[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 29 (Tuesday, March 1, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H1394-H1395]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SECURE ACT INTRODUCTION
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Pennsylvania (Mr. Murphy) for 5 minutes.
Mr. MURPHY of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, currently, U.S. families
spend about $1 billion per day on imported oil. We import about 1.6
billion barrels from politically unstable nations with a corresponding
instability in prices, which influences our dollars, our economy, and
sometimes our soldiers having to look at defending these areas.
We are currently losing 220,000 barrels per day in domestic
production because of the administration's moratorium on Gulf of Mexico
oil rigs. This also means the government is losing almost $1.4 billion
in revenue that we so sorely need. Keep in mind that each one cent
increase in the price of gasoline costs American families $1 billion
per year. That's money that is not going into our economy. Because 60
percent of our oil comes from foreign countries, it is money that is
going into other economies.
Now, while this moratorium is taking place, at least 12 rigs have
already departed from the gulf, some not to return, as they move these
rigs to operate in other countries, which can cost $1 million a day.
Four more are considering leaving. That's 6,000 jobs in jeopardy.
Currently, more than 30 drilling rigs in the Gulf of Mexico are idle;
and even though the administration is now allowing just one of those
rigs to move forward with exploration, all other exploration is still
off limits with something of a permitorium, as they're looking at their
permits all over again.
That is why yesterday I introduced the Safe Exploration Coming from
Underwater Reserves of Energy Act, or the SECURE Act. This bill allows
all of those Gulf of Mexico drilling permits to move safely forward,
those which have already been approved by regulators. Keep in mind, all
of these have been reviewed thoroughly. It takes a lot of time to do
that, and they all follow strict regulations. There are no shortcuts on
safety, and there is no bypassing environmental regulations. Quite
frankly, I trust our environmental regulations to protect the
environment more so than those of other countries.
What we have from the lost production of the domestic oil industry
means we are increasingly dependent on those unstable foreign regimes
to meet our needs, which puts our economy at risk should another spike
in oil prices occur like the one we have now. Add to this and punctuate
this with the recent unrest in Libya, Egypt, Bahrain, Yemen, and
whatever country may come next, which helps point out a lot of our
vulnerability: the vulnerability of what happens if the Suez Canal is
closed down even for a short period of time; the vulnerability that
comes if Libyan oil production declines; the vulnerability that comes
with Iran and its use of oil revenue to put pressure on other nations
to support their efforts to develop
[[Page H1395]]
nuclear weapons, their threats to Israel and their threats to dominate
the Mideast.
The cost of an arms race in the Mideast and an arms race in the world
with new nuclear weapons far surpasses anything we can imagine--as are
the revenues we can get from oil.
So I ask my colleagues to join me in supporting this bill, the SECURE
Act, so we can secure our own energy future, so we can lower gas
prices, so we can create thousands of jobs right here at home: from
drilling on these rigs, from developing the pipe, from building the
rigs, from so many other supply chains of what we have in this Nation
to do this, and above all, so we keep our domestic oil at home rather
than pay for our own dollars to go to other nations.
We can drill for our oil and our own jobs, and we can boost our own
economy; or we can continue to be dependent on unstable nations, rising
prices and, sadly, paying for both sides of the war on terror. It is a
sobering thought for Americans to think that every time they go to put
gasoline in their tanks they're funding both sides of the war on
terror.
That alone should be enough to make us change our approach. That
alone should be enough to say let's use our oil and our resources
instead of propping up the economies of other nations. That alone
should be something that motivates us to make sure we are working on
these issues. Hopefully, that means we can melt this moratorium on our
own domestic oil production.
The choice is ours. I hope all of my colleagues will choose to
support jobs of the United States of America as opposed to supporting
those dollars that are just going to other countries.
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