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Antelope graze near gas drilling rigs in western Wyoming's Upper Green River Basin. A recent report by the Energy Information Administration projects that oil and natural gas production in the United States will continue to climb over the next eight years.


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS


Energy politics spins both ways

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WASHINGTON (AP) — You wouldn't know it from the Republicans, but these are boom times for American energy. And you wouldn't know it from President Barack Obama, but he has little to do with that.

From the presidential campaign trail to Congress, Republicans have been hammering Obama on energy. GOP presidential front-runner Mitt Romney, for one, accuses Obama of pursuing policies "that keep us from using our own energy."

But in fact, the United States produced more oil in 2010 than it has since 2003, and all forms of energy production are up.

Obama is not only hoping that simple, rock-solid statistic will silence his GOP critics, he's angling to get some credit for the trend as he navigates a tricky re-election campaign. But he oversells the government's influence on the industry and ignores the fact that many wells coming into production were planned before he was president.

"We've opened millions of new acres for oil and gas exploration," Obama bragged recently in multiple speeches. "Right now American oil production is the highest it's been in eight years."

Data collected by the U.S. Energy Information Administration, an independent statistical arm of the Energy Department, are on Obama's side, at least when it comes to pushing back against Republican criticisms.

Besides the upward trend for oil, more gas has been produced in each of Obama's three years in the White House than any other year since 1936, thanks in large part to a boom in the production of natural gas from shale and other hard-to-reach sources.

Mining for the radioactive ore that fuels nuclear power plants has also risen every year under Obama. And no other president has seen more energy produced from renewables, which include hydroelectric power, solar, wind and biofuels. Coal mining is also on the rebound.

In speeches and his first campaign ad, Obama also points to the nation's reduced dependence on foreign oil. But the energy information agency says the decline began in 2005 and results from a variety of factors — among them the recession, high gas prices that dampened driving and changes in efficiency and consumer behavior that pre-date the Obama administration.

Even if Obama's policies aren't the cause of these trends, the data certainly make it harder for Republicans and the oil and gas industry to substantiate their claim that his policies have dampened energy production.

Lynn Helms, head of the North Dakota Department of Mineral Resources, has seen oil production triple there in recent years thanks to new drilling methods, hydraulic fracturing and high oil prices. He says federal policies neither help nor hurt.

In fact, a recent report by the energy information agency projects that oil and natural gas production in the United States will continue to climb over the next eight years, making the U.S. a net exporter of natural gas.

But that same report provides ammunition for Republicans, because it predicts that oil production in the Gulf of Mexico — where the Obama administration placed a moratorium on new deep-water exploratory drilling after the 2010 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.

Partly to respond to Republican criticism and higher gasoline prices, Obama extended leases affected 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.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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