Category Archives: Offshore Oil and Gas

Budget Cuts in the N.C. Coastal Management Program

January 30, 2014.  Caught between state and federal budget reductions, the state’s Division of Coastal Management (DCM) eliminated five positions effective  December 31, 2013 including the land use planning director and federal consistency coordinator.  DCM carries out the state’s Coastal Area Management Act (CAMA)  — a joint state-local program to reduce  property damage and injury from coastal hazards; protect public access to the state’s beaches and waterways;  and manage the impacts of  development on sensitive coastal resources.  With the support of Republican Governor Jame Holshouser, the N.C. General Assembly adopted CAMA in 1974 shortly after  Congress enacted the federal Coastal Zone Management Act  to encourage creation of state coastal resource protection programs.  Over the next several decades,  North Carolina became a national leader in coastal policy even as   the state’s  coastal counties experienced an explosion of development activity.

DCM was forced to eliminate these two positions and three others (the Assistant Director for Permitting and Enforcement,  an IT support position and a policy analyst)  after several years of state and federal budget reductions. Federal grant funding under the Coastal Zone Management Act had been flat for over a decade while salaries, benefits and indirect costs increased. The last federal funding cycle  reduced the state grant by 5.9%. At the same time, state appropriations  have dropped  35% since 2009 and permit receipts  fell by  approximately  30%  as the recession slowed development activity.

More on the impact of eliminating the land use planning and coastal consistency positions:

Land Use Planning Director. One  goal of the Coastal Area Management Act  was to plan coastal development with an eye toward conditions that make the coastal area uniquely hazardous and uniquely productive. To work, it had to be a joint state-local effort and CAMA made local land use planning a key part of the state’s coastal management program.  Budget  cuts in previous years  forced the elimination of a long-standing DCM grant program that provided  financial assistance to coastal cities and towns for land use planning.  Ongoing budget cuts have now made it necessary to eliminate the  CAMA land use planning director. The director supervised  DCM’s  planning efforts and worked directly with local government planners.    Supervisory responsibilities for the  planning program has  shifted to DCM’s policy director.

Federal Consistency Coordinator. The federal Coastal Zone Management Act requires federal  activities affecting  the coastal area to be consistent “to the maximum extent practicable” with the state’s approved coastal management  program.  (To be enforced through the CZMA consistency requirement, a state program must be approved  by the  Office of Coastal Resource Management in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.) The approved North Carolina coastal management program  includes development standards adopted under CAMA, but also includes local land use  policies, water quality standards, and other state laws and rules concerning coastal resources.   As a practical  matter, the federal consistency requirement  gives the state an opportunity to review and comment on proposed federal activities and federal permit decisions affecting the North Carolina coast.   In many cases, federal consistency review is the only  way  the state  can influence the federal action.

You can find a list of  the types of federal actions and permits DCM  reviews  here.    North Carolina has most often used  consistency review to request accommodation for state needs rather than to block a federal action entirely.  The state used consistency review  to press the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to put sand from federal navigation dredging projects back on N.C. beaches rather than dumping the sand offshore.  In 1991,  the U.S. Secretary of Interior upheld a North Carolina consistency objection to a federal  permit that would have allowed  Mobil Oil  to deposit drilling waste from an exploratory well onto a commercially important fishing ground off the Atlantic coast. The CZMA consistency requirement also became one of the most important legal tools in North Carolina’s  unsuccessful effort to prevent Virginia from constructing  a pipeline to take water from Lake Gaston to  the City of Virginia Beach.

Loss of the federal consistency coordinator comes at a particularly bad time given the increased  activity around  coastal energy development.  Offshore oil and gas  development  most often occurs in federal waters that are beyond the state’s jurisdiction. (Under the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, state jurisdiction  only extends  3-miles from shore.)  Without  direct permitting or enforcement authority,  the  state’s only influence over offshore energy activities may be through  consistency review of federal lease and permit decisions.  Since those federal decisions can advantage or disadvantage the different Atlantic coast states, even supporters of offshore oil and gas development may need a way to advocate for North Carolina interests.  Consistency review  also gives the state an  opportunity to influence  federal leases and permits for  onshore and offshore wind energy facilities.

