Oregon governor signs permanent offshore drilling ban into law
Oregon Governor Kate Brown has signed a bill prohibiting offshore drilling in Oregon waters.
In a statement on the 27th March, the governor’s office said the governor signed the Senate Bill 256 into law, “creating a new line of defence against offshore oil and gas drilling which could undermine the coast’s thriving tourism, recreation and fishing industries.”
The bipartisan bill, sponsored by Senator Roblan, Representative Brock Smith and Representative Gomberg, makes permanent a moratorium on oil and gas leasing in Oregon’s Territorial Sea which had been set to expire in 2020.
Apart from banning offshore drilling, the law also blocks the development of new piers, pipelines and other infrastructure in state waters required to support oil, gas and, sulphur drilling further offshore.
“The federal government’s proposal to open most American waters to offshore drilling would have opened our shores, our wildlife, our communities, and our economy to the threat of devastation from an oil spill. It was a move that undermined decades of bipartisan coastal protection and turned its back on our commitment to reducing our dependence on fossil fuels,” said Governor Brown.
“This legislation is the product of Oregonian voices speaking loudly for Oregonian values and taking a leadership role in preventing the erosion of core laws which protect our environment.”
“Our ocean resources and their coastal economies are worth more than the limited possibilities off the Oregon Coast for drilling,” said Republican Brock Smith. “I’m very proud of the bipartisanship leadership we’ve had in protecting what’s important to our coastal communities.”
According to the statement, the legislation was a response to a federal proposal released last January to open 90% of US waters – including the coasts of Oregon, Washington, and California – to new oil and gas leasing.
Source: Offshore Energy Today