Interior Secretary Ken Salazar told a Senate committee investigating the Gulf of Mexico oil spill that the government’s 16-month battle to overhaul oil industry regulation has been met with strong opposition by oil companies. The main complaint, Salazar says, is that the regulation changes would only be roadblocks in the development of oil and gas resources, Bloomberg news reports.
The Minerals Management Service, which is a part of the Department of the Interior, has been under fire since scandals in 2008 exposed the close relationship between agency personnel and the oil industry they were charged with regulating.
Salazar announced plans last week to split the MMS into two divisions in the wake of the Gulf spill. The agency used to sell oil and gas leases while it regulated the industries, leading to conflicts of interest.
The MMS official overseeing the safety of offshore drilling rigs has also resigned. Chris Oynes held the post since 2007 and before that was in charge of federal oversight for the Gulf of Mexico for 13 years, Bloomberg reports.
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Concentrate on stopping the oil spill down stream. If this spill happens to pass the shores of maine onto the antarctic as well as the netherlands,first (iceland , British ilands we the world are of grave danger. If just a small stream of this spill circles the globe, there will most certainly be a global warming!! amongst other catastrophies. Man and Mother nature must join forces,(vast exspanses of ocean currents) to revive our precious planet of unnatural sea life. For if we deplete our waters we most certainly will destroy our EARTH,YES? thank you. Canada?