Republican governor and a possible vice presidential candidate, reversed his long-standing opposition to lifting the ban last month.

The ban won't be lifted without a fight.

U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, who has led opposition to offshore drilling among the state's Congressional delegation, criticized the governor for reversing his position, accusing Crist and McCain of putting oil company profits before protecting the state's $65 billion annual tourism industry.

"Oil companies and their allies are using the shockingly high price of oil and gasoline, which largely is the result not of a supply problem but speculative fever, to scare the public into thinking coastal drilling offers a real solution to our dependency on oil," he said in an e-mailed statement.

The 2006 Senate compromise opening up the Panhandle tracts made sense and should be honored by the oil companies, said Dan McLaughlin, Nelson's spokesman. Instead, the companies and Congressional Republicans are pushing to open more acreage, he said. Nelson helped broker the compromise.

"It was a compromise allowing them to go where they wanted to go, where there were some proven reserves, while also keeping them at a distance to save the economy, the environment and protect our military training areas," McLaughlin said.

"That compromise closed the door and kept the moratorium in place. Now you see the governor doing an about face, but we are confident we are going to fight it back again."

 
 

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- keepemhonest See Profile I'm a Fan of keepemhonest permalink

Big oil has had these 68 Million acres of US land for years -- why haven't they drilled? Profits, that's why.

It's about time big oil starts to drill on US Land they've had for years! Their lack of drilling is not due to democrats -- it's due to big oil greed!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:20 PM on 07/07/2008
- booker52 See Profile I'm a Fan of booker52 permalink

Speculators are driving up the price of oil, this is just crap. Drilling off shore buys us nothing. The oil companies have alot of government land leased, why are they not looking that that??? We hear all kiinds of excuses, I hear lazy!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:02 AM on 07/07/2008
- Vinca See Profile I'm a Fan of Vinca permalink

To booker52: I agree with you, WE HAVE LOADS OF OIL RIGHT HERE IN THE GOOD OLE USA< START DRILLING

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:11 PM on 07/07/2008
- research See Profile I'm a Fan of research permalink

7-14 years to see any oil, even if we start now. 2-4 years of oil estimated total.

much faster to install wind at 30GW/year *30% growth/year
Solar at 1 GW per year per machine doubling every 6 months or faster.

see my profile for details.

No more subsides or free rides for oil.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:09 PM on 07/07/2008
- calijon See Profile I'm a Fan of calijon permalink

the dollar is the key to this mess not driling. look at today dollar up and oil down 4 bucks. if we strengthen the dollar it will make it harder for foreign countries to subsidize their purchases and will lead to lower consumption. we need to consume less here also.

the idea that drilling is the answer is absurd. PBR found 6-8 billion off Brazil and oil still went up 30%. the less we use will be consumed by other nations and the government can't help. don't sell out to the oil companies because you're scared.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:00 AM on 07/07/2008
- MikeMidCity See Profile I'm a Fan of MikeMidCity permalink

How about we make all the lease holders of federal oil fields work the lease or lose it?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:00 AM on 07/07/2008
- TxAggie See Profile I'm a Fan of TxAggie permalink

Brilliant idea....but the oil companies already thought of it, they work the hell out of what they have. What exactly consititues an "oil field" from the midcity view?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:42 AM on 07/07/2008
- ibsteve2u See Profile I'm a Fan of ibsteve2u permalink

As everybody but the most outrageous liars in the petroleum industry concurs, the process will have little if any effect on the escalation in energy prices that is increasingly being driven by the offshore demand uncorked by the free trade policies of Clinton, neoliberal Democrats, and the Republicans.

There is, however, a bright side to massive oil exploration and harvesting off our nation's shorelines.

As more and more Americans find that they cannot afford to fly or drive to the beach, there is a very good chance that all of the new exploration and harvesting activity will allow the "average American" to console themselves with the thought:

"Oh, well. The beaches are too crappy these days anyway."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:13 AM on 07/07/2008
- TommyMcCarthy See Profile I'm a Fan of TommyMcCarthy permalink

you mean there's "outrageous liars" in the awl biddness?!?!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:41 PM on 07/07/2008
- chicago25624 See Profile I'm a Fan of chicago25624 permalink

Heaven forbid we drill our own oil and keep our own money in our own country. What are we thinking?

P.S. That's sarcasm for those of you who don't understand.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:02 AM on 07/07/2008
- ibsteve2u See Profile I'm a Fan of ibsteve2u permalink

"Heaven forbid we drill our own oil and keep our own money in our own country. What are we thinking?"

