Offshore Drilling is Not a Major Risk to Florida

A new study prepared for the Florida House of Representatives says offshore oil and natural gas activities "are unlikely to present a major risk to Florida."

The study, conducted by Willis Structured Risk Solutions, is part of an ongoing effort to gather information about the costs and benefits of offshore drilling. State leaders are considering whether to open state-owned offshore areas to oil and natural gas development.

Florida owns the portion of the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) that extends three miles or so to the Gulf Stream in the Atlantic and 10.4 miles along its western coastline into the Gulf of Mexico. The OCS areas that exist beyond these boundaries are controlled by the federal government.

The study says that there is "great uncertainty" about the amount of oil and natural gas that could exist in Florida's waters because no drilling has occurred in 25 years. Additionally, it acknowledges that exploration technology has improved dramatically, and the only way to prove that energy reserves exist is to drill.

The study also says:

  • An oil spill would be a "very rare" occurrence, and oil would not reach Florida's beaches.
  • OCS geology would determine the oil and natural gas industry's footprint.
  • Florida could take a "hands on" approach to offshore development to ensure that jobs and revenues are generated within the state.

Last year, the Florida House voted overwhelmingly to pass a bill to authorize energy development in Florida state waters. In March, resolutions were also introduced to lift drilling bans in federal waters near Florida's coastline.

The oil and gas industry utilizes state-of-the art technology and strict operating practices to ensure that any development would be done in a way that protects both the environment and state's vital tourism industry.

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

‘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

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

Energy Works in Florida

Here’s what the oil and natural gas industry currently means to the state of Florida: More than $18 billion contributed to the...

Blog Posts

What Energy Progress Looks Like

Interesting piece by the Washington Post’s Robert Samuelson, analyzing America’s energy future in light of new government figures sh...

Blog Posts

Energy and the State of the Union

There were lots of energy mentions in the president’s State of the Union speech, and we appreciate every one of them because they li...

Blog Posts

Graphically Speaking: Producing Oil Offshore

Yesterday, we looked at the time it takes to produce oil on federal lands, now let’s look at offshore.  As you can see from the char...

Blog Posts

The Keystone XL, Cynicism and A Public Engaged

Hours after President Obama rejected the job-creating, energy-delivering Keystone XL pipeline, “The Fix” blogger Chris Cillizza, a l...

Blog Posts

Keystone and Consequences

Heather Zichal, Deputy Assistant to the President for Energy and Climate Change, writes: "But what’s abundantly clear is that t...

Blog Posts

An Illogical Decision, Not An Arbitrary Deadline

In announcing his rejection of the Keystone XL permit, President Obama said: "This announcement is not a judgment on the merits...

Blog Posts

The Keystone XL’s Real Jobs Numbers

In an economy with more than 13 million Americans out of work, every potential new job matters, right? Wrong, according to some Keys...

Blog Posts

What Would You Do?

Compelling video from the office of U.S. House Speaker John Boehner that cuts to the heart of the case for approving the Keystone XL...

Blog Posts

The White House’s Natural Gas/Manufacturing Connectio...

From where we sit, a new White House report that gives substantial credit to natural gas production for recent growth in U.S. manufa...

Blog Posts

Study: Effects of Gulf Drilling Policies Detailed

Policies have consequences. Certainly, we’ve seen economic impact in the 2010 decision to halt deepwater drilling in the Gulf of Mex...

Stay Connected