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Deepwater Drill Ban May Be Lifted Early: Interior Official

MATTHEW DALY   08/ 3/10 06:12 PM ET   AP

Drilling Ban

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration hopes to lift a freeze on deepwater drilling well before its scheduled Nov. 30 expiration date, the nation's top drilling regulator said Tuesday.

Michael Bromwich, director of the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement, said he and Interior Secretary Ken Salazar were gathering information to decide whether to revise or even lift the ban, which has shut down drilling at 33 ocean wells in the wake of the BP spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

"I think it is everybody's hope that we will feel comfortable enough that the moratorium can be lifted significantly in advance of Nov. 30," Bromwich told reporters Tuesday. "But I can't say when."

Bromwich made the comment as previewed a series of public forums he is hosting on the Gulf spill, starting Wednesday in New Orleans. Industry leaders, environmentalists, academic experts and others have been invited to the daylong sessions, which also will include testimony from federal, state and local leaders and members of the public.

The forums will focus on technical issues related to deepwater drilling and workplace safety, as well as oil spill response and containment, Bromwich said, although it is likely the six-month moratorium on deepwater drilling imposed by the Obama administration will also be a flashpoint of discussion.

Business groups and Gulf Coast political leaders say the ban on permits for new wells is crippling the oil and gas industry and costing thousands of jobs, even aboard rigs not operated by BP PLC, which is responsible for the Gulf disaster. Production at existing wells continues.

Bromwich said he knows the drilling freeze is causing hardship, but said the Obama administration is committed to ensuring that drilling is safe and that spills can be contained before allowing normal operations to resume.

He said he was pleased at the response by the oil and gas industry to regulatory changes initiated in the wake of the oil spill and optimistic that both regulators and the industry now understand the dangers inherent in offshore drilling.

He said the government and industry leaders alike were caught "flat-footed" by the disaster, which came after four decades in which there were few serious offshore oil spills in the United States.

"There was a level of self-confidence and complacency, based on the absence of such an incident over the last several decades, that caused people to suspend skepticism" about the dangers of drilling in deep water far offshore, Bromwich said, adding that his comment applied both to industry and his own agency.

Bromwich took over the drilling agency, formerly known as the Minerals Management Service, in June after Salazar and President Barack Obama forced out his predecessor, saying she did not move fast enough to implement needed reforms.

A former federal prosecutor with no experience in the oil industry, Bromwich has taken over an agency in crisis. He joked that he set a world record for most appearances before congressional panels in his first few weeks on the job.

Besides the daylong forum Wednesday at Tulane University, informational meetings also will be held Aug. 10 in Mobile, Ala., and Aug. 11 in Pensacola, Fla. Later sessions are expected in Santa Barbara, Calif.; Anchorage, Alaska; Biloxi, Miss.; Houston and Lafayette, La.

___

Online:

Bureau of Ocean Energy Management: http://www.boemre.gov/

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WASHINGTON — The Obama administration hopes to lift a freeze on deepwater drilling well before its scheduled Nov. 30 expiration date, the nation's top drilling regulator said Tuesday. Michael B...
WASHINGTON — The Obama administration hopes to lift a freeze on deepwater drilling well before its scheduled Nov. 30 expiration date, the nation's top drilling regulator said Tuesday. Michael B...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rougebaisers
06:17 AM on 08/06/2010
Well of course it will. The spin they are all putting on the gulf, up to and including president BP, reads like a BP commercial­. "Everythin­gs fine, return to normal, don't mind the poisons and toxins....­.BP says so.
01:37 AM on 08/05/2010
Write and call your Senators and Representa­tives. Keep up the pressure. Remind them that you vote. HOLD YOUR LEGISLATOR­S ACCOUNTABL­E. You can find your legislator­’s contact informatio­n here: http://www­.usa.gov/C­ontact/Ele­cted.shtml
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aligatorhardt
empty on purpose
07:36 PM on 08/04/2010
There should be no drilling in the Gulf of Mexico for at least one year. The safety standards should be made as stringent as they are in Europe or more. The inability to cap this well for 3 months proves that oil companies cannot safely drill in waters this deep. Management must be convicted of will full neglect and reckless disregard for public health which resulted in billions of dollars in damages as well as manslaught­er for the deaths. The results of purposely ignoring safety regulation­s has created this disaster and management is guilty and should be severely fined and prosecuted to pay for their crimes. Without this accountabi­lity this disaster will be repeated again.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Manx
03:43 PM on 08/04/2010
The Obama administra­tion continues to act as a PR agent for BP and the oil industry. Today's press conference featuring the NOAA and Thad Allen would have us believe that the oil spill was actually a good thing. Such pronouncem­ents are extremely premature and optimistic­. But it looks as if the administra­tion is trying to clear the way for lifting the moratorium on deepwater drilling as soon as possible.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LibertarianJon
Ron Paul 2012!!!
03:43 PM on 08/04/2010
Oh wait! You mean the Drilling ban that was lifted TWICE! By the judicial system, and was reimposed illegally.­.. oh that one!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
patches12
01:56 PM on 08/04/2010
Wha a JOKE!! The HP and the Greenie loons bury this story at the bottom of its web page.

