[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 36 (Thursday, March 10, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1530-S1531]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ENERGY
Mrs. HUTCHISON. Mr. President, I rise to talk in morning business
about the energy issue facing the country. Anyone who has filled up the
car or truck in the last month knows we have an energy crisis that is
building and needs to be addressed. Last week I filled up my pickup
truck. It cost about $50. Across the Nation, parents are driving in
carpools. Farmers, small business owners, and commuters are
experiencing sticker shock at the rising cost to put gas in their
vehicles. Today oil is over $104 a barrel. That means on average
Americans are paying $3.52 a gallon. It is going in the upward
direction from there. We are clearly in an economic downturn. We have
high unemployment. Now is not the time to sit back and do nothing as
the price of gasoline goes up at the pump.
In response, the White House is beginning to talk about tapping the
Strategic Petroleum Reserve. We know that will not work. The Strategic
Petroleum Reserve is available for natural disasters and global
disasters. But experience has shown that any gain from releasing oil
from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve is small and temporary, and prices
quickly go right back up to their high and rising levels. If we
diminish our resources, our reserves in the Strategic Petroleum
Reserve, we are even more vulnerable to those who would do mischief to
the country because they would know we have a diminished supply, or to
the natural disasters for which we are supposed to be prepared.
Our problem is, we are the only Nation on Earth that has vast natural
resources which we will not use. American energy is out there. It is
under our land. It is under our waters. It is ready to be tapped, and
it can be tapped environmentally safely. We could bring the prices down
on our own accord. We know there is upheaval in the Middle East right
now that could affect further the gasoline prices because of potential
shortages. We are too dependent on foreign sources for our energy
needs. It is a little more than 50 percent. That is not strategically
sound, and it is most certainly not in our national security interest
to leave us at that level.
The Gulf of Mexico is one of the biggest resources we have. The Gulf
of Mexico accounts for nearly 30 percent
[[Page S1531]]
of total U.S. oil production and 13 percent of natural gas production.
By failing to take full advantage of that resource, we are putting our
energy security on the line.
Mr. President, 400,000 jobs across the gulf coast are tied to the
offshore energy industry. Nearly a year after issuing its moratorium
and months since the moratorium was lifted, the Department of the
Interior last week approved its first, its one and only, deepwater
permit--one in a year. It's one and one only. There are thousands of
idled leases, people sitting in the Gulf of Mexico idle that should be
able to be at least exploring to determine if it is worth drilling. Yet
the gulf is facing a permitorium.
My constituents know the pain of this ``permitorium.'' One
unfortunate case is the Houston-based Seahawk Drilling Company. Seahawk
Drilling used to be the second largest shallow water drilling
contractor in the United States. It provided high-paying jobs to men
and women in Texas and across the Gulf of Mexico. I say ``used to''
because in February bureaucratic delays in shallow water permitting
forced Seahawk Drilling to declare bankruptcy. They could not continue
to have the costs associated with their employment levels, and with
their company being there without the opportunity to drill and produce
and keep their employee base. They declared bankruptcy. It destroyed
1,000 high-paying Texas jobs.
I received a letter describing the pain and distress the company felt
when it had to inform the dedicated Seahawk employees they no longer
had a job. According to the letter, on the day Seahawk was forced to
sell its assets and lay off workers, the chief operating officer had to
``fight back the emotions of the day. He took a deep breath and he left
the conference room for a room full of Seahawk employees to tell them
that their company was bankrupt.''
These are real people with real families who lost real jobs--American
jobs--and it could have been prevented.
Since the moratorium was enacted, at least 13 rigs--deepwater and
shallow water--have departed the Gulf of Mexico, taking with them good
American jobs, and, furthermore, putting us in the position of having
to import now from the foreign countries where these rigs have gone,
not only taking away American jobs but forcing us to be even more
dependent on foreign imports for our energy needs.
Offshore energy production is expected to decrease by 13 percent in
2011, due to the slow pace of permitting. This is unacceptable, and we
must do something that is productive.
Yesterday, Senator Landrieu and I introduced the LEASE Act, the Lease
Extension and Secure Energy Act of 2011. All our bill does is extend
the offshore leases that are impacted by the moratorium and the lack of
permitting for 1 year.
The LEASE Act returns to lessees the lease time taken from them
during the moratorium. This will increase domestic energy production
and protect some American jobs--those that have not already left.
Despite being unable to explore for energy resources, the leaseholders
are continuing to pay the expenses, as time ticks away on their lease.
The LEASE Act will prevent leases from running out, and it gives the
lessees the certainty they deserve that they will have the full amount
of the lease for which they have paid bonus payments to secure.
In 2009, the industry accounted for $70 billion in economic value and
provided $20 billion in revenue to Federal, State, and local
governments through royalties, bonuses, and tax collections.
I hope our bill will be noncontroversial. It would seem to me that
anyone would agree that if you paid for a 10-year lease, and you have
the expenses of exploring to see if that lease has potential, before
you drill to see if the lease has potential, you would have the full 10
years, and not 9 years because you have not been able to use the year
we have had the moratorium and the lack of permitting.
There has been another suggestion by the administration that perhaps
we should be proposing energy taxes--up to $90 billion over the next 10
years. The President suggested that in his State of the Union message.
Much of the taxes that would go on the oil and gas industry for
expenses--that any industry, any business can write off, but would
single out the oil and gas industry not to be able to expense their
exploration and drilling costs--what would happen? If the prices go up,
of course, who is going to pay those high prices? The families and
businesses that are having to fill their cars with gasoline.
In fact, the administration, through the EPA, is trying to bring more
expenses to the refining industry by purporting to regulate greenhouse
gas emissions. The administration is also adding to the refiners by
saying they should not get the manufacturing tax credit.
We have been trying to encourage manufacturing in America because we
want manufacturing jobs in America, and so many of those have gone
overseas. But the administration proposes to tax refiners who are
manufacturing the gasoline from the oil and add more expense to the
product, which is gasoline, and, oh, by the way, take away the
capability for these refiners to have the same treatment as any other
manufacturer in our country.
Raising taxes on our domestic oil and energy industry is wrong,
particularly at this time. We need to assure that we are not going to
drive our energy jobs overseas. Yet what the administration is doing is
counterintuitive if we all agree we want to keep the jobs in America.
So here we are with gas at $3.52 a gallon, and the summer driving
season is upon us. We are looking now at estimates from the experts
that gasoline could be $4 a gallon. What is that going to do to the
family who wants to take a vacation at a reasonable price? What is that
going to do to the workers who have to get to work and who are already
strapped, and, for Heaven's sake, the poor people who are unemployed
who are trying to go and interview for jobs with gas at $4 a gallon?
We cannot sit here and let this happen. It is time we get together
with the President of the United States and have proactive energy
ideas, programs, and solutions that are going to keep jobs in America,
that will allow us to use our natural resources to begin to set the
stage if we have upheaval in the Middle East that causes the supply to
go down at a great rate. We need to have our supply go up to meet the
test we should have of lowering energy prices for our people with our
own natural resources. It is not to put the SPR out and put us in an
even more vulnerable position. No. It is to use our resources, with
Americans to take the jobs, and increase our supply so the price of
gasoline at the pump goes down for the American people, and so we can
have the jobs we should have in America stay in America.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maryland.
____________________