Obama Deserves No Credit For Energy Boom
He would prevent it if he could. But he can't.
House Republicans said a Congressional Research Service (CRS) study
made public Tuesday backs up claims that President Obama’s policies have
handicapped oil-and-gas production on federal lands.
The study by the nonpartisan CRS concluded that while overall United
States oil-and-gas production has increased since 2007, it has declined
considerably on federal lands.
The findings play into GOP arguments that the domestic U.S. energy
boom has occurred in spite of Obama. They have urged the White House to
loosen restrictions on energy drilling in hopes of driving economic
activity, generating federal revenues and creating jobs.
“Where the states have been in charge, we have seen energy
development boom in a safe and responsible way, but under federal
control we have seen a sharp decline in production. A web of red tape
and a backlog of delayed permits are blocking important energy
production opportunities on federal lands,” Rep. Ed Whitfield (R-Ky.),
who chairs the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Energy and
Power, said in a Tuesday statement.
Republicans have prodded Obama to emulate the activity on private
and state lands, where a bulk of the nation’s drilling is occurring.
They say expanding energy development could yield more situations
like North Dakota’s Bakken formation, where drilling has added thousands
of jobs.
While Republicans have criticized Obama’s position on drilling, the
president has often responded that oil-and-gas drilling has spiked under
his watch. The White House, along with congressional Democrats,
contends it has opened a majority of proven oil-and-gas reserves on
federal lands to drilling. The administration has kept the rest, both
offshore and onshore, closed off largely for environmental reasons.
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