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Enviros Upset Over Obama's Drilling Stance, Happy With Rest of Energy Plan


grist.org

Many in the environmental community are annoyed by Barack Obama's change of position on offshore drilling, even while they applaud his comprehensive energy plan.

The Democratic candidate had staunchly opposed new drilling on the outer continental shelf, but then shifted his position on Friday to say he would be open to some drilling if it were necessary to reach compromise on a broader energy plan -- like the one introduced by a bipartisan "Gang of 10" late last week. That plan, which Obama indicated he could support, calls for limited offshore drilling as well as increased investment in clean energy, with the overarching aim of reducing America's oil dependence.

Friends of the Earth President Brent Blackwelder was quick to criticize Obama's position switch. "Friends of the Earth Action endorsed Barack Obama in May in large part because he spoke out against the 'gas tax holiday' gimmick that would have done nothing to reduce our dependence on oil," Blackwelder said in a statement Monday afternoon. "That's why it's so disappointing to see Obama now say he would consider expanding offshore drilling, even though he knows it is not a real solution to the energy crisis that is devastating our environment and our economy." Blackwelder also criticized the "Gang of 10" legislation for including funding for liquefied coal and nuclear power.

Adam Kolton, the senior director of congressional and federal affairs for the National Wildlife Federation, says there's been more than enough compromising on drilling already, pointing to the large portion of the Gulf of Mexico that was opened to drilling in 2006 and the part of the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska that President Clinton freed up in 1998. "In the case of the environment, we've been compromising," he said. "I mean, at some point, you can say let's compromise, but you keep giving away more and more."

Kolton also criticized the "Gang of 10" plan. "This is like a BLT sandwich with just the lettuce and tomato," he said. "There's no bacon. We've got to have things that really move us away from our addiction to oil and help solve global warming. This proposal doesn't get it done."

League of Conservation Voters President Gene Karpinski knocked the compromise mindset too. "Once we have a new president and more forward-thinking members in the House and Senate, we don't believe we will need a 'compromise' on offshore drilling, which will be yet another giveaway to Big Oil and will provide no relief for hard hit consumers," saud Karpinski in an statement to Grist. "We will resist any effort to pay this ransom which George Bush, John McCain, and Big Oil are demanding in exchange for the release of real investments in clean, renewable energy."

Now Say Something Nice

But even while they criticized Obama's drilling switch and components of the "Gang of 10" bill, enviros had lots of nice things to say about Obama's own comprehensive energy plan, which he detailed during a speech in Lansing, Mich., on Monday. Largely the same as the energy plan Obama had outlined earlier, it would, among other things, create 5 million new green jobs, invest $150 billion in clean energy and job training, require more electricity to come from renewable sources, promote plug-in hybrids and other fuel-efficient cars, and give Americans an "emergency energy rebate" paid for by a windfall-profits tax on oil companies.

Karpinski praised the plan's "tough measures to truly end our dependence on oil." Dan Weiss, a senior fellow and director of climate strategy at the Center for American Progress Action Fund, said Obama's plan, taken as a whole, is "a vast improvement over what anybody else has proposed."

A Sierra Club press release on Monday ignored the offshore-drilling issue entirely and simply heaped praise on Obama's energy platform (and scorn on John McCain's). "Sen. Obama's plan will put America on the path to a clean energy future because it prioritizes efforts that will benefit working families instead of the outdated fossil-fuel industries," said Sierra Club Political Director Cathy Duvall. "Sen. Obama supports creating millions of jobs by investing in the cleanest, cheapest, and fastest technologies to meet our energy needs and stimulate our economy."

Some enviros even said they could go along with Obama's new call to release 70 million barrels of oil, or about 10 percent of the stockpile, from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve -- if the move were part of a comprehensive energy plan and could provide relief for angry Americans. Though he opposed opening the SPR just a few weeks ago, Obama argued on Monday that releasing some oil could lower gas prices within two weeks.

