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In case of an oil
spill or gas release:

Call 911

Facility Operators
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1-800-645-7911


Energy Division
(805)886-7165


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Historic Overview of the Energy Division

Introduction

Santa Barbara County formed the Energy Division in 1982 as a special unit within its planning department to address a large influx of offshore oil and gas development(1) with related onshore infrastructure and industrial facilities. This influx was by no means the County's first experience with offshore oil and gas development. However, several forces had converged between 1947 and 1982 that would shape a new era for such development, causing the County and oil producers to make significant adjustments in the way they did business.

One set of forces enabled and stimulated a major expansion of offshore oil and gas development beyond near-shore fields. New technological advances in offshore drilling during the 1940s and federal legislation enacted during the 1950s allowed oil companies to tap oil and gas reserves situated farther distances from the coast via fixed offshore platforms. In 1973, members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) imposed an embargo on oil exports to the United States, spurring the nation's first non-wartime energy crisis. These and other factors led to 10 oil and gas lease sales in federal waters offshore California between 1966 and 1984. A total of 369 tracts were leased, a majority of which were situated offshore Santa Barbara County. Local decision-makers faced an unprecedented boom in oil and gas production, with increasing demand to industrialize the relatively scenic and rural Santa Barbara coastline.

A second set of forces influenced the way in which new offshore oil and gas development would proceed, bringing attention to issues of public safety, environmental protection, and other concerns of local communities impacted by such development. The 1969 oil spill in the Santa Barbara Channel, followed by new federal and state environmental laws adopted in the 1970s, considerably changed the process by which offshore oil and gas development would be permitted and operated. Offshore oil had long been controversial in Santa Barbara County, and the 1969 spill focused that controversy into well-organized opposition. The environmental laws enacted during the 1970s brought about extensive requirements to eliminate, or significantly reduce, adverse effects on the environment, and gave citizens more voice in policy and planning decisions. Some oil producers resisted this new era of regulation; however, others were more willing to accept it, and its associated costs, with the expectation that the price of oil would reach $50 per barrel by the 1990s and provide a substantial return on their investments.

By the late-1970s, the convergence of these forces marked the beginning of a new era for offshore oil and gas development. The pending offshore oil boom and new regulatory environment posed significant new challenges for Santa Barbara County - a point not initially acknowledged by the federal government or oil industry. County decision-makers drew upon past experience with major coastal oil and gas projects to tackle a range of issues - both old and new - including big picture policy questions regarding public safety and environmental protection and organizational questions regarding a boom in permit applications for complex industrial facilities. Among other things, County decision-makers formed the Energy Division.

The Energy Division's first decade largely reflected efforts to balance the boom in offshore oil and gas development with the County's desire and legal obligation to protect public safety, the environment, and quality of life for its citizens. Ultimately market forces considerably tempered the boom in offshore oil development by the 1990s, and created a new set of challenges. Instead of reaching $50 per barrel, the price of offshore oil generally stayed below $18 per barrel, partly as a result of the 1985 collapse in worldwide oil prices and partly as a result of competition with crude oil from Alaska's North Slope. As described below, generally low and unstable oil prices would be key in shaping the Energy Division's direction over the past two decades.
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(1) The County's historic experience dates back to the first successful effort to develop offshore oil and gas worldwide in 1896, when oil producers built piers from the beach offshore Summerland to serve as drilling platforms. Development of near-shore oil and gas reserves spread to other locations in the County between 1930 and 1965.

     

 
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