[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 154 (2008), Part 11]
[Senate]
[Pages 15441-15443]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                                 ENERGY

  Mr. NELSON of Florida. Mr. President, it looks as though I am the 
cleanup hitter tonight, before we close the session. It has been this 
Senator's privilege to be sitting in the chair while a number of these, 
our colleagues, have been speaking from their perspective. One of the 
unique features of this democracy is that there are 50 States, each 
with two Senators who sometimes have points of view that are different 
from each other. But out of the collective will, by the give-and-take 
process--as the Good Book says, ``Come let us reason together''--we try 
to forge a consensus in which to govern the Nation and to set policy 
through law and then abide by the rule of law.
  What a great privilege it is for this Senator to be a part of that 
and try to articulate the interests as I see the national interests 
through the lens as I perceive it, through the interests of my State, 
as well as the country as a whole.
  The fact is, we are in a deplorable condition where we are now 
importing 66.2 percent of our daily consumption of oil from places such 
as the Persian Gulf, Nigeria, and Venezuela. These are very unstable 
parts of the world. The President can certainly appreciate the fact 
that if we did not have to do that, we would be not only economically a 
lot better off but just imagine what our defense posture would be if we 
did not have to protect the sea lines. The U.S. Navy has to protect the 
sea lines, not only for our interests but a lot of the others of the 
world's interests in all those areas coming around--out of the Persian 
Gulf, on the west coast of Africa, and so forth.
  It is also true that those sea lines and that flow of oil is 
increasingly under jeopardy because of terrorist groups such as al-
Qaida that can figure it out and strike in undefended oil-producing 
facilities, as they have tried to do in Saudi Arabia and who knows 
where else. All of those jitters that ripple throughout the economy 
come because people think this tight oil supply is going to be cut 
off--as well it may be.
  Back in the early 1970s it was cut off because of a cartel called 
OPEC, and they decided to cut back on production. You remember in the 
early 1970s that drove oil from something like $2 a barrel up to $10 a 
barrel.

[[Page 15442]]

  This has progressively gotten worse to the point that the United 
States is now dependent for almost two-thirds of our daily consumption 
of oil coming from foreign shores. The United States only has 3 percent 
of the world's oil reserves. Yet the United States consumes 25 percent 
of the world's oil production.
  It does not take a mathematical genius to realize if we want to do 
something about our vulnerability, if we only have 3 percent of the 
world's oil reserves but we consume 25 percent of the world's oil 
production, what is the ultimate solution? We have to wean ourselves 
from oil. We have to go to alternative fuels. We have to vigorously, 
through research and development, develop new engines. We have to use 
renewables, such as solar and wind and geothermal. Indeed, we have to 
get serious about conservation.
  This Nation simply has not done this with great vigor. It is clearly 
the hope of this Senator that the next President of the United States 
is going to have this at the top of his agenda. Then, this Congress, 
combined with the next President, is going to be able to make some 
major policy shifts about our energy consumption and from where we get 
our energy. But, in the meantime, the scare, the fright, the pain of 
$4.11-per-gallon gasoline; the scare, the fright of oil, what normally 
would be at $55 a barrel, according to an ExxonMobil executive 
testifying, under normal supply and demand--it is not anywhere close to 
that. It is way up in the 130s, and it actually got up over $140 a 
barrel.
  Because of that pain right now we have to act. There are those who 
have trooped in here and over and over their mantra is, as they hold up 
a big sign--and it is primarily the ones on that side of the aisle who 
say: ``Drill here. Drill now,'' as if that is the solution. This 
Senator has no problem with drilling if it is done responsibly and it 
is done in an area that there is not a prohibitively painful tradeoff.
  What do I mean? I want to give you an example. It was this Senator 
who, 3 years ago, had to start a filibuster to stop a punitive measure 
against the defense interests of the United States. I had to stop it 
with a filibuster. That was an attempt to drill oil in the eastern Gulf 
of Mexico off of Florida. That happens to be the largest testing and 
training area for the U.S. military in the world. Why do you think we 
train all of our F-22 pilots at a base in Florida? Why do you think we 
train the pilots for the still-being-developed F-35 Joint Strike 
Fighter in Florida? It is because they have all of that unrestricted 
space over the Gulf of Mexico.
  When the U.S. Navy shut down their training facility on the island of 
Vieques next to the island of Puerto Rico, why did they bring all of 
that U.S. Naval Atlantic Fleet training to the Gulf of Mexico? It is 
because it is restricted air space where they can have joint air, sea, 
and, at Eglin Air Force Base, land exercises in the training of our 
military.
  We are testing new weapons systems that go hundreds of miles. Where? 
In the testing and training area of the Gulf of Mexico. And this 
Senator has shared with this Senate a letter from the Secretary of 
Defense that says: Do not drill for oil and gas in the military mission 
area of the eastern gulf testing and training area.
  So 2 years ago, we put together a compromise. The oil forces wanted 
to have 2.5 million acres headed on a line straight for the west coast 
of Florida. This Senator worked it out with Senator Landrieu and 
several others. We arranged not 2.5 million acres to drill in, but 8.3 
million acres, four times as much. But we kept it away from the 
military mission area, the military testing and training area, which 
also kept it away from the coast of Florida.
  So when these folks come up with this mantra: Drill here, drill now, 
it is not taking into consideration that we have been through this 
drill before, and we have crafted a compromise. You know, we put that 
into law, as Senator Landrieu has shared, on different parts of the 
offshore. She showed you where we put that into law. It is prohibited 
under law, not by Presidential proclamation, it is prohibited by law 
until the year 2022.
  We did that for the reasons I have already said. We thought we 
balanced the interests, and that was 2 years ago. And do you know what. 
Not one acre of that 8.3 million acres has been drilled. So this mantra 
of ``drill here, drill now,'' as if we do not have the area to drill, 
this Senator worked his fingers to the bone to get a compromise to 
satisfy all of the interests, including the drilling interests, and not 
one acre of that has been drilled.
  As a matter of fact, not any of the 32 million acres under lease in 
the Gulf of Mexico has been drilled. This Senator is not opposed to 
drilling. This Senator wants to drill in the 32 million acres that are 
already available in the Gulf of Mexico and not harm the preparation 
and training of the United States military to defend our country.
  Now, that is a simple message I want to share, and I had to wait 
until this hour in order to get the time to come out here and maybe, 
through the lens of that camera, some of this message is getting 
shared.
  There is one more thing I want to share with the Senate that simply 
is not true. The folks who come out here with this simple message, 
drill here, drill now, constantly say: In all the hurricanes that they 
had there was not any oil spill. That is not true. I want to show you a 
satellite photo 4 days after Hurricane Katrina had already hit land up 
here on the Mississippi and the Louisiana coast. I want you to see the 
oil spills as recorded in a photograph from space. That is what it 
looked like 4 days after Katrina.
  Now, I hope this debunks all of those folks coming up here and saying 
there were no oil spills. I think they have gotten a lot safer, but 
don't come up here and say there are no oil spills. Let's be realistic 
about it. Let's use the most modern techniques where we are going to 
drill in those 32 million acres out in the gulf that are leased but not 
drilled.
  After Katrina, 7.5 million gallons of oil were spilled. This 
satellite image was taken by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric 
Administration 4 days after Katrina.
  If you do not believe me because I am saying it, let me point you to 
the report that was produced by the Bush administration after Katrina. 
This is from ``The Federal Response to Hurricane Katrina, Lessons 
Learned.'' It has the seal of the U.S. Government, written in February 
2006. I want to give you the quote on page 8 of this report:

