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<classification authority="sudocs">GA 1.13:GAO-08-792R</classification>
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 <subject>Cost analysis</subject>
 <subject>Federal legislation</subject>
 <subject>Future budget projections</subject>
 <subject>Gas leases</subject>
 <subject>Gