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Lies, Damned Lies and DOI Press Releases

In an effort to deflect blame for high gasoline prices away from the Obama Administration, the Department of the Interior today released a report which purports to show that the oil and gas industry, not DOI or BOEMRE, is guilty of dragging its feet on offshore energy exploration and development. This, in spite of a 10 month regulatory moratorium/permitorium that has brought new well drilling to a near standstill, and the first year-long offshore lease sale hiatus since 1958.

This is propaganda, pure and simple. Interior’s career staff certainly knows better, but for the time being they find it expedient to facilitate the Obama/Salazar green jihad against the American oil and gas industry. As a result, the report is one which bolsters Democratic talking points while twisting reality.

WASHINGTON – A report requested by President Obama and released today by the Department of the Interior shows that more than two-thirds of offshore leases in the Gulf of Mexico and more than half of onshore leases on federal lands remain idle, neither producing nor under active exploration and development by companies who hold those leases.

“We continue to support safe and responsible domestic energy production, and as this report shows millions of acres that have already been leased to industry for oil and gas productions sit idle,” Department of Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said. “These are resources that belong to the American people, and they expect those supplies to be developed in a timely and responsible manner and with a fair return to taxpayers. As we continue to offer new areas onshore and offshore for leasing, as we have done over the last two years, we will also be exploring ways to provide incentives to companies to bring production online quickly and safely.”

According to the report, more than 70 percent of the tens of millions of offshore acres under lease are inactive, neither producing nor currently subject to approved or pending exploration or development plans. This includes almost 24 million inactive leased acres in the Gulf of Mexico, which potentially could hold more than 11 billion barrels of oil and 50 trillion cubic feet of natural gas.

Also,

Where to begin fisking this mess?

[Here is a link to a hot-off-the-press statement from the House Natural Resources Committee. - Ed.]

  • The majority of the idle offshore leases are in deepwater. Drilling and development costs in deepwater require the discovery of very large fields to justify development. Smaller accumulations which might justify development nearer to shore or in shallower water are abandoned as uneconomic.
  • Oil and gas are not uniformly distributed, as DOI’s focus on acreage statistics seems to imply. All leases were not created equal; only the ones which contain the necessary elements for hydrocarbon accumulation are particularly valuable. As Figure 1 below shows, most of the oil and gas is found clustered on discrete geologic features. Geologic and geophysical studies are needed to separate highly prospective leases — the “high ground” — from the much less prospective (and hence less valuable) “goatpasture” in between.
  • Fields of sufficient size to be produced are more sparsely distributed in deepwater than on the Shelf, in shallower water.
  • An operator earns the right to enter a lease with the BOEMRE by competitive bid, and the lease represents an exclusive option to explore for and develop oil and gas for a specific term. Deepwater tracts have up to 10 year lease terms, versus 5 years on the Shelf.
  • Many of the deepwater leases were acquired speculatively, for bids at or near DOI’s minimum bid. Many of them were acquired before technology and infrastructure existed to make their development feasible; and for many of those, that is still the case.
  • The government’s resource estimate is just that — the government’s resource estimate. It is a statistically derived guess, not industry’s estimate reflective of specific field data; with the qualification “technically recoverable resources”, economics have not been taken into account.
  • Many shallow water leases have been leased multiple times. Some that are in the DOI’s “idle” statistics are blocks that have been explored, produced and abandoned before being leased by another company for an entirely different exploration play. The Shelf is like a cotton field that has already been picked over two or three times.
  • It is not hard to figure out why the 2009 and 2010 Lease Sales were not terribly active (especially relative to 2008) in the Central and Western Gulf. Oil and natural gas prices were at all-time highs in 2008. By 2009 prices had plummeted, along with the economy. Gas prices have stayed low, and most of the Shelf drilling is for gas.
  • Many Shelf blocks that were bid assuming $8-10 per mcf gas are no longer economic at $4. This is not rocket science.
  • One of the Obama Administration’s first budget proposals upon taking office in early 2009 was to increase taxes on oil and gas. It can hardly be a surprise that those proposals caused industry to reconsider its drilling plans.
  • DOI offers statistics on the number of acres offered in the 2009-10 lease sales, but many of the leases offered have been picked over before, or are well outside any known producing trends.
  • The second lease sale of 2010 was cancelled in the aftermath of the BP spill.
  • The BOEMRE has only issued a few permits in the last year. Each week for the last six weeks, they have granted new deepwater permits with great fanfare, but these permits have so far allowed renewed activity on about a third of the wells where activity was suspended after the BP blowout. Of the three dozen or so shallow water permits, virtually all are for gas drilling.
  • BOEMRE has refused to consider an operator’s ability to secure a permit as a factor in granting lease extensions.
  • The Administration has proposed a new “use-it-or-lose-it” fee for undrilled leases, even though the leases already contain specific provisions for annual rentals in the event a lease is not drilled.

