The US Interior Department has finalized a range of new rules to overhaul the federal onshore oil and gas leasing framework, a move that will increase fees for oil and gas companies to drill on federal lands, as reported by AP News on April 13. The rules, crafted by the Interior Department’s Bureau of Land Management (BLM), raise royalty rates for oil drilling on federal lands to 16.67%from 12.5%, marking the first time since 1920 that the government increased the oil and gas leasing royalty rate. In addition, the rule will increase the minimum lease bond requirements, used to pay for the clean-up of abandoned wells, to USD150,000 from USD10,000, a level unchanged since 1960. The new rules will only apply to oil and gas operations on public lands, which contribute nearly 10% of the nation’s oil and gas output.
The increased costs related to oil drilling aim to reduce wasteful speculation, increase returns for the public, and prevent taxpayers from bearing the costs of environmental cleanup. Specifically, officials pointed outthat the previous bonding rates of USD10,000 were too low to force companies to clean up old drilling sites or cover potential costs to reclaim a well. The new rules will also restrict oil drilling in sensitive wildlife habitats, prompting companies to focus on areas with existing infrastructure and a high potential for oil and gas reserves. Nevertheless, opponents have raised concerns about unfair costs on energy companies, reductions indrilling activities, job losses, and heightened reliance on oil imports.
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