Category Archives: Uncategorized

press.co.nz: Protesters make a stand in Sumner New Zealand

see photos from New Zealand, online at:
http://www.stuff.co.nz/the-press/news/6952153/Protesters-make-a-stand-in-Sumner

The Press

JO MCKENZIE-MCLEAN
Last updated 14:36 19/05/2012

JO MCKENZIE-MCLEAN/Fairfax NZ
BRAVING THE COLD: Protestors covered in molasses and cooking oil stand on Sumner Beach with their sign to protest against the proposed deep-sea oil drilling off Canterbury’s coast.

Freezing temperatures did not deter about 20 protesters from stripping down and lathering themselves in oil in Christchurch today.

Spokeswoman Hannah Flatman said the group, Oil Free Otautahi, held the “Oily People” event at Sumner Beach to oppose the proposed deep-sea oil drilling off Canterbury’s coast.

Exploratory drilling in the Canterbury Basin was expected to start as early as this summer, she said.

“These waters are up to 1500 metres deep, the same depth as the Deepwater Horizon exploratory drill, which exploded in 2010 and leaked 800 million litres of oil into the Gulf of Mexico. New Zealand is completely unprepared to deal with an oil spill of this magnitude.”

The Government should be promoting New Zealand’s world-class clean technology industry rather than inviting foreign companies to search for oil in high-risk depths around coastlines, she said.

Special thanks to Richard Charter

E&E: Interior to lease 37M acres in central Gulf

Phil Taylor, E&E reporter
Published: Thursday, May 17, 2012

The Interior Department today finalized the terms of a June lease sale in the central Gulf of Mexico that it said could yield more than 1 billion barrels of oil.

The June 20 sale in New Orleans will be the Obama administration’s first in the central Gulf since the April 2010 Deepwater Horizon incident killed 11 people and spilled nearly 5 million barrels of crude.

A lease sale in the central Gulf a month before the spill garnered nearly $1 billion in winning bids for tracts spanning roughly 2.5 million acres.

“We continue to make millions of acres of federal waters and public lands available for safe and responsible domestic energy exploration and development,” Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said. Earlier this week, he released a report showing that nearly 72 percent of the 36 million acres of federal waters leased for oil and gas remains “idle,” meaning it is neither producing nor currently subject to approved or pending exploration or development plans (E&ENews PM, May 15).

Interior’s Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) said it will include new stipulations in next month’s sale to encourage prompter exploration of the leases, as it did with last December’s lease sale in the western Gulf.

Stipulations include “escalating rental rates and tiered durational terms with relatively short base periods followed by additional time under the same lease if the operator drills a well during the initial period,” the agency said.

Minimum bids for deepwater leases will also be nearly tripled to ensure buyers intend to pursue development. An Interior study suggests that deepwater leases purchased for less than $100 per acre rarely see exploration or development drilling.

“This sale will continue making significant and promising areas available while encouraging diligent development and providing the
taxpayer a fair return,” BOEM Director Tommy Beaudreau said in a statement.

The agency said it will also notify bidders that they may need to comply with the terms of a recent settlement between the United States and Mexico governing development of a transboundary region the size of Delaware. The agreement still requires approval by Congress.

New lease sales in the aftermath of the BP PLC spill have drawn lawsuits from environmental groups. Groups including Oceana, Defenders of Wildlife, the Natural Resources Defense Council and the Center for Biological Diversity in December filed a complaint in a federal court in Washington, D.C., challenging the western Gulf lease sale, arguing Interior failed to fully gauge
the impacts of the BP oil spill and neglected to consider postponing the lease (E&ENews PM, Dec. 13, 2011).

That sale drew $338 million in winning bids for more than 1 million acres, which Interior officials heralded as a sign of continued industry interest despite a bevy of new safety standards and complaints of longer permitting times (E&ENews PM, Dec. 14, 2011).

Next month’s sale will be the last under Interior’s 2007-2012 leasing plan for federal waters. Beaudreau recently told a House committee he plans to finalize a new five-year plan by the end of next month and that no Gulf leases would be delayed. A western Gulf lease sale is planned for the end of the year.

Special thanks to Richard Charter

Seattle Times: Repsol: Exploratory oil well off Cuba comes up dry

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2018236721_apcbcubaoil.html

Originally published Friday, May 18, 2012 at 11:03 AM

An exploratory oil well drilled off the coast of Cuba has proved a failure and will be capped and abandoned, a spokesman for Spanish company Repsol said Friday.
By PETER ORSI
Associated Press

An exploratory oil well drilled off the coast of Cuba has proved a failure and will be capped and abandoned, a spokesman for Spanish company Repsol said Friday.

