WASHINGTON, D.C. — The head of the U.S. oil industry called for expanded offshore oil and gas production on Wednesday, delivering a call for deregulation two weeks before the inauguration of President-elect Donald Trump.
In a speech delivered in Washington, American Petroleum Institute president Jack Gerard said the United States should relax the “regulatory onslaught” the U.S. energy industry has seen in recent years.
“Today, 94% of federal offshore acreage is off limits to energy production,” Gerard said in prepared remarks at an annual state-of-the-industry event. “Restricted offshore areas could hold 50 billion barrels, or more, of oil and more than 195 trillion cubic feet of natural gas.”
The remarks came two weeks after President Barack Obama banned new offshore oil and gas drilling in more than 100 million acres of the Arctic and parts of the Atlantic Ocean, a move that coincided with a similar freeze by Canadian authorities.
In decisions welcomed by industry, Trump has picked prominent figures and allies of the oil and gas industries to fill his new administration, including his designated heads of the State Department, former Exxon Mobil CEO Rex Tillerson, and Energy Department, former Texas Governor Rick Perry.
Trump has also tapped Oklahoma Attorney General and climate change denier Scott Pruitt to lead the Environmental Protection Agency and made the oil investor Carl Icahn an advisor for overhauling regulations.
Gerard said broad majorities of both Democrats and Republicans had favored energy development.
“We know we need more energy,” Gerard said, “but we haven’t seen any meaningful expansion of offshore access in decades.”
Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2017