NOIA Encourages Movement on Permits to Prevent a De Facto Gulf-wide Moratorium

 

 

For Immediate Release:                            Contact:  Nicolette Nye

Tuesday, October 12, 2010                               (202) 347-6900          

 

NOIA Encourages Movement on Permits to Prevent a De Facto Gulf-wide Moratorium

 

WASHINGTON, DC – NOIA President Randall Luthi today issued the following statement in response to the lifting of the deepwater drilling moratorium announced today by Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar:

“While we are pleased today that Secretary Salazar has opted to end the job-killing moratorium on deepwater drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, our companies remain doubtful that this announcement is anything more than symbolic, until permits are actually  issued for new drilling. 

“In the shallow water gulf, where no official moratorium was imposed, permitting slowed to a snail’s pace under the government guidelines imposed this summer, some of which are now codified in the Interim Final Drilling Safety Rule announced by DOI last week.  It is therefore not a stretch to assume that, despite today’s action, companies operating in the deepwater Gulf may suffer a similar de facto moratorium. 

“Slowing or stopping the actual issuance of permits is not the only threat posed by the Administration’s handling of this issue. The Interior Department today referred to the ‘dynamic’ nature of future regulations in an effort to show they would adapt as circumstances warrant. That sounds good. In reality, however, it introduces another level of uncertainty to a regulatory process that has come to be less predictable than in many under-developed nations around the globe. When billions of dollars of investment are at stake, a ‘dynamic’ regulatory process could be as dangerous to future offshore energy development as an outright ban.

“Any moratorium on offshore drilling and operations, official, de facto or in the form of vague dynamic regulatory systems, kills jobs and home-grown energy.  The offshore industry is ready, willing and able to comply with governmental rules and regulations to ensure safe operations, but would also like to see the Department focus more energy and resources on reviewing and approving permits so we can get back to work for America.”

 

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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.  The NOIA membership comprises more than 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.

National Ocean Industries Association
1120 G Street, NW • Suite 900
Washington, DC 20005

Phone: 202.347.6900 | Email: media@nullnoia.org