The
U.S. Bureau of Land Management will auction 37 parcels on 6,851
acres in New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas through the
online auction site EnergyNet. Most of the parcels are in New
Mexico overlaying parts of the sprawling Permian Basin, the
world's biggest oil field.
The auction will reveal the level of demand for new leases from
an industry facing an uncertain future for drilling on federal
lands, weak prices and depressed demand for fuel due to the
economic effects of the coronavirus pandemic.
Federal drilling auctions, a critical part of President Donald
Trump's "energy dominance" agenda to maximize domestic
production of fossil fuels, have garnered increasingly weak
interest this year due to the health crisis and the prospects of
a new U.S. president keen to fight climate change.
Biden has said he would halt new oil and gas leases on federal
lands and waters, but he has not laid out a method or timeline
for realizing that goal.
A study https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-drilling-study/ban-on-federal-drilling-leases-would-cost-eight-u-s-states-billions-study-finds-idUSKBN28P338
by the state of Wyoming last month found that such a ban would
cost eight Western states $8.1 billion tax revenue and $34.1
billion in investment in the next five years.
But auctions in Wyoming, Utah and other states last month
attracted sparse bidding, and major oil companies failed to show
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-alaska-oil/oil-drillers-shrug-off-trumps-u-s-arctic-wildlife-refuge-auction-idUSKBN29B0KR
up entirely for last week's first ever sale of drilling leases
in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
Environmental, community and taxpayer groups have criticized the
administration for holding oil and gas lease sales at a time of
low prices, saying they are not generating adequate returns.
"This lease sale is being conducted under an antiquated system,
which prioritizes the bottom line of oil and gas companies
instead of New Mexico taxpayers," James Jimenez, director of the
non-profit New Mexico Voices for Children, said in a statement.
BLM officials did not immediately respond to a request for
comment.
(Reporting by Nichola Groom; Editing by David Gregorio)
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