Media Center

Matt Petersen, President & CEO of Global Green, on Gulf Oil Spill

Los Angeles - May 27, 2010 - People in Louisiana have been working hard the last 4 1/2 years to rebuild their homes, neighborhoods and the region in a sustainable way after the destruction of Katrina. Global Green has been on the ground here since just weeks after the storm, helping them to rebuild better and in ways that create lower energy bills, solutions to climate change, and green jobs.
 
Now these same communities are faced with another disaster, a product of lax regulation policies and cozy relationships with the oil industry (which started long before President Obama took office) combined with BP's cost cutting decisions that are devastating the wildlife, marshes and the people of Louisiana once again.
 
Hopefully, the ‘top kill’ works to stop the continued leak. But if that succeeds, its only the beginning of what will take years, if not decades, to recover from.

Global Green applauds President Obama on his long term policy of reducing our dependency on fossil fuels and his recent moratorium on new offshore oil drilling for six months, but believe he must go further. The magnitude of this spill -- and utter failure of BP to have sufficient contingency plans -- points to the the need to put a longer hold on deep water offshore oil drilling.   We need an agency with regulatory and prosecutorial experience overseeing the oil industry, not the continued cozy ways of the past.

The recent announcement of increasing fuel efficiency for cars, medium and heavy duty trucks was a step in the right direction, but we also need increased and accelerated fuel efficiency requirements for all transportation sectors along with investment in green, clean energy technologies that can provide jobs and economic opportunity for those communities devastated by the spill.

Global Green calls on President Obama and the federal government to urgently provide resources needed to stop the leak, clean up our beaches, wetlands and ecosystems, investigate the causes, and implement policies that will better protect our estuaries and people immediately.

Finally, now that President Obama has acknowledged that he takes responsibility, the full resources of the federal government must be deployed to the Gulf.  BP may have the only equipment to stop the oil spill, but the US Government certainly has the equipment and manpower to manage a much more engaged and robust cleanup effort than we've seen to date from the anemic and wholly inadequate response of BP.
 
We call on President Obama to recognize the level of desperation and suffering the Louisiana economy, communities, wetlands and marine life – which provide much of our nation’s energy and food, as well as critical ecosystems and species that make life as we know it possible -- are experiencing, and take action commensurate to the problem.

We hope he – and Congress – hears the voices which are saying “never again.”