REUTERS
SACRAMENTO
Hundreds of environmental activists in California protested a Trump Administration proposal to vastly increase offshore oil drilling in the United States on Thursday, just ahead of a public meeting on the proposal.
Officials at the meeting by the US Interior Department's Bureau of Ocean Energy Management in Sacramento talked with members of the public about the proposed drilling expansion and helped them submit comments.
Several hundred protesters at the state Capitol building, some carrying a giant blue inflatable whale, listened to speakers warn the Trump administration not to drill for oil off California's coastline. Others carried signs with slogans like"Oil and sea life don't mix."
"Do not pollute our planet for your profit," California state Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson told the cheering crowd."You do not represent us." Jackson's Santa Barbara district's coastline has been polluted by oil spills from past drilling.
Carrying a sign showing a sea otter, Joseph Palermo, a history professor at Sacramento State, said he came to love the coastline as a college student.
"The coast is very important to me," he said."I heard about this and I had to come out."
California officials said on Wednesday the state would block transport of such petroleum through its waters.
The California Coastal Commission weighed on Thursday, requesting that the state be removed from consideration for offshore drilling. The state's Natural Resources secretary, John Laird, also voiced opposition.
The protest was organised by several environmental groups including the Centre for Biological Diversity, the Sierra Club and the Natural Resources Defence Council.
"Offshore drilling is dirty and it's dangerous," said Miyoko Sakashita, head of the oceans program for the Centre for Biological Diversity."It results in oil spills that injure and kill wildlife."
California's threat to deny pipeline permits for transporting oil from new leases off the Pacific Coast is the latest step by states trying to halt the biggest proposed expansion in decades of federal oil and gas leasing.
Officials in Florida, North and South Carolina, Delaware and Washington state have warned that drilling could despoil beaches, harm wildlife and hurt lucrative tourism industries.
On Wednesday, California officials sent a formal letter to the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management demanding that the Pacific Coast be removed from the programme. The State Lands Commission, which must approve any new pipelines, said in the letter it would not permit the movement of oil from new offshore leases to pass through state land or water.
"I am resolved that not a single drop from Trump's new oil plan ever makes landfall in California," Lieutenant Governor Gavin Newsom, chair of the State Lands Commission and a Democratic candidate for governor, said in an emailed statement.