Santa Barbara County Rejects ExxonMobil Oil-Trucking Plan

Source: Environmental Defense Center

The Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors voted today to reject ExxonMobil’s proposal to transport oil by tanker trucks along hazardous California highways. The plan would have helped the company restart three 1980s drilling platforms off the Santa Barbara coast, shut down since the Refugio disaster seven years ago.

Today’s vote comes on the heels of a disturbing new report from international scientists on climate change’s intense and mounting damages. It follows last year’s disastrous oil spill off Huntington Beach, another offshore oil leak from DCOR Pipeline 0919, an oil tanker truck accident and fire in Santa Maria, and the Alisal Fire that threatened the ExxonMobil’s Las Flores Canyon oil-processing facility, where trucks would load crude.

ExxonMobil’s plan would have added up to 24,800 oil-filled truck trips a year on coastal Highway 101 and hazardous Route 166. ExxonMobil’s three offshore platforms near Santa Barbara were shut down in 2015 after the Plains All American Pipeline ruptured and spilled thousands of gallons of oil. In 2020 county planning staff recommended a prohibition on oil tanker trucks on Route 166 after a major accident spilled more than 4,500 gallons into the Cuyama River.

“Recent oil tanker truck accidents and offshore oil spills show how dangerous ExxonMobil’s proposal to restart its offshore oil platforms and truck crude oil along scenic and perilous county highways is. Our research revealed that there have been eight serious accidents involving tanker trucks along the route in the last several years, resulting in deaths, oil spills, injuries, fires, and road closures,” said Linda Krop, chief counsel of the Environmental Defense Center, which represents Get Oil Out! and Santa Barbara County Action Network. “We applaud the Board’s vote against ExxonMobil’s project, which puts the safety of our communities, climate and coastlines first.”

The county’s rejection of ExxonMobil’s proposal was based on the project’s significant and unavoidable harms to biological, water and cultural resources in the event of a spill, as well as the proposed trucking’s other threats to health, safety and general welfare. 

“The Environmental Affairs Board celebrates the Board of Supervisor’s decision to reject Exxon’s trucking proposal once and for all,” said the Environmental Affairs Board at University of California at Santa Barbara. “Exxon’s trucking proposal was a step in the wrong direction on climate and put Californians and our coastal resources in harm’s way from spills, crashes, pollution and fires. This vote gives our generation of students hope that the county is transitioning to a clean, safe and just future without delay.”

California suffers hundreds of oil-truck incidents a year, and many result in oil spills. There were 258 trucking accidentsalong the planned route from 2015 to 2021; since 2007 eight oil tanker truck accidents have occurred that resulted in six deaths, multiple injuries, fires, road closures, and oil spills.

“This is an enormous victory against oil industry pollution and this trucking plan’s significant threats to public safety,” said Julie Teel Simmonds, a senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity. “We’ve seen oil spill after oil spill along the California coast, and it’s incredibly encouraging to see Santa Barbara County supervisors take a stand against this dirty and dangerous industry.”

A majority of Santa Barbara County voters oppose restarting ExxonMobil’s offshore drilling platforms in the Santa Barbara Channel, according to a November 2019 poll. Nearly 3 out of 4 respondents said they were concerned “about the safety of our local highways if up to 70 oil tanker trucks are allowed on our roads each day.”

“The Huntington spill sadly brought into clear, devastating focus why restarting Exxon’s 40-year-old platforms, beyond their max 35-year life, with a history of corrosion and spills, would place our entire coastline at risk,” said Katie Davis, chair of the Sierra Club Los Padres Chapter, which also submitted a petition, signed by more than 2,000 people, opposing the project. “Offshore oil is too risky. We know it, and the industry and regulators know it. It’s why 7,500 businesses and 90 cities on the Pacific coast are on record opposing offshore oil.”

