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Fla. Coastal & Ocean Coalition: Facts Show Coastal Drilling Too Risky Off Florida’s Coasts

Florida Coastal and Ocean Coalition

Caribbean Conservation Corporation & Sea Turtle Survival League 

Gulf Restoration Network · Indian River Keeper

Natural Resources Defense Council · Reef Relief

Surfrider Foundation

www.flcoastalandocean.org 

News Release   Contact: Lindsey Pickel (813) 846.1827

February 11, 2010

 FACTS SHOW COASTAL DRILLING TOO RISKY OFF FLORIDA’S COASTS

Today the Florida Coastal and Ocean Coalition, a group of organizations working together to conserve, protect and restore Florida’s coastal and marine environment, released a factsheet that explores the impacts of offshore drilling on  Florida’s coast. The factsheet shows that drilling off Florida’s coasts will not only endanger the environment Floridians treasure, but also cause significant economic losses to the state at a time when it is trying to recover from other economic impacts.

“Catastrophic oil spills, such as the recent Australian spill, remind us of the serious environmental consequences even state of the art technology can create” stated Lindsey Pickel, FCOC Coordinator.

 “It doesn’t make economic sense to threaten Florida’s valuable ocean and coastal economies that depend on clean water, beautiful beaches and abundant fish and wildlife with the pollution and industrialization that accompanies offshore drilling” said Sarah Chasis, Director of NRDC’s Ocean Initiative and a member of the Coalition’s Steering Committee. It makes more sense to invest in clean energy strategies that will create more jobs, spur new business and safeguard Florida’s great assets—its coasts and oceans.”

 The facts present clear evidence that Florida’s coastal and ocean economies provide far greater resources and revenues than projected drilling revenues.  Ericka D’Avanzo, Florida Regional Manager of Surfrider Foundation stated, “The proposed oil royalties pale in comparison to the potential damage caused by new coastal infrastructure to support drilling operations, the costs of drilling-related accidents, and, most importantly, Florida’s coastal recreation and marine economies which generated over $550 billion in 2006– almost 300 times more than the driller’s projected annual revenue.”

 “The oil industry’s track record across the Gulf of Mexico should be reason enough for Floridians to oppose drilling right off our coast” said Joe Murphy, Florida Program Coordinator, Gulf Restoration Network.  “Spills, pollution, industrialization, and tar balls are all part of the deal, and it would be a bad deal for Florida.  Our coastlines support a fishing industry and tourism industry that is the envy of the nation, and that is too valuable to place in the hands of the oil industry.” 

 The Florida Coastal and Ocean Coalition’s Factsheet discusses issues such as oil drilling byproducts, oil spills, ocean currents, Florida’s coastal and ocean economies, and the myth that drilling off Florida’s coasts will lower gas prices.  “Florida’s coastal water quality is critical to the economic lifeblood of Florida’s long term survival, and any economic recovery in Florida will be driven by the quality, and continued protection of our coastal water resources. People don’t visit, start new sustainable businesses, or buy homes around polluted beaches and estuaries”, stated George Jones, Executive Director, Indian Riverkeeper. 

 Florida’s world renowned beaches support coastal economies and also provide critical habitat for threatened and endangered species “These beaches host 90% of all the marine turtle nesting in the United States”, said Gary Appleson, Policy Director of the Caribbean Conservation Corporation, the world’s oldest marine turtle conservation organization. “These beaches are already under threat from inappropriate shoreline development and coastal erosion. As Florida works to reduce these threats it should not be adding new ones posed by oil drilling.”

 “Any spills from peninsular Florida could rapidly move to the coral reefs and mangrove forests of the Florida Keys and southeast Florida via the Loop Current, (a major ocean current in the Gulf of Mexico) creating a major ecological and economic disaster for our state”, said Paul Johnson, Programs and Policy Director for REEF RELIEF, based out of Key West, Florida. “What is needed is a comprehensive national energy policy in concert with marine spatial planning of existing ocean activities and resources, before Florida moves forward with any consideration of offshore oil and gas”.

 To view the Coalition’s Factsheet, go to www.flcoastalandocean.org or see attached.    

