推迟的 GoM 石油、天然气租赁销售在中标中获得 382MM 美元

经过国会的争论、法庭诉讼和三次重新安排后,Lease Sale 261 的结果公布了,这似乎是近十年来最昂贵的租赁销售。

编者注:本文已更新,包含来自海洋能源管理局的 Sale 261 统计数据。


经过一系列法律行动引发的启动和停止后,石油和天然气生产商终于在 12 月 20 日对墨西哥湾 (GoM) 的 Lease Sale 261 的投标进行了统计。结果是超过两打勘探和生产公司对311 块土地,占地 170 万英亩。中标总额超过 3.821 亿美元。

Hess Corp.提交了 20 份投标,是出价最高的投标人,出价约为 8,830 万美元。阿纳达科石油公司(Anadarko Petroleum Corp.)提交了第二高的出价,共 49 份,总金额达到 7,420 万美元。阿纳达科公司还以 2550 万美元的价格获得了一个区块的单次最高出价。壳牌公司总共提交了 65 份出价,总金额为 6900 万美元。

雪佛龙 公司、Woodside EnergyEquinorBPRepsolBeacon Offshore EnergyTalos Energy是前 10 名最高出价者中的其余公司。Green Canyon 是租赁销售期间出价最多的地段,有 75 个地段至少收到一份出价。赫斯是该地区最高的出价者,在 188 区块上花费了 2100 万美元。密西西比峡谷有 45 个区块收到出价,其中阿纳达科对 389 区块的出价最高。Beacon Offshore 在 Keathley Canyon 的出价最高,为 240 万美元,共有 38 个区域接受投标。

美国石油学会上游政策副总裁霍莉·霍普金斯表示,“尽管存在政策阻力”,此次出售产生了近十年来最高的出价金额。

导致本轮租赁竞价大幅上涨的一个可能因素是未来租赁机会的稀缺。Lease Sale 261 是至少到 2025 年为止的最后一轮租赁。

前总统奥巴马的五年海上石油和天然气租赁计划于2022年到期后,拜登政府最近仅敲定了2024年至2029年期间(2025年、2027年和2029年)的三笔海上石油和天然气租赁销售。

生产商和反对出售的人都对未来的租赁计划表示不满。海上勘探与生产公司表示,销售量太少,这将限制美国未来的能源生产。可再生能源和其他替代能源的倡导者——反对化石燃料——但销售被取消。

“如果没有国会干预,这将是至少在 2025 年之前的最终租赁出售。在我们具有前瞻性的行业中,获得新的租赁区块对于勘探和开发对美国经济至关重要的资源至关重要,”国家能源局总裁埃里克·米利托 (Erik Milito )海洋工业协会在 12 月 20 日的新闻稿中表示。“在一个以全球碳强度最低的地区而闻名的地区,需要额外的海上面积来维持和扩大能源生产。”

米利托表示,美国缺乏投资机会的情况只会转移到世界其他地区,包括环境标准可能较宽松和排放量较高的地区。“国家能源、经济和安全的未来取决于墨西哥湾每年的租赁销售,以确保新的面积,”他说。

塞拉俱乐部土地保护项目主任阿桑·曼努埃尔在一份新闻稿中表示,“每一次额外的石油和天然气租赁销售都会让我们更难实现避免气候灾难所需的雄心勃勃的目标。”

曼努埃尔表示,总部位于华盛顿特区的环保组织塞拉俱乐部认为,世界正处于一个“关键时刻”,应该扩大清洁能源,而不是“几十年来一直依赖化石燃料”。

销售推迟,再次推迟

由于持续的法律挑战,Lease Sale 261 被拖延。原定于 9 月 27 日进行的出售活动被位于新奥尔良的美国第五巡回上诉法院推迟,原因是拜登政府与该地区的环保组织一起对法院关于增加土地面积的裁决提出上诉。租赁出售。

增加面积的呼吁获得批准,但销售于 11 月 2 日再次推迟,以提供更有序的流程,并在提供额外面积后给投标人更多的时间进行投标。海洋能源管理局于 11 月 16 日重置了租约。

总体而言,Lease Sale 261 在海湾西部、中部和东部规划区共提供了 13,482 个未租赁区块,占地 7,270 万英亩。 

共有 26 家公司参与了此次拍卖,提交了 352 份投标,总金额为 441,896,332 美元。

原文链接/hartenergy

Delayed GoM Oil, Gas Lease Sale Fetches $382MM in Winning Bids

After wrangling in Congress, court battles and three reschedules, Lease Sale 261’s results were announced in what appears to be the most expensive lease sale in nearly a decade.