Repsol SA is evaluating the data it collected since the Scarabeo-9 drill rig arrived off the coast of Havana in January, and will determine whether to sink further wells in the future, spokesman Kristian Rix said.

It’s not uncommon for offshore wells to strike out, with four of every five coming up dry, he said, and it’s too soon to say whether other parts of Repsol’s exploration block are viable. “Mapping an oil field is like trying to draw a map of a city when all you have is one in 10 lampposts working and a bit of a fog,” Rix said by phone from Madrid. “It’s very hard to do, so I can’t draw any conclusions from one well about the whole rest of it. These are questions that geologists will have to answer.”

He declined to say how much Repsol has spent to carry out the exploration with the Scarabeo-9, a massive platform brought to Cuba from Asia to avoid conflicts with the U.S. economic embargo and leased for around a half-million dollars a day.

Special thanks to Richard Charter

Huffington Post: Arctic Drilling Opponents Swarm The White House & M15: Million Mobilization to Save the Artic

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/05/15/anti-arctic-drilling-activists-white-house_n_1518664.html?1337109177
Lucia Graves
lucia@huffingtonpost.com

Posted: 05/15/2012 3:12 pm Updated: 05/15/2012 3:36 pm

WASHINGTON — Because sometimes to get your point across you need to dress up as an Arctic Tern, scores of anti-drilling activists on Tuesday gathered outside the White House dressed in fuzzy onesies and polar bear masks.

The demonstration — organized by Green Peace, Sierra Club, Defenders of Wildlife, Friends of the Earth, 350.org, Credo Action and Alaska Wilderness League, among other environmental groups — comes as part of a larger effort to pressure President Barack Obama to stop drilling in the Arctic’s Chukchi Sea, home to such iconic species as the polar bear, bowhead whale and walrus.

“We’re out here today to deliver a million comments to Obama asking him not to allow Shell to drill this summer,” Leah Donahey, western Arctic and oceans program director at Alaska Wilderness League, told The Huffington Post at Tuesday’s rally.

Last fall, the Obama administration affirmed a decision to offer millions of acres of the ocean for sale to oil companies. More than a million people have written letters or signed petitions to ask the president to revoke the permits. Donahey, who was holding the 1.1 million comments to be delivered to the Council on Environmental Equality, said they would be delivered by the end of the day.

Deputy Interior Secretary David Hayes responded to the issue in a statement on Monday. “We welcome the robust political dialogue that we have on this subject and all the input from all of the interested groups,” he said according to reporting from Politico. The groups said they have yet to receive a direct response from the president.

Ben Copp, a 25-year-old intern with the Sierra Club’s Lands Protection Program who’s spent summers in Alaska working as a fishing guide, told HuffPost that drilling is an issue particularly close to his heart.

Copp, who was dressed as a huge furry Arctic Tern, said of why he’d come out in costume, “The only person who has the power to stop them from drilling in the Arctic this summer is President Obama.” Asked what he thought of the president’s record on the issue he added, “It could be better, and it will be better next term.”

The Sierra Club has also organized thousands of activists to call in to the White House this week to demand that the administration protect America’s Arctic.

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videos and photos at:
http://storify.com/AlaskaWild/hundreds-gather-to-say-no-to-shell-drilling

M15: Million Mobilization to Save the Arctic
Today, in President Obama’s backyard, we delivered comments from more than one million people who said: President Obama, tell Shell Oil, no drilling in our Arctic Ocean! The time is now to turn Shell’s drill ships around!

.
. More than 1 million people tell President Obama: Protect America’s Arctic Ocean now | Alaska Wilderness League

Statement from Cindy Shogan, Executive Director, Alaska Wilderness League: “Speaking for more than 1 million people who have written lett…

. As Shell moves closer to Arctic drilling, environmentalists and others, like insurance giant Lloyd’s of London, speak out about the risks of Arctic drilling.

