世界石油


(WO)——美国石油学会(API)呼吁拜登政府允许持续、可预测地获取美国庞大的海上能源资源,从而帮助满足不断增长的能源需求。

美国石油集团敦促拜登政府通过消除海上生产障碍来支持能源安全 - 石油和天然气 360

资料来源:世界石油

在针对 2024-2029 年墨西哥湾租赁销售信息和提名征集而提交给海洋能源管理局 (BOEM) 的评论中,API 与 EnerGeo 联盟、美国独立石油协会 (IPAA) 和路易斯安那州加入中大陆石油和天然气协会(LMOGA)重申其对政府一再试图限制未来海上生产的担忧,并敦促该机构立即完成其五年海上租赁计划,并按计划完成每笔租赁销售在墨西哥湾区域范围内。

“多年来,美国墨西哥湾一直是美国能源生产的支柱,过去二十年每天提供超过一百万桶石油当量,”API 上游政策副总裁霍莉·霍普金斯 (Holly Hopkins) 表示。“有关未来租赁的决定将对我们国家的能源和国家安全、创造就业机会和政府收入产生短期和长期影响。”

除了就信息征集提交意见外,这些协会还与国家海洋工业协会 (NOIA) 和离岸运营商委员会 (OOC) 一起提交意见,以回应 BOEM 准备墨西哥湾区域性海洋设施的意向通知。外大陆架石油和天然气计划环境影响报告书。

在两封评论信中,这些协会都强调了拜登政府一再试图限制美国墨西哥湾的能源生产,包括非法暂停石油和天然气租赁销售;取消离岸销售;允许联邦离岸租赁五年计划到期;增加不合理的限制,从国会授权的租赁销售中删除面积,并发布历史上最少租赁销售的最终五年计划。这些协会敦促内政部结束官僚主义的拖延,包括额外的 NEPA 审查,并尽快推进全地区的租赁销售。

“如果没有正确的实施,政府的五年计划将只是纸上谈兵,而不是加强美国能源安全的可行工具,”霍普金斯总结道。


原文链接/oilandgas360

World Oil


(WO) – The American Petroleum Institute (API) called on the Biden administration to help meet growing energy demand by allowing for consistent and predictable access to America’s vast energy resources offshore.

U.S. oil groups urge Biden administration to support energy security by removing offshore production barriers- oil and gas 360

Source: World Oil

In comments submitted to the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) in response to the Call for Information and Nominations for 2024-2029 Gulf of Mexico Lease Sales, API joined with EnerGeo Alliance, the Independent Petroleum Association of America (IPAA) and the Louisiana Mid-Continent Oil and Gas Association (LMOGA) in reiterating its concern regarding the administration’s repeated attempts to restrict future offshore production and urged the agency to promptly finalize its five-year offshore leasing program without delay and hold each of the lease sales scheduled on a region-wide basis in the Gulf of Mexico.

“The U.S. Gulf of Mexico has been the backbone of U.S. energy production for years, providing more than one million barrels of oil equivalent per day for the last two decades,” API Vice President of Upstream Policy Holly Hopkins said. “The decisions made regarding future leasing will have short- and long-term implications for our nation’s energy and national security, job creation, and government revenue.”

In addition to submitting comments on the Call for Information, the associations joined with the National Ocean Industries Association (NOIA) and the Offshore Operators Committee (OOC) to submit comments in response to BOEM’s Notice of Intent to Prepare a Gulf of Mexico Regional Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement.

In both comment letters, the associations highlighted the Biden administration’s repeated attempts to restrict energy production in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico, including issuing an unlawful moratorium on oil and gas lease sales; cancelling offshore sales; allowing the five-year program for federal offshore leasing to expire; adding unjustified restrictions and removing acreage from a congressionally-mandated lease sale and issuing a final five-year program with the fewest lease sales in history. The associations urged Interior to end the bureaucratic delays, including additional NEPA reviews, and move forward with region-wide lease sales as soon as possible.

“Without the right implementation, the administration’s five-year program will become a mere paper exercise instead of an actionable vehicle for strengthening U.S. energy security,” Hopkins concluded.