“The Board has taken the right stance today and protected Chumash homelands and homewaters from this unthinkable project,” said Mariza Sullivan, Coastal Band of the Chumash Nation Tribal representative. “The Chumash people will not condone this or other destructive fossil fuel projects passing through our ancestral lands.”

Watch the video produced by @vacationland for @environmentaldefensecenter. Directed by @offline.media.account and @nicholas_weissman.

The coalition opposing ExxonMobil’s trucking plan includes 350 Santa Barbara, the California Coastal Protection Network, the California Wildlife Foundation/California Oaks, CalTrout, Carpinteria Valley Association, the Center for Biological Diversity, the Center for Oceanic Awareness Research, and Education (COARE), Channel Islands Restoration, Citizens Planning Association, Climate First: Replacing Oil and Gas, the Coastal Band of the Chumash Nation, Coastal Ranches Conservancy, Community Environmental Council, the Cuyama Valley Community Association, Eco Vista, Environmental Center of San Luis Obispo, Environmental Defense Center, Explore Ecology, Food & Water Watch, Food and Water Action, Fund for Santa Barbara, Gaviota Coast Conservancy, Get Oil Out!, Goleta Goodland Coalition, Goodland Coalition, Heal the Bay, Heal the Ocean, the League of Women Voters (Santa Barbara), Los Padres ForestWatch, Northern California Recycling Association, the Plastic Pollution Coalition, Plastics Ocean International, Santa Barbara Audubon, Santa Barbara Channelkeeper, Santa Barbara County Action Network, the Santa Barbara Standing Rock Coalition, the Santa Barbara Urban Creeks Council, Save Our Shores, the SB Museum of Natural History & Sea Ctr, Seventh Generation Advisors, Sierra Club Los Padres Chapter, Sierra Club Santa Lucia Chapter, Society of Fearless Grandmothers (SB), Surfrider Foundation, Surfrider Foundation Santa Barbara County Chapter, The 5 Gyres Institute, UCSB Associated Students External Vice President for Statewide Affairs Esmeralda Quintero-Cubillan, UCSB Coastal Fund, UCSB Environmental Affairs Board, UCSB Environmental Justice Alliance, UPSTREAM, WE Watch, Wishtoyo Chumash Foundation, and Zero Waste USA.

Avatar

Written by EDC

What do you think?

Comments

4 Comments deleted by Administrator

Leave a Review or Comment

54 Comments

  1. Looking pretty hypocritical here SB supervisors (and assorted Edhat commenters). Keep on driving! It’s gotta come from somewhere. I love the ocean. Who doesn’t? But yeah, just cause we live here doesn’t mean we automatically bail on some level of responsibility to ‘preserve our perfect uptopia’.

  2. BASIC – “‘preserve our perfect uptopia’.” No, it’s no preserve a delicate and largely endangered ecosystem. Our “responsibility” should be to the land and the species who thrive there and to those who make a living from said land.

  3. Do people like SACJON think the gasoline just comes into fruition in a week? A month? 90 days after extracting oil from a drill site…? The fuel we were using until 3 months ago was from crude drilled at least 9 months ago… Biden, immediately after taking office, sign an executive order to ban drilling on federal lands, impose restrictions on current sites as well as refiners and closed down Keystone… As if his pen stroke would immediately make us a “Green” country! LOL!!! 95% of “Green” energy components, whether solar or wind blades etc are made in CHINA… It will take at least 2 generations to ween us of petroleum energy as a mainstay… but even then, we will STILL need petroleum products…

  4. CHIP, VOICE and others taking Russia’s side regarding the historical spike in gas prices:
    “The overnight spike comes after Russian troops attacked Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, the second-largest nuclear plant in Europe—intensifying concerns that new sanctions could curb oil production in Russia, one of the world’s top oil-producing countries…… Oil prices spiked immediately after the attack, with U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate jumping 5% to a nearly eight-year high of $113 per barrel by 11 a.m. EST on Friday.”
    (https://www.forbes.com/sites/jonathanponciano/2022/03/04/gas-prices-suddenly-spike-to-10-year-high-after-russias-nuclear-plant-attack-experts-warn-surge-will-only-get-worse/?sh=4a9fcad6a682)
    I don’t know, but I’d probably put more trust into FORBES than a couple local Putin defenders.

