New York Times Greenwire: Oil Spill Panel’s Chairman Says His Push for Cuba Talks Irked Obama Admin

http://www.nytimes.com/gwire/2011/05/16/16greenwire-oil-spill-panels-chairman-says-his-push-for-cu-50005.html

By KATIE HOWELL of Greenwire
Published: May 16, 2011

The Obama administration is pushing back against plans by its oil spill commission co-chairman to spread his message about offshore drilling reforms to Cuba, the panel leader said today.

William Reilly, the co-chairman of the presidential panel that made a series of recommendations earlier this year to improve offshore drilling safety and regulation after the BP PLC oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico last summer, has already helped convinced Mexican drilling regulators to adopt U.S. regulatory structures.

But he said he has had his “wrist slapped” by the Obama administration for his plans to discuss reform with Cuba, with which the United States has had no diplomatic relations since 1961.

“I have been causing grief to the State Department,” Reilly, a former U.S. EPA chief under President George H.W. Bush, said during an event hosted by Resources for the Future in Washington, D.C.
Cuba is developing plans to drill 16 oil and gas wells in waters 50 miles from Key West, Fla., using Spanish oil and gas giant Repsol YPF and Russian natural gas producer Gazprom.

“That’s something that’s very important to us, I think, given that they’re drilling 50 miles off Key West, so I’ve asked to be invited to Cuba to talk about the report and have had my wrist slapped by the administration for raising the sensitive Cuban issue,” Reilly said. “I had to say, ‘I don’t work for you.'”

Reilly said spreading the message to nations interested in drilling in Gulf waters is constructive and important. And he said if such plans do go forward, it is imperative for a company with an established safety record, like Repsol, to do the work.

“I asked one CEO of a major oil company, ‘What’s Gazprom like?’ And he said, ‘I don’t think they’ve ever drilled an oil well — they’re a gas company,'” Reilly said. “Let’s hope Repsol does all the work.”

Reilly also blasted legislative proposals from Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.) and Rep. Vern Buchanan (R-Fla.) that would penalize international oil companies that operate in Cuban waters, calling it “counterproductive.”

“What you want is a company like Repsol, which has its own interest in the United States, has rigs in the Gulf, applies for permits from the United States government,” Reilly said. “I don’t know who we would get — maybe [Venezuelan President Hugo] Chávez — if it were so limited that we couldn’t have a responsible company doing that drilling.”

Reilly said he is also negotiating a meeting with Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin to discuss offshore drilling safety in the Arctic.

Reilly’s international efforts come as talks have come to a virtual standstill on reforming domestic offshore drilling safety. Only a handful of the panel’s extensive recommendations have been implemented. And partisan bickering in the House and Senate could keep any legislative proposals to codify the recommendations from advancing this year.

But Reilly said he is not giving up on seeing some of the panel’s strongest recommendations — to create an independent industry-funded safety watchdog institute and to create a separate regulatory director within the Interior Department — come to fruition.

“Yeah, I’m going to continue to pop up. I mean, I’m trying to go to Cuba,” he said.

Special thanks to Richard Charter

New York Times: High hopes and fear stir Belize as oil riches swirl (note 2006 date)


By Simon Romero
Published: Tuesday, February 21, 2006

SPANISH LOOKOUT, Belize — Near this small Mennonite town carved out of the thick jungle, a farmer dug a shallow water well a few years ago and found a viscous black liquid seeping into the water.

Given Belize’s disappointing record of oil exploration, stretching back to its years under British rule, nearly everyone shrugged at the story except a stubborn Denver geologist.

Now Belize is the newest exporter of oil to the United States, a development that is starting to upend this small country of 280,000 people. A roughneck crew, backed by investors from Ireland and Colorado, struck oil in its first drilling attempt last year.

Their wells, dotting the dairy farms of German-speaking Mennonites who moved here a half-century ago from Canada and Mexico, are producing 2,000 barrels a day of oil similar in quality to the prized low-sulfur crude from the oil fields of West Texas.

Much of Belize is on tenterhooks regarding the oil and its ramifications. But the small companies behind the discovery, Belize Natural Energy andCHX Energy, which is based in Denver, are reveling in their good fortune.

Together with other independent companies that have recently struck oil and natural gas in locations once written off, including Paraguay, Syria and Uganda, these entrepreneurs are proving that wildcatting is alive and well.

As in Belize, the quantities of oil discovered in these places are relatively small. But with oil fetching more than $60 a barrel on world markets, smaller companies are willing to risk just about everything these days in hopes of finding even tiny oil fields.

“There were 50 dry wells drilled in Belize over 50 years until we came along,” said Susan Morrice, a geologist from Denver.

She is the wildcatter behind Belize Natural Energy, a venture she formed with the backing of her husband, Alex Cranberg, who is a Colorado oil executive, and more than 70 small investors from Ireland, her native country.

“We simply felt we could not fail in our search for oil in such a promising, if neglected, country.”