Final Fact Sheet 2-11-2010[1]

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The Florida Coastal and Ocean Coalition is comprised of national and statewide organizations working together to preserve the saltier and sandier sides of Florida.  For more information please visit the Coalition’s website www.flcoastalandocean.org

Sierra Club: Hands Across the Sands Saturday Press Conference in St. Pete

Media Advisory
 
For Immediate Release                                                                                                                                     Contact: Cathy Harrelson, 727-415-8805
February 9, 2010                                                                                                                                                              Phil Compton, 813-841-3601
Hands Across the Sands Saturday
Pinellas Legislators, Coastal Businesses and Residents Join Together &
Speak Out Against Threat of Big Oil to Way of Life on Gulf Beaches
 
Florida’s beaches today face an unprecedented threat from Big Oil’s determined drive to drill in the eastern Gulf of Mexico. Saturday February 13th thousands of Floridians from every walk of life and political persuasion will join hands at 1:30pm on more than 80 Florida beaches to defend those beaches from the threat of offshore & nearshore drilling to our coastal environment and economy.
 
Prior to the Hands event, Pinellas County elected officials will join with local businesses at noon to explain why Florida’s coastal economy must now be protected in both Tallahassee and Washington
 
WHEN:           Saturday February 13, 2010, 12:00 noon
WHO:             Pinellas County Elected Officials
WHAT:           Hands Across the Sand press conference with Pinellas elected officials
WHERE:        Sirata Beach Resort, 5300 Gulf Blvd. St. Pete Beach, FL 33706
Scheduled to speak at the noon press conference at the Sirata Beach Resort are:
·        Pinellas County Commissioner Ken Welch, District 7
·        Senator Dennis Jones, D.C., Florida District 13 (R-Seminole)
·        Senator Charlie Justice, Florida District 16 (D-St. Petersburg)
·        Rep. James C. “Jim” Frishe, Florida District 54 (R-St. Petersburg)
·        Rep. Rick Kriseman, Florida District 53 (D-St. Petersburg)
·        Shahra Anderson, Regional Director, office of U.S. Senator Bill Nelson
·        St. Petersburg City Councilman Karl Nurse
Rep. C.W. “Bill” Young, Florida 10th Congressional District (R-St. Petersburg), has also been invited.
 
Drilling in the eastern Gulf of Mexico has been considered for years, but never more seriously than today, with debate in both the US Senate and Florida State Legislature to occur in the next few weeks. Floridians are sounding the alarm statewide and joining hands in an outpouring of support to protect America’s best beaches and the $65 billion tourist industry sustained by our coastal environment.
 
Directions to press conference at Sirata’s beachfront North Deck: Enter Sirata Beach Resort entrance, turn right, driving under registration portico. Right, then left past Avis building, another left to park near yellow wall with sign for “north deck” on left (beach access is on the right).
 
Visuals: Bi-partisan unity among local elected officials, joined by business leaders and owners from Gulf Blvd.’s beach resorts, on issue of defending Pinellas beaches from oil drilling, standing together on world famous St. Pete Beach at Sirata resort, with view of Tradewinds resort next door.
 
Note: Hundreds of participants in nearby Hands Across the Sands events will begin gathering at 1:00 pm to join hands from 1:30 – 1:45. Separate advisory will highlight local events.
 
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Phil Compton, Regional Representative, Sierra Club Florida Regional Office
111 2nd Ave. NE, Ste. 1001, St. Petersburg, FL 33701
727-824-8813, ext. 303      813-841-3601: cell

Public News Service: A Line in the Florida Sand

Public News Service-FL nc@publicnewsservice.org]

February 10, 2010

A Line in the Florida Sand

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – On Saturday, thousands of Floridians will literally draw a line in the sand to fight near-shore oil and gas drilling. The “Hands Across the Sand” protest is aimed at putting the brakes on a proposal many feel will damage the environment and jeopardize Florida’s beach-dependent tourism industry.

Organizer Dave Rauschkolb says people will be holding hands, along beaches from Pensacola to Key West and Miami to Jacksonville, to make a point about Florida’s ecology and economy.

“Every Chamber of Commerce from Pensacola to Panama City Beach has passed resolutions against oil drilling.”

The group Defenders of Wildlife predicts that a bill to allow drilling off the Florida coastline will be the defining issue of the legislative session that begins in March; a similar measure failed last year when the state Senate refused to consider it.

Supporters of drilling say it would help ease the nation’s dependence on foreign oil and create jobs, but Shannon Miller with Florida’s Defenders of Wildlife chapter, warns the potential damage is not worth the gamble.

“It will leave us with damaged coastal and marine habitats and lead us away from a healthy, sustainable and renewable energy future.”

Rauschkolb adds Florida’s beaches are the key to the state’s economic health, and doing anything that might endanger them is a foolish risk.

“Florida’s legacy is clean water, clean beaches, sunshine, lots of fun – and why would we want to risk that coastal legacy?”

