Winter
2003 - The Bush Administration
Local Ripples
by Leah
Hadfield
Photos by Photographer
The refinery came
out of nowhere. My photographer was driving and I looked out the window
at the grasslands and forests along the road. Suddenly, Whatcom Countys
British Petroleum Cherry Point Refinery came into view. It loomed above
us and columns of steam poured from the stacks. Metal dominated the horizon
and asphalt conquered the earth. We drove along the fence looking at the
framework of industry, turned left though the brick entryway and parked
outside the administrative building.
The BP refinery was
built in 1969 but remains one of the newest oil refining facilities in
North America, said Keith Willnauer, Whatcom County assessor.
More than 90 percent
of the refinerys crude oil comes from the Alaskan North Slope. The
refinery is specially designed to process Alaskan North Slope crude, said
Mike Torpey, an engineer at the refinery. The crude is processed into
gasoline, diesel, jet fuel and propane. Every four days an 800,000-barrel
tanker arrives from the Prudhoe Bay oil field in Alaska.
In an effort to balance
the nations energy supply with its demand, President George W. Bush
commissioned a group of cabinet members to create a National Energy Policy.
Released in May 2001, the policy makes it easier for refineries to increase
capacity and efficiency while expanding oil exploration and production.
Whatcom Countys economy is dependent on the oil industrys
ability to continue production and provide jobs for the approximately
1,300 permanent and contract-based employees of the areas two refineries
BP Cherry Point and ConocoPhillips.
Whatcom County Executive
Pete Kremen said if the refineries in Whatcom County shut down it would
have a severe effect on the local economy.
"Between the
number of jobs lost and the elimination of the overall payroll produced
by the two facilities (it) would have a significant adverse impact to
our local economy," he said.
Kremen said the facilities
produce revenues through taxes that fund road building, public schools
and other county projects.
For example, the Blaine
School District receives $1.8 million in tax money from the BP Cherry
Point Refinery annually, Willnauer said.
"Were a
major player for the economy," said George Fletcher, a senior laboratory
technician at BP Cherry Point. "We have 600 employees and a number
of contractors. The impact is just tremendous."
BP Cherry Points
government and public affairs manager Mike Abendhoff said the jobs provided
by the refinery pay well, offer good benefits and are some of the most
sought after jobs in the county. The refineries contribute to the local
tax base and the money spent by employees supports local businesses, he
said.
"The economic
ripples of (the refineries) ability to expand and grow would be
significant," Abendhoff said.
According to the Bush
administrations policy, refineries have had trouble getting money
through investments to improve efficiency due to the numerous environmental
regulations and required permits. The policy recommends expediting the
permitting process to make it easier for refineries to expand and meet
the nations oil demand.
Abendhoff said the
required permits and the poor national economy limit the BP Cherry Point
Refinerys ability to expand production. He said, however, the refinery
has been running near maximum production at 220,000 barrels per day for
the last five years.
According to the energy
policy, as the nations demand for oil increases refineries are running
near full capacity.
"Whether the
economy is booming or in a recession, we still have to drive to work and
heat our homes," Abendhoff said.
The policy states
that the nations energy crisis is due to an imbalance between production
and consumption. It also says the United States gets 52 percent of its
oil from imports.
According to the Department
of Energy, in December 2002 the United States imported more than 11 million
barrels of crude oil and oil products each day.
On average, the United
States consumes more than 25 percent of the oil produced worldwide, according
to the energy policy.
In 2000, more than
55 percent of oil refined in the United States came from four countries:
Canada, Saudi Arabia, Venezuela and Mexico, according to the DOE.
To increase domestic
sources of oil, the energy policy and Bushs 2004 budget proposal
suggest opening public lands, such as the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge,
to oil exploration and production.
Bill Bradlee, Western
Region program manager for the League of Conservation Voters, said he
questions the amount of oil that could be extracted from public lands
and whether it would quench the nations demand for oil. He said
some estimates predict the oil in ANWR would satisfy six months of consumption
in the United States.
"I dont
see opening up the Arctic wilderness or building new pipelines as any
kind of solution other than a temporary solution," said Kathy Moran,
an operations technician at BP Cherry Point.
The Bush administration
also suggested that alternative forms of energy, such as solar, wind and
geothermal energy should be researched for future use. Both the energy
policy and the budget proposal recommended opening ANWR to drilling and
using part of the money from land bids to fund research for renewable
and alternative forms of energy.
Bradlee said because
the money for renewable research has to come from drilling in the Arctic,
the proposal, in essence, takes renewable energy hostage.
Bushs 2004 budget
has to be approved by Congress before the oil industry can begin exploration
for oil in the Arctic. For now, oil companies will continue to drill on
Alaskas North Slope and BP Cherry Points employees will continue
to refine its crude.
Within the next few
years, the refinery will add two new units that will make production of
petroleum products more efficient and provide jobs.
BP Cherry Points
manager of environmental health and safety Karen Payne said the refinery
is adding a clean gasoline unit that will allow the refinery to produce
cleaner gasoline, which should be available at gas stations by 2005.
The refinery is also
adding a co-generation facility that will provide electricity for the
refinery as well as for the electricity grid. The unit takes natural gas
through turbines that produce electricity and steam for the refinery,
Payne said.
Abendhoff said the
two units will provide 55 to 65 permanent jobs at the refinery.
"I have to look
at the big picture," Fletcher said. "I work in the oil industry.
Its provided a fantastic living."
Kremen said that he
believes times will change and in the future the production of gasoline
will not have the value that it has today.
"I think the
local economy will evolve as technology changes," he said. "In
the near future our local economy is somewhat dependent on those two refineries,
but I think in the long term that may not be the case."
Moran said that oil
is woven into American culture and will be necessary until better options
are available.
"I dont
know very many people who would be willing to give up their ability to
travel," Moran said. "They dont want to give up police
responding to their calls or the military to a national incident. At this
point in our economy and technology, we have to have gasoline and diesel
to move our people."
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