  5. Sac, I am advocating for increasing oil and gas production in North America in order to reduce the reliance of western countries on people like Putin for energy. I am advocating for increasing oil and gas production to reduce prices, thus strengthening our economy and reducing the revenue of people like Putin. You are advocating for maximizing the dependency of the west on people like Putin for energy and for maximizing the oil and gas revenue of people like Putin. I guess in newspeak that means I support Putin and you oppose him? At any rate, if Putin had the power to decide us energy policy he would have wholeheartedly implemented Biden’s plan because it has made him wealthier and more powerful.

  6. Hilarious! We saw just how safe pipelines are with the Refugio spill and the more recent spill offshore from LA. Weren’t you oil industry apologists just arguing that trucking the oil in tankers was safest? As long as oil companies think profit is more important than safety, nothing they do is safe.

  7. A lot of our refiners, particularly in the gulf coast of Texas are built for this lower quality crude that comes from the Middle East and Russia and Canada. And the crude that we produce is typically higher quality. Counterintuitively, it’s harder for us to actually turn that better crude into gasoline and diesel than it is for the lower quality crude. You’d need to make no refineries – or re-tool existing ones.

  8. Here’s a modest proposal: All “western” oil companies should declare that they are in it for the people of Ukraine and the world and that they will forgo profit on this business for the duration of Putin’s hellish invasion. There is little harm to them from doing this and it would strike a rallying blow for the capitalist democracies against the oligarchs and other authoritarian economies (such as the Gulf States).

  9. Best moment at yesterday’s hearing. SBCAN had a video and ran that during their 1 minute. Lavagnino shouts out’ Point of order!!! We have never had a video during public comment”. Well, they freeze the video at the point where they show a tanker blowing up. It was on my screen at home for at least 5 minutes. They certainly got to make their point. All the ‘suits’ and paid Exxon/Mobil employees who were in the audience got to look at that for a long time.

  10. @ GT- …because this Administration changed all the rules to extricate the oil from the ground, making so many mandated regulations that it is insane to go in… not to mention the fact that our refineries are handcuffed by the Feds as well. Go figure why we need Iranian and Venezuelan oil “deals”…. Deals with the devil once again. INSANE!

  11. The lefty hypocrites just can’t stand “oil”. Das and Gregg will happily use commercial jets to fly back and forth to the den of corruption (Sacramento), but they sure as hell aren’t gonna let Evil Exxon transport their product and produce fuel. I paid $5.59/gal for gas today. That high price is directly related to the SB County BOS childish hatred of energy companies.

  12. Actions like these help drive up the price of oil and increase our reliance on imported oil. Is it really better to buy oil from countries like Russia, Venezuela, and Iran than it is to produce our own oil?

  13. CHIP – Actions like invading sovereign countries drives up the price of oil. Know what else does? Banning the import of oil from Russia. Yep, you guys screamed and yelled to stop supporting Russian oil, well……. actions have consequences.

  14. SAIL – as a presumed seaman, how could you actually want CA oil transported/produced anywhere near our pristine coastline? Sure, it’s a little NIMBY-ish, but why can’t we leave the oil production and transport inland and away from the delicate ecosystem of our oceans? THAT is what “a large portion of our population” is against. Drill all you want inland (well, don’t but you get what I mean), but let’s keep our fisheries and our beautiful coast clean. Why jeopardize the livelihood of local fishermen, tourist industry (no one wants to vacation at a dead beach) and the lives of millions of sea creatures just to avoid having to go elsewhere for our oil?

