CNBC | October 16, 2018 | Brian Sullivan
CNBC's Brian Sullivan reports from one of Shell's offshore drilling platforms, which go down more than 3,000 feet.
CNBC | October 16, 2018 | Brian Sullivan
CNBC's Brian Sullivan reports from one of Shell's offshore drilling platforms, which go down more than 3,000 feet.
For Immediate Release: Thursday, October 18, 2018
Contact: Nicolette Nye, (202) 465-8463, nnye@nullnoia.org
NOIA Welcomes Secretary’s Zinke’s Announcements Advancing U.S. Offshore Wind
Washington, D.C. – NOIA President Randall Luthi issued the following statement on Interior Secretary Zinke’s Wednesday afternoon announcements on new offshore wind progress:
“NOIA applauds Interior Secretary Zinke and this Administration for achieving significant new progress bringing the future vision of U.S. offshore wind to reality. The Secretary’s commitment to leasing multiple new areas offshore Massachusetts is exciting and we expect to see NOIA member companies actively pursuing those leases during the auction this December. In addition, the upcoming call for commercial interest in areas offshore California presents a tremendous new opportunity for the offshore wind industry to expand to both sides of the continental U.S.
“NOIA has worked with this Administration to encourage and support efforts to bring increased and more diverse offshore energy to the American people. We are gratified that the announcements made by Secretary Zinke mark significant milestones in the race for American energy security. Coupled with the possibility of increased offshore oil and natural gas in the future, this is truly good news for U.S. workers and consumers.”
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ABOUT NOIA
The National Ocean Industries Association (NOIA) is the only national trade association representing all segments of the offshore industry with an interest in the exploration and production of both traditional and renewable energy resources on the nation’s outer continental shelf. NOIA’s mission is to secure reliable access and a fair regulatory and economic environment for the companies that develop the nation’s valuable offshore energy resources in an environmentally responsible manner. The NOIA membership comprises nearly 250 companies engaged in business activities ranging from producing to drilling, engineering to marine and air transport, offshore construction to equipment manufacture and supply, telecommunications to finance and insurance, and renewable energy.
For Immediate Release: Thursday, September 27, 2018
Contact: Justin Williams, (202) 465-8464, jwilliams@nullnoia.org
NOIA Welcomes Oil and Gas Production Safety System Improvements
Washington, D.C. – NOIA President Randall Luthi issued this statement following the release of the revised Oil and Gas Production Safety System regulations:
“NOIA welcomes the common-sense approach by the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE) in improving the Oil and Gas Production Safety System regulations. The revisions develop a rule that reduces unnecessary burdens placed on industry, while still maintaining world-class safety and environmental protections. We have a rule that is not a safety rollback, but instead incorporates modern technological advances.”
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ABOUT NOIA
The National Ocean Industries Association (NOIA) is the only national trade association representing all segments of the offshore industry with an interest in the exploration and production of both traditional and renewable energy resources on the nation’s outer continental shelf. NOIA’s mission is to secure reliable access and a fair regulatory and economic environment for the companies that develop the nation’s valuable offshore energy resources in an environmentally responsible manner. The NOIA membership comprises nearly 250 companies engaged in business activities ranging from producing to drilling, engineering to marine and air transport, offshore construction to equipment manufacture and supply, telecommunications to finance and insurance, and renewable energy.
Washington Post | Paulina Firozi | September 17, 2018
THE LIGHTBULB
Hurricane season is in full swing — and it's throwing into the spotlight an ongoing debate between industry and environmental groups over expanding offshore drilling.
The National Ocean Industries Association is pointing to hurricanes as a reason the United States should allow offshore drilling in areas beyond the Gulf of Mexico. Because most of the nation’s offshore drilling is concentrated in such a hurricane-prone region, the lobbying group that represents offshore energy companies warns the country is “rolling the dice” with natural disasters, which can jeopardize the country's oil supply if bad weather forces companies to shut down oil production and evacuate oil platforms.
The group wants the Interior Department to expand oil production into the southeast Atlantic, the eastern Gulf of Mexico, and off the coast of California and Alaska as part of the Trump administration's controversial proposal to open most of the nation's outer continental shelf to potential drilling.