Morrice’s company has been remarkably swift in turning the discovery into cash. In January, Belize Natural Energy loaded 40,000 barrels onto a barge destined for a refinery in Houston, netting the company about $2 million.

With other wells planned in Spanish Lookout, it soon expects to be producing 5,000 barrels a day, and some geologists say Belize as a whole may one day produce 50,000 barrels a day. That level is tiny compared with Mexico, where daily output is 3.4 million barrels a day. But it is significant for a small country that has long scrounged for enough hard currency to import all its oil.

Belize imports about 5,000 barrels of oil a day. So the crude in Spanish Lookout has allowed this country to dream of energy independence.

Still, Belize, known as British Honduras until it was granted autonomy from Britain in 1981, faces some serious obstacles before it becomes anything resembling the Kuwait of Central America. It has no refineries or pipelines and, unlike many developing countries, it has no national oil company or oil ministry.

Andre Cho, a civil servant who is Belize’s inspector of petroleum, said the government had recently approved his request to hire more staff geologists, as well as a former United Nations consultant from India who specializes in organizing the petroleum industries of poor nations.

Despite such moves and the formation of a government petroleum advisory board in December, there is considerable skepticism throughout Belize that the country can develop its oil resources without the corruption and environmental damage that afflict other poor oil-producing countries.

Much of the tension around the oil discovery is focused on the 7.5 percent royalty that Belize Natural Energy is required to pay the government, which is much less than in other oil-producing countries. Royalties to Norway for exploration in the North Sea, for instance, are more than 70 percent.

Belize’s prime minister, Said Musa, has said the royalty was kept low to provide a strong incentive for companies to explore in a country where oil had never been found before.

Sheila McCaffrey, a director of Belize Natural Energy, said the government would end up collecting overall taxes of about 30 percent on the oil. That includes royalties and agreements that give the government a minority stake in the company, along with control of 10 percent of production from the oil wells.

The company is also trying to avoid ill will among Belizeans by channeling 1 percent of its revenue to a fund for protecting the country’s fragile environment, which is about 40 percent jungle.

The most acute political risk for Belize’s nascent oil industry may be a territorial dispute with Guatemala.

Representatives of the two countries agreed this month to begin negotiations to resolve territorial claims. But areas of Belize where oil exploration is taking place or planned remain squarely in land still claimed by Guatemala. Spanish Lookout is just a 20-minute drive from the Guatemalan border, where migrants seeking available land, many of them Maya Indians, have settled.

Special thanks to Gene Shinn & the Coral-list

Bureau of Energy Management, Regulation & Enforcement: Process, public comment on 4 EA’s for Exploratory Plans

NOTICE:

The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement (BOEMRE) announced that public comment is invited with respect to four Environmental Assessments (EA) for Exploration Plans (EP). The EPs involve deepwater activity in the Gulf of Mexico and were completed in accordance with new safety and environmental standards implemented since the Deepwater Horizon explosion and oil spill. A new feature has been added to increase accessibility for the public to submit comments on the bureau’s homepage at: www.boemre.gov.

Consistent with federal regulations, an EP is deemed “submitted” once all supporting materials and documentation has been provided. Once a plan is deemed submitted, BOEMRE has 30 calendar days to analyze and evaluate it. The 30-day time frame for review includes a 10-day public comment period to allow an opportunity to review and comment on the issues that should be considered by BOEMRE in preparing the EA for the plan. The four plans will be available for comment by the end of the business day today.

The four plans include one Initial EP and three Revised EPs. The first plan is an Initial EP received from Hess Corporation and includes three proposed exploratory wells in 1,600 feet water depth, approximately 80 miles offshore Louisiana. The second and third plans received are two Revised EPs from Cobalt International Energy LP. One includes nine proposed exploratory wells in approximately 5,800 feet water depth, approximately 160 miles offshore Louisiana, and the other includes ten proposed exploratory wells in approximately 4,700 feet water depth, approximately 136 miles offshore Louisiana. The fourth plan received is a Revised EP from Nexen Petroleum USA Inc. and includes one proposed exploratory well in approximately 7,460 feet water depth, approximately 134 miles offshore Louisiana.

As part of its review, BOEMRE will prepare an EA specific to the proposed exploration activities. Upon completion of the technical and environmental review, BOEMRE must decide whether to approve the plan, require modifications, or disapprove the plan. An EP describes all exploration activities planned by the operator for a specific lease or leases, including the timing of these activities, information concerning drilling vessels, the location of each planned well, and other relevant information that needs to meet important safety standards.

With the addition of the new Public Comment link on the bureau’s website, individual press notifications of exploration and development plan public comment opportunities will be not be issued.

For more information on the new safety and environmental standards, go to: http://www.boemre.gov/ReorganizationRegulatoryReform.htm. For more information on pending, submitted and approved plans, go to: http://www.gomr.boemre.gov/homepg/offshore/safety/well_permits.html.

Special thanks to Richard Charter

"Be the change you want to see in the world." Mahatma Gandhi