Vitter-Bishop bills underline single-minded drilling agenda
Summary:
- Bills introduced today in the House and Senate seek to rapidly accelerate the production of dirty fossil fuels, including opening up more sensitive areas off American coasts and in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to dangerous oil drilling, pushing lease sales of oil shale reserves, and reinstating Bush-era oil and gas leases on public lands
- The bill also seeks to seriously undermine the Clean Air Act and the Endangered Species Act, two bedrock environmental laws that protect the health of Americans and our natural resources, by prohibiting the regulation of carbon dioxide, methane and other dangerous air pollutants
- This Congressional drilling push comes on the heels of a speech by President Obama yesterday in which he outlined a long-term plan for the country to rein in its oil consumption and transition to a cleaner, more sustainable future
The following is a statement from Rodger Schlickeisen, Former president and CEO of Defenders of Wildlife:
“Senator Vitter’s and Representative Bishop’s short-sighted dirty energy bills would take us backwards in the urgent national effort to chart a new and sustainable energy direction for the nation. The bills would sell out America’s lands and waters to the dirty energy industry, which – as demonstrated all too clearly during the Gulf of Mexico oil disaster less than a year ago – has little regard for the wellbeing of coastal communities, local economies, our precious wildlife or treasured natural places.
“The members of Congress bought and paid for by Big Oil are no longer even attempting to mask their single-minded drive for more dirty energy production. Instead, they’re putting the livelihoods of their constituents and the wellbeing of the environment at greater risk for what amounts to zero relief at the pump. We need real solutions, not ones that sacrifice the health of the American people, wildlife and natural resources so Big Oil can make even more obscene profits.”
Learn more about Defenders’ work to protect American coasts from offshore drilling disasters.
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Contact(s):
Caitlin Leutwiler, (202) 772-3226, cleutwiler@defenders.orgFor over 75 years, Defenders of Wildlife has remained dedicated to protecting all native animals and plants in their natural communities. With a nationwide network of nearly 2.1 million members and activists, Defenders of Wildlife is a leading advocate for innovative solutions to safeguard our wildlife for generations to come. To learn more, please visit https://defenders.org/newsroom or follow us on X @Defenders.