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Monday, June 02, 2008
Humberto Fontova :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Environmental Benefits of Offshore Drilling
by Humberto Fontova
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Louisiana produces almost 30 per cent of America's commercial fisheries. Only Alaska (ten times the size of the Bayou state) produces slightly more. So obviously, Louisiana's coastal waters are immensely rich and prolific in seafood.

These same coastal waters contain 3,200 of the roughly 3,700 offshore production platforms in the Gulf of Mexico. From these, Louisiana also produces 25 per cent of America's domestic oil, and no major oil spill has ever soiled its coast. So for those interested in evidence over hysterics, by simply looking bayou-ward, a lesson in the “environmental perils” of offshore oil drilling presents itself very clearly.

Fashionable Florida, on the other hand, which zealously prohibits offshore oil drilling, had its gorgeous "Emerald Coast" panhandle beaches soiled by an ugly oil spill in 1976. This spill, as almost all oil spills, resulted from the transportation of oil – not from the extraction of oil. Assuming such as Hugo Chavez deign to keep selling us oil, we'll need increasingly more and we'll need to keep transporting it stateside – typically to refineries in Louisiana and Texas.

This path takes those tankers (as the one in 1976) smack in front of Florida's panhandle beaches. Recall the Valdez, the Cadiz, the Argo Merchant. These were all tanker spills. The production of oil is relatively clean and safe. Again, it's the transportation that presents the greatest risk. And even these spills (though hyped hysterically as environmental catastrophes) always play out as minor blips, those pictures of oil-soaked seagulls notwithstanding. To the horror and anguish of professional greenies, Alaska's Prince William Sound recovered completely. More birds get fried by landing on power lines and smashed to pulp against picture windows in one week than perished from three decades of oil spills.

For fear of oil spills, as of 2008, the U.S. Federal government and various states ban drilling in thousands upon thousands of square miles off the U.S. Coast. These areas, primarily on the Outer Continental Shelf, hold an estimated 115 billion barrels of oil and 633 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. This leaves America 's energy needs increasingly at the mercy of foreign autocrats, despots and maniacs. All the while worldwide demand for oil ratchets ever and ever upward.

"Environmentalists" wake up in the middle of the night sweating and whimpering about offshore oil platforms only because they've never seen what's under them. This proliferation of marine life around the platforms turned on its head every "environmental expert" opinion of its day.

The original plan, mandated by federal environmental "experts" back in the late '40s, was to remove the big, ugly, polluting, environmentally hazardous contraptions as soon as they stopped producing. Fine, said the oil companies.

About 15 years ago some wells played out off Louisiana and the oil companies tried to comply. Their ears are still ringing from the clamor fishermen put up. Turns out those platforms are going nowhere, and by popular demand of those with a bigger stake in the marine environment than any "environmentalist."

Every "environmental" superstition against these structures was turned on its head. Marine life had EXPLODED around these huge artificial reefs: A study by LSU's Sea Grant college shows that 85 percent of Louisiana fishing trips involve fishing around these platforms. The same study shows 50 times more marine life around an oil production platform than in the surrounding Gulf bottoms.

An environmental study (by apparently honest scientists) revealed that urban runoff and treated sewage dump 12 times the amount of petroleum into the Gulf than those thousands of oil production platforms. And oil seeping naturally through the ocean floor into the Gulf, where it dissipates over time, accounts for 7 times the amount spilled by rigs and pipelines in any given year. Continued...

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About The Author
Humberto Fontova is the author of four books including Exposing the Real Che Guevara and the Useful Idiots Who idolize Him and Fidel; Hollywood's Favorite Tyrant. Visit www.hfontova.com
 
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TreadmillJoe
You are correct about OPEC and it's mission. If one will think back just a few years ago when OPEC created it's "target bushel price" their stated plan was no higher than $28/bbl. Despite the price/barrel being much higher the OPEC members kept the tap closed claiming it was a refining problem, not a crude shortage. While there is a refining deficit in this country (thanks again to our liberal friends), keeping the output low keeps foreign stockpiles low which in turn buoys prices. Now oil is well over $100/barrel and OPEC's answer was to raise production by 500,000 bpd. America ALONE consume 11 million bpd so just how much does OPEC think this increase will do? If we continue to listen to these airhead eco warriors and their congressional allies we'll truly see just how high fuel can get along with all the fringe "benefits" high fuel prices bring.

Great article
I worked offshore Louisiana and Texas for over 2 decades combined. I was there when EPA restrictions were alot less stringent than they arfe now and I was/am there now. Mr. Humberto's example of fishing boats tied to oil rigs is so common to someone who's actually been there they are hardly noticed. I used to fish from the platform and catch bags full of fish in just a few days. I'm talking about snappers, sand trout, marlin, and other varieties. A simple look down over the side reveals the schools of fish waiting for a natural prey to wander by. These platforms really are like gardens of the sea but don't expect "enviromentalists" to see them that way, America is now at the mercy of it's dumber minority, all of whom call themseleves Democrats.
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