US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) endorsed natural gas as a transition to alternative fuels but continued to place conditions on a possible vote to open more of the Outer Continental Shelf for oil and gas leasing.
“You can have a transition with natural gas that is cheap, abundant, and clean compared to fossil fuels…. The supply of natural gas is so big and you do need a transition if you’re going from fossil fuels…. These investments in wind, in solar and biofuels, and [a] focus on natural gas are the real alternatives,” she said during a weekend interview on NBC-TV’s “Meet the Press,” Aug. 24.
Pelosi reiterated that more drilling offshore won’t reduce prices at the gasoline pump. “But if the president wants to put it on the table and we can revisit the relationship between Big Oil and resources that belong to the American people,” she continued, the matter might be discussed.
“We’ll put it all on the table … offshore drilling, if that is worth it, but renewable resources so that we do not get in this situation again,” Pelosi said.
“I don’t think [leasing additional OCS areas] is a good alternative, but if they can prove that it is and they want to pay royalties to the taxpayer, let us use those royalties to invest in renewable energy resources, we have something to talk about,” she said later in the interview.
But when interviewer Tom Brokaw said much later, “Sounds like we’re going to have offshore drilling,” Pelosi immediately responded, “No, no, no.”
She also said that while Congress does not have a very high public approval rating, it is above those of the Bush administration and the oil industry. Congress successfully pressed the president to quit filling the Strategic Petroleum Reserve when crude oil prices were more than $100/bbl, she noted.
“You know when the Republicans were doing what I call “a war dance of the handmaidens of the oil companies” on the floor of the House a couple of weeks ago? Well, one of those Thursdays was primary day in Tennessee, and one of those Republicans was up for reelection and lost in the primary to a Republican who said that the incumbent was a candidate of Big Oil and offshore drilling,” Pelosi said.
“So again, we have to talk to the American people about this. We have to do what is right for the consumer, for the taxpayer and for the environment. And we know how to do that. If they want to put that in the mix …have standards and no subsidies, give us royalties, [and] revisit the relationship between the oil that belongs to the American people and the profits of Big Oil, let’s have that discussion,” she said.
API responds
In response to Pelosi’s comments, API issued a statement, saying, “The US oil and natural gas industry paid an estimated total of $8.7 billion in royalties to the Treasury during fiscal year 2007 to produce from federal lands onshore and in federal waters offshore, according to the Interior Department.
“The industry also paid another $6.8 billion in bonus bids to the federal government to acquire leases in the four lease sales held so far in 2008,” the organization reported. “These payments represent a significant source of revenue paid to the US Treasury.”
API said, “What the country needs is a balanced energy approach that encourages conservation but also production of all forms of energy, including domestic oil and natural gas.”
“Increasing access to domestic resources could make us more secure at home, generate more American jobs, and put even more into federal coffers.”