The Bureau of Land Management NEWS |
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Last updated: 04/04/03
For release: Thursday, March 19, 1998
The Department of the Interior today issued a report outlining a series of initiatives affecting oil and gas operations on Federal and Tribal lands, actions Department officials said will benefit the energy industry, the environment, and the American taxpayer.
Assistant Secretary for Land and Minerals Management, Bob Armstrong, described the initiatives in a 54-page report titled "A Balanced Approach to Managing Oil and Gas Resources," which was prepared by two Interior agencies -- the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and the Minerals Management Service (MMS). The BLM manages onshore oil and gas exploration and development on the public lands, while MMS manages such activities on the Outer Continental Shelf.
"We have a responsibility to manage the country's mineral resources for the national interest," said Armstrong. "That's why we have established four overarching goals in this approach: (1) ensuring environmentally sound and safe activities; (2) fostering economic growth; (3) ensuring a fair return on resources; and, (4) building a better government."
"Let me emphasize that these goals are interrelated. Progress in achieving one goal will not come at the expense of another. Rather, taken together, the goals constitute a comprehensive, balanced approach to managing Federal oil and natural gas resources," Armstrong said.
Deputy Assistant Secretary Sylvia Baca noted that companies paid more than $6.2 billion last year for the right to explore for and produce oil and natural gas from onshore and offshore Federal and Indian lands. Those revenues, she said, are distributed to the Federal Treasury, States, Tribes, and Indian allottees. Last year, for example, $600 million was disbursed to 36 States -- more than any previous year -- to be used for schools, roads, and other public works. Another $1 billion in revenues is deposited each year into the Land and Water Conservation and National Historic Preservation Funds.
"These funds are used to acquire, restore, and create parks, rivers, wildlife preserves, wilderness areas, and recreation facilities, and to restore and preserve national historic sites," said Baca. "At a time when the American people have shown that they care deeply about their surroundings and support the administration's environmental restoration work, this is an extraordinary legacy to future generations of Americans."
MMS Director Cynthia Quarterman said her agency is aggressively working to advance the Administration's efforts to create a government that works better and costs less. "For example," Quarterman said, "MMS is drafting a regulation that will shift the focus from checking to see if OCS workers have completed required training courses to ensuring they have the skills needed to perform their jobs safely. Emphasizing results rather than process will give companies the flexibility to design and tailor training to meet their employees' greatest needs, thereby making training more efficient and improving the safety of OCS operations."
"A Balanced Approach to Managing Oil and Gas Resources" cites other examples of how the Interior Department is working to achieve its four principal oil- and gas-related goals:
The report "A Balanced Approach" notes that each year, private companies produce about 1.5 billion barrels of oil and nearly 7 trillion cubic feet of natural gas from BLM- and MMS-managed public lands. This accounts for more than one-third of America's natural gas production and about one-fourth of the nation's oil production.
"A Balanced Approach" can be obtained from local BLM and MMS offices or from the Washington, D.C., offices of the agencies. The report is also available online in PDF format. (Click here to download. Please note that this file is over 3 megabytes in size.)
The BLM manages 264 million acres of Federal land, most of it in 12 Western States, including Alaska, for a variety of public uses and values, including oil and gas leasing, outdoor recreation, watershed protection, wildlife habitat conservation, and hardrock mining.
MMS manages America's oil, natural gas, and other mineral resources on the Outer Continental Shelf. The agency also collects and disburses more than $4 billion in revenues each year from offshore Federal mineral leases and from onshore mineral leases on Federal and Indian lands.
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