Obama Administration Wants Jobs Without Employers August 18, 2011, 10:49 pm
At least that is the only conclusion I can draw. All the talk in this administration about job creation, yet they stand staunchly athwart the only only major industry that is really trying to grow, hire, and invest right now. Just letting off the brakes the Administration has set on oil and gas drilling would lead to the creation of a ton of jobs, and better jobs than we will get with a new WPA paying workers to dig holes and fill them back in again.
coyoteblog.com
Report: Exxon fights U.S. over major oil discovery
Aug. 18, 2011 04:51 PM Associated Press NEW YORK - Exxon Mobil Corp. and the federal government are fighting over one of the largest oil discoveries in the Gulf of Mexico that could yield billions of dollars of crude in coming years, according to a report in the Wall Street Journal.
The Julia oil field, about 250 miles southwest of New Orleans, may hold billions of barrels of oil and gas equivalent. Exxon, which announced the discovery in 2008, wants to tap that field. But the Department of the Interior says Exxon's leases have expired and the company hasn't met requirements for an extension.
Exxon and part-owner Statoil have filed separate lawsuits in a Louisiana federal court to preserve the leases.
Exxon spokesman Patrick McGinn told the Journal that the government traditionally grants extensions as a matter of course. "You state your case and you got it." The government's refusal "was unexpected."
Tens of billions of dollars are at stake. The oil could revert back to the federal government if Exxon and Statoil don't win in court. And if the Department of the Interior takes back those leases, it would delay the development of those fields and the tax royalties that come with them.
At current prices, potential royalties paid to the government over the lifetime of a 1 billion-barrel field would be about $10.95 billion, the Journal said.
The dispute over the Julia field began in October 2008 when Exxon applied to extend its lease. By February 2009, the government denied Exxon's request, saying that the company didn't present a specific plan to producing the oil. Exxon appealed numerous times, losing its final appeal in May.
A Department of the Interior spokeswoman said, "Our priority remains the safe development of the nation's offshore energy resources, which is why we continue to approve extensions that meet regulatory standards."
azcentral.com |