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House to Vote on Offshore Drilling Bill

House GOP leaders to send compromise offshore drilling bill to floor for vote next week


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WASHINGTON, Dec. 1, 2006
By BEN EVANS Associated Press Writer
(AP) House Republicans agreed Friday to move a compromise offshore drilling bill passed by the Senate this summer that would open new territory in the Gulf Coast area to oil rigs and create a cash cow for nearby states.

With time running out on the party's majority rule, GOP leaders decided to send the measure to the floor for a vote next week, Kevin Madden, a spokesman for Majority Leader John Boehner said.

It wasn't clear, however, whether Republican leaders would press for its passage or simply offer it up for a vote anticipating it would fail. They have previously blocked it, hoping for a more ambitious bill that would open coastal waters across the country to drilling unless a state objects.

The bill would allow new oil and natural gas development in 8.3 million acres of federally controlled waters in the eastern-central Gulf of Mexico, with supporters saying it would help ease tight markets, particularly for natural gas. The Senate passed the bill 71-25 in August.

Along with opening new territory, the bill would sharply increase royalty shares for Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Texas from less than 2 percent to 37.5 percent. In 2017, the new royalty formula would apply to all oil and gas produced in the Gulf, not just from the 8.3 million acres newly opened.

A leading opponent of the Senate bill, House Resources Committee Chairman Richard Pombo, R-Calif., lost his seat in the Nov. 7 election.

Another staunch opponent, Rep. John Peterson, R-Pa., said he still believes the measure is too modest but would support it as an incremental improvement.


MMVI The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


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