A couple of example maps may help make my point. The first is a detail of a portion of the shallow water Shelf. Each block is approximately a three mile by three mile square of open water; white designates unleased blocks, yellow the tracts currently being leased by an oil and gas operator. You’ll note that some of the white “open” blocks contain wells; those leases were previously drilled and produced to depletion and abandonment, and the leases were relinquished back to the Feds. Some of the yellow blocks may be second- or third- generation leases, meaning that production was found early-on, produced and plugged out. A newer lease may have been taken by a new operator for a completely unrelated prospect (possibly deeper drilling). In that case, the new “undeveloped” lease would count in the DOI’s “idle lease” statistics.

Green dots = oil wells; Red ‘spiders’ = gas wells; Small squares = platforms; ‘Crosshairs’ = dry holes

The geographic distribution of the wells defines the geologic structures where the oil and gas may be trapped. In between those defined structures, you’re a lot more likely to drill a dry hole.

The second map is a detail near two large Shell deepwater fields named Mars and Ursa. You do see a lot more undrilled and undeveloped leases in deepwater, but that’s because the only deepwater prospects that get drilled are the “elephants”. Small and medium-sized prospects which might be highly profitable on the Shelf will not merit drilling on a deepwater tract.

DOI’s study creates the false impression of an industry that is dragging its feet, sitting on leases with no intention of developing known oil and gas accumulations. Nothing could be further from the truth. Industry has no way to make money by paying for leases that never get developed. That’s one point that seems to escape industry outsiders and a legion of Google-educated 15 minute know-it-alls. Unfortunately, that description applies to the people who seem to be able to influence energy policy under the Obama/Salazar regime.

Cross-posted at VladEnBlog.

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COMMENTS

  • http://www.gmsplace.com/ civil truth

    First you demonize the oil and gas companies as responsible – the usual script is at the refinery level, but here it’s at the discovery and extraction level.

    This also diverts attention from the administration’s responsibility

    Then you use this inactivity as argument to directly take-back the leases (or have them “voluntarily give them back by new taxation policies).

    Then the government re-leases (or gives) these to its politically well-connected entities in return for political support. And so forth from there, like subsidies, etc.

    There are other scenarios too, but it’s the same in the end – demonize private companies to increase government control.

    • The_Gadfly

      The Big 0 has just returned from vacationing with his buddy Hugo. He’s aiming to start GDC* to supply all of our energy needs. That way he can ensure all the oil profits go into R&D for solar, wind and unicorn fart energy production.

      *Government Drilling Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of the US Government.

      • http://www.gmsplace.com/ civil truth

        Much better is to hand off these resources to your buddies, which gives a veneer of private ownership, but they in turn give you back a percent of the pie which you can spend to keep you in power. And when you drive out competitors by governmental action – all the better for your buddies. Nice mutual deal, so long as honor remains among thieves.

        A goodmodel is the new Russia.

  • txgho1911

    They may be bidding their time and waiting for a new admin that is not so hostile to the industry.

    If they can base operations from overseas they may find themselves unrestricted to explore and produce wherever they please royalty free.

  • http://vladenblog.tumblr.com Steve Maley

    ExxonMobil’s blog. Excerpt:

    …But the fact is that you can?t change geology ? sometimes the oil just isn?t there. The DOI claimed in the study that since March 2009, it has offered 90 million acres of offshore oil and gas leases, but that only 5 million were actually leased. That statistic says nothing about the ?activity? levels of oil and gas companies ? it only says that the government is not leasing land that?s worth exploring.

    In fact, the U.S. government has continually prohibited access to the majority of America?s offshore acreage, as well as significant onshore acreage as well. That?s a decision that has implications for the U.S. economy and energy security. One recent study found that opening up federal lands that Congress has kept off-limits for decades could generate $1.7 trillion in government revenue over the life of the resource, create 160,000 jobs by 2030, and increase U.S. oil output by as much as 2 million barrels a day in 2030. Yet for the most part, access to U.S. resources is often denied. [emphasis added]

    From Jim Adams, President & CEO of the Offshore Marine Service Association:

    ?Once again, President Obama is sending us into the Bizarro World. He says he wants to cut America?s dependence on foreign oil, then his administration refuses to approve but a handful of deepwater drilling permits in the Gulf of Mexico.

    The President says he wants incentives for domestic drilling, then seeks new limits on drilling leases.

    Even Superman could not find his way out of this convoluted logic.

    It?s time President Obama got back to the real world and offered a real solution to rising gas prices and our nation?s growing dependence on foreign oil. Let Gulf workers get back to exploring for oil in America?s waters.

    We?ve said it before and we?ll say it again: It?s the permits, stupid.

  • http://vladenblog.tumblr.com Steve Maley

    Here.

    ?In 2008, then-Senator Salazar opposed opening the OCS even if gas prices reached $10 a gallon! So no one should be surprised that he is now trying to cover up his worst-in-history energy record, especially as gas prices climb for motorists and businesses. The Secretary should let Americans go back to work producing energy: offshore, in Alaska, and in the west on government lands. In addition, the Administration should start celebrating our own oil production instead of Brazil?s.?

  • johnt

    An old leftist line borrowed in the cause of the Normal. O and his gang want us to suffer so bad they even have the civil service slugs lying for them. Why not, what else do they do with their time?