Tuesday, May 1, 2007

U.S. to be free of Middle Eastern Oil by 2012

Last night, Interior secretary Dirk Kempthorne was on CNBC touting a new offshore oil drilling program that would put to work 48 Million Acres in the Gulf of Mexico and off the coasts of Alaska and Virginia.

"Department officials estimated that the entire plan could produce 10 billion barrels of additional oil and 45 trillion cubic feet of additional natural gas over the next 40 years."

This would effectively provide enough energy for the US to completely cease its importing of oil from any Middle Eastern Country according to the Interior Secretary. In addition, they plan to make sure that certain environmental standards are being met:

"The proposal includes measures to protect against damage to coastal areas from oil spills and other accidents. It would not allow drilling within 50 miles of the Virginia shore and would wall off an additional “obstruction zone” near the mouth of Chesapeake Bay."

However, environmentalists are criticizing the plan for not being protective enough:

“The Bush administration is zeroing in on the most environmentally sensitive areas for offshore drilling,” said Richard Charter, a lobbyist for Defenders of Wildlife and co-chairman of the National Outer Continental Shelf Coalition. “These areas that they are characterizing as buffer zones are woefully inadequate when you consider that the Exxon Valdez oil spill traveled hundreds of miles in a matter of weeks.”

My thoughts on this issue are that it would be great for our own economy, hurt the purchasing power of the Middle Eastern countries, lower the price of oil in general and really help create a more energy independent country. The problem is, I do worry about potential oil spills and tend to question the safety of these offshore oil rigs with the oceanic environment. I feel split because nobody can guarantee environmental protection with these oil fields.

SOURCE: Kudlow & Company, New York Times

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