In both 2012 and 2013, the General Assembly  funded new positions in  DENR’s Division of Energy, Mineral and Land Resources to support work on energy development.   At the same time,  DCM budget cuts have resulted in the loss of a position critical to the state’s influence on offshore energy development activities.    As of January 1, 2014,  federal consistency review  will be divided between two DCM staff  who  review  CAMA major development permits. If activity around offshore energy development  continues to pick up,  the state will need to  reinvest in the federal consistency process to have a voice in how that development happens.

Legislative Wrap-Up II: Energy

August 2, 2013: Highlights of energy legislation.

Shale Gas/Hydraulic Fracturing. This is one area where the big news may be the legislative proposals that failed. The Senate adopted two controversial  shale gas provisions, but neither passed the House. Legislation adopted in 2012 effectively put a moratorium on hydraulic fracturing  by prohibiting issuance of permits until  the Mining and Energy Commission adopted rules and the  General Assembly acted to specifically allow permitting.  The N.C. Senate had always wanted to set a specific date for permitting to begin and tried again this year in Senate Bill 76 (the Domestic Energy Jobs Act). The version of the bill that came out of the Senate repealed the 2012   language  and authorized the Department of Environment and Natural Resources to begin issuing permits for hydraulic fracturing on March 1,  2015 without any further legislative action.  The House had concerns about the change. After back and forth on alternative language and  intensive lobbying in the  last  days of the legislative session, the final bill kept the permitting moratorium in place.

The other controversial Senate proposal  had to do with disclosure of information on chemicals used in hydraulic fracturing fluid. The Senate  intervened on behalf of the oil and gas industry when energy giant Halliburton expressed concern about a chemical disclosure rule drafted by the Mining and Energy Commission. The commission’s draft rule requires drilling companies to disclose all chemicals used in hydraulic fracturing fluid to the Department of Environment and Natural Resources, but allows DENR to keep any trade secret information confidential. You can find more about the chemical disclosure rule and trade secret protection in this post.   In an effort to make the rule more acceptable to the oil and gas industry, the Senate adopted language directing the Mining and Energy Commission to revise the rule to allow  drilling operators to withhold information on trade secret chemicals unless DENR needed the information to respond to environmental damage or a specific health problem.  In the face of significant opposition,   the Senate  modified the language to allow   state regulators  to review information on trade secret chemicals at the same time the drilling company  disclosed  other chemicals used in the fracturing fluid. The revised language did not allow DENR  to actually receive  information on trade secret chemicals — the department could only review  information  that remained  in the drilling company’s possession.  In the final  days of the legislative session, the  bill containing the Senate  language died and the restriction on chemical disclosure died with it.  Failure of the legislation allows the Mining and Energy Commission  to move ahead with the original draft rule on chemical disclosure.

The final version of Senate Bill 76 signed by the Governor included a number of  less controversial changes related to shale gas and hydraulic fracturing:

– Rules adopted by the Mining and Energy Commission are exempted from the  requirement for a fiscal analysis. State law  generally  requires every proposed rule that has an economic impact of $1 million or more (based on the total impact on everyone affected by the rule)  to be accompanied by a  fiscal analysis.

–  Minor changes in the makeup of the MIning and Energy Commission.

– Three new studies to look at:  1. creation of a coordinated permitting process that will allow issuance of a single environmental permit for all oil and gas exploration and production activities; 2. the appropriate level of severance tax for oil and gas resources; and 3. implementation of  the 2012 registration requirement for people involved in  purchase or lease of property for oil and gas exploration and development.

– Technical amendments to an existing law allowing the state to limit the total amount of oil and gas produced in the state (G.S. 113-394).

–  New criteria for setting the amount of  the reclamation bond required for oil and gas activities and a process for either the drilling company or the property owner to appeal the bond amount.

