Under Obama, Oil and Gas Production on Federal Lands Is Down 40%

The Dude

Banned
Under Obama, Oil and Gas Production on Federal Lands Is Down 40%
Rob BlueyJanuary 18, 2012 at 4:57 pm(124)

UPDATE: The U.S. Energy Information Administration announced on Jan. 27 that data used for its study of oil and gas production on federal lands was “incomplete.” The EIA is currently reviewing information from the Department of Interior and will correct its report upon completion.

In his announcement rejecting the Keystone XL pipeline today, President Obama boasted that under his administration, “domestic oil and natural gas production is up.” Obama, of course, failed to mention that his administration can’t actually take any credit for the increase.
The vast majority of America’s new oil and gas production is happening on private lands in states like North Dakota, Alaska and Texas.
It’s not that Obama is devoid of responsibility. His administration oversees oil and gas production on federal lands by issuing leases. But when measuring oil and gas production in areas under Obama’s jurisdiction, the numbers tell a different story.
Citing publicly available federal data, the House Natural Resources Committee noted these figures:
Oil and natural gas production on federal lands is down by more than 40 percent compared to 10 years ago.
Under the Obama administration, 2010 had the lowest number of onshore leases issued since 1984.
The Obama administration held only one offshore lease sale in 2011.
Despite the Obama administration’s restrictive policies for*oil and gas production on federal lands, overall production still increased thanks to the pro-energy policies in states like North Dakota.
“North Dakota has been the poster child for what can happen when we unleash free enterprise and allow states to develop and commercialize their resources,” Heritage’s Nick Loris wrote recently on The Foundry. “North Dakota is drilling at record pace.”
The result: North Dakota’s unemployment rate is 3.4 percent, the lowest in the country. According to a recent report from IHS Global Insight, North Dakota already returned to pre-recession employment along with energy-rich Alaska. Texas is expected to do so in the first quarter of 2012, followed by Nebraska and South Dakota next year.
Those states all have something in common: energy production.
That policy aligns with recommendations from Obama’s own Council on Jobs and Competitiveness, which yesterday issued a report calling for more energy production that includes drilling and pipelines. Here’s the language from the Jobs Council report:
As a nation, we need to take advantage of all our natural resources to spur economic growth, create jobs and reduce the country’s dependence on foreign oil. First, we should allow more access to oil, natural gas and coal opportunities on federal lands. Where sources of shale natural gas have been uncovered, federal, state and local authorities should encourage its safe and responsible extraction. While the administration has supported holding additional lease sales*and evaluating new areas for drilling, further expanding and expediting the domestic production of fossil fuels both offshore and onshore (in conjunction with more electric and natural gas vehicles) will reduce America’s reliance on foreign oil and the huge outflow of U.S. dollars this reliance entails. In addition, policies that encourage rapid lease development while emphasizing the highest safety standards will ensure companies responsibly drill for natural gas or oil and mine for coal or other our minerals in federal areas in a timely manner.
With the Keystone XL decision, Obama rejected that advice. “At a time when unemployment remains unacceptably high, Iran is threatening the Strait of Hormuz, and Canada is looking to take this oil elsewhere, it is difficult to understand how the President could say no to thousands of jobs and an increase in energy supply from our all
 
Under Obama, Oil and Gas Production on Federal Lands Is Down 40%Rob BlueyJanuary 18, 2012 at 4:57 pm(124) UPDATE: The U.S. Energy Information Administration announced on Jan. 27 that data used for its study of oil and gas production on federal lands was “incomplete.” The EIA is currently reviewing information from the Department of Interior and will correct its report upon completion.—In his announcement rejecting the Keystone XL pipeline today, President Obama boasted that under his administration, “domestic oil and natural gas production is up.” Obama, of course, failed to mention that his administration can’t actually take any credit for the increase.The vast majority of America’s new oil and gas production is happening on private lands in states like North Dakota, Alaska and Texas.It’s not that Obama is devoid of responsibility. His administration oversees oil and gas production on federal lands by issuing leases. But when measuring oil and gas production in areas under Obama’s jurisdiction, the numbers tell a different story.Citing publicly available federal data, the House Natural Resources Committee noted these figures:Oil and natural gas production on federal lands is down by more than 40 percent compared to 10 years ago.Under the Obama administration, 2010 had the lowest number of onshore leases issued since 1984.The Obama administration held only one offshore lease sale in 2011.Despite the Obama administration’s restrictive policies for*oil and gas production on federal lands, overall production still increased thanks to the pro-energy policies in states like North Dakota.“North Dakota has been the poster child for what can happen when we unleash free enterprise and allow states to develop and commercialize their resources,” Heritage’s Nick Loris wrote recently on The Foundry. “North Dakota is drilling at record pace.”The result: North Dakota’s unemployment rate is 3.4 percent, the lowest in the country. According to a recent report from IHS Global Insight, North Dakota already returned to pre-recession employment along with energy-rich Alaska. Texas is expected to do so in the first quarter of 2012, followed by Nebraska and South Dakota next year.Those states all have something in common: energy production.That policy aligns with recommendations from Obama’s own Council on Jobs and Competitiveness, which yesterday issued a report calling for more energy production that includes drilling and pipelines. Here’s the language from the Jobs Council report:As a nation, we need to take advantage of all our natural resources to spur economic growth, create jobs and reduce the country’s dependence on foreign oil. First, we should allow more access to oil, natural gas and coal opportunities on federal lands. Where sources of shale natural gas have been uncovered, federal, state and local authorities should encourage its safe and responsible extraction. While the administration has supported holding additional lease sales*and evaluating new areas for drilling, further expanding and expediting the domestic production of fossil fuels both offshore and onshore (in conjunction with more electric and natural gas vehicles) will reduce America’s reliance on foreign oil and the huge outflow of U.S. dollars this reliance entails. In addition, policies that encourage rapid lease development while emphasizing the highest safety standards will ensure companies responsibly drill for natural gas or oil and mine for coal or other our minerals in federal areas in a timely manner.With the Keystone XL decision, Obama rejected that advice. “At a time when unemployment remains unacceptably high, Iran is threatening the Strait of Hormuz, and Canada is looking to take this oil elsewhere, it is difficult to understand how the President could say no to thousands of jobs and an increase in energy supply from our all
The oil industry isn't drilling on leases for millions of acres of land that could be producing energy. Experts say oil companies aren't drilling on the land because it doesn't make economic sense to do it.A recent report from the Interior Department showed that over 70% of the offshore acres the industry has leased from the federal government are sitting idle. Onshore, nearly 60%, or 22 million acres in total, aren't producing any oil or gas.The industry is purposefully idling production so they can book the oil and gas reserves on their balance sheet as an asset -- a move that might drive up their stock price.http://money.cnn.com/2011/06/06/news/economy/oil_drilling_leases/index.htm
 