Editor's note: This story was updated to include Sale 261's statistics from the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management.


After a series of starts and stops prompted by legal actions, oil and gas producers finally got their bids counted for Lease Sale 261 in the Gulf of Mexico (GoM) on Dec. 20. The result was more than two dozen E&Ps placing high bids on 311 tracts spanning 1.7 million acres. The winning bids totaled more than $382.1 million.

Hess Corp. submitted 20 bids and was the highest bidder, doling out approximately $88.3 million. Anadarko Petroleum Corp. submitted the second-most high bids with 49, with the sum reaching $74.2 million. Anadarko also had the single highest bid for one block, spending $25.5 million on Mississippi Canyon Block 389. Shell submitted 65 total bids for a sum of $69 million.

Chevron Corp., Woodside Energy, Equinor, BP, Repsol, Beacon Offshore Energy and Talos Energy were the remaining companies in the top 10 highest bidders. Green Canyon was the most bid-on section during the lease sale, with 75 tracts receiving at least one bid. Hess had the highest bid in the area, spending $21 million on Block 188. Mississippi Canyon had 45 tracts receive bids, with Anadarko’s bid on Block 389 being the highest. Beacon Offshore had the highest bid of $2.4 million in Keathley Canyon, which had 38 tracts receive bids.

Holly Hopkins, American Petroleum Institute vice president of upstream policy, said the sale generated the highest bid amount in nearly a decade, “despite policy headwinds.”

One likely factor for the leasing round’s large bid haul is the scarcity of future leasing opportunities. Lease Sale 261 is the last leasing round scheduled until at least 2025.

After former President Obama’s five-year offshore oil and gas leasing program expired in 2022, the Biden administration recently finalized just three offshore oil and gas lease sales between 2024 and 2029—in 2025, 2027 and 2029.

Producers and opponents of the sale have expressed dissatisfaction with the future leasing scheme. Offshore E&Ps say there are too few sales, which will limit future U.S. energy production. Advocates for renewables and other alternatives—who oppose fossil fuels—want the sales cancelled.

“Without Congressional intervention, this is the final lease sale until at least 2025. In our forward-thinking industry, securing new lease blocks is vital for exploring and developing resources crucial to the U.S. economy,” Erik Milito, president of the National Ocean Industries Association, said in a Dec. 20 press release. “Additional offshore acreage is necessary to sustain and expand energy production in a region known for among the lowest carbon intensity barrels globally.”

Milito said a lack of investment opportunities in the U.S. will just shift to other parts of the world, including regions with potentially laxer environmental standards and higher emissions. “The nation's energy, economic and security future hinges on annual lease sales in the Gulf of Mexico to secure new acreage,” he said.

Athan Manuel, the Sierra Club’s lands protection program director, said in a press release that “each additional oil and gas lease sale makes it harder to achieve the ambitious goals we need to achieve to stave off climate catastrophe.”

Manuel said Sierra Club, a Washington D.C.-based environmental group, sees the world at a “critical moment” in which clean energy should be expanded rather than “locking ourselves into fossil fuel for decades.”

Sale postponed, postponed again

Lease Sale 261 dragged out due to ongoing legal challenges. Originally scheduled to take place Sept. 27, the sale was postponed by the Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans after the Biden administration, in conjunction with environmental groups in the area, appealed a ruling by the court to add more acreage to the lease sale.

The appeal for additional acreage was approved, but the sale was once again postponed on Nov. 2 to provide for a more orderly process and give bidders more time to make bids after additional acreage was made available. The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management reset the lease on Nov. 16.

Overall, Lease Sale 261 offered a total of 13,482 unleased blocks on 72.7 million acres in the Gulf’s western, central and eastern planning areas. 

A total of 26 companies participated in the sale, submitting 352 bids totaling $441,896,332.