LEED Certification.  House Bill 628 (Protect/Promote Locally Sourced Building Materials) was signed into law after a major rewrite in the Senate.  The  original House bill would have prohibited state building projects from seeking Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) certification under U.S. Green Building Council standards because few North Carolina forestry operations meet standards necessary to earn LEED credit for sustainable wood products. You can find more explanation of the controversy over sustainable forest practices and the LEED standard here.  The Senate rewrote the bill to allow construction of state projects under “green” building standards that  give credit for use of local building materials — which LEED standards do.   The  final bill also calls  for study of the energy efficiency standards for state buildings that were adopted in 2007.

Renewable Energy.  Legislation to repeal the state’s Renewable Energy Portolio Standard  died.   With the support of a number of conservative political organizations — including Americans for Prosperity — House Bill 298 and Senate Bill 365 (both titled the Affordable and Reliable Energy Act)  proposed to repeal the 2007 state law requiring major electric utilities to generate an increasing percentage of power from renewable energy sources.  An earlier post talked about the politics of the renewable energy standard and  the practical problem the bill presented for Republican  legislators. The tension between the practical (jobs) and the political (conservative opposition to  subsidies for renewable energy) played out in both the House and the Senate.  In the end, neither bill got all of the committee approvals needed to get to  a floor vote.

The General Assembly adopted legislation setting up a permitting program for  wind energy projects (House Bill 484). The bill largely responds to concerns about the potential impact of wind turbines on military training  activities in the coastal area. Two onshore coastal wind projects already proposed for the coastal area had generated questions about interference with radar and risk to pilots flying low-level military training routes.  Aside from establishing environmental criteria for permitting wind turbines, the bill requires DENR to provide notice of  the permit application to commanders at  nearby military installations and to the Federal Aviation Administration. The bill makes interference with military operations a basis for denying  a wind energy permit.

The final budget for 2013-2015  eliminated state funding for the N.C. Biofuels Center. The General Assembly created the Biofuels Center in 2007 to  encourage  biofuels production in N.C. using  non-food crops.  The Biofuels Center set a goal of replacing 10% of the state’s imported petroleum with homegrown biofuels. To develop biofuels production, the Biofuels Center made grants to support biofuels research and to develop pilot  projects.  Late in July, the N.C. Biofuels Center board decided that it would not be practical to continue operations without state funding; the  Center will  close by the end of October and unused grant money will be returned to the state.

Offshore Energy.  Senate Bill 76 also addressed offshore energy production. One section of the  bill creates a plan for allocating revenue from offshore energy production off the N.C. coast. The first $250 million in royalties to the state would go into an Offshore Emergency Fund to be used for emergency response and cleanup in case of an offshore oil or gas spill. Any royalties to the state beyond the first $250 million would go largely to the General Fund (75%); the remaining 25% would be divided among the Highway Trust fund (5%), the Community College System (5% for programs to train students in fields related to energy development), DENR (5% for coastal projects), the UNC system (5% for energy-related research and development); State Ports Authority (3% for ports infrastructure associated with energy production); and Department of Commerce (2% to recruit energy-related industries to the state).

Note: Offshore oil and gas production would almost certainly occur in federal waters beyond the three-mile limit of state jurisdiction. North Carolina will not receive any royalties from offshore production in federal waters unless Congress specifically authorizes revenue-sharing with the state.

The bill also encourages  the Governor to negotiate a regional energy compact with the states of Virginia and South Carolina to develop a regional strategy for offshore energy production in the three-state region. The General Assembly directs Governor McCrory to work with his counterparts in those states to encourage the U.S. Department of Interior to amend the national 2012-2017 Five Year Leasing Plan to include leasing for oil and gas exploration and development in waters of the Atlantic Ocean off the VA-NC-SC coast.

