Close call for
Florida’s beaches
Florida Legislature
slows down the rush to
drill
This fall,
Environment Florida, our
allies in the green
community, coastal
cities and Chambers of
Commerce teamed up to
stop the Florida
Legislature from handing
our world-famous
coastline over to oil
companies during a
special legislative
session.
“The legacy of toxic
pollution and oil spills
from Gulf drilling shows
us oil and healthy
beaches do not mix,”
said Environment
Florida’s Adam Rivera.
“Environmentalists and
businesses are coming
together to oppose
drilling before beaches
close and tourists
leave.”
Pushing past the oil
lobbyists
Oil lobbyists claimed
advanced practices would
safeguard our coastal
environment and promised
new undersea technology
would prevent rigs from
being a visual blight to
beachgoers or coastal
homeowners.
But the American
Petroleum Institute, one
of the oil industry’s
most powerful trade
groups, admitted, “There
is no such thing as an
invisible oil rig.”
And on Aug. 21, a
state-of-the-art rig,
touted by lobbyists as
“the future of oil and
gas exploration,”
ruptured, causing a
massive oil spill. The
rig leaked for 73 days,
spilling more than 9
million gallons of oil
off Australia’s pristine
Kimberly coastline into
one of the ocean’s
busiest migratory
routes.
Environment Florida and
the Sierra Club released
a report, “Oceans under
the Gun,” finding that
clean, sustainably
enjoyed beaches are
worth more than three
times to Florida’s
economy than what
drilling would produce.
Next steps for our
beaches
In the face of false
industry claims and
pressure from
environmentalists and
coastal businesses,
pro-drilling legislators
halted the push to pass
drilling. Florida Senate
President Jeff Atwater
called on a nonpartisan
panel to take as much
time as needed to review
drilling proposals in an
unbiased, science-based
manner before looking at
any legislation.
“Careful deliberation
about what’s at stake
for Florida’s coastline
is slowly replacing the
rush to drill,” said
Rivera. “We’re confident
the facts will show that
keeping protections for
our beautiful beaches is
the right thing to do.”