• Posted on Wednesday, January 26, 2011
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GOP House energy chairman Hastings' fix: drill for more oil

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WASHINGTON — With gasoline prices rising, the new chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee wants to drill for more oil.

"In a down economy, it seems to me we ought to be exploring more domestic energy production, wherever it may be," said Rep. Doc Hastings, R-Wash., who got to bang the committee's gavel for the first time Wednesday.

As the new Congress got fully under way this week, the politics of oil moved quickly to the front burner.

Seeking to block any more drilling on the West Coast, two Democratic senators — Washington state's Maria Cantwell and California's Barbara Boxer — introduced legislation on Tuesday that would permanently ban offshore drilling off the coasts of Washington, Oregon and California.

"One of the lessons learned from the disastrous BP oil spill is that without a fundamental transformation of the oil industry, another spill is possible, even likely," Cantwell said. "That's not a risk I'm willing to take for Washington state's beautiful coastlines and the communities that depend on them."

Hastings, however, said the White House should be doing everything it can to increase U.S. energy production. He wants to speed up the process for approving federal permits for more offshore drilling in the Gulf of Mexico.

Hastings, whose committee held its first hearing on last year's BP oil spill, said the disaster shouldn't bring drilling to a halt.

"We need to have a robust domestic energy production area, and clearly the Gulf of Mexico is that right now," he said.

After getting trounced in the 2010 congressional elections, Democratic opponents on Hastings' committee are ready to play defense.

"The 'drill, baby, drill' folks won the election," said Rep. John Garamendi, D-Calif. "And I would expect them to do everything they can to do just that: 'Drill, baby, drill.'"

Cantwell said that more drilling won't lower gasoline prices and that the U.S. should focus "on the promising clean energy alternatives that are better for consumers."

After being in place for decades, the moratorium on offshore oil and gas drilling expired in 2008. Cantwell said the West Coast is only protected now by a pledge from President Barack Obama that there will be no new offshore drilling there.

Hastings countered that families struggling to make ends meet "cannot afford to have American energy development slowed down." He said that Congress needs to ensure that offshore drilling meets the highest safety standards, but he added: "As gasoline prices continue to rise, we cannot allow ourselves to become increasingly dependent on hostile foreign nations for our energy needs."

Hastings said there'll be pressure on Obama to allow more drilling if gasoline prices continue to rise. And he said any congressional action that results from the spill "should accomplish our shared goals of improving safety, allowing drilling to move forward in a timely manner" and putting people back to work.

Asked if the search for energy should include the Pacific Coast, he said: "Do I feel that that should be something we look at? The answer to that is yes, including Alaska."

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