Special thanks to Richard Charter

Houston Chronicle: Obama challenges oil companies to drill existing leases & Transportation Nation Report: 70 Percent of Offshore Oilfields Unused & Bishop Calls DOI’s Comments on Unused Oil & Gas Leases “Smoke and Mirrors”

http://www.chron.com/business/article/Obama-challenges-oil-companies-to-drill-existing-3561090.php

Houston Chronicle: Obama challenges oil companies to drill existing leases
By Jennifer A. Dlouhy
Published 08:37 p.m., Tuesday, May 15, 2012

WASHINGTON – The White House on Tuesday pushed back against the oil and gas industry’s claims that the Obama administration is blocking domestic energy development, releasing a new analysis showing that 46 million acres of federal lands and waters leased for drilling are sitting idle.

According to the Department of Interior report, oil and gas companies are actively drilling or have launched development on less than a third of the 36 million acres they have leased offshore, and on just over half of their onshore leases.

That includes leases where the companies have not yet filed exploration and development plans with the federal government, and ones where companies have received drilling permits but haven’t launched the work. According to the report, the government has issued about 7,000 permits for exploration not yet under way on federal and Indian lands.

The Interior Department analysis, which updates an assessment issued last year, comes as industry leaders accuse the Obama administration of walling off access to domestic energy resources. In particular, industry leaders and their congressional allies complain about the Interior Department’s decision not to sell drilling leases in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans over the next five years.

With gasoline prices and the economy looming large at the ballot box this year, the administration has been emphasizing its commitment to an “all of the above” energy policy and especially touting its support for domestic natural gas production.

Administration officials said the report underscores the White House’s commitment to allowing oil and gas drilling on federal lands and waters.

“We continue to make millions of acres … available for safe and responsible domestic energy production on public lands and in federal waters,” said Interior Secretary Ken Salazar in a statement. “We also want companies to develop the tens of millions of acres they’ve already leased but have left sitting idle.”

But industry leaders argue that the administration’s numbers don’t reflect the sometimes-long lead times between buying leases and winning federal regulators’ approval to drill on those tracts, or the time needed to assess leases geologically before launching exploration.

‘Election-year politics’

American Petroleum Institute President Jack Gerard dismissed the report as “election-year politics” and said it was “absurd to contend the industry pays the government billions of dollars every year in bonus bids and rents to leave land idle.”
On the contrary, Gerard insisted, oil and gas companies develop leases as expeditiously as they can.

“The industry last year alone invested $200 billion in the United States,” Gerard said. “So we’re hardly sitting on anything. We’re waiting for Uncle Sam to give us permission to produce these resources.”

Industry representatives also argue that it takes time for companies to conduct technical research and plan for drilling – generally without any guarantee that they will find oil and gas.

Kathleen Sgamma, vice president of government and public affairs at the Western Energy Alliance, said the administration was trying “to deflect blame for leases that are not producing onto the industry.”

Sgamma said the alliance estimates that about half of non-production on onshore acres results from “redundant regulations and bureaucratic delays,” not industry disinterest.

‘Use it or lose it’

Some congressional Democrats have argued that the onus is on the industry to develop their existing holdings. They have proposed “use it or lose it” fees for undeveloped leases that would be paid on top of existing rental rates.

In a bid to spur development, the Interior Department already has boosted annual rental rates for offshore acres that are leased but haven’t started producing oil. The government also has shortened the leasing times for initial drilling in some shallower water depths and hiked the minimum bid for some offshore tracts from $37.50 to $100 per acre.
Separately Tuesday, the Interior Department’s Bureau of Land Management kicked off the formal planning for a November lease sale in Alaska’s National Petroleum Reserve, when it asked energy companies and other stakeholders to say what parts of the region – if any – should be auctioned for drilling.

As many as 630 tracts covering 7.1 million acres in the reserve could be up for grabs.
jennifer.dlouhy@chron.com

___________________________________

http://transportationnation.org/2012/05/15/report-70-percent-of-offshore-oilfields-unused/

Transportation Nation Report: 70 Percent of Offshore Oilfields Unused
By Andrea Bernstein | 05/15/2012 – 3:01 pm

Some 26 million acres of offshore areas currently under lease for oil and gas development are inactive, according to a report issued Tuesday by the Department of the Interior. A DOI press release touts the finding, and pushes oil companies to, umÅ drill, baby, drill.
The report comes as President Barack Obama pushes his so-called “all-of-the-above” energy strategy, which includes development of alternative fuels but also more vigorous oil drilling.

Here’s an excerpt from the release.

