Abstract

Abstract The Coastal Zone Management Act (CZMA) is one of the first experiments in federal land use planning and part of the recent trend to transfer powers to the states traditionally reserved in the federal domain. Two of the most ambitious provisions of this Act— national interest in facility planning and siting and federal consistency with approved state programs—created a new partnership between states and the federal government. The aspect of this partnership that most concerns the petroleum industry is federal consistency which allows state coastal management policies to assume the force of federal law by virtue of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) approval of state coastal zone management programs. Moreover, the complex federal consistency procedures under CZMA are counterproductive to the expressed purpose of the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act amendments (OCSLA), i.e., expediting OCS development. As a result, the requirement for state‐level federal consistency determin...

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