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All’s Well that Ends in
Oil
Drilling in ANWR gets an icy reception
from Congress and the media.
By Dan Gainor
The Boone Pickens Free Market Fellow
May 10, 2006
It’s just like the swallows returning to Capistrano or the salmon
battling upstream to spawn. Every time gas or oil prices go up, the
politicians return to one of their favorite topics –ANWR.
The salmon analogy is accurate with one exception – eventually
salmon get somewhere. When it comes to ANWR, Americans have gotten
absolutely nowhere. |
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First, a little background about ANWR for the newly initiated into
this perennial endeavor. The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge is an
enormous wildlife sanctuary in the northeast part of Alaska. When I
say enormous, I’m not kidding. ANWR is 19 million acres. That’s
three times the size of Maryland.
According to the U.S. Geological Survey, ANWR is estimated to have
up to 16 billion barrels of oil. At $70 a barrel, that could be
worth as much $1.1 trillion. That number is so incredible, many
smaller calculators simply can’t handle it. Eight or even nine
digits are not enough. All that oil also could add up to almost
750,000 jobs here in the United States.
To get at that “black gold,” as it used to be called, could take
five to 10 years. With modern technology that allows drilling on a
slant, we need to develop about 2,000 acres – out of 19 million –
leaving 99.99 percent untouched.
That should be simple. We have a nation thirsting for oil and Alaska
holds a vast amount of it. But nothing in Washington is ever simple.
Environmentalists oppose drilling because they fear it might hurt
the caribou’s living room and breeding grounds, along with some
species of birds and other creatures. They paint a picture that
makes the area appear like some vast National Zoo.
The Feb. 4, 2001, “60 Minutes” showed reporter Lesley Stahl taking a
trip to the proposed drilling location.
It was a barren wasteland – more similar to
Siberia than Eden.
Stahl interviewed Deborah Williams, a former Clinton Interior
Department official who headed the Alaska Conservation Foundation.
Williams showed how uncompromising the environmental movement really
is. “There are no conditions that would deal with the irretrievable
loss of wilderness,” she said, no matter how much oil is there.
Williams even compared the site to the Everglades and Redwoods. Of
course it looks nothing like those places, but the media gush just
as openly. Bill Weir of ABC’s “Good Morning America” called it
“truly an awe-inspiring place” during a June 12, 2005, broadcast.
So far, ANWR drilling has been beaten in Congress or squashed by
President Bill Clinton. When Bush took over, ANWR was a big part of
his plans. What’s especially funny is that the media consistently
try to paint the recent rise in gas prices as Bush’s fault, as well.
Back in 2001, he already was laying out a plan “addressing what he
calls the worst energy crisis since the ’70s,” according to Joie
Chen of “The Early Show.”
Bush wasn’t the only one who warned us to do something.
ABC’s Sam Donaldson rejected a similar concern in an April 1, 2001,
interview with Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham. “Well, some people
think that you are talking up an energy crisis – you and the
president – to try to be able to sell drilling in the Arctic
Wildlife Refuge,” he told Abraham on “This Week.”
Gas was selling for about $1.55 a gallon in April that year – a
little more than half what it costs now. I wonder if Donaldson still
thinks that’s a manufactured crisis.
Maybe he ought to talk with one of the other folks Stahl found on
her trip to Alaska – Ken Boyd, former director of that state’s
Division of Oil and Gas. Boyd, back in February 2001, put the debate
in terms any of us can relate to today.
“I can imagine somebody in Iowa or Kansas or something saying,
‘Well, I don't have any problems. I can go out and buy my gas for
$1.35 and my house is heated and I'm happy. What do I care about
ANWR? I might as well say close it.’” But Boyd added that public
opinion could change “on the day when, you know, all of a sudden,
gasoline is $3 a gallon and their home isn't warm and they haven't
got enough gas.”
We’re about there. Nearly $3 a gallon, still no drilling and our
future is at risk because we’re afraid to drill in the supposed
living room of the caribou. I can’t speak for the caribou, but I
don’t care if they are bothered by a 2,000-acre project hidden among
19 million acres. For billions of barrels of oil, Big Oil can drill
in the middle of my living room.
Dan Gainor is a career journalist and The Boone Pickens Free Market
Fellow. He is also director of the Media Research Center’s Business & Media Institute www.businessandmedia.org.
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