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GAO-07-590R 1 (2007-04-12)

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, E ,G A             0
.,! =   Accountability * Integrity  Reliability
United States Government Accountability Office
Washington, DC 20548



          April 12, 2007

          Congressional Requesters:

          Subject: Oil and Gas Royalties: Royalty Relief Will Cost the Government Billions of
          Dollars but Uncertainty Over Future Energy Prices and Production Levels Make
          Precise Estimates Impossible at this Time

          Oil and gas from federal lands and waters is critical to meeting the nation's energy
          needs, providing about 35 percent of all oil and 25 percent of all the natural gas
          produced in the United States in fiscal year 2005. Oil and gas companies that lease
          federal lands and waters agree to pay the federal government royalties on the
          resources extracted and produced from these leases. In 1995-a time when oil and
          natural gas prices were significantly lower than they are today-Congress passed the
          Outer Continental Shelf Deep Water Royalty Relief Act of 1995 (DWRRA), which
          authorized the Department of the Interior's (Interior) Minerals Management Service
          (MMS) to provide royalty relief' on oil and gas produced in the deep waters of the
          Gulf of Mexico from leases issued from 1996 through 2000. This royalty relief'
          waived or reduced the amount of royalties that companies would otherwise be
          obligated to pay. In implementing the DWRRA for leases sold in 1996, 1997, and 2000,
          MMS specified that royalty relief would only be applicable if oil and gas prices were
          below certain levels, known as price thresholds, thereby protecting the
          government's royalty interests should oil and gas prices increase significantly. MMS
          did not include price thresholds for leases it issued in 1998 and 1999. Because oil and
          natural gas prices have risen significantly in recent years, the omission of price
          thresholds on the leases issued in 1998 and 1999 has resulted in significant foregone
          royalties to the federal government. In an effort to recoup some of these royalties,
          Interior is currently negotiating with some of the oil and gas companies that own
          these leases. Congress has also been considering legislative actions to recoup
          foregone royalty revenues on these leases or to encourage companies to negotiate
          with MMS. In addition to the foregone royalties on the 1998 and 1999 leases, one
          company, Kerr-McGee, is currently pursuing a legal challenge to the Interior's
          authority to place price thresholds on any deep water leases issued between 1996 and
          2000 under the DWRRA.' If successful, this legal challenge would lead to additional
          foregone royalties on leases issued in 1996, 1997, and 2000.

          We reported to the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources in January
          2007 that the royalty relief for leases issued under the DWRRA will likely cost the
          federal government billions of dollars, but that the final costs have yet to be

          'Kerr-McGee Oil and Gas Corp. v. Burton, No. CV06-0439LC (W.D. La. March 17, 2006).


GAO-07-590R Royalty Relief

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