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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 30, 2007
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Shane Wolfe, 202-208-6416
or Gary Strasburg, 202-208-3985

Secretary Kempthorne Unveils Major Initiative to Expand Oil, Natural Gas Production on the Outer Continental Shelf

Environmentally sound development would strengthen U.S. energy security, provide economic stimulus to Nation, states

From left to right, C. Stephen Allred, Assistant Secretary for Land and Minerals Management, Dirk Kempthorne, Secretary of the Interior, and Johnnie Burton,  Director of the Minerals Management Service, at Monday's unveiling of the Five Year Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing Program.
From left to right, C. Stephen Allred, Assistant Secretary for Land and Minerals Management, Dirk Kempthorne, Secretary of the Interior, and Johnnie Burton, Director of the Minerals Management Service, at Monday's unveiling of the Five Year Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing Program.

WASHINGTON – Secretary of the Interior Dirk Kempthorne today announced a major federal initiative to boost oil and natural gas production on the U.S. Outer Continental Shelf in the Gulf of Mexico and off Alaska.  The program could produce 10 billion barrels of oil and 45 trillion cubic feet of natural gas over 40 years, generating almost $170 billion, in today’s dollars, in net benefits for the Nation.

“The Outer Continental Shelf is a vital source of domestic oil and natural gas for America, especially in light of sharply rising energy prices and increasing demand for these resources,” Kempthorne said. “This energy production will create jobs, provide greater economic and energy security for America and can be accomplished in a safe and environmentally sound manner.”

Interior’s Minerals Management Service developed the initiative, known as the Five Year Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing Program, to guide domestic energy leasing on the OCS from 2007 to 2012.  The program proposes 21 lease sales in 8 planning areas. Twelve sales are slated for the Gulf of Mexico, 8 off of Alaska and, at the request of the Commonwealth of Virginia, one in the Mid-Atlantic Planning Area, about 50 miles off the coast of southern Virginia.  

Kempthorne noted that revenues from OCS energy production are shared with coastal states adjacent to OCS energy production.  “This proposal will provide hundreds of millions of dollars of new revenue for states to pay for roads, bridges, environmental restoration and other critical needs,” he said. “Outer Continental Shelf energy revenues also support historic preservation and environmental conservation projects in all states through the Historic Preservation Fund and Land and Water Conservation Fund.” 

Offshore energy production is one of the largest sources of non-tax revenue for the federal government; the new program will generate billions of dollars for the U.S. Treasury.

Kempthorne emphasized that the proposal balances the critical need for domestic energy resources with the equally critical need to protect human, marine and coastal environments.  He noted the program was developed through extensive consultation, public comment and the rigorous analysis required by the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act and the National Environmental Policy Act. 

“We consulted extensively with Members of Congress, state, local and tribal officials, industry, environmental organizations and received comment from more than a hundred thousand interested citizens,” Kempthorne said. “This program gives great weight to the desires of coastal states regarding oil and gas development near their shores and environmentally sensitive areas were removed from proposed lease sales.”

He also noted that 75 percent of the comments received from the public supported some level of increased access to the domestic energy resources of the Outer Continental Shelf.

There is no leasing proposed within 125 miles of the Florida coast or east of the military mission line in the Eastern Gulf.  The program includes a Central Gulf sale in 2007 that involves a portion of the Sale 181 area and, as mandated by the Gulf of Mexico Energy Security Act of 2006, one lease sale in the Eastern Gulf in 2008.  
 
The Act, signed by President George W. Bush on December 20, 2006, requires oil and gas leasing in a portion of the area known as the “Sale 181 Area,” consisting of 2,574,823 million acres, of which 2,028,730 is in the Central Gulf and about 546,093 acres is in the Eastern Gulf of Mexico Planning Area.  The proposed sale area “181 South” consists of 5,762,620 acres.  The total of new areas in the Gulf offered under the proposed program is 8,337,443 acres.

The leasing program schedules eight sales in Alaska: two in the Beaufort Sea; three in the Chukchi Sea; up to two in Cook Inlet; and one in the North Aleutian Basin – in an area of about 5.6 million acres that was previously offered during Lease Sale 92 in 1985.  There are currently no existing leases in the North Aleutian Basin.  These areas would be subject to environmental reviews, including public comment, and extensive consultation with state and local governments and tribal organizations before any lease sale proceeds.

The program also includes a proposed sale in the Mid-Atlantic Planning Area off the coastline of Virginia in late 2011.  Between the current presidential withdrawal and the annual congressional moratoria, the majority of the OCS around the lower 48 states is off limits to energy development, including all areas off Virginia.  This sale would, therefore, only take place if the presidential withdrawal is modified and the congressional moratorium discontinued in the Mid-Atlantic Planning Area. 

This planning area excludes a 50-mile coastal buffer from leasing consideration as requested by the Commonwealth of Virginia, as well as a wedge-shaped No-Obstruction Zone to avoid conflicts with navigation activities in and out of the Chesapeake Bay.
No lease sale would proceed without additional and more site-specific analysis of its environmental effects under the National Environmental Policy Act.

A Notice of Availability for the 5-Year program and its Final Environmental Impact Statement will appear in the Federal Register on May 2, 2007.  As required by the OCS Lands Act, the program was submitted to the President and Congress today and, after 60 days, the Secretary may approve it to take effect on July 1, 2007.  The complete proposed program is online athttp://www.mms.gov/5-year/

Proposed Final Program for 2007-2012—
Lease Sale Schedule

SaleNo.

Area

Year

204

Western Gulf of Mexico

2007

205

Central Gulf of Mexico

2007

193

Chukchi Sea

2008

206

Central Gulf of Mexico

2008

224

Eastern Gulf of Mexico*

2008

207

Western Gulf of Mexico

2008

208

Central Gulf of Mexico

2009

209

Beaufort Sea

2009

210

Western Gulf of Mexico

2009

211

Cook Inlet

2009

212

Chukchi Sea

2010

213

Central Gulf of Mexico

2010

215

Western Gulf of Mexico

2010

216

Central Gulf of Mexico

2011

217

Beaufort Sea

2011

214

North Aleutian Basin

2011

218

Western Gulf of Mexico

2011

219

Cook Inlet

2011

220

Mid-Atlantic**

2011

221

Chukchi Sea

2012

222

Central Gulf of Mexico

2012

*Sale 224 is mandated by the Gulf of Mexico Energy Security Act of 2006.
**Lease sale would only be held if the President chooses to modify the withdrawal and Congress discontinues the annual appropriations moratorium in the Mid-Atlantic.


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