According to the report, more than 70 percent of the tens of millions of offshore acres currently under lease are inactive, neither producing nor currently subject to approved or pending exploration or development plans. Out of nearly 36 million acres leased offshore, only about 10 million acres are active – leaving nearly 72 percent of the offshore leased area idle.

In the lower 48 states, an additional 20.8 million acres, or 56 percent of onshore leased acres, remain idle. Furthermore, there are approximately 7,000 approved permits for drilling on federal and Indian lands that have not yet been drilled by companies.

“These lands and waters belong to the American people, and they expect those energy supplies to be developed in a timely and responsible manner and with a fair return to taxpayers,” said Interior Secretary Ken Salazar. “We will continue to encourage companies to diligently bring production online quickly and safely on public lands already under lease.”

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http://robbishop.house.gov/News/DocumentSingle.aspx?DocumentID=295497

Bishop Calls DOI’s Comments on Unused Oil & Gas Leases “Smoke and Mirrors”
Leases remain idle from onerous federal regulations

May 15 –
WASHINGTON- Congressman Rob Bishop (UT-01), Chairman of the House Natural Resources Subcommittee on National Parks, Forests, and Public Lands, responded to comments made today by U.S. Department of Interior Ken Salazar that the DOI “want[s] companies to develop the tens of millions of acres they’ve already leased but have left sitting idleÅ ”.

“Secretary Salazar’s is basically telling energy companies to run a marathon with a bus strapped to their back. Maybe if the Secretary would reduce rather than add to the redundant bureaucratic red tape and make necessary policy changes that encourage rather than discourage production, companies would be able to development the resources within the leases. Let’s be serious, these comments are smoke and mirrors attempts to appear as though the Administration supports energy production on federal lands. Their thinly veiled attempts to curb specific forms of domestic energy production over the past three years speak for themselves,” said Congressman Bishop.

This graphic from the American Petroleum Institute (API) illustrates the lengthy process required to develop leases.
According to the Institute for Energy Research (IER), in 2011 oil production on federal lands declined from 2010 levels by 11 percent and natural gas production on federal lands declined by 6 percent. However, there was a 14 percent increase for oil production on private and state lands and a 12 percent increase for natural gas production on private and state lands. Natural gas production on federal lands in FY2011 declined by 27 percent from its FY2009 level, when it peaked at 6.82 trillion cubic feet, while natural gas production on state and private lands increased 28 percent during that same period of time.

-30-

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http://blogs.detroitnews.com/politics/2012/05/15/big-oil-lets-leases-lie-dormant/

Detroit News

NATIONAL POLITICS MAY 15, 2012, 6:09 PM
Big Oil lets leases lie dormant
BY LIBBY SPENCER

Libby Spencer separating fact from fiction

A while back, when I posted about domestic oil drilling being at a historic high under President Obama, my conservative friends complained that all the drilling was happening on private land. Not that there’s anything wrong with that, but as it turns out the reason there isn’t more drilling on federal land is big oil companies aren’t drilling on 2/3rds of federally permitted leases. As a new government report on drilling activity shows:

More than 70 percent of the tens of millions of offshore acres currently under lease are inactive, neither producing nor currently subject to approved or pending exploration or development plans. Out of nearly 36 million acres leased offshore, only about 10 million acres are active – leaving nearly 72 percent of the offshore leased area idle.

In the lower 48 states, an additional 20.8 million acres, or 56 percent of onshore leased acres, remain idle. Furthermore, there are approximately 7,000 approved permits for drilling on federal and Indian lands that have not yet been drilled by companies. […]
In addition to holding thousands of undeveloped leases while lobbying to drill in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, off the New England Coast, and in the Eastern Gulf of Mexico, the big five oil companies produced 12 percent less oil in 2011 than in 2006 – all while making record profits.

In other words, all this wailing coming from Big Oil and Republicans about President Obama blocking domestic drilling is a big, fat lie. Also, the American Petroleum Institute, Big Oil’s propaganda arm, is lying when it says this report doesn’t include initial exploratory work. As the quoted part of the report clearly shows, they counted any planning stage as an active site.

So to review, Big Oil isn’t drilling where they already have permits, they’re spending money lobbying for opening up even more environmentally sensitive areas to leases, and they’ve decreased production overall, one might assume in order to be able to charge us more for their products. And let’s not forget the millions they sink into campaigns to support climate change denialists to the detriment of our children’s future on this fragile planet.
Remind me again, why on earth we should be giving these companies billions in government subsidies?

Special thanks to Richard Charter