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For Immediate Release:
2007-06-04
For More Information:
Contact Jeremiah Baumann
(503) 231-1986

Oregon House Protects Oregon Coast with Offshore Drilling Moratorium

Salem—The Oregon House voted today in favor of a three-year moratorium on oil and gas drilling off the Oregon coast. The state Senate has already voted in favor of the measure, so it goes now to the Governor’s desk.


“The Coast is a place that Oregonians from every corner of the state treasure, whether it’s Haystack Rock or the Oregon Dunes,” said Jeremiah Baumann, an advocate with Environment Oregon. “Today,
Oregon sends a message that our Coast will be protected from the damage of oil and gas drilling.”

 
The Coast is home to many Oregonians and its resources have been the core of
Oregon’s fishery and forestry economic bases.  Proponents of the bill argue that allowing oil and gas drilling would risk significant long-term environmental damage. The Oregon Coast was protected until 1995 by a moratorium enacted in part because of a 1971 oil spill off the coast of Santa Barbara, California.

 
“The images of oil-coated birds and wildlife, and of ruined beaches, are hard to forget,” said Baumann.

 
The oil industry says that because of new technology, the risk of a spill is dramatically reduced, but the Minerals Management Service of the federal government made an estimate for
California that ongoing operations there pose a 95% risk of a spill of less than 1,000 barrels in volume and a 41% risk of a spill larger than 1,000 barrels.

 
SB 790 was introduced by state Senator Ryan Deckert (
Beaverton) and cosponsored by Reps. Deborah Boone (Cannon Beach) and Jean Cowan (Newport).