HOUSTON (Reuters) – A U.S. offshore regulator on Wednesday said efforts to resume a federal oil and gas leasing program are underway following a court decision reversing the Biden administration’s suspension.
“Based on the court order, we are now moving ahead with leasing,” Walter Cruickshank, deputy director of the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM), said at the Offshore Technology Conference. “It will not be too long before you see something.”
The Biden administration this week challenged the court decision but said it would proceed with leases as its appeal grinds through the courts. It had halted the program in January to as part of its efforts to combat the effects of climate change.
The oil and gas industry has opposed the lease suspension and energy trade groups joined U.S. Gulf Coast state officials in seeking to overturn the Biden halt.
Cruickshank also said the BOEM and the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement are finalizing new rules that require offshore producers and all previous owners of the assets to be liable for plugging wells and removing platforms and pipelines.
The issue has come to the fore with last year’s severe downturn in energy prices that led to offshore bankruptcies.
“Our basic policy is that Americans should not pay for decommissioning,” the offshore administrator said. Proposed changes to the rules “would protect taxpayers from being charged with it. We want to make sure that companies are financially strong and taxpayers are not loaded with these costs.”
(Reporting by Marianna Parraga; Editing by David Holmes)