Yet environmental groups are pointing to Florence as the latest evidence this hurricane season that offshore drilling shouldn’t happen anywhere. “As this hurricane is proving, there’s no area off the coast of the U.S. that is immune to hurricanes or storms,” said Athan Manuel, director of the lands protection program for the Sierra Club. Florence was downgraded on Sunday to a tropical depression. Yet Manuel said the risk of oil spills and the fact that there’s no real way to move oil facilities “out of harm’s way” shows “there’s no safe place to drill.”
For its part, NOIA says that dispersing drilling across a broader geographical area will better ensure the country's energy security in the event of a natural disaster. By concentrating drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, “what we’ve done is put all of our oil and natural gas eggs into one basket,” NOIA President Randall Luthi said in an interview.
NOIA in part blames energy policy, which makes about 94 percent of the U.S. continental shelf off limits to drilling. In January, the Trump administration announced its proposed five-year plan to widely expand drilling in U.S. continental waters. But in April, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke told Congress he would scale back that plan, responding to opposition from both Democratic and Republican governors and lawmakers in coastal states.
The storms exacerbate the drilling limitation, Luthi said, since companies start shutting down their units and evacuating their workers. Production pauses, depending on the duration, he said, can have a “significant effect on the amount of oil and gas that’s being produced for a period of time.”
Read the full story here.
The Daily Signal | Nicolas Loris | September 14, 2018
When gas prices topped $4 per gallon in May 2011, President Barack Obama said, “We can’t just drill our way out of the problem.”
Throughout his presidency, Obama stated some version of that sentiment every time he wanted to push to subsidize alternative energy sources.
More than seven years later, human ingenuity, technological innovation, and the power of the free market have proven him wrong. To the benefit of American families across the country, the United States is now the largest global producer of crude oil.
According to a report from the federal government’s Energy Information Administration this week, U.S. crude oil production surpassed that of Saudi Arabia and Russia. When Obama made his statement in May 2011, U.S. monthly production was 174 million barrels (5.67 million barrels per day). In June 2018, monthly production stood at 320.23 million barrels (10.67 million barrels per day).
The dramatic increase in supply shows drilling is not just a “bumper sticker” slogan, as Obama called it in his weekly address in February 2012, but a path to energy independence, prosperity, and jobs.
Domestic extraction has lowered gas prices for millions of drivers and savedthem hundreds of dollars a year at the pump. A number of factors contribute to the price of gasoline, but crude oil is the largest.
In 2017, crude prices made up 50 percent of the price of gas, with federal and state taxes (19 percent), distributing and marketing (17 percent), and refining (14 percent) accounting for the rest. Over the past decade, crude oil accounted for 61 percent of the total cost of a gallon of gas.
The economic benefits of the shale boom extend well beyond crude oil production and lower prices at the pump. When combining natural gas and other petroleum products, the U.S. has been the world leader for seven years.
Thanks in large part to smart drilling technologies, increased energy supplies lowered household energy bills. Businesses are spending less on shipping and electricity costs and can invest in new technologies or hiring more people.
In the last eight years alone, chemical companies have invested more than $200 billion in 333 projects—and cited the shale boom as the reason why they’re investing in America.
There’s no time like the present, but the future of U.S. oil and gas production looks incredibly bright, too. According to a recent report from IHS Markit, production in the Permian Basin of West Texas and New Mexico could double by 2023. The Bureau of Land Management’s lease sale in New Mexico grossed nearly $1 billion in bonus bids for 142 parcels.
In its draft proposed program in January, the Department of Interior listed 47 potential lease sales off the coasts of Alaska, and in the Pacific, the Atlantic, and the Gulf of Mexico, and would make more than 90 percent of the total federal acreage available for exploration and development. These changes stand in stark contrast to the Obama administration’s last order, which placed all but 6 percent of the Outer Continental Shelf off-limits.
Read the full story here.
Nicolas Loris, an economist, focuses on energy, environmental and regulatory issues as the Herbert and Joyce Morgan fellow at The Heritage Foundation.