The looming possibility of offshore drilling just 50 miles from South Carolina’s coastline could find more than one presidential candidate looking out of their depth as the state’s February primaries approach.
Coastal communities, businesses and lawmakers across the state have been taking sides for months as the Bureau of Ocean and Energy Management gets ready to release a finalized five-year plan for offshore oil and gas drilling leases this spring that includes waters off South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia and Georgia. The controversial proposal is pitting coastal communities and environmental groups against state leaders who see it as a source of jobs and billions in revenue.
White House hopefuls, who have been debating starkly partisan issues for months, will have to tread carefully in the Palmetto State.
“I think national candidates assume South Carolinians align with national, polarized politics, but conservation is viewed here as a bipartisan issue,” said Ann Timberlake, executive director of the environmental advocacy group Conservation Voters of South Carolina. “Given the preponderance of Republicans living along our coast who care about this issue, I believe it could swing some votes, especially in these last weeks before our February primaries.”
250,000 ocean-related jobs in Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia in 2012, contributing $14.6 billion to the economies in the region, that could be affected by offshore drilling, according to a report by the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey
Democratic candidates Bernie Sanders and Martin O’Malley have been vocal about their opposition to Atlantic offshore drilling, and when pressed by a South Carolina radio station Hillary Clinton said she is “very skeptical” about it. Most Republican candidates haven’t come out with a definite position, preferring to point to a more general energy policy, but in the coming weeks they will certainly be asked by a state with a nearly 200-mile coastline that depends heavily on tourism.
Environmental groups and coastal communities are skeptical of the economic benefits of drilling, which they say would come at the cost of marine life, the environment and a billion-dollar tourism industry.
While efforts have focused on getting the Obama administration to pull its plan for the Atlantic area, groups from both sides are shifting their attention to the 2016 election – and his successor.
The South Carolina Chamber of Commerce told the Bureau of Ocean and Energy Management that “prematurely excluding” South Carolina from consideration for offshore drilling would “deny citizens and businesses from a major opportunity to realize significant economic and societal benefits for many years to come.”
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“The Obama administration has another couple of weeks to finalize their drilling plans, but the reality is that like Sarah Palin made ‘drill baby, drill’ an issue in 2008, stopping offshore drilling will play a key role in the energy debate this election,” said David Helvarg, director of the Blue Frontier marine conservation advocacy group.
“It’s not the traditional partisan issue; this has divided coastal areas against state houses, and people are going to be asking the candidates these questions,” he said.
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Every local government along the South Carolina coast, 24 in all including Charleston and Myrtle Beach, has passed a resolution to formally oppose seismic testing and offshore drilling, even as many state and federal leaders have supported the proposal.
“There is a disconnect between the governors at the state level and what’s happening at the local level, which is bipartisan and unanimous opposition,” said Sierra Weaver, an attorney at the Southern Environmental Law Center.
This leasing hadn’t been on the table for the last 30 years. It took a while for people to realize that these are at stake and say, “Oh wait, my governor asked for this and it could happen here.’
Sierra Weaver, attorney at the Southern Environmental Law Center
South Carolina Republican Gov. Nikki Haley has long supported offshore drilling, and along with the governors of North Carolina, Virginia and Georgia asked to be included in the plan, which the administration said influenced their decision.
“Offshore drilling is where we need to be. We don’t want to wait until other states do it, we will be one of the first states to do it,” Haley said in a 2012 speech flanked by Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Rep. Jeff Duncan, R-S.C.
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In her public comments on the Bureau of Ocean and Energy Management proposal, Haley says that her support “should not be construed as unconditional or unconcerned” and asks for a buffer zone “to balance industry needs against preservation of South Carolina’s coastal aesthetic.”
As the presidential race enters South Carolina, industry groups have been making their case to voters as well, touting their polls that show the majority of the state supports drilling. A poll of South Carolina voters last year by Consumers Energy Alliance, a coalition of energy industry groups, showed 85 percent of the Palmetto State voters polled said energy issues will play an important role in the 2016 election.
The American Petroleum Institute has taken their advocacy branch to social media, launching a campaign called “Vote4Energy” to urge voters to commit to candidates who support expanding offshore drilling.