Table 22. (Concluded). 



County and product/industry 



T^TT 



Employees'^ 



1990 



2000 



2030 



Okaloosa (continued) 



Printing industry 

 Stone, clay and glass products 

 Machinery excl . electrical 

 Electrical machinery 

 Transportation equipment 

 All Others 



Total others 



1,673 



2,000 



2,150 



2,325 



Santa Rosa 



Food products 

 Apparel manufacturers 

 Paper products 

 Chemical products 

 Stone, clay and glass products 

 All others 



Total 



1,658 



1,825 



1,950 



2,025 



Numbers rounded to nearest 25. 



Not all areas of the seven counties of Northwest Florida would be subject 

 to OCS onshore related impacts. Inland communities probably would be little 

 affected. In addition, coastal communities without harbor channel depths of 

 about 5.4 to 7.5 meters (18 to 25 feet) and without adequate dock space would 

 probably be of little service to the OCS oil and gas industry (Calder 1978). 

 The only ports with adequate channel depths are Pensacola Harbor, Panama City 

 Harbor, Port St. Joe, and Carrabelle Harbor. Pensacola and Panama City are 

 the most probable sites. Neither Carrabelle or Franklin County has the resi- 

 dential or manufacturing base needed to support OCS oil and gas onshore needs. 

 Port St. Joe and Gulf County, despite having relatively adequate port facil- 

 ities and a somewhat greater population and manufacturing base, probably do 

 not have adequate housing, types of supporting industries, and community 

 infrastructure to meet the immediate onshore needs of extensive offshore 

 development. 



In general, "offshore pfetroleum and natural gas production can be ab- 

 stracted into four of five phases" (Calder 1978). These phases are prelimi- 

 nary geophysical and geological surveys, exploratory drilling, systems devel- 

 opment, production, and ultimately, decline (Calder 1978). 



85 



