Florida Offshore Drilling: Providing Jobs and Preserving the Environment

In a Tallahassee Democrat op-ed published this week, the Florida Petroleum Council's Dave Mica challenges recent inaccurate claims that oil and natural gas jobs are declining and production off Florida's coast will harm the tourism industry.

Dave argues that the oil and natural gas industry already supports 9.2 million American jobs and is poised to create even more jobs if provided more opportunities to explore and produce domestic oil and natural gas.

Further, energy development doesn't have to come at a price to the environment. Dave says:

"The good news is that Florida does not have to choose between offshore oil and natural gas development and tourism and the environment. State-of-the-art advances in seismic measurements, directional drilling, subsea production and safety systems, along with cooperative planning among industry, governments, local communities and environmental stakeholders, have led to incredibly creative and responsible approaches for reaching oil and natural gas resources in unique areas."

Dave cites a few examples of oil and natural facilities where energy development and the environment are in harmony, including Independence Hub south of Pensacola in the Gulf of Mexico. A one-acre surface platform manages 10 natural gas fields on the ocean floor, extending about 40 miles from the platform.

Independence Hub.jpg

(Independence Hub)

Dave explains:

"...technology has expanded the possibilities for meeting the unique challenges of Florida's special environment and military commitments in new ways. And the industry continues to innovate to meet new challenges."

Domestic oil and natural gas can provide new jobs, revenues and energy for the nation's economy. For more information, read the full op-ed.

Comments

Related

Blog Posts

Royalties and Fair Shares

Great post by the American Enterprise Institute’s Steven Hayward (similar version posted on Powerline), breaking down a recent study...

Blog Posts

Forestalling a ‘Regulatory Avalanche’

John Felmy, API’s chief economist, talked to reporters this week about a looming federal “regulatory avalanche” that could impact th...

Blog Posts

‘Poisoned’ Politics, the Keystone XL and the Nation...

New York Times op-ed columnist Joe Nocera’s piece on the “poisoned” politics of the Keystone XL pipeline decision is a must read. Be...

Blog Posts

Survey Says, Misinformation on Energy, Keystone XL

Politico reports (subscription required) this week on a new poll that shows a political edge for the president on energy and jobs –...

Blog Posts

Energy Works in Minnesota

For the state of Minnesota, the oil and natural gas industry currently means: More than 117,000 jobs – with an average salary o...

Blog Posts

Energy Works in Colorado

Here’s what the oil and natural gas industry currently means to the state of Colorado: $20.5 billion contributed to the economy...

Blog Posts

Blogger Conference Call – SOTU Follow Up

Last week, API hosted a blogger conference call to follow up on President Obama’s State of the Union remarks. API Senior Tax Policy...

Blog Posts

Political Theater on Refined Exports

One of the flimsier arguments deployed against the Keystone XL pipeline is that the Canadian oil sands crude it would deliver to U.S...

Blog Posts

Hydraulic Fracturing Workshops Launched

This week API is launching a series of hydraulic fracturing workshops in shale energy states to continue the conversation on industr...

Blog Posts

More Evidence of the Keystone XL Consensus

New polling on the Keystone XL pipeline shows consensus in America isn’t always elusive. The United Technologies/National Journal Co...

Stay Connected