Or, alternately, “Ken Salazar and Obama: Lying, dissembling, partisan, CYA-determined crapweasels.” From WSJ:
Before the Obama Administration sweeps under the carpet the controversy over the drilling experts it falsely used to justify its moratorium, the incident bears another look. Not least because it underlines the purely political nature of a drilling ban that now threatens the Gulf Coast economy and drilling safety.
When President Obama last month announced his six-month deepwater moratorium, he pointed to an Interior Department report of new “safety” recommendations. That report prominently noted that the recommendations it contained—including the six-month drilling ban—had been “peer-reviewed” by “experts identified by the National Academy of Engineering.” It also boasted that Interior “consulted with a wide range” of other experts. The clear implication was that the nation’s drilling brain trust agreed a moratorium was necessary.
As these columns reported last week, the opposite is true. In a scathing document, eight of the “experts” the Administration listed in its report said their names had been “used” to “justify” a “political decision.” The draft they reviewed had not included a six-month drilling moratorium. The Administration added that provision only after it had secured sign-off. In their document, the eight forcefully rejected a moratorium, which they argued could prove more economically devastating than the oil spill itself and “counterproductive” to “safety.”
The Administration insisted this was much ado about nothing. An Interior spokesman claimed the experts clearly had been called to review the report on a “technical basis,” whereas the moratorium was a “comprehensive” question. Obama environment czar Carol Browner declared: “No one’s been deceived or misrepresented.” Really? We can only imagine the uproar if a group of climate scientists had claimed the Bush Administration misappropriated their views.
[…]
Ken Arnold, an engineer and consultant, said the changes went beyond just the drilling moratorium. The Interior draft he looked at included timelines for each safety recommendation. The “bulk” of those recommendations, he explained, were all ones that could be done within 30 days. And most of the longer-term provisions would result in only “marginal increases in safety.”
Yet when the final report came out, the timelines he saw had been removed, no doubt because they argued against the necessity of a six-month moratorium. Mr. Arnold adds that the Administration’s decision to allow industry to continue drilling “gas injection wells”—which, he says, are no more risky than production wells—only shows the moratorium makes “no sense.”
“This was a political call; this was not a technical call,” says Mr. Arnold. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar has since testified that the call was his. But Robert Bea, from the University of California at Berkeley, who also reviewed the report, told us Interior had sent him a letter that “stated clearly that [the moratorium] had been inserted at the request of the White House.” Mr. Bea pointed out that the Department of Interior is more than equipped to target and shut down specific Gulf operations that might offer safety concerns. There was no call for a moratorium “for industry as a whole.”
Ford Brett, managing director of Petroskills and also a reviewer, notes that the experts first went to the Interior Department with their concerns. “All they had to do was put out another press release—one sentence long—clarifying that we hadn’t reviewed the drilling moratorium. . . .That didn’t happen.” Only then did the experts go public.Matthew Kaminski and Joe Rago of the WSJ Editorial Board discuss the challenges in Afghanistan and Kyrgyzstan, the Left’s panning of Obama’s BP speech, and the early-retiree fiasco.
As for Ms. Browner’s claim that no one was “misrepresented,” Mr. Brett disputes that. Several reviewers said they had, in fact, received “apology” notes from the Interior Department acknowledging the misrepresentation. “We did not mean to imply that you also agreed with the decision to impose a moratorium on all new deepwater drilling,” read one.
All of this matters because it offers proof the moratorium was driven by politics, not safety. The drilling ban was not reviewed by experts, and was not necessary to satisfy most of the safety recommendations in Mr. Salazar’s report. It was authored by political actors so Mr. Obama could look tough. A cynic might argue the ban was only added after review precisely because the Administration knew experts would refuse to endorse it.
A big reason why those experts would have balked is because they recognize that the moratorium is indeed a threat to safety. Mr. Arnold offers at least four reasons why.