       In fact, Hurricane Katrina caused at least ten oil spills, 
     releasing the same quantity of oil as some of the worst oil 
     spills in U.S. history.
       Louisiana reported at least six major oil spills of over 
     100,000 gallons and four medium spills of over 10,000 
     gallons. All told, more than 7.4 million gallons poured into 
     the Gulf Coast region's waterways, over two-thirds of the 
     amount that spilled during America's worst oil disaster, the 
     rupturing of the Exxon Valdez tanker off the Alaska coast in 
     1989.

  That is the administration's own report.
  In the next hurricane that came a few weeks later, Hurricane Rita, a 
large vessel struck a submerged oil platform that sank during the 
storm. Up to 3 million gallons of oil spilled in the gulf because of 
that, and only half of that oil was recovered.
  There have been plenty of technological advances on safety. But it 
has not ensured the safety of all that oil infrastructure that Senator 
Landrieu showed you an aerial photo of in the Gulf of Mexico.
  Listen to what the Bush administration's Minerals Management Service 
predicts. They predict there will be one oil spill in the Gulf of 
Mexico of 1,000 barrels of oil each year, and one spill of at least 
10,000 barrels of oil every 3 to 4 years in the future. That is their 
prediction.
  And, of course, if we have another Katrina--and remember, Katrina was 
only a Category 3 storm, which is up to 135 miles per hour. Guess what 
would happen if you get to a Category 5, which are winds in excess of 
146 miles per hour, and the destructive forces of each mile per hour, 
when you get into that category, go up exponentially.
  Well, I think I made my point. More intense hurricanes could mean 
more big spills and more damage to our fragile coastline and wetlands, 
our military

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mission, our gulf coast beaches, and the tourism industry they support, 
and the ecosystem. It could be devastating and decimated by a huge oil 
spill.
  Now, we have to have balance because we are behind the eight ball 
since we import two-thirds of our daily consumption of oil. What this 
Senator wants is for us to balance the approach to this: R&D, 
alternative fuels, conservation, stretch the envelope, develop new 
engines, drill for oil, and do it in a responsible way where we have 
already provided the leases.

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