Democrats, aides and environmentalists feel confident that the prevention of oil and gas drilling in most U.S. waters will survive scrutiny in the Senate, including from key centrist Sen. Joe Manchin III (D-W.Va.).
Other policies aimed at limiting oil and gas development have inspired fierce partisan divides on Capitol Hill. But coastal lawmakers of both parties have rallied around preventing drilling off their coastlines. For instance, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) earlier this year introduced the “American Shores Protection Act,” which would codify a temporary moratorium on drilling off the coasts of Florida, Georgia and South Carolina.
Meanwhile, Manchin has not publicly expressed concerns about the offshore drilling provision — a sharp contrast to his outspoken opposition to a tax credit for union-made electric vehicles, among other things.
Diane Hoskins, a campaign director at Oceana, an ocean conservation group, similarly expressed optimism. “Given the bipartisan nature of the support for this provision, the economic benefits of this provision, and the president’s commitment to addressing the climate crisis, I’m very hopeful,” she said.
Still, the U.S. oil and gas industry has expressed serious concerns about the limitations on offshore drilling.
In a letter to Manchin yesterday, industry groups took issue with the offshore drilling provision and other policies that they said would stifle domestic energy production.
- “Such impacts on domestic production threaten to result in greater reliance on foreign production from nations with weaker environmental standards as compared to production from U.S. federal waters and comparable regions onshore,” the groups wrote.
- The letter was signed by industry heavyweights including the American Petroleum Institute, the Independent Petroleum Association of America and the National Ocean Industries Association.
The Build Back Better Act “taxes American energy, restricts access to our own resources and advances the same type of ‘import-more-oil’ strategy that this administration has been promoting as a solution,” API President Mike Sommers previously said in a statement.
“I think we’ve got to sleep with one eye open when it comes to anything opposed by the fossil fuel industry,” he said. “But we have talked quite a bit with the Senate at every step of this process. So I think we’re cautiously hopeful that this holds together.”