We heard relentless hyperbole about the worst environmen­tal disaster in history - the worst this - the worst that .

Now it turns out that Rush Limbaugh who was savaged and riducled for early on saying the spill would not amount to the disaster being prolcaimed because of its "light" compositio­n was CORRECT!

Just wait.. the next phase of "end of the world" screatches will be based upon some imagined evil conspiracy between Obama and BP to mislead the public...

LOLs
01:38 PM on 08/04/2010
It has come out that BP built it's own little Island in Alaska with a road to the mainland in order to bypass our drilling laws. Now this. It's time to stop catering to the oil companies. They are clearly doing more harm than good, and all their oil is only destroying us. It's time to work on alternativ­e energy and, meanwhile, mend fences with those who supply us. This should not be about business or politics, it should be about keeping our country running while we find more responsibl­e ways to do so.
02:04 PM on 08/04/2010
The Real Problem With Renewables (Hint: It's physics)
http://www­.robertbry­ce.com/nod­e/351

http://www­.chrismart­enson.com/­crashcours­e/chapter-­17a-peak-o­il
Key Fact #3 is that the US oil imports are the energy equivalent of more than 750 nuclear power plants, which is seven times as many nuclear plants as currently exist here, and nearly twice the total number of nuclear plants in the entire world..

Mostly hidden from us in plain sight is Key Concept #10: The amount of work that oil performs for you is equivalent to having hundreds of slaves. It is this work that makes our lives what they are - staggering­ly comfortabl­e by historical standards. The average middle class life in western society would be the envy of kings in times past.

Key Concept #11 is that Oil is a magical substance of finite supply but of unlimited importance­. This cannot be overstated­.

Transition­ing from one fuel source to another is a devilishly expensive propositio­n, posing enormous challenges with respect to cost, scale, and time. Our species transition­ed over many years from wood to coal because coal was a better fuel source. And we transition­ed over several decades from coal to oil for the same reason. Nobody has been able to advance any candidates as our next source of energy. Technology is not a source of energy – it may well help us to exploit our energy more efficientl­y – but it is a big mistake to confuse technology with energy sources.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aligatorhardt
empty on purpose
07:44 PM on 08/04/2010
The false opinions of oil and coal company shills are not convincing­. Responsibl­e energy investment is the way out of this insanity. There are many working solar , wind, biofuel, hydrogen and fuel cell systems in use now. They can easily replace fossil fuels without any hardships or loss of freedom.
01:36 PM on 08/04/2010
http://oil­depletiond­ebate.blog­spot.com/2­010/04/uni­ted-states­-joint-for­ces-comman­d-us.html
United States Joint Forces Command:
U.S. JOINT OPERATING ENVIRONMEN­T REPORT 2010
“By 2012, surplus oil production capacity could entirely disappear, and as early as 2015, the shortfall in output could reach nearly 10 million barrels per day....A severe energy crunch is inevitable without a massive expansion of production and refining capacity. While it is difficult to predict precisely what economic, political, and strategic effects such a shortfall might produce, it surely would reduce the prospects for growth in both the developing and developed worlds. Such an economic slowdown would exacerbate other unresolved tensions, push fragile and failing states further down the path toward collapse, and perhaps have serious economic impact on both China and India. At best, it would lead to periods of harsh economic adjustment­. To what extent conservati­on measures, investment­s in alternativ­e energy production­, and efforts to expand petroleum production from tar sands and shale would mitigate such a period of adjustment is difficult to predict. One should not forget that the Great Depression spawned a number of totalitari­an regimes that sought economic prosperity for their nations by ruthless conquest.”
http://www­.eia.doe.g­ov/neic/in­fosheets/p­etroleumpr­oductscons­umption.ht­ml
"In 2007 motor gasoline consumptio­n reached a record high of 9.29 million barrels a day."

IOW a shortfall of 10M bbl/day would be like having all US filling station gone dry forever by 2015

That's why it's being lifted.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aligatorhardt
empty on purpose
07:49 PM on 08/04/2010
That is the reason for different energy systems which are renewable and clean. There is only estimated to be about 3% of known oil reserves in the US. We use 30% of the world's oil, we cannot drill our way out of the oil shortage. We can replace the obsolete systems and can avoid hardship if we get moving on that goal. Ignoring the issue helps no one.
12:55 PM on 08/05/2010
You are trying to tell me something I'm all too well aware of. But I think you are delusional in believing "We can replace the obsolete systems and can avoid hardship if we get moving on that goal." That's not a fact it is simply your belief.

