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In fact, a recent report by the energy information agency projects oil and natural gas production in the U.S. will continue to climb over the next eight years, reducing oil imports and making the U.S. a net exporter of natural gas. But that same report provides ammunition for Republicans, because it predicts that in the short term, oil production in the Gulf of Mexico, where the Obama administration placed a moratorium on new deep-water exploratory drilling after the Gulf oil spill, will show a decline in 2011 and this year before rebounding later. In the face of rosy production numbers, Republicans and the oil and gas industry focus on federal lands, because that's where the government controls access and permitting to drill. There, Obama's record is mixed. "He is implying it is because of his actions that it is happening, and frankly, nothing can be further from the truth," said Rep. Doc Hastings, R-Wash., who heads the House Natural Resources Committee. "Where is the production coming from? It is coming from state and private lands," where the government has little control. Soon after Obama took office, the Interior Department rescinded 77 leases in Utah because of their close proximity to national parks, later reinstating 17 of them. Then weeks before the 2010 Gulf oil spill, Obama said he would consider expanding drilling off the Virginia coast and Alaska, only to scrap or delay those plans after the spill. Partly to respond to Republican criticism and higher gasoline prices, Obama extended leases impacted by the post-spill moratorium, called for annual lease sales in the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska, and has offered or plans to offer up much of the Western and Central Gulf, and some waters off the Alaskan coast, to oil and gas companies. These steps could help boost production.
[Associated
Press;
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