Ummm...and I gather you are thinking that the oil companies won't ship our own oil off to foreign nations even if those nations are willing to pay enough to make it more profitable than selling it in the U.S. would be?

If so, you are not thinking. What better use for the debt other nations hold in American dollars that are worth increasingly less on the global stage than to use them to outbid American consumers for their own oil?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:00 AM on 07/07/2008
- cabbile See Profile I'm a Fan of cabbile permalink

I certainly hope this doesn't spread to the west coast where I live. But if it does I guess I could move to another country where they don't mind paying high gasoline prices. I'm very disappointed that the Republicans have won over people's thinking so quickly just by raising gas prices. It's unfortunate that we've allowed poor people to live in this country, they are obviously the ones who have succombed to price pressure. Why can't they all buy Priuses like I have?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:25 AM on 07/07/2008
- NateJ See Profile I'm a Fan of NateJ permalink

Far be it from me to defend the Republicans, but they didn't raise the gas prices.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:58 AM on 07/07/2008
- cgpunker See Profile I'm a Fan of cgpunker permalink

No but their continued support of the people profiting from gas prices is at this point pretty much the same thing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:04 AM on 07/07/2008
- cgpunker See Profile I'm a Fan of cgpunker permalink

This is assinine. If you want to drop the price of gas, close the Enron loophole and stop the speculators and hedge funds from profiting on gas speculation. If we did that, the cost of oil and gas would plummet, and we could avoid the ridiculous and dangerous drilling for nothing off our coasts.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:11 PM on 07/06/2008
- RoloTomassi See Profile I'm a Fan of RoloTomassi permalink

While I certainly agree on the issue of risk related to potential large scale oil spills off the coast of Florida, such unusual events shouldn't be the primary focus of concern. Everyday seepage and discharge of oil, chemicals and other waste materials from platforms, drilling rigs and service vessels should be, as they are a constant presence once the exploration-through-production process begins, and would be routine contributors to a never before experienced polution problem for Florida beaches.

Also, there are many small spills that occur in the drilling and production oil each year that are never reported, and such small scale damage builds over time.

I suspect that a decade of oil exploration & production would leave Florida's beaches in very sad shape.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:54 PM on 07/06/2008
- wwinfield See Profile I'm a Fan of wwinfield permalink

This isn't going to fix anything. I hope all of you in favor realize that there are many hundreds of oil spills every year that go unreported because it is considered just a part of doing business. The oil will be sold to China and India. It will have very little effect on gas prices in America. If we want to use our own resources we could have huge fields dedicated to solar and wind energy like Iceland. Iceland by he way is one hundered percent energy independent. It is so disgusting because the oil and car companies are just as crooked as the tobacco companies. They have had the technology and the means to produce fuel efficient vehicles that have the ability to get up to 80miles/ gallon for the last twenty years.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:40 PM on 07/06/2008
- mjt218 See Profile I'm a Fan of mjt218 permalink

I personally take offense to a blanket statement that oil spills are not reported. I work offshore in the Gulf and we have worked very hard to build a culture around spill prevention and response. In fact, we report spills out to the 10,000th of a gallon. As a result, we have a huge number of spills per year, but a very small volume. We also learn valuable lessons on spill prevention from every incident.

Every spill, no matter how small is reported to the federal government.

http://www.nrc.uscg.mil/incident97-02.html

Despite what you may think, there are people with morals who care about the environment working in the oil and gas industry.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:45 AM on 07/07/2008
- TxAggie See Profile I'm a Fan of TxAggie permalink

Thank you for speaking up. It is good to see someone that knows about the subject first hand instead of the knee jerks that fail away at the key board without having a clue of what they speak.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:06 AM on 07/07/2008
- orangepetal See Profile I'm a Fan of orangepetal permalink

Iceland ? don't they have a large land with a small population ?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:36 AM on 07/07/2008
- guinness327 See Profile I'm a Fan of guinness327 permalink

In 1997, it was called the Project for a New American Century. In it, the neocon wingnuts said it would take a disaster akin to the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor to convince Americans we should adopt a much more aggressive policy in the Middle East, including, say, overthrowing Saddam Hussein. But even Bush, Sr. said the costs, both in dollars and human life, would never justify it. In 9/11, they got their disaster. And what patriotic citizen could possibly have a problem with our invading Iraq??

The same side of the aisle has been trying to let their buddies in big oil drill in AMWAR and off our coasts, but they knew the country would never go for it. Now, for some "reason" gas is $4 a gallon. $4 a GALLON???? How could that happen?? What patriotic citizen could possibly want to prevent drilling now??