Energy Policy Act.  Senate Bill 76  makes significant changes to the state’s Energy Policy Act (the Act begins at G.S. 113B-1). The changes  generally run in the direction of  reducing  the emphasis on energy efficiency and renewable energy and increasing  the emphasis on job creation.   The amended Energy Policy Act has more to say about expanding development of all energy sources – including natural gas and nuclear power — and much less about energy conservation.  The bill changes the makeup of the Energy Policy Council (an advisory board created to guide state energy policy) along the same lines:

– The seat on the Council for a person  with experience in alternative fuels or biofuels becomes a seat for a representative of  an investor-owned natural gas utility.

–  The seat designated for a person  with experience in energy efficient building design or construction  becomes a seat for  an energy economist.

–  The seat on the Council for a person with experience in renewable energy becomes a seat for an industrial energy consumer.

The General Assembly also consolidated state energy programs in the Department of Environment and Natural Resources. The budget bill moves the State Energy Office (which has largely carried out federally funded energy efficiency programs) from the Department of Commerce to DENR. Senate Bill 76  moves the Energy Policy Council, which had also been under the Department of Commerce,   to DENR. The Council will be  staffed by the Division of Mineral, Energy and Land Resources.

Postcards From the Coast: Offshore Drilling

March 6, 2013

First,  a postcard from Raleigh to the coast — While fracking has used up most of the oxygen in recent  discussions of  state energy policy, offshore energy development has  taken on new political life.   The sections of Senate Bill 76 dealing with shale gas production have gotten more attention, but the bill also revives  legislative proposals on offshore  energy  development that did not survive  the 2011-2012 session. These sections of the bill apply to all kinds of offshore energy generation (including ocean  wind  turbines), but the bill clearly intends to  signal support for  offshore oil and gas drilling.

In Section 7, Senate Bill 76 proposes a way to divide up state revenue received from  offshore energy  production.   Whatever the merits of the Senate plan  — and it seems designed to promise money for every good thing possible —  it is not certain that the state will ever receive revenue from offshore  energy  production.   The United States has had no experience with  offshore wind turbines and the economics of ocean wind energy make it  an unlikely revenue  source.  Most oil and gas drilling sites are in federal  waters outside the limits of state jurisdiction;  all revenue from drilling in federal waters goes to the  United States  treasury unless Congress authorizes  revenue sharing with the   states.   Gulf Coast states benefit from a federal formula for sharing revenue from production in the Gulf of Mexico and something similar would be needed to allow  Atlantic coast states to receive revenue from production along the eastern seaboard.  Assuming Congress allows revenue sharing for Atlantic coast oil and gas production, the benefit to North Carolina  will depend on where  drilling  occurs and how  the revenue sharing formula works.

Note: The U.S. Department of Interior is not currently issuing offshore oil and gas leases in Atlantic coast waters.  Under the department’s  5- year lease plan, no Atlantic coast leases will be offered until 2018 at the earliest.

The bill also encourages the Governor to negotiate an interstate offshore energy compact with the governors of Virginia and South Carolina. As described in the bill, the purpose of the compact would largely be to lobby for earlier issuance of  oil and gas leases  off  the  east coast of the United States; revenue sharing for Atlantic coast states; and quicker permitting of offshore oil and gas activities.

Although Senate Bill 76 has not yet become law, Governor McCrory has already checked off two  items on the bill’s to-do list. Governor McCrory   joined the governors of South Carolina and Virginia in sending a letter to the President’s nominee for Secretary of the Interior, Sally Jewell,   urging her to  open east coast waters for oil and gas drilling  sooner.  A February 14 press release  issued by Gov. McCrory’s office includes excerpts from the letter and a link to the full text of the letter.

The following week, Governor McCrory joined the governors of Alaska, Louisiana, Texas, Virginia, Mississippi, Alabama, and South Carolina   as a new member of the Outer Continental Shelf Governor’s coalition.  The coalition advocates for more offshore leasing, quicker permitting of offshore oil and gas operations, and revenue sharing for all states with offshore energy production.

Senate Bill 76 has passed the Senate; the bill will go through three House committees (Commerce, Environment and Finance) before reaching the House floor.