"The short-term problem is that Americans are really hurting on gas prices," said David Willett, press secretary for the Sierra Club. "It would just be really foolish of us to be completely ignorant of that fact. [Releasing oil from the reserve] would hopefully take some of the pressure off the folks who are feeling pressure, who don't want to be for drilling but they're not sure that they have a choice at this point because of public demand."

A report released Monday by the Center for American Progress Action Fund found that in the 100 days after previous releases from the SPR, the average family saved a significant amount of money on gasoline -- $65 following a 1991 release shortly before Desert Storm, and $125 following a release prompted by Hurricane Katrina (adjusted to 2008 dollars).

John McCain and many other Republicans oppose a release from the SPR, arguing that the stockpile should be saved for a genuine emergency.

Weiss pointed out that Republicans didn't oppose such a move on previous occasions, when advocated by the two presidents Bush. And even if the government sold 70 million gallons out of the SPR today, the reserve would still be 90 percent full, said Weiss. "It's not posing any risk to our security at all to sell a small amount of oil."

grist.org Many in the environmental community are annoyed by Barack Obama's change of position on offshore drilling, even while they applaud his comprehensive energy plan. The Democratic candidate...
grist.org Many in the environmental community are annoyed by Barack Obama's change of position on offshore drilling, even while they applaud his comprehensive energy plan. The Democratic candidate...
 
 
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
blueshield
12:45 AM on 08/06/2008
The oil companies want lease rights. They're not interested in drilling, not on the leases they already have, not on any new leases. The only reason drilling is an issue is because the Repubs knew it would distract everyone from Bushco's handout of public assets.

Senator O has put some leases on the table as bargaining chips in a deal that will benefit the public and cost the oil companies - cuts in tax subsidies, increased royalty rates, etc and etc. Read his proposal.

The eco / prog world is a day late and a dollar short and are being played for suckers. They should be thanking the Senator for having the savvy to play hardball.
10:08 PM on 08/06/2008
Could you explain why the oil companies want to pay millions of dollars for "Lease rights" that they are not interested in drilling? How do you know this, did someone let you in on the secret oil company conspiracy?
10:31 PM on 08/05/2008
The "Gang of ten" bill is the best thing to come along in a long time regarding energy. It is a true comprimise that meets the needs and wants of each side. We will not be free from oil for a long time and that is a fact. I keep hearing how wind and solar will get us off of oil, but I have yet to see a wind powered car and solar cars are laughable right now. Oil needed for many years to come and that is a fact. We would not have plastic or roads without oil. None of our goods could be delivered without oil. How long will it take until non-oil powered cars are readily available and affordable to all? How long until we find something cheaper than plastic with which to make so many items that we rely on? I am all for wind, solar (when it is more efficient and cost effective), geothermal, nuclear and anything else that will make energy affordable for all. I will not, however, limit myself to only one path. If there continues to be this "my way or the highway" attitude in D.C., nothing will get accomplished. Republicans are beholden to oil a-holes and the Democrats are beholden to environmental nuts. Neither side has it quite right. There must be comprimise to fight the problems of today while preparing for tomorrow.
07:28 PM on 08/05/2008
Public mass transit must be improved not only to save fuel and the money attached to it, but to relieve the congestion on the roadways. Immediately after WWII my small rural town had superior service from both the Great Northern and Greyhound. Local trains had about 6 which stopped at various times of the day going both directions. The balance of the 30+ each day were express to or from the coast. The Greyhound ran more frequently than my commuter buses run today in North Suburban Chicago. For example: in 1947 the Greyhound took me to within 4 blocks of my eye doctor and took an hour to do it. Today I must take a bus, 4 different trains and a long walk taking 2 or more hours to reach my eye doctor to whom I can drive in less than 40 minutes. As the earlier blogger noted, in Europe the trains and trams are frequent and abundant in routes. We need to do better!
03:07 PM on 08/05/2008
the drilling is mostly harmless pandering. The oil companies can't start spilling oil from those new sites till long after Obama is president and the rules are changed.
02:20 PM on 08/05/2008
Obama stated very clearly that he would be open to limited compromise on off-shore drilling in order to get his energy plan enacted. It's not a flip-flop of "support" that some have twisted it to be. If his plan really is as good as many environmentalists claim (rave, actually), they should appreciate Obama's willingness to compromise to get it done. Is it ideal that he likely will have to compromise? No, but that's the reality. Either we compromise to see the plan enacted, or we kiss another opportunity for progress good-bye.
photo
rflctammt
War doesn't prove who is right, only who is left.
12:45 PM on 08/05/2008
You might want to check out this posting (also in today's HuffPost) :

