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Perry's environmental speech comes as his campaign tries to move beyond some early bumps and his momentum seems to have slowed. Shaky debate performances took away some of his shine, and as voters got to know details of his record they seemed to sour on yet another GOP contender who was, at one point, an instant front-runner. Perry hoped to calm those jitters with the speech, delivered at a U.S. Steel Corp. plant that produces sheet metal used to make household appliances. While echoing the popular-with-Republicans call for increased drilling on federal lands, he also appealed to parochial interests in relaxing oversight and allowing drilling in Pennsylvania. But it is unclear that if shale drilling rules remain slack and the industry increases its activities, this would decrease U.S. reliance on foreign oil. The drilling being done in Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Ohio is largely for natural gas, not oil
-- and the price of gas dictates the speed of production more than regulation or any other factor. Labor Department data show that only a tiny percentage of companies that experience large layoffs cite government regulation as the reason. Since Obama took office, just two-tenths of 1 percent of layoffs have been due to government regulation, the data show. Perry also spoke in support of the proposed Keystone XL pipeline that is under review at the State Department. "It's either going to go west to China or south to America. I know where I want it to go," Perry said. The 1,700-mile pipeline, which would travel through Montana, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas and Oklahoma, ending up on Texas's Gulf Coast, would carry an estimated 700,000 barrels of oil a day, doubling the capacity of an existing pipeline from Canada. Supporters say it could significantly reduce U.S. dependence on Middle Eastern oil. The project has become a flashpoint for environmental groups who say it would bring "dirty oil" that requires huge amounts of energy to extract and could cause an ecological disaster in case of a spill. "The quickest way to give our economy a shot in the arm is to deploy American ingenuity to tap American energy. But we can only do that if environmental bureaucrats are told to stand down," Perry said. Texas has some of the most limited drilling regulations, but the state is also coming under fire from its own residents
-- many of them staunch Republican, energy-backing conservatives -- who are demanding the industry be held to higher standards.
[Associated
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