Judge to allow offshore drilling in the Gulf

 Newsmax:

A federal judge in Louisiana has ruled that the Biden administration overstepped its authority by indefinitely blocking new oil and gas drilling across vast portions of U.S. coastal waters.

Judge James Cain Jr. ruled Thursday that former Presidents Joe Biden and Barack Obama exceeded their powers when they sought to permanently shield offshore areas from energy development.

Cain wrote that their orders "constituted a departure from the executive branch's longstanding practice and exceeded the authority granted" under federal law.

Biden issued the executive order on "Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad" on Jan. 27, 2021, shortly after taking office, expanding on protections created under the Obama administration.

The measure barred new leasing across 625 million acres, including the entire East Coast, the waters off California, Oregon, and Washington state, large parts of Alaska's coast, and the eastern Gulf of Mexico — now referred to as the Gulf of America.

At the time, the White House framed the move as a cornerstone of its climate agenda, aimed at slowing the development of fossil fuels while steering the U.S. toward renewable energy sources.

Biden's Interior Department highlighted the policy as a safeguard against oil spills and a step toward reducing emissions linked to offshore production.

The restrictions did not affect the central and western Gulf of Mexico, which remains the hub of U.S. offshore drilling and accounts for the vast majority of domestic offshore oil and gas output. Still, industry groups saw the sweeping moratorium as a threat to long-term supply and energy security.
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Offshore drilling is providing the US with energy that would otherwise have to be imported.  It is a safe way to provide the US energy needs.

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