Obama Administration Eyes East Coast for Offshore Drilling

The president鈥檚 new exploration plan leaves the Atlantic, Arctic, and Gulf of Mexico open to intrusion.

Last week, the Obama administration  through the Bureau of Ocean Energy Managementa division within the Department of the Interior鈥攖hat includes a five-year plan for offshore drilling in American waters beginning in 2017. That plan names 14 possible lease sites: 10 in the Gulf of Mexico, one off the coast of the Eastern Seaboard, between Virginia and Georgia, and three off the coast of Alaska. It also closes off 10 million acres of the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas near Alaska to drilling.

Democratic officials angry with the plan point to past failings in drilling. This year marks the five-year anniversary of the BP oil spill in the Gulf; the same deep-water tactics, with no new regulations to make them safer, could be used off the East Coast. 鈥淚f drilling is allowed off the East Coast of the United States, it puts our beaches, our fisherman, and our environment in the crosshairs for an oil spill that could devastate our shores,鈥 Senator Ed Markey of Massachusetts  after the announcement. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to make it clear we鈥檙e very unhappy with this plan鈥 You鈥檙e looking at the beginning of an alliance to put pressure on this administration to withdraw this proposal.鈥 This is in sharp contrast from Markey鈥檚 last statement regarding the plan, which applauded the president for . 

Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell , 鈥淎t this early stage in considering a lease sale in the Atlantic, we are looking to build up our understanding of resource potential, as well as risks to the environment and other uses.鈥 But a balanced approach seems to have served the purpose of alienating everyone, including . 鈥淲hile considering the Atlantic for potential development is a good step, the administration's proposal represents the bare minimum for potentially opening that area by including only a single lease sale six years from now,鈥 said a spokesman for the American Petroleum Institute .

So far the proposal simply names sites that could be up for grabs, which means that there is still time for the opposition to rally. An  will proceed until March 28th, after which the Department of the Interior will release its final list of sites that can be legally leased to oil companies. In the meantime, activist groups will attempt to shutter some of those potential spots, hoping to follow in the footsteps of the Pacific states, which  off their coastlines.