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alan-fein/obama-calls-mccains-bluff_b_116786.html

Seems to me Obama is PDS (pretty damn smart).
11:55 AM on 08/05/2008
Very well crafted. While it doesn't give everything to everybody it certainly puts forward the necessary agenda. If this is the kind of governance we can look forward too Obama will live up expectations. I just hope people remember that he never claimed to want to govern from one side or the other.

It also takes away drilling as a wedge issue come November from the republicans. Which is vital, at this stage of the game, to take away anything they can use and repeat and repeat and...
10:18 AM on 08/05/2008
As with all things politic, it's a mixed bag when it comes to Obama's compromise on energy. Sure, I like most of it but drilling is NOT what we need to do. Clean energy is just waiting for the price of oil to catch up and it will take longer to catch up if we keep foolishly subsidizing this dirty and unsustainable substance. We need to change our infrastructure (compressed air cars are my favorite option) and get off of oil so that we can get out of the middle east. All of our problems there are tied to our blind addiction here. Obama needs to have BIG vision but I can wait until he's in the white house to lay it out. At this point he can middle of the road all he wants to as long as we don't end up with John McBush.
10:55 AM on 08/05/2008
Thank you for still seeing the big picture that a lot of voters are ignoring. That 7 out of 10 americans want off-shore drilling, is crazy b/c no one tells them that it will not immediately lower the price of gas at the pump. O is pressured to go with that b/c if he does not, it feels to voters like he does not care. How sad.

We need to get off oil, by developping more mass transit. I lived in Europe for years en people use that a lot.
Here people here started to use that more with this energy crisis, but the public transportation companies are not ready to respond to the demand.
The comprehensive energy bill needs to have funds allocated to every single state (so that even small areas can get mass transit) to develop the infrastructures for public transportation. Attach strings to those funds, so that they are only used to develop public transportation. I guarantee you people will use it if it is available to them versus driving
11:40 AM on 08/05/2008
:"Thank you for still seeing the big picture that a lot of voters are ignoring. That 7 out of 10 americans want off-shore drilling, is crazy b/c no one tells them that it will not immediately lower the price of gas at the pump. O is pressured to go with that b/c if he does not, it feels to voters like he does not care. How sad."

Hogwash. That's as much a false straw man as McCain cliaming it will cure teh problem. Lifting the moratorium will reduce priceswithin a few weeks by deflating speculation. Conservation and increased renewables will reduce it further and increased production will reduce it significantly in the long run.
12:01 PM on 08/05/2008
Mass transit is great for urban areas if it is clean (diesel from buses is hideous), but the US population is very spread out (frontier mentality) and that is something that is not easily changed. Transportation is our biggest use of energy and there is a technological avalanche coming that will provide a 'plug and play' replacement for oil powered vehicles. MIT just announced a more efficient method of hydrogen production from solar sources. Fuel cell cars where the hydrogen is produced from solar rather than coal are an ideal solution. Electric cars and other battery powered solutions are a poor choice because most of our electricty comes from coal. They should be honest and call them 'coal powered cars'. I still like compressed air if the energy used to compress the air is from clean sources.