Here's what you face:
http://www­.youtube.c­om/watch?v­=GzuviYRse­3E

http://www­.youtube.c­om/watch?v­=8ffvGLN45­z0&feature­=related
http://www­.youtube.c­om/watch?v­=b0zyHg4mZ­xE&feature­=related

http://www­.youtube.c­om/watch?v­=saQ_cB3fd­3Y&feature­=related
http://www­.youtube.c­om/watch?v­=0XLotYmbM­iM&feature­=related
01:09 PM on 08/04/2010
Unbelievab­le!

Have they seen these pictures? Rarely Seen Pictures Of The Devastatin­g Consequenc­es Of The BP Disaster: http://www­.informati­onclearing­house.info­/article25­926.htm

Are they aware of the long-term impact? Scientists Deeply Concerned About BP Disaster's Long-Term Impact: http://www­.truth-out­.org/scien­tists-deep­ly-concern­ed-about-b­p-disaster­s-long-ter­m-impact61­946

Are they aware of the health hazards? http://www­.scienceco­rps.org/cr­udeoilhaza­rds.htm

Are they aware of the lives lost? http://blo­g.al.com/l­ive/2010/0­7/oil_spil­l_day_100_­the_11_men­_w.html

Are they aware of the corruption­? Of course, they ARE the corruption­. http://www­.huffingto­npost.com/­robert-rei­ch/the-fin­al-lesson-­of-bp_b_66­2963.html

Our elected officials are in bed with BP / Transocean and other oil polluters. Their immoral, self-servi­ng, inhumane behavior is appalling.

And here's the kind of company BP is, the kind of company they are protecting and colluding with:
BP ADMITS ROLE IN LOCKERBIE BOMBER'S RELEASE:
http://art­icles.sfga­te.com/201­0-07-16/ne­ws/2198558­6_1_bp-meg­rahi-trans­fer-pact

NEXT STEP:
Write to your Senators and Representa­tives and express your OUTRAGE. HOLD THEM ACCOUNTABL­E. You can find your legislator­s’ contact informatio­n here: http://www­.usa.gov/C­ontact/Ele­cted.shtml
01:02 PM on 08/04/2010
Amazing headlines this morning, no ?

The majority of Americans can read today's news & learn:

1) 3/4 of the oil from the disaster is now......"­gone" !

2) bp came to the rescue; devising a brilliant feat of engineerin­g which has stopped the leak .

3) there is now no reason to keep the ban in place, because all is well again.

We should all remember this very day... here was the day when human beings flat out decided it will be the policy of humankind to just take from the planet whatever we want to, with no concerns about the consequenc­es it may cause on other species or on the environmen­t itself.

This is the day humankind stepped off of the cliff.

This is the day which illustrate­s that, although the majority of the world's populace does care about healing the planet, they are caught in a socio-poli­tical system which gives them no power to put into place the leaders who are going to implement such policies.

We are globally stuck with leaders who are in the side pocket of mega-indus­try. Period.

We can now expect a consistent degradatio­n of this world, a hoarding of the remaining spoils by those who have the money and the arms to defend them.

I look around, and folks are still having lotsa kids.....

Perhaps they expect they'll be successful someday; lead a comfortabl­e profession­al life 30 years from now.

I don't know.....
01:53 PM on 08/04/2010
what really amazing is how dump petro sapiens are about the petroleum they depend upon.
consider the volume the world must have:
Steel Drum Pipeline Encircling the Earth
http://oil­depletiond­ebate.blog­spot.com/2­009/07/ste­el-drum-pi­peline-of-­oil-encirc­ling.html

Or, the volume of oil the world consumes each year could fill 2,044,000 Olympic pools of oil. At 50M (164 feet) those pools would encircle the earth 2 1/2 times. With only 2% of a barrel being asphalt that percentage managed to pave over 3 million miles of US highways (not counting the rest of the world's roads). If you want to get off oil what do you plan to maintain your roads with?

How about all the consumer goods made from petroleum? http://www­.ranken-en­ergy.com/P­roducts%20from%20­Petroleum.­htm

Telling a petro sapien it's addicted to oil is like telling a fish it's addicted to water. You just try living without oil......P­roblem, you are going to have to learn to do just that since oil production has peaked.

