Georgia’s coast is more precious than oil!
For years, OHM fought alongside residents, elected officials, and organizations to protect our coast from offshore drilling—and won vital bipartisan legislative protection! But now, the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) is once again considering including our 100-mile coast as one of the areas available for leasing and oil drilling, placing our coastal way of life, economy, and environment at risk.
BOEM issued a Request for Information and accepted public input through June 16, 2025. We now await their decision!
Thank you to everyone who joined us in asking BOEM to keep Georgia OFF the National Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) Oil and Gas Leasing Program.
Learn more
Protecting Georgia’s coast from drilling has been a hard-won process. Learn about OHM’s role in the fight over the last several years.
Why is drilling a BAD idea?
BOEM’s proposed program would throw out past and current protections fought for in Georgia and across the country, putting our coastal quality of life, environmental health, and economy at risk. Georgia should NOT be opened up for offshore gas and oil drilling.
The potential return is not worth the risk.
Aside from jeopardizing our essential coastal industries (including shrimping, fishing, and eco-tourism), it’s estimated that only a total of about 410 million barrels of oil are potentially available off the South Atlantic Coast. That’s enough to meet less than one month of domestic demand—while the negative effects of testing and drilling (including increased ocean noise, habitat disruption, and any spills) would harm both wildlife and local economies for generations.
The process threatens our wildlife and coastal economy.
Seismic blasting, which is used to identify where oil and gas reserves may be, is detrimental to commercial fisheries, as fish and marine mammals abandon traditional feeding grounds plagued by the noise. Animals flee their mating grounds, migration routes, and may even beach themselves to escape. This impacts our ecotourism industry—even without the costly damages caused by mechanical malfunctions and oil spills. (Read our comment letter to understand how drilling could impact threatened and endangered species like nesting sea turtles and migrating shorebirds, as well as key habitat for North Atlantic right whales.)
Opposition has widespread bipartisan support.
Nearly every coastal Georgia community adopted resolutions opposing oil and gas off our coast. In 2019, the GA House of Representatives listened to their constituents and overwhelmingly voted for and adopted House Bill 88 opposing oil and gas development and seismic testing off Georgia’s coast. In 2020, President Trump imposed a 10-year moratorium on leasing off the GA, SC, and FL coasts, and Rep. Buddy Carter even asked that GA be exempted from the 2024-2029 OSC plan (which this new program is trying to replace).
















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