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Las Vegas Sun Editorial ~ June 19, 2008
Our natural heritage
Democrats, Republicans work together on creating new wilderness areas
While the contention between congressional Democrats and Republicans is
almost tangible on such issues as immigration, health care, energy policy and
the economy, Congress has managed to find some unlikely common ground —
creation of wilderness areas.
Up to one dozen new wilderness areas are expected to be set aside this year,
and pieces of legislation proposing at least seven others are in the making.
Certainly, a Congress controlled by Democrats hasn’t hurt. Environmental
groups also have increased efforts to forge compromises with opponents, and
communities have jumped onboard — tourists and prospective property owners
likely find a wild river or a pristine mountain view more desirable than an oil
derrick.
Still, opponents point to the stringency of wilderness protections — the
most strict afforded under federal law — saying that rising energy prices
illustrate that, rather than setting land aside, the government should open up
more federal land to exploratory drilling to reduce the United States’
dependence on foreign oil.
That argument, however, doesn’t wash. Gas prices have risen steadily since
the 1990s, even as the federal government significantly increased the amount of
land open to drilling.
A report issued this month by the House Natural Resources Committee shows
that federal drilling permits increased from 3,802 five years ago to 7,561 last
year. And of the 91 million federal acres for which drilling leases have been
issued, only 23.7 million acres have been put into production.
President Bush called on Congress this week to lift the ban on offshore
drilling when, as the House report shows, only 10.5 million acres of the 44
million acres of offshore areas open to drilling are being used.
As the House report says, our nation “simply cannot drill its way to lower
prices at the pump.” The avenue to reductions in fuel prices and foreign oil
dependency is through better conservation efforts and alternative fuel
development — not expanding the destruction of the nation’s precious ecological
systems and open space.
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