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API calls on Obama to restore Gulf offshore drilling, unveils study of potential job growth

Almost 190,000 new jobs could be created in 2013 if permitting in the Gulf of Mexico for offshore development returned to levels before the Obama administration’s moratorium, according to a study conducted by Quest Offshore Resources and released by the American Petroleum Institute (API).

The full study, entitled "United States Gulf of Mexico Oil and Natural Gas Industry Economic Impact Analysis," also projects a 71% increase in Gulf development spending to $41.4 billion and a 70% increase in economic activity related to Gulf development to $44.5 billion.

"The slow pace of Gulf development since the accident has cost jobs, revenue and energy production," said API CEO Jack Gerard. "The study shows what could be accomplished on jobs if project approvals and permits could get back to a normal pace.

“We’ve done the necessary work raising the bar on safety,” Gerard continued. “We cannot continue to delay developing energy and hiring people in the Gulf. The disappointing unemployment numbers from the government last week make this more important than ever.”

The drilling moratorium was put in place after the Deepwater Horizon rig explosion and resulting oil spill in April 2010.

Quest Offshore conducted the study for API and the National Ocean Industries Association.

Quest based its forecasts on project development data and historical benchmarks of spending for specific equipment and services.

"Total employment related to offshore Gulf of Mexico oil and natural gas industry operations could reach 430,000 jobs in 2013 if the permitting slowdown is reversed," Gerard said.

"As large as the jobs numbers are, however, they are just a fraction of all the jobs our industry could create with more forward-looking development policies in all federal onshore and offshore areas,” he continued. “And along with the increased jobs and energy production could come hundreds of billions of dollars of desperately needed additional revenue to the government.

“Policymakers now debating tax increases on the industry should understand that producing at home more of the oil and natural gas our nation will need is a far better way to help fix our economy and pay down our debt.”

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