Apakah pemeriksaan alat bor sampai makan waktu 10 bulan, sampai sekrup yang 
kecil dsb? Atau masalah perijinan tentang lingkungan dan kehutanan? Mungkin 
kalau metode perijinan tidakber-belit2, ijin akan cepat diberikan.
Atau hal lain yang menyebabkan mundur?
Salam. 
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-----Original Message-----
From: Rovicky Dwi Putrohari <rovi...@gmail.com>
Sender: <iagi-net@iagi.or.id>
Date: Wed, 26 Jun 2013 00:05:03 
To: IAGI<iagi-net@iagi.or.id>; <migas_indone...@yahoogroups.com>; 
Indoenergy<indoene...@yahoogroups.com>
Reply-To: iagi-net@iagi.or.id
Subject: [iagi-net] Di Amerika perlu 307 hari untuk ijin ngebor
Pasti banyak yg ngeluh bahwa ijin ngebor di Indonesia itu berbelit dan
perlu waktu lama. Namun banyak yang ngga ngeh di Amerikapun ijinnya
perlu 307 hari !
Tentunya bukan sebagai alasan pembenaran, tetapi itu semestinya bukan
keluhan yang dipakai untuk mengundurkan komitment pengeboran sumur
eksplorasi !

RDP
====================
By Penny Starr
)
Panel: In Time it Takes Feds to Approve Oil-Drilling Permits You Could Watch
‘Die Hard’ 3,349 Times
April 19, 2013 - 4:07 PM
(CNSNews.com) – The House Committee on Natural Resources revealed on
Wednesday that the time it
takes to obtain a permit for oil and gas exploration on state lands is
about 12 to 15 days – a short time
compared with the average 307 days to obtain a permit for onshore
drilling on federal land.
That means a person could watch the movie “Die Hard” 3,349 times,
according to the committee, which
provided facts at the hearing to demonstrate just how lengthy the wait
is for a federal drilling permit.
In addition to the “Die Hard” example, a handout provided by the
committee, showed one could:
-- Drive from Washington, D.C., to Los Angeles 154 times
-- Travel to Mars and back – 150 days each way
-- Hike the Appalachian Trail two times
Using the average 307-day federal permitting wait time, provided by
the Bureau of Land Management, and data provided by individual
oil-producing
states, the committee handout said that in the time it takes to get a
federal permit, 30 state permits could be granted in North Dakota.
Although the U.S. Department of Interior is in charge of granting
drilling permits on federal land, the BLM was the source for the
average permitting
timeframe, according to the committee.
In his opening remarks, the committee chairman, Rep. Doc Hastings (R-
Wash.) said the time it takes to get a federal permit has nearly
doubled
from the 154 days it took for the process in 2005.
“Regulatory hurdles, long delays, and policies that keep federal lands
under lock-and-key have become all too common,” Hastings said. “As a
result, federal oil and natural gas production has declined.”
Ranking Democrat Rep. Raul Grijalva (D-Ariz.) defended the Obama
administration by disputing Hastings’ claim, but did not cite any
source for his
statistics.
“Despite the claims of the majority, [oil] production from federal
lands onshore is also increasing,” Grijalva said. “Last year oil
production from
federal lands onshore was 8 percent higher than in 2011.”
“It was 16 percent higher than at the end of the Bush administration.
And production from Indian lands has increased three fold from the
last year of
the Bush administration,” Grijalva said.
According to a March 7 Congressional Research Service report, however,
the increase in oil production on non-federal lands and production on
federal lands is down.
“On non-federal lands, there were modest fluctuations in oil
production from fiscal years (FY) 2008-2010, then a significant
increase from FY2010
to FY2012 increasing total U.S. oil production by about 1.1million
barrels per day over FY2007 production levels,” the report summary
states.
“All of the increase from FY2007 to FY2012 took place on non-federal
lands, and the federal share of total U.S. crude oil production fell
by about
seven percentage points.”



RDP

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