Gulf Oil Spill: Obama’s Regulatory Response Falls Short

Splitting the federal agency that oversees oil and gas production isn’t enough.

Before April 20, most Americans had probably never heard of the Minerals Management Service, the federal agency that oversees oil and gas production in federal waters. Now, with oil from the Deepwater Horizon blowout closing wildlife refuges and fishing grounds in the Gulf of Mexico, the MMS is facing tough questions about its role in the disaster. Its cursory environmental review minimized the prospects of a large spill, and it failed to demand that BP have a realistic response plan in place before drilling.

While Congress holds hearings, the Obama administration has announced its intent to split MMS into two agencies — one with responsibility for offshore leasing and development permits, the other for environmental and safety enforcement. That split may be desirable, but it wouldn’t be enough to protect workers or fragile coastal environments from another catastrophe.

It certainly sounds like the right approach. After all, maximizing oil and gas development — and the revenues they bring to the federal treasury — mix with protecting worker safety and the environment like oil and water. The proposal follows the lead of Norway, Britain and Australia, all of which have independent safety enforcement agencies. Moreover, the administration has promised to ask Congress to double MMS’ current enforcement budget.

Still, there are two important reasons why the proposed reforms fall short of what’s needed.

Read more: http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-doremus-mms-20100520,0,4734813.story
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