Posted on 07/25/2008 9:14:22 PM PDT by K-oneTexas
Drill ANWR
by Paul Driessen
Issue 112 - July 23, 2008
We cant drill our way out of our energy problem. This daily mantra underscores an abysmal grasp of economics by the politicians, activists, bureaucrats and judges who are dictating US policies. If only their hot air could be converted into usable energy.
Drilling is no silver bullet. But it is vital. It wont generate overnight production. But just announcing that America is finally hunting oil again would send a powerful signal to energy markets and to speculators many of whom are betting that continued US drilling restrictions will further exacerbate the global demand-supply imbalance, and send futures prices even higher.
Pro-drilling policies would likely bring lower prices, as did recent announcements that Brazil had found new offshore oil fields and Iraq would sign contracts to increase oil production. Conversely, news that supplies are tightening because of sabotage in Nigerias delta region, or more congressional bans on leasing will send prices upward.
One of our best prospects is Alaskas Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, which geologists say contains billions of barrels of recoverable oil. If President Clinton hadnt bowed to Wilderness Society demands and vetoed 1995 legislation, wed be producing a million barrels a day from ANWR right now. Thats equal to US imports from Saudi Arabia, at $50 billion annually.
Drilling in ANWR would get new oil flowing in 5-10 years, depending on how many lawsuits environmentalists file. Thats far faster than benefits would flow from supposed alternatives: devoting millions more acres of cropland to corn or cellulosic ethanol, converting our vehicle fleet to hybrid and flex-fuel cars, trying to build dozens of new nuclear power plants, and blanketing thousands of square miles with wind turbines and solar panels. These alternatives would take decades to implement, and all face political, legal, technological, economic and environmental hurdles.
ANWR is the size of South Carolina. Its narrow coastal plain is frozen and windswept most of the year. Wildlife flourish amid drilling and production in other Arctic regions, and would do so near ANWR facilities. Inuits who live there know this, and support drilling by an 8:1 margin. Gwichin Indians who oppose drilling live hundreds of miles away and have leased and drilled nearly all their own tribal lands, including caribou migratory routes.
Drilling and production operations would impact only 2,000 acres to produce 15 billion gallons of oil annually. Saying this tiny footprint would spoil the refuge is like saying a major airport along South Carolinas northern border would destroy the entire states scenery and wildlife.
Its a far better bargain than producing 7 billion gallons of ethanol in 2007 from corn grown on and area the size of Indiana (23 million acres). Its far better than using wind to generate enough electricity to power New York City, which would require blanketing Connecticut (3 million acres) with turbines.
Anti-drilling factions also assert: US energy prices are high, because Americans consume 25% of the worlds oil, while possessing only 3% of its proven oil reserves.
Possession has nothing to do with prices any more than owning a library, but never opening the books, improves intellectual abilities; or owning farmland thats never tilled feeds hungry people.
It is production that matters and the United States has locked up vast energy resources. Not just an estimated 169 billion barrels of oil in the Outer Continental Shelf, Rockies, Great Lakes, Southwest and ANWR but also natural gas, coal, uranium and hydroelectric resources.
Proven reserves are resources that drilling has confirmed exist and can be produced with current technology and prices. By imposing bans on leasing, and encouraging environmentalists to challenge seismic and drilling permits on existing leases, politicians ensure that we will never increase our proven reserves. In fact, reserves will decrease, as we deplete existing deposits and dont replace them. The rhetoric is clever but disingenuous, fraudulent and harmful.
The Geological Survey and Congressional Research Service say its 95% likely that there are 15.6 billion barrels of oil beneath ANWR. With todays prices and technology, 60% of that is recoverable. At $135 a barrel, that represents $1.3 trillion that we would not have to send to Iran, Russia, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela. It means lower prices and reduced risks of oil spills from tankers carrying foreign crude.