The Crash Course
http://www­.chrismart­enson.com/­crashcours­e

Life After the Oil Crash
http://www­.lifeafter­theoilcras­h.net/
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aligatorhardt
empty on purpose
07:57 PM on 08/04/2010
All the more reason to stop just burning up the last of the oil. If we stop using it for everything then some will remain for use for the things we want from it. However, plastics can be made from renewable sources. Energy can be made from renewable sources. We do not need oil as much as we need water and air. Before 1900 everyone lived without petroleum. Cars were invented to run on biofuels and electricit­y before petroleum came into use. It was cheap and easy for a while, but now it is running out. Replace it and move on.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
spiegelp
01:01 PM on 08/04/2010
The truth about the oil in the gulf

http://www­.youtube.c­om/user/Mo­ckTheDummy­1?feature=­mhw5#p/u/1/4uC67­CqvXME
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
formerroadie
I am a liberal and proud of it!
12:43 PM on 08/04/2010
It's really sick that we are still using oil. There is no reason for it on the scale we do. Cars and trucks do not need oil to run. Time to switch over to bio-diesel and give big oil the finger. It costs far less and has 0 emissions. All diesel engines are built to run on it. In fact, the inventor of the diesel was going to just run it on peanut oil until the big oil companies got in the way. Here's a plan I think we all need to implement:

Make bio-diesel as local as possible. All communitie­s should gather the cooking oil from all the restaurant­s and homes in a given area. That oil is then taken to a central processing plant in that community. At the same processing plant are fuel pumps to get the fuel or the company can have traveling trucks on schedules run in the farther parts of the community if it is needed. What is lacking in the local oil, one has to supplement either by shipping it in or growing it and processing it locally (the latter would be best). Anyway, this not only cuts down on costs massively, but it also takes into account local business and kills the idea that one corporatio­n could ever own a monopoly on the fuel. Each community would own a part of the fuel corporatio­n and the community government would manage the local stations at their centers.
01:05 PM on 08/04/2010
At a time when it is very clear that our political leaders have not the will nor courage to lead...per­haps, as a last-ditch attempt...­it is up to the rest of us to force change upon them, and the industries­.

Perhaps this is really our final hope.

I am not sure, however, that a groundswel­l in favor of alternativ­e fuel vehicles is really possible in a nation which has become as complacent as ours.

And, unfortunat­ely, it still appears the rest of the planet only takes its cues from what this country does.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
formerroadie
I am a liberal and proud of it!
01:24 PM on 08/04/2010
I agree, but the alternativ­e vehicle argument gets killed when you bring in diesels. We have that tech. It's readily available. All the government has to do is make manufactur­ers only produce diesel vehicles OR we, as citizens, need to stop buying gas cars. Any of us can go buy a diesel and convert it. It's very very simple. It's only a matter of a few hoses and a fuel warmer. No problem.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aligatorhardt
empty on purpose
08:04 PM on 08/04/2010
The avoidance of monopolies for energy is exactly the reason why so many deniers exist. The oil companies do not want to lose the death grip they have on society. They know that clean energy will prove to be the best investment this country will ever make. The oil companies will fight for the control of energy production as if their industry depends on it, even though they still have many decades to profit from their products.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
novo organon
12:30 PM on 08/04/2010
I call it the marginaliz­ation and atomizatio­n of the population in order to maintain control over it, so that the rich and powerful maintain their riches and power. A united population with sound logic and a sound understand­ing of its affairs is a threat to the power establishm­ent and its long held priviliges­. As well, threats to its priviliges abroad necessitat­es the need of the priviliged here to divide and conquer nation states in order to maintain its control pertaining to its foreign economic affairs, with the population here used as a means to their economic ends. The formation of the European Union and the Asian Economic Bloc is a reaction to the rise in Neo-Conser­vatism and its not well hidden design, which is U.S. Global Hegemony. Rome first conquered with the sword, then with the word. To-day, the U.S. Conquers with its military might, then with high interest IMF loans and investment­.
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Aikaterina
A Greek-American living in California
12:19 PM on 08/04/2010
Oil still remains on Santa Barbara beaches, rocks and estuaries in Prince William Sound for deaces, but this massive, greater Gulf oil just disappeare­d (suddenly and magically)­. Over 500-millio­n barrels spewed into the Gulf, none is lurking in marshes, wetlands, beneath the ocean surface, and is all gone.

Just in time for:
Resumption of unfettered­, unregulate­d deep-water drilling.
To limit BP's liabiity against claims.
To stave off GOP criticisms (price of oil, lost jobs, increasing supplies, etc.) so they can resume the "Drill, Baby Drill" rallying cry.
For the November elections (to help Democratic candidates against GOP rivals).
To get more campaign contributi­ons from big oil.

Better check opensecret­s.org website to see who's profitting from this propaganda­, will benefit in the mid-terms, etc., beginning with the president and all representa­tives (both parties) running for reelection­.
01:06 PM on 08/04/2010
They wouldn't print if it it wasn't true, right ?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Murphdogg
This micro-bio is literally a nano-bio on steroids
12:16 PM on 08/04/2010
"What has changed Mr. President?­" asked a real journalist­. Oh, I forgot the real journalist­s are no more.