Troll I am one of those experts on the inside. I will teach you troll.
East coast no drilling from main to Florida. West coast no drilling from Washington to Mexico.
Much of that land was under lease when the no drill faux shortage scam was sold.
Thank u for buying.
next
 
George W. Bush wasn't to blame when gas prices surged above $4.50 a gallon in summer 2008, and President Barack Obama is not responsible for the 30-cents-a-gallon spike we've seen since December.



During Bush's second term, speculative trading, a weak dollar and growing demand from China and India were the culprits. Today, once again, Wall Street speculators are part of the reason, along with the uncertainty of supply from Iran and an increase in demand from the improving economy.



Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum are peddling the canard that Obama's "radical environmentalism" is to blame. Real radical environmentalists only wish Obama was one of them. The shortsighted GOP snipers want to ramp up offshore drilling and say the president should tap the nation's emergency reserves to bring down prices, but they're wrong. We didn't drill ourselves out of the spike in 2008, and we can't do it today.



Even under the most optimistic estimates by the Bush administration, drilling off the coast would have no significant effect on U.S. production for at least two decades. Even then, it would reduce prices by no more than 3 cents a gallon.
As to reserves: The U.S. holds 700 million barrels of oil, but that will supply the entire nation for only a month. Obama should keep every drop of it in case of a true emergency, especially given the volatility in the Middle East, which controls so much of the world supply.



The core problem decades ago is the same today: The United States holds less than 2 percent of the world's oil reserves but consumes 25 percent of the world's oil. We can't drill enough to overcome that disparity.


http://www.dailycamera.com/editorials/ci_20082062
 
The fuck he wasn't welder boy. He couldn't convince Dummycrats to open production. Please say bush didn't want more production. I love you making yourself look stupid and poor. Welder BOY!
 
Troll please make us laugh and say you went to college. Where obuma has a say production is way down. You are citing a coincidence. Moron

I laugh when I see your lack of language skills.

Please, do explain how "obuma" lessened US oil production....

The Arctic National Wildlife Range was established in 1960 to protect the "unique wildlife, wilderness and recreational values" of the area.

In 1980, Congress passed the Alaska Lands Act, which renamed the area and more than doubled its size. Today, the ANWR encompasses nearly 20 million acres, which is about the size of South Carolina.

The same act authorized the study of the oil and gas potential of the northern part of the Refuge, called the 1002 Area. This region is still being looked at as a possible oil-development site. It's still uncertain just how much oil exists under the ground of the ANWR.

[FONT=arial,helvetica][SIZE=-1]The world oil supply acts like an asymptotic value, which is just a mathematical term for a value that gets closer and closer to another value, but never actually gets there.

In this case, the "other value" is zero, or no oil left anywhere. Why would we never get there? Oil companies start out with the easiest (and cheapest) oil to find and bring to the surface. Once that runs out, they have to find more oil, which might be harder to harvest. As time goes on and the oil supply dwindles, it will get harder and harder (and more and more expensive) to find what's left. Eventually, it will get so expensive to find and harvest the remaining oil that no one will be able to afford it. The rising costs will force us to develop other energy sources.[/SIZE][/FONT]

http://auto.howstuffworks.com/fuel-efficiency/fuel-consumption/gas-price5.htm
 
Ahh he stalled deep water permits a year, we have 1 platform that does 250,000 barrels a day. A level you Dummycrats said wasnt possible till we proved it.
 
Ahh he stalled deep water permits a year, we have 1 platform that does 250,000 barrels a day. A level you Dummycrats said wasnt possible till we proved it.

He "stalled deep water permits a year"?

Why was that?

Did the oil industry fail to exercise due caution in deepwater drilling operations?

Gulf oil spill ring any bells?

BTW, permits are now being processed after regulatory requirements are met.

http://www.bsee.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Permits/Status-of-Gulf-of-Mexico-Well-Permits.aspx
 
Troll what did obuma say he was going to do vs what he did on opening up drilling.
Bueller? Bueller?

What did Deepwater Horizon and the oil companies do to the Gulf?

Bueller...Bueller?

Are you saying the government should have relaxed safety regulations after the biggest blowout and oil spill in history?
 
Back
Top