Sunday, February 3, 2013

BLM Lease Auction Update

A Bureau of Land Management (BLM) oil and gas lease auction held on January 29 netted $11,433,090 in revenues from the sale of 25 Federal leases, totaling 2,831.38 acres, in North Dakota. The quarterly sale took place at the BLM’s Montana State Office in Billings.

The highest single-parcel bid was $1,596,000 submitted by Slawson Exploration Company, Inc. of Wichita, Kan., for an 80-acre parcel located in Mountrail county. This same bid also garnered the highest per-acre bid at $19,500 per acre.


BLM oil and gas leases are awarded for a period of 10 years and for as long thereafter as there is production in paying quantities. The revenue from the sale of Federal leases, as well as the 12.5 percent royalties collected from the production of those leases, is shared between the Federal Government and the states. The state of North Dakota will receive 48 percent of the sales revenue resulting from today’s auction and royalties paid on oil and gas production from those leases, and fifty-two percent of the revenue generated goes to the Federal Government. North Dakota will receive nearly $5.5 million from today’s sale. Total royalties collected in North Dakota in fiscal year 2012 for oil, gas, coal, and natural gas liquids was $138,890,069 Federal and $257,400,980 Indian minerals. Since the Bakken Play began in 2009, the total payout in royalties on Indian minerals is $801,253,522.

The Mineral Leasing Act of 1920 and the 1987 Federal Onshore Oil and Gas Leasing Reform Act authorize leasing of Federal oil and gas resources. The 1987 law requires each BLM state office to conduct oil and gas lease sales on at least a quarterly basis. BLM lease sales are competitive and conducted by oral bidding.

The January 29 auction was the second of 33 oil and gas lease sales the BLM is scheduled to hold in 2013 and builds on the 31 onshore oil and gas lease sales held last year, which generated $233 million for American taxpayers. The 2012 sales offered more than 1.4 million acres of public land in 1,707 parcels and reflected a continued increase in the average price paid per acre. The price drillers are willing to pay for onshore parcels has more than tripled in the past three years, compared to the last 25 years. Since 1988, the average price paid per acre was $55, while over the past three years, the average was $210.

Potential environmental effects that could result from exploration and development are analyzed before any leases are offered for sale.  All leases come with conditions on oil and gas activities to protect the environment that can include limits on when drilling can occur or restrictions on surface occupancy.  Once an operator proposes exploration or development on a BLM-issued lease, further environmental analysis under the National Environmental Policy Act is conducted to determine the site-specific need for various types of impact-limiting or mitigation measures.  In addition, many operators routinely use Best Management Practices such as remote monitoring of producing wells and multiple wells per pad to minimize surface impacts.

The next BLM Federal oil and gas lease sale is scheduled for May 7, 2013, at the BLM’s Montana State Office, located at 5001 Southgate Drive, Billings, Montana. Additional information regarding competitive sale lists, detailed results of sales, and the leasing process is available by writing the Bureau of Land Management, 5001 Southgate Dr., Billings, Mont. 59101, by calling (406) 896-5004, or at www.blm.gov/mt.

Source: BLM

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