Environmental Integrity Project
 

 

Gas Prices, Hurricanes, and Environmental Regulation
by Eric Schaeffer & Mary Nagle
Oct 3, 2005

        On October 26, the Senate Environment Committee voted 9-9 to reject efforts to cut back on clean fuels and rush environmental permits for refineries in an effort to speed up gasoline production.  Oil company profits are at record levels, refinery expansions are already underway, and the industry's own leaders have publicly said that environmental rules do not significantly hamper investment in new refining capacity.  The Senate action suggests that these facts are finally beginning to sink in.

        Rather than relax environmental rules, Congress should consider strengthening construction and maintenance standards for offshore rigs and refineries in the hurricane prone Gulf Coast.  The damage to our energy infrastructure shut off supplies and raised the price of gasoline, but also inundated communities like Meraux, Louisiana, with devastating oil spills. EIP joined other environmental groups in arranging for hurricane survivors from the Gulf Coast to travel to Washington to share their views with Congress during the debate over refinery rollback legislation. 

        Experts agree that hurricanes will increase in frequency and severity over the coming decades.  Nearly half our refining capacity is situated in Gulf Coast states, and major efforts are already underway to expand that capacity.  If we want to avoid spiraling gas prices and oil spills that wipe out entire communities, we ought to take reasonable precautions to minimize damage from the next storm.  

Fact sheet -- Refining Capacity and Gasoline Price: Separating Fact from Fiction

Fact sheet -- Protecting Our Oil Supply from Hurricanes, and Gulf Coast Communities from Environmental Disaster

Eric Schaeffer's testimony before the House Government Reform Subcommittee on Energy and Resources

Eric Schaeffer's testimony before the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee


Click here to listen to the audio from the news event featuring survivors from hurricanes Katrina and Rita (Windows Media Player is required).

 

Environmental Integrity Project • 1920 L St. NW, Suite 800, Washington, DC 20036
Phone - 202-296-8800 • Fax - 202-296-8822 • Email - officemanager@environmentalintegrity.org