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:26 PM on 07/06/2008
- wm1066 See Profile I'm a Fan of wm1066 permalink

And this is the way Bush Oil pays back Florida for being its willing stooge for the last two elections!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:35 PM on 07/06/2008
- 530Rose See Profile I'm a Fan of 530Rose permalink

The voters in Florida had better work fast to prevent their coastline from looking like much of Alaska - the Aleutians, Prince William Sound, Prudhoe Bay, and much of the area covered by the frequently damaged pipeline.

They need to remember that the Supreme Court, ready to support corporations over communities whenever they can, reduced the damages previously awarded to the Alaskan people.

They need to remember the seabirds, fish and other wildlife that are killed and maimed by oil spills as well as the damage to the fishing industry, tourism, and the total ecosystem in places where oil drilling is performed.

Florida is a beautiful state with a multitude of resources that could be damaged or destroyed by even a tiny oil spill. The small amount of oil available from offshore drilling will be eaten up by the millions of new drivers in China, India, and the rest of the third world, not to mention the inefficient automobiles many Americans choose to drive. Nothing we can do will ever allow us to "catch up" to the worldwide demand for oil. Our only hope is alternative fuels/energy sources.

Please, Florida, stop this madness. Save your environment. Save your economy. Vote Democrat this year!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:44 PM on 07/06/2008
- NoBo08 See Profile I'm a Fan of NoBo08 permalink

I live in Florida and I say DRILL HERE, DRILL NOW.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:31 PM on 07/06/2008
- orangepetal See Profile I'm a Fan of orangepetal permalink

Me too, and for many of us that were dying to vote democrat, well tell the DNC to count our votes, every single one. 5 states broke the rules, only 2 were punished. We voted early, well just get over it !
First cut consumption, stop sending billions of our money to other countries everyday, then we won't need to drill.
I have a good idea for a green energy idea but I don't see people looking for ideas, so I guess we have to drill.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:45 AM on 07/07/2008
- RoloTomassi See Profile I'm a Fan of RoloTomassi permalink

I live in Florida as well, and I am strictly OPPOSED to such drilling.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:57 PM on 07/06/2008
- BardEric See Profile I'm a Fan of BardEric permalink

I would also think that the lack of wisdom in building rigs in hurricane-prone waters was made perfectcly clear after Katrina? Does anyone know if we can build rigs to withstand a cat 5 hurricane?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:51 PM on 07/06/2008
- catzoned See Profile I'm a Fan of catzoned permalink

It seems some have forgotten hurricane Ivan as well as well as Katrina although Ivan had the strength to push all the way North. It is just plain stupid to put oil rigs in hurricane alley.

I don't care for Florida myself but I do love wildlife. It's already been squeezed out by human encroachment.

Save yourself Florida - vote Democratic from local politics to the presidency.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:15 PM on 07/06/2008
- BushSunkOurShip See Profile I'm a Fan of BushSunkOurShip permalink

Corporations "OWN" the news media , our elected officials and now they are working on the democrats.

We have to many elected officials with ties into the very policies the promote and vote on.

Do you believe this could influence the way someone would vote when it came down to large wealth and income....

This should be illegal and there should be laws to stop it. Oh there are laws but as Bush and his republican friends they decide that they are above them.. Laws are for little people and in this country little people have no say......l.

Diania Feinstein democratic senator ,, As chairperson and ranking member of the Military Construction Appropriations subcommittee from 2001 through the end of 2005, Feinstein supervised the appropriation of billions of dollars a year for specific military construction projects. Two defense contractors whose interests were largely controlled by her husband, financier benefited from decisions made by Feinstein as leader of this powerful subcommittee.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:18 PM on 07/06/2008
- jubo See Profile I'm a Fan of jubo permalink

I hear there's gobs of it in a triangular area just off of Bermuda island.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:07 AM on 07/06/2008
- raker See Profile I'm a Fan of raker permalink

Today, Sunday, Bill Kristol's employer The NY Times figured the whole oil thing out. It's our fault. Yours and mine. Of course! Why didn't we see that the driving - to work, to the grocery store, to soccer practice - that's the evil at work. That's why we're getting raped "at the pump" as newspeople are required to chirp.

Apparently it's not supply and demand; rising demand in China; rising demand in India; not enough refineries; hurricanes in the gulf; Middle East unrest; slow OPEC production; none of those things. It's you and me driving around in circles, wasting gas, guzzle guzzle guzzle.

Reminds me of the litany of fake reasons they kept inventing to invade Iraq. Fool me once...shame on...fool me twice...you can't get fooled agin!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:45 AM on 07/06/2008