Monday, August 09, 2010

It's the Oil Industry. We gotta do something, anything, says Obama

The Obama administration wants proof that oil companies can respond to oil well disasters. How will Ken Salazar at the Interior Department know if a plan to cap a well blow-out will work? What's wrong with the current method? Based on anecdotal evidence, existing blow-out preventers have handled the job almost flawlessly for decades.

Okay. Something went terribly wrong on the Transocean rig that was destroyed in April. Seems most likely that existing blow-out preventers need some improvements to end a repeat of the Gulf disaster. But overall, BP jumped in and after working endlessly at a site a full mile below the waters' surface, it stopped the leak. I think the results speak for themselves. Pretty impressive.

Anyway, it is obvious that when it comes to the oil business -- any business -- the Obama administration has no idea what it's doing.


Obama Oil-Spill Commission Questions Drilling Halt

Aug 9, 2010


The presidential commission investigating BP Plc’s Gulf of Mexico oil spill has asked the Obama administration if a temporary ban on deep-water drilling should be lifted for certain rigs.

The commission wrote to Michael Bromwich, director of the Interior Department’s Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, on Aug. 6, seeking information on the moratorium, according to a letter released today. President Barack Obama suspended drilling in waters deeper than 500 feet though Nov. 30.

The moratorium has been criticized by the oil industry and Gulf Coast lawmakers such as Senator Mary Landrieu, a Louisiana Democrat, who told the commission last month that the ban would lead to rising unemployment in the region. Bromwich last week said drilling might resume sooner than the end of November.

“We are particularly interested in whether individual rigs, or categories of rigs, subject to the moratorium are sufficiently safe to allow the moratorium to be lifted,” the commission said in the letter.

The suspension will remain in place until companies can show they are able to prevent and contain spills such as BP’s, which spewed an estimated 4.9 million barrels of crude after an April 20 explosion aboard the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar has said. Salazar told the House Oversight Committee on July 22 that he would consider modifications based on new information.

Bromwich last week began a series of public hearings on the moratorium with industry officials, academic experts and environmentalists.

Cut Short

“We may be able to cut short the moratorium,” Bromwich told reporters Aug. 3 at a briefing in Washington.

The National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Spill and Offshore Drilling, which held its first hearing in New Orleans July 12, has asked Bromwich for information on how the agency is evaluating rig safety, according to the letter. Bob Graham, co-chairman of the commission, had said the panel wouldn’t have the resources to evaluate the safety of the rigs or the ability of the oil industry to respond to another spill.

The panel might use its “bully pulpit” to ensure that the Obama administration knew the region’s concerns about the drilling ban, Graham said.

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1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hey, I ain't anonymous, I'm a Snake Hunter...
>>
Sarah Palin to Greta Van Sustrin
in Alaska, August 17th.

Palin sez, "Obama needs to take a vacation to ANWR & The North Slope"

then make a decision about drilling
On-Shore, also the shallow off-shore reserves right here! The North American continent has abundant oil and natural gas if career politicians in DC would stop pussy-footing around!
>
Now wouldn't that frost our not-so-friendly oil sources at OPEC?

reb
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12:12 AM  

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