Lawmakers and experts fear loss is only the start of offshore exodus
WASHINGTON — Diamond Offshore announced Friday that its Ocean Endeavor drilling rig will leave the Gulf of Mexico and move to Egyptian waters immediately — making it the first to abandon the United States in the wake of the BP oil spill and a ban on deep-water drilling.
And the Ocean Endeavor's exodus probably won't be the last, according to oil industry officials and Gulf Coast leaders who warn that other companies eager to find work for the now-idled rigs are considering moving them outside the U.S.
Devon Energy Corp. had been leasing the Endeavor to drill in the same region of the Gulf as BP's leaking Macondo well, which has been gushing crude since a lethal blowout April 20.
But Diamond announced Friday it will lease the rig through June 30, 2011, to Cairo-based Burullus Gas Co., which plans to send the Endeavor to Egyptian waters immediately.
Devon is one of three companies that has cited the deep-water drilling ban in trying to ease out of contracts to lease Diamond rigs. Diamond, a drilling company, said it expects to make about $100 million from the deal, including a $31 million early termination fee it recovered from Devon.
Larry Dickerson, CEO of Houston-based Diamond, signaled that other of his company's rigs could be relocated, too.
"As a result of the uncertainties surrounding the offshore drilling moratorium, we are actively seeking international opportunities to keep our rigs fully employed," Dickerson said. "We greatly regret the loss of U.S. jobs that will result from this rig relocation."
It was unclear how many U.S. jobs could leave with the Ocean Endeavor, but typically more than 100 workers are on the rig at any given time, doing everything from drilling to cooking meals. Onshore, a network of businesses supplies the rigs with groceries, equipment, uniforms and drilling materials.
"It's not unusual for an energy service company to have 1,000 vendors that they buy from or purchase services from," noted Rep. Kevin Brady, R-The Woodlands. As a result, Brady said, the economic damage from the moratorium stretches far and wide.
Fearing for investment
Brady and other oil-patch lawmakers have been pressing President Barack Obama to end the six-month moratorium he imposed on 33 deep-water projects May 27 after the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon rig that was drilling a well for BP.
Obama said the ban was needed to allow time for new safety standards to be implemented and a commission to investigate the cause of the April 20 blowout at BP's Macondo well.
Although the administration on Thursday lost its second bid to keep the ban in place while it appeals a federal court's decision to strike down the moratorium, federal regulators plan to try again with a revised version soon.
Dan Pickering, a financial analyst with Tudor, Pickering Holt & Co. Securities, said the legal uncertainties surrounding the ban - and the administration's plan to issue a new, revised moratorium - ensure that no companies will resume deep-water drilling in U.S. waters anytime soon.
"Are you really going to spend $5 million … getting ready to drill a well that someone would then probably block you from drilling?" Pickering said.
Lawmakers complain
Pickering added that prospects are high that a dozen rigs ultimately could leave the Gulf of Mexico because of the ban.
Brady said the rig owners are searching for revenue - even if it means relocating to get it.
"There are two types of rigs in the deep-water Gulf today: those that are leaving the country and those that want to, because with this moratorium hanging over their heads, they simply can't go back to work," Brady said. "I'm afraid this is the first of many rigs and many American jobs to leave the Gulf."
Once the rigs relocate, it could be a minimum of five to 10 years before they return, predicted Rep. Pete Olson, R-Sugar Land.
"We cannot afford to lose these jobs or the energy they provide," Olson said. "President Obama should allow this moratorium to remain lifted and let Americans get back to work."
During trading Friday, Diamond Offshore stock fell 86 cents - or 1.32 percent - to close at $64.40. It has fallen 29 percent from its closing price of $91.20 on April 20, the day the Deepwater Horizon exploded.
By JENNIFER A. DLOUHY - jennifer.dlouhy@chron.com WASHINGTON BUREAU July 9, 2010, 8:28PM
Oil Gushes as BP Prepares to Swap Containment Cap
URGENT (07.10.10): Oil spews freely from damaged undersea well in the Gulf of Mexico as BP prepares tighter cap to plug oil disaster.
Video: Fox News Conspiracy Theory Over BP Oil Spill Disaster
Video: Hannity: Michelle Malkin On 6-Month Drilling Moratorium Ruling - 06/23/10
[PDF] Jones-Act compliant vessels that support deepwater and ultra ... File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTML
Jun 22, 2010 ... MARTIN L. C. FELDMAN. UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE. Case 2:10-cv-01663-MLCF-JCW Document 67 Filed 06/22/10 Page 22 of 22.
For those who missed last week’s “Media Mash,” on Hannity you can check out the video at our NewsBusters blog: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/kyle-drennen/2010/07/02/mrc-tv-brent-bozell-hannitys-media-mash-discusses-coverage-oil-spill-k - It focused on the Gulf Oil Spill
The Real Question again must be… are we going to let them all get away with this?
Are they perhaps going to finally cap this well and do a little clean-up along with a little PR… and then move on, now that they have destroyed the Gulf for years to come, stolen more jobs, destroyed the eco-system and gotten what they wanted: oil drilling halted; the uniformed to call for a stop to drilling permanently; the uninformed and Cap and Trading Progressive bunch to demand Cap and Trade… even though it will cripple us financially and steel more freedoms and lower our standard of living; and line the pockets of George Soros, Brazil, Petrobras, BP, NALCO, Kerry, and all the big money Progressives.
All the information is out there. Most has been posted and emailed out my this author and a network of partiot friends.
Follow the money:
George Soros; Petrobras, deep-water drilling in Brazil, drilling money from Obama to Brazil; NALCO; NALCO stock, over-insurance of the Deepwater Horizon; no MayDay from Deepwater Horizon until young employee sent it; What happened to the May Day girl?; WH lies about scientists recommendations and findings on spill; big investments in NALCO 6-months before spill; lowest federal response in history? Why?; the press restricted from BP Oil Spill area; the Jones Act not waved by Obama for 80-days… waved immediately for Katrina; the real damage; health problems caused by BP Oil Spill; BP and Enron were major original proponents of Cap and Trade; and the list goes on?
The Truth Will Set You Free… And Will Punish the Guilty!
No comments:
Post a Comment