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January
30, 2006
Editorial:
Admit that ANWR fight is over
Resounding no from Congress on oil drilling in reserve went
unheard by some Republicans
Las Vegas
Sun
A
few die-hard Republicans are not giving up on despoiling the
treasured Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Most Democrats
and several Republicans have always opposed oil drilling
there on environmental grounds. In recent years, many other
Republicans, fearing a backlash at the polls, also have come
to oppose it.
But
New Mexico
's Sen. Pete Domenici, chairman of the Energy and Natural
Resources Committee, is vowing to get a drilling bill passed
one way or the other. He was quoted in the San Francisco
Chronicle last week as saying, "We've got to find a
way. We think there's one out there."
Domenici
and other drilling proponents will be going against history
if they mount another push this year. The issue goes back to
1980, when Congress reserved for itself the authority to
grant drilling rights in the preserve. The closest
Republicans ever got to realizing their dream was 1995, when
their majority in both houses prevailed on a drilling bill.
But President Bill Clinton vetoed it.
Last
year pro-drilling Republicans tried again, reasoning their
majority and support from President Bush would win the day.
But the Senate, with help from moderate Republicans,
stripped a drilling measure from a House-supported energy
bill. Later it rejected attempts to enmesh drilling
authorization in budget and defense-spending bills.
Drilling
in the ANWR is bad public policy. It would put millions of
migratory birds and thousands of caribou, polar bears and
other wildlife species at grave risk. Also,
no oil would flow for at least 10 years, during which time
attention should be turned to renewable fuels to reduce our
oil dependency.
Domenici
and other drilling supporters should admit that attempts to
get a drilling bill through Congress are a waste of time.
They should turn their energies toward productive energy
legislation, such as bills requiring automakers to meet
higher fuel-efficiency standards.
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