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 For Immediate  Release, July 27, 2010 Contact: Miyoko  Sakashita, (415) 658-5308, [email protected] Obama  Cancels Offshore Oil Lease Sales in the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico Feds Acknowledge  Greater Environmental Protection Needed for Drilling
 SAN FRANCISCO—  The Center for Biological Diversity praised the Obama administration’s announcement  today that it is cancelling two offshore oil and gas lease sales: one in the  Atlantic off the coast of Virginia and another in the Gulf of Mexico. The  Atlantic lease sale was part of a controversial area that Interior Secretary Ken  Salazar approved for expanded offshore oil development after the Bush administration  lifted the moratorium on drilling in the Atlantic. The Gulf of Mexico lease sale  was scheduled to take place in mid-August. “Obama’s  decision to cancel these lease sales recognizes that risky offshore drilling  needs reform,” said Miyoko Sakashita, oceans director at the Center. “Halting  controversial lease sales is among the most proactive steps that Obama has  taken toward the Gulf disaster.” The Federal  Register notices to be published tomorrow cancel Lease Sale 220 in the  Atlantic and Lease Sale 215 in the western part of the Gulf of Mexico. The  notices say cancelling these lease sales “will allow time to develop and  implement measures to improve the safety of oil and gas development in Federal  waters, provide greater environmental protection, and substantially reduce the  risk of catastrophic events.” “Rather than sound science and common  sense, federal approval of offshore drilling has relied upon Big Oil promises,  “ said Sakashita. “This commitment to revisit oil spill risks, safety and  environmental protections is long overdue.” 
              Just weeks  before the Deepwater Horizon explosion, the Department of the Interior proposed  expanding offshore oil development into new areas of the Atlantic, Arctic and  eastern Gulf of Mexico.   “In light of the BP oil spill,  President Obama should pull back from the entire plan to expand offshore  drilling and instead pursue clean energy,” added Sakashita.             |