  15. House Republicans demanded this week that President Joe Biden “unleash American energy dominance.” While it’s unclear what exactly that means from a policy standpoint, the facts show that the problem with high gas prices comes not from government, or Russian sanctions, but from oil companies who aren’t using what they have and they’re prioritizing stock buybacks while scoring record profits.
    The 2021 report from the U.S. Energy Information Administration showed that the oil that the United States gets from Russia was a small fraction (3.3 percent) of the entirety of the U.S. imports, totaling 72.6 million barrels. During the 2020 pandemic, due to lower demand, that import was even smaller, at 1.3 percent, which makes up 27.7 million barrels of crude oil.

  16. Oil companies aren’t using 9,000 approved drilling leases that were approved by the government. Oil companies aren’t using what they have and are prioritizing stock buybacks while making record profits.

  17. Environmental NIMBY’ism at it’s worst. I can’t wrap my head around people thinking it’s “greener” or better for our climate to pump oil out of the ground halfway around the world, where there are few to no environmental controls compared to CA, then use more fossil fuels to ship it halfway around the world to CA where we actually use it. They’ve embraced the farm-to-table approach with locally sourced produce, this is the same thing.

  18. Typical left-wing propaganda Sacjon, gas prices were going way up well before the ban on Russian oil yet here you are trying to deflect that stifling local production doesn’t impact oil prices. I also don’t recall anyone screaming or yelling, just reasonable comments pointing out the lunacy of continuing to fund the Putin war machine with oil purchases from Russia. But keep on exaggerating….

  19. SACJON I have been sailing for years. work I responded to CHIP OF SB as in we need to be self sufficient not dependent. Our coast is no more special than any other in the world, its just we live on this one. Drill all you want inland? Inland is just a beautiful, unique and possibly more delicate. Not just a little NIMBY. Very NIMBYish

  20. Agreed voice! Blaming Russia for everything is getting a little tired. The previous administration prioritized the expansion of domestic energy production in order to achieve energy independence and encouraged Europe to do the same. The previous administration promoted the construction of the keystone pipeline at home and advocated against the completion of the nord stream 2 pipeline to Russia. The current administration prioritized the reduction of domestic energy production, cancelled the keystone pipeline project, and promoted the construction of the nord stream 2 pipeline to Russia. The results of these policy changes were increasing energy prices, increasing reliance on Russian and other foreign energy sources, increasing profit for Putin and other foreign energy producers, and reduced energy security for the us and Europe. All of these changes occurred prior to Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

  21. I’m one who thinks the ‘truck plan’ is a bad idea, while a new, properly-supervised pipeline would be very much safer. Why is the industry putting forth the truck plan, anyway? Seems to me, because the County and Coastal Commission have stone-walled the pipeline. Why? Maybe for the same reason the Biden Admin killed Keystone; to wit, they just want to throttle oil production, leading somehow to a perfect non-carbon future. Pretty unrealistic, given you cannot make windmills or solar panels without petroleum products.

  22. SAIL – who’s ecosystem is more at risk? Inland prairies or coastal? I’m just saying that if you are going to demand we produce more oil in our country, why would we put that production and transportation in the most delicate and environmentally sensitive areas? Yeah, it IS NIMBYism, but it’s just my backyard, it’s the “backyard” of millions of species, including hundreds, if not thousands, endangered species. An oil catastrophe on our coast would arguably be more detrimental than an inland prairie/desert. It’s just a cold hard fact that there exists a FAR larger number flora and fauna along our coasts.
    Why put them at risk just to avoid being called a “NIMBY?”

  23. While oil companies are absolutely for-profit business which focus on maximizing profits and shareholder value, there are a whole host of reasons why those 9,000 leases aren’t pumping oil; between being tied up in litigation with environmental groups, needing additional government approvals and environmental reviews before drilling can begin, some leases simply don’t extractable oil beneath them, the infrastructure isn’t in place to transport oil/gas to a processing facility, etc.. For example, here in SB we have several oil platforms with approved drilling leases that are sitting idle because the county refused to let them truck the oil out.