The ban requires oil companies to abandon uncompleted wells. The process of discontinuing a well, and then later re-entering it, introduces unnecessary risk. He notes BP was in the process of abandoning its well when the blowout happened.
The ban is going to push drilling rigs to take jobs in other countries. “The ones that go first will be the newest, biggest, safest rigs, because they are most in demand. The ones that go last and come back first are the ones that aren’t as modern,” says Mr. Arnold.
The indeterminate nature of this ban will encourage experienced crew members to seek other lines of work—perhaps permanently. Restarting after a ban will bring with it a “greater mix of new people who will need to be trained.” The BP event is already pointing, in part, to human error, and the risk of that will increase with a less experienced crew base. Finally, a ban will result in more oil being imported on tankers, which are “more likely” to spill oil than local production.
All this is even before raising ban’s economic consequences, which already threaten tens of thousands of jobs. This is why Louisiana politicians are now pleading with the Administration to back off a ban that is sending the Gulf’s biggest industry to its grave.
“Mr. President, you were looking for someone’s butt to kick,” said Lafourche Parish President Charlotte Randolph, recently. “You’re kicking ours.” The sooner the Administration climbs down from this pointless exercise, the better for a Gulf that needs real help.
My emphases.
File this under 1) elections have consequences, and 2) most TRANSPARENT ADMINISTRATION EVER!
Seriously. Can’t someone just call a 50-state governor’s meeting, wherein all the governors agree to place a six-month moratorium on following any dictates coming from an Administration that, whether through incompetence of carefully-planned subterfuge, is intent on destroying the U.S. as it was conceived?
(h/t TerryH)
I’ve been wondering what would happen if the companies with operational rigs simply and quietly just go back to work. It’d focus matters quickly where they should be focused, for all that.
there’s the odd Republican with a pair it seems
Some Republicans consider BP deal a US “shakedown”*
Good for Mr. Barton I think.
BP should tell our pussybitch little country to go fuck itself.
Thanks, happy. That gets its own post.
But, after six months, think of all the jobs that will suddenly be saved or created by lifting the moratorium. Long-term strategy silly wingnuts.
From ‘feets link:
I’m no longer particularly surprised that they forget to talk about BP’s connections to this administration, its influence on the cap and trade bill or its long history of contributing to Obama.
“…after six months…”
I don’t think it’s necessarily going to work that way. By that time, many of the jobs lost in the interim will have been lost permanently.
In other news:
Well, except for the fact that he was a machine Democrat in Chicago. That should have been a hint.
Back to work.
Just do it.
Obama at least has been a positive inspiration to Alvin Greene, who had exactly the correct takeaway from Obama’s election.
By that time, many of the jobs lost in the interim will have been lost permanently.
yes. The rigs will be gone away to the respectable countries.
If nothing else they’ll tie them up just to kick failmerica in the nuts.
Next up: Why drilling for oil in the Bakken Flats, largely barren wastelands in ND, Montana and Wyoming, needs to be carefully controlled.
BECAUSE OD THE … um … BECAUSE OF THE … er … STEVEN CHU HAS A NOBEL PRIZE!!!
We’ll probably just lease them to Brazil or some such.
Can we just take everything from Houston to Edmonton and make a functional country out of it? ‘Cuz that would be nice.
[…] “Crude Politics: The drilling experts speak out on the Obama … […]
#12 – could you swing by the western suburbs of Chicago, when making that map, please?
Meanwhile, an anonymous but seemingly knowledgeable commenter elseweb says that the worst is yet to come.
Foolish engineers believe we live in a democratic technocracy, where reason, science, knowledge, expertise are admired and trusted. We live in the world that Ayers and Spielberg, Hiss and Stone have created. They should count themselves lucky that our Chavez/Castro/Allende, supported by academia and media, can ignore them. Assassination is the common means of solving the problem of uppity technocrats. Now their deaths will be postponed until the Democrat party has the control for which it wishes.
[…] “Crude Politics: Thе drilling experts speak out οn thе Obama deepwater moratoriu… […]