It represents another $400 billion in state and federal royalties and corporate income taxes plus billions in lease sale revenues, plus thousands of direct and indirect jobs, in addition to numerous jobs created when this $1.7 trillion total is invested in the USA.
It means additional billions in income tax revenues that those jobs would generate, and new opportunities for minority, poor and blue collar families to improve their lives and living standards. It means lower prices for gasoline, heating, cooling, food and other products.
Thats just ANWR. Factor in Americas other locked-up energy, and were talking tens of trillions of dollars that we either keep in the United States, by producing that energy or ship overseas.
This energy belongs to all Americans. Its not the private property of environmental pressure groups, or of politicians who cater to them in exchange for re-election support.
This energy is likewise the common heritage of mankind. Politicians and eco-activists have no right to keep it off limits and tell the rest of the world: We have no intention of developing American energy. We dont care if you need oil, soaring food and energy prices are pummeling your poor, or drilling in your countries harms your habitats to produce oil for US consumers.
Those attitudes are immoral and intolerable. It shows disdain for the worlds poor. And its bad for the global environment.
Its time to drill again here in America onshore and off, in Alaska and the Lower 48 while conserving more and pursuing new energy technologies for the future.
Paul Driessen is senior policy advisor for the Congress of Racial Equality and Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow, and author of Eco-Imperialism: Green power ∙ Black death.
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Yes - Lets drill our way out of this
Contact your congress
Contact Nazi Pelosi
Pelosi AmericanVoices@mail.house.gov
Digging for diamonds wont lower the price of diamonds so, despite the fact that you have diamonds on your property, you shouldnt dig them out. Instead, when diamonds are at an all time high, buy your diamonds from a foreign source. Export as much money as humanly possible so foreign
entities can buy up US landmarks like the Chrysler Building (and the mortgage on your house by bailing out the banks).
While you are busy exporting trillions to buy diamonds, work hard to make diamonds obsolete thru new technology. That way, all the potential trillions you have in diamonds of your own eventually becomes worthless as you let them rot in the ground.
Silly, isnt it.
Great pics to share.
Don’t Reelect Incumbent Lollygagging Legislators. A new meaning for DRILL?
All we are asking is Congress get out of the way. If you like $4/gal, Thank Congress.
Pray for W and Our Troops
I live in Alaska and have worked on the North Slope. What you posted is the flat out truth. Democrats, in blocking drilling there, prove themselves demogogues.
There is absolutely no reason at all to not drill there. The North Slope Eskimos ought to know the lay of the land if anybody knows it. And they say the same thing.
Contact your Congress critters to let them know that you are tired of high gas prices.
The beautiful pics the demogogues and the MSM use, supposedly of the drilling area, are taken in the Brooks Range which skirts the southern boundary of ANWR.
I’ve been there, on the coastal plain (North Slope), looking directly south, on the far horizon you can just barely make out the outline of the Brooks Range.
The democrats and the MSM, their willing partners, are liars.
Thank you!
All of that puts the U.S. in a position that war for oil or
complete economic collapse are our only choices.
You can't frustrate every source of domestic energy
without consequences. Our enemies will blackmail us
to the extent that we are vulnerable to blackmail.
Are the Democrats trying to force us into a real war for oil?
I sort of wish GWB would issue some kind of emergency directive—just go ahead and drill, then let the Dems try to stop it. I guess it’s probably unrealistic, but his very resolve might help push world prices down.
Oh, I can just hear the howls from the MSM: "He's just doing this for his friends in BIG OIL!"..."See, we told you so!"
The 17% for all of the Alaska North Slope is a little dated information. Production has fallen since few new areas have been opened for production. It is down to less than 14%.
Bump on Drill ANWR as well as open up all of NPRA as well. They have allowed some of NPRA for leases and exploration but have continued to hold up permits required for production for many years.
Crude Oil Production (US with breakdown)
http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/dnav/pet/pet_crd_crpdn_adc_mbblpd_m.htm
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