Biden administration drilling plan may exclude all waters beyond Gulf of
Mexico
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[June 30, 2022]
By Jarrett Renshaw and Nichola Groom
(Reuters) - The U.S. Interior Department
has recommended to the White House that all federal offshore oil and gas
drilling auctions over the next five years be located in the Gulf of
Mexico, where the drilling industry has already been focused for
decades, according to two sources familiar with the matter.
The recommendation to exclude all other waters from offshore oil and gas
development comes as U.S. President Joe Biden seeks to balance his goal
to transition the country away from fossil fuels against a Congressional
requirement to hold regular drilling auctions, and intense political
pressure to boost energy supplies to ease soaring inflation.
The Biden administration is due to unveil the proposed five-year
offshore development plan on Thursday, as mandated by a Congressional
deadline. It is unclear if the proposal will match Interior's
recommendation to focus solely on the Gulf, or whether the White House
made changes to include other regions.
In recent years, the Interior Department has leased areas off the coast
of Alaska. And former President Donald Trump had proposed a vast
expansion of drilling sales to cover more than 90% of coastal waters,
including areas off California that had not been offered since the 1980s
and new zones in the Atlantic and Arctic. Those plans were blocked by
legal challenges.
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Unused oil rigs sit in the Gulf of Mexico near Port Fourchon,
Louisiana August 11, 2010. REUTERS/Lee Celano//File Photo
Biden, conversely, had campaigned on a promise to end
all new federal drilling to combat climate change. But his early
efforts to suspend leasing were also blocked in court.
Interior will unveil the draft proposal just ahead of the June 30
expiration of the five-year drilling current plan, and could
finalize it by the end of this year after a public comment period.
The department will not be able to hold any lease sales until the
new plan is in place.
Interior last held an offshore oil and gas auction in November,
located in the Gulf of Mexico, but a court order later vacated the
sale saying the administration had failed to properly account for
its impact on climate change.
Offshore oil and gas production, which occurs mainly in the Gulf of
Mexico, contributed about $4 billion in revenue to U.S. coffers last
year. The Gulf accounts for about 15% of domestic oil production and
2% of natural gas production, according to the Bureau of Ocean
Energy Management.
(Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw in Washington and Nichola Groom in Los
Angeles; Editing by Richard Valdmanis and Stephen Coates)
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