  24. VOICE – “no one on EdHat defended Russia. ” Sure did. Chip said “Blaming Russia for everything is getting a little tired.” That means, he thinks we shouldn’t blame Russia. When someone says “don’t blame x,y,z” they’re…. DEFENDING it from that blame. Ergo, Chip “defended Russia” from my blame. Next!

  25. Let me elaborate for you as I’m sure you still won’t get it: I blamed Russia for the recent skyrocket in gas prices. Chip said don’t blame Russia, blame Biden. Therefore, Chip defended Russian from being blamed for the recent skyrocket in gas prices.
    There, even you should be able to understand that.

  26. I guess if you change the definition of ‘defend’, then yeah I could see how your would think Chip is defending Russia. To everyone else, no, people won’t think what he said is a “jump to defend Russia”.

  27. VOICE – now YOU’RE lying. I never said he “jumped to defend.” Look, if you say don’t blame Russia, blame Biden, then what else are you doing other than DEFENDING Russia from blame? Dude, simple freakin’ English.

  28. CHIP – “Blaming Russia for everything is getting a little tired.” Uh…… who invaded Ukraine? I’m not blaming them for “everything,” but sure are blaming them for that and the resulting catapult in gas prices…… Your hate for liberals and Biden has evolved to such an extent that you jump to defend Russia when confronted with the fact that the invasion caused a skyrocket in prices.

  29. So Joe, do you think the price would go down if the Board had approved the trucking plan?!
    Can you explain how the high price of gas is “directly related to the SB County BOS childish hatred of energy companies”?

  30. God help us if the comments posted here are representative of the average American’s understanding of the environment and geo-politics. The ignorance is so thick I could barely stand to read all the comments.

  31. Bingo Basic! It has to be pumped from somewhere, from someone’s backyard, then transported over other peoples backyard and along other peoples coastline to get to where Sacjon and other consume that oil. Environmental NIMBY’ism isn’t environmentalism, it’s just more virtue signaling.

  32. JOE -“That high price is directly related to the SB County BOS childish hatred of energy companies.” – No it wasn’t. As the article I cited from FORBES (you know, the money magazine staffed by actual financial EXPERTS, not online locals), the skyrocket in prices occurred the night Russia invaded Ukraine. You’re trying to tell us that had nothing to do with it? That ONLY the BOS decision, which happened AFTER the rise in prices was to blame?
    PROVE it. It’s easy to anonymously just spout out words and claim them as “facts” (we have a few of those around here), but it’s quite another, and more respectable and dignified, to actually provide some evidence to back your claim. Again….. PROVE IT.

  33. CHIP – “You are advocating for maximizing the dependency of the west on people like Putin for energy and for maximizing the oil and gas revenue of people like Putin.” Nope, not in any way. I’ve never once supported using Russian oil. In fact, I’m very much for the ban on oil imports. We can make do with the oil we get from all the other countries and what we produce here. I just don’t want it produced and transported here in such and environmentally sensitive area. How is that so hard to understand. NIMBY? Sure am. I have no problem saying put that crud somewhere else where not as much is at stake.

  34. That is misinformation Sacjon. The skyrocket in prices started November 2020 with a 15% jump from the prior month, was doubled by November 2021, and now 300% higher than it was at the start of the Biden administration, where day 1 he took significant actions to curtail domestic oil production. Elections certainly have consequences. But hey, we can all just go buy a Tesla so we don’t have to worry about gas prices….. never mind that we don’t have to the infrastructure to keep all those new EV’s charged.

  35. VOICE – what was “misinformation?” Where I said the BOS decision the other day wasn’t the cause of the spike in prices or where I said the invasion of Ukraine caused an overnight spike, as reported by FORBES. Sure, maybe prices slowly got higher over the past 2 years, but the SPIKE everyone is complaining about happened ON THE NIGHT OF THE INVASION. Facts. Plain ol’ facts.

Garage Fire in Santa Ynez

March Edness 2022: Day 3