Rose Garden
1:27 P.M. EDT
July 14, 2008
President Bush Discusses Outer Continental Shelf Exploration
THE PRESIDENT: Good afternoon. Across the country, Americans are concerned about the high price of gasoline. Every one
of our citizens who drives to work, or takes a family vacation, or runs a small business is feeling the squeeze of
rising prices at the pump.
To reduce pressure on prices we must continue to implement good conservation policies, and we need to increase the
supply of oil, especially here at home. For years, my administration has been calling on Congress to expand domestic oil
production. Unfortunately, Democrats on Capitol Hill have rejected virtually every proposal -- and now Americans are
paying at the pump. When members of Congress were home over the Fourth of July recess, they heard a clear message from
their constituents: We need to take action now to expand domestic oil production.
One of the most important steps we can take to expand American oil production is to increase access to offshore
exploration on the Outer Continental Shelf, or what's called the OCS. But Congress has restricted access to key parts of
the OCS since the early 1980s. Experts believe that these restricted areas of the OCS could eventually produce nearly 10
years' worth of America's current annual oil production. And advances in technology have made it possible to conduct oil
exploration in the OCS that is out of sight, protects coral reefs and habitats, and protects against oil spills.
Last month, I asked Congress to lift this legislative ban and allow the exploration and development of offshore oil
resources. I committed to lift an executive prohibition on this exploration if Congress did so, tailoring my executive
action to match what Congress passed. It's been almost a month since I urged Congress to act -- and they've done
nothing. They've not moved any legislation. And as the Democratically-controlled Congress has sat idle, gas prices have
continued to increase.
Failure to act is unacceptable. It's unacceptable to me and it's unacceptable to the American people. So today, I've
issued a memorandum to lift the executive prohibition on oil exploration in the OCS. With this action, the executive
branch's restrictions on this exploration have been cleared away. This means that the only thing standing between the
American people and these vast oil resources is action from the U.S. Congress.
Now the ball is squarely in Congress' court. Democratic leaders can show that they have finally heard the frustrations
of the American people by matching the action I've taken today, repealing the congressional ban, and passing legislation
to facilitate responsible offshore exploration. This legislation must allow states to have a say in what happens off
their shores, provides a way for the federal government and states to share new leasing revenues, and ensure the
environment is protected.
This legislation should also take other essential steps to expand domestic production: Congress should clear the way for
our nation to tap into the extraordinary potential of oil shale, which could provide Americans with domestic oil
supplies that are equal to more than a century's worth of current oil imports. Congress should permit exploration in
currently restricted areas of northern Alaska, which could produce roughly the equivalent of two decades of imported oil
from Saudi Arabia. Congress should expand and enhance our domestic refining capacity, so that America will no longer
have to import millions of barrels of fully-refined gasoline from abroad.
The time for action is now. This is a difficult period for millions of American families. Every extra dollar they have
to spend because of high gas prices is one dollar less they can use to put food on the table or send a child to school.
And they are rightly angered by Congress' failure to enact common-sense solutions. Today, I've taken every step within
my power to allow offshore exploration of the OCS. All that remains is for the Democratic leaders in Congress to allow a
vote. The American people are watching the numbers climb higher and higher at the pump -- and they're waiting to see
what the Congress will do.
ENDS