Participants in Hands Across the Sand will gather at their local beaches at 1:30 p.m. on Saturday, February 13. For more information about the protest, see www.handsacrossthesand.org.

Special thanks to Richard Charter

Oregon Live: Supporters Cheer House Vote to Ban Offshore Drilling for 10 years

Oregon Live
POLITICS & ELECTIONS
Oregon and national election and politics news from The Oregonian

 
Breaking News, Environment, Oregon House, Politics »
Supporters cheer House vote to ban off-shore drilling for 10 years
By Michelle Cole, The Oregonian
February 08, 2010, 4:20PM
 SALEM — Oregon’s coastal waters — at least the three-mile-wide strip that the state controls — would remain off-limits to oil and gas drilling for the next decade under a bill that passed the House Monday.

Supporters, including the Oregon League of Conservation Voters and the state’s crab, salmon and trawl commissions, said a moratorium will signal to the federal government that Oregon’s coast should be off limits for drilling.
–Michelle Cole.

_________________________



Canadian Business

Oregon House votes to extend ban on offshore drilling for oil and gas for next 10 years

SALEM, Ore. (AP) – The Oregon House has voted to extend a ban on drilling for oil and gas off Oregon’s coast for the next decade.

The vote Monday was 38-21. The bill goes to the Senate.

A state moratorium on drilling expired in January. The state has regulatory power to three miles out. Beyond that, the federal government is in charge of drilling regulation.

Backers of the bill say there are no plans for drilling, but the state should take precautions to protect the beauty of the coastline and its fishing economies.

Sport and commercial fishing groups supported a permanent ban on drilling. But some legislators wanted a briefer moratorium, and they worked out a compromise for a 10-year extension.

State officials first adopted a drilling moratorium in the 1990s and lawmakers readopted a three-year ban in 2007. But that expired on Jan. 2 of this year.

After more than a half hour’s debate, the House voted 38-21 in support of House Bill 3613, which would extend the drilling ban for another 10 years. The vote moves the bill on to the Senate for consideration.

“Oregonians are not willing to risk our off-shore resources for a few days of energy,” argued Rep. Ben Cannon, D-Portland.

But others questioned whether 10 years is too long to lock up a resource Oregon might need.

Rep. Wayne Krieger, R-Gold Beach, said rapidly evolving technology may make it possible to extract oil and gas without harming the environment. Krieger asked: “How can you create jobs without using natural resources in our rural communities?”

Environmental and fishing industry groups, often adversaries on public policy issues, teamed up in favor of seeing the ban renewed during this month’s special session. The original version of the bill called for a permanent ban but a compromise was struck shortening it to 10 years.

No one expects oil companies are planning to begin drilling anytime soon. Yet the idea does come up. Two years ago, with gas prices topping $4 a gallon, some in Congress called for the nation to tap its off-shore reserves.

Brian Doherty, lobbyist for the Western States Petroleum Association, testified in committee that the are no proven commercial quantities of oil or natural gas in Oregon’s territorial sea. But his group opposed a permanent ban.

Special thanks to  Richard Charter

Pinellas County, Fl: “Hands Across the Sand”–People gather in protest of Fla. Offshore Oil Drilling

“Hands Across the Sand” – People gather in protest of Florida off-shore oil drilling
 Kathryn Bursch     6 hrs ago
               
St. Pete Beach, Florida – Even on a cool day, the Dahl family from North Dakota enjoys looking for shells and walking along St. Pete Beach.

“People who live here may take it for granted, but we find this is pretty breathtaking,” says Ardys Dahl.

And keeping Florida’s beaches attractive to both tourists and wildlife is the aim of a statewide demonstration planned for this Saturday.

It’s called Hands Across the Sand. Organizers want people to hit the beach at 1:00 p.m. and hold hands, in order to show their opposition to oil drilling off Florida’s coast.

“This is why we visit here. This is why we have a $65 billion a year tourist industry.”
While the move to lift Florida’s oil drilling ban has recently lost some momentum in Tallahassee, just like the waves, this controversial issue is expected to come back time and time again.

“If we don’t think this is coming back next year, we’re kidding ourselves,” says Rep. Rick Kriseman, D-St. Petersburg. “Everything we do now, lays the groundwork not only to defeat it this year, but to beat it back the following year.”

Those pushing for oil exploration say Florida will benefit from millions in royalty dollars. But those gathering on Saturday consider clean water and sand priceless.

Here is more information on the demonstrations in Pinellas: 
the Facebook group Love Tourists Not Drilling.

You can also get more information for demonstrations across the state.
See flyer: