"Support for Offshore Oil and Gas Drilling
Among the California Public"
Eric R. A. N. Smith
(Department of Political Science, and Environmental Studies Program
University of California,
Santa Barbara)
This report describes Californians’ opinions about offshore oil and gas
development. The report begins by describing the trends in support for
offshore drilling since 1977. It then focuses on explaining the surge
of support for offshore oil drilling that accompanied the rapid increase
in gasoline prices in 2000 and 2001. In this report, we present data from
a series of public opinion polls of Californians, which were conducted
between 1977 and 2001. The surveys were conducted by the Field Institute,
a nonpartisan, not-for-profit public opinion research organization established
by the Field Research Corporation.2 The samples were representative cross-sections
of California adults with sample sizes ranging from 485 to 1,034 (See
the data appendix for details). We should also note that this study updates
some of the information published in a previous MMS report, Trends in
Public Opinion on Offshore Oil Development in California (Smith 1995),
and in the recently published book, Energy, the Environment, and Public
Opinion (Smith 2002).3
Download this paper in Adobe Acrobat format: http://www.ucei.berkeley.edu/PDF/EPE_005.pdf
The document can be downloaded or viewed using Adobe's Acrobat Reader
(version 4.0 or later). If you do not have Acrobat Reader, you can download
it from Adobe. To DOWNLOAD the documents right mouse click on the name and
then click again on "Save link as..."