WASHINGTON – As the Obama
administration continues to make millions of acres available for oil and gas
development, a report released today by the Department of the Interior (DOI) shows
that more than two thirds of federal offshore acreage leased by industry and
more than half of federal onshore leased acreage in the lower 48 states remains
idle – neither producing nor under active exploration or development by
companies who hold those leases.
“As
part of the Obama administration’s all of the above energy strategy, we
continue to make millions of acres of public lands available for safe and
responsible domestic energy production on public lands and in federal waters,”
said Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar.
“We
continue to offer new areas onshore and offshore for leasing, as we have over
the last three years, and we also want companies to develop the tens of
millions of acres they’ve already leased but have left sitting idle in order to
further reduce our reliance on foreign oil as quickly as possible.”
According
to the report, more than 70 percent of the tens of millions of offshore acres
currently under lease are inactive, neither producing nor currently subject to
approved or pending exploration or development plans. Out of nearly 36 million
acres leased offshore, only about 10 million acres are active – leaving nearly
72 percent of the offshore leased area idle.
In
the lower 48 states, an additional 20.8 million acres, or 56 percent of onshore
leased acres, remain idle. Furthermore, there are approximately 7,000 approved
permits for drilling on federal and Indian lands that have not yet been drilled
by companies.
“These
lands and waters belong to the American people, and they expect those energy
supplies to be developed in a timely and responsible manner and with a fair
return to taxpayers,” added Secretary Salazar.
“We
will continue to encourage companies to diligently bring production online
quickly and safely on public lands already under lease.”
The
report is available here.
Consistent
with the findings of last year’s report and the Administration’s Blueprint for a Secure Energy Future,
DOI has taken administrative steps to reform the terms of offshore oil and gas
leases to include a range of incentives that encourage prompt development and
ensure a fair return to taxpayers.
These
measures to incentivize prompt exploration and development include escalating
rental rates and tiered durational terms with relatively short base periods
followed by additional time under the same lease if the operator drills a well
during the initial period.
Beginning
with the most recent offshore lease sale, DOI increased the minimum bid in
deepwater to $100 per acre, up from only $37.50, to ensure that taxpayers
receive fair market value for offshore resources and to provide leaseholders
with additional impetus to invest in leases that they are more likely to
develop.
Analysis
of the last 15 years of lease sales in the Gulf of Mexico showed that deepwater
leases that received high bids of less than $100 per acre, adjusted for energy
prices at time of each sale, experienced virtually no exploration and
development drilling.
Onshore
on public lands, reforms have focused on new leasing policies that establish a
more orderly, open, and environmentally sound process for efficient development
of oil and gas resources on public lands.
Today’s
report came as Interior’s Bureau of Land Management (BLM) today issued a call
for nominations and comments on available tracts to be considered for its
scheduled November 2012 oil and gas lease sale in the National Petroleum
Reserve in Alaska (NPR-A) – the second sale since President Obama directed the Department of the Interior on May 14, 2011, to
conduct annual oil and gas lease sales in the NPR-A. The BLM offered 3 million
acres in the 2011 sale.
The
Administration notes that in 2011, American oil production reached the highest
level in nearly a decade and natural gas production reached an all-time high,
and America’s dependence on foreign oil has gone down every single year since
President Obama took office.
Administration
officials added that thanks to booming U.S. oil and gas production, more
efficient cars and trucks, and a world-class refining sector that last year was
a net exporter for the first time in 60 years, the United States has cut net
imports by ten percent – or a million barrels a day – in the last year alone.
The
Obama administration also continues to provide significant opportunities to
drill on public lands and waters. According to the Energy
Information Administration, total federal oil production (offshore
and onshore) has increased by 13 percent during the first three years of the
Obama administration combined, compared with the last three years of the
previous administration.
Based
on independent analysis, the total number of active rigs operating on the U.S.
outer continental shelf was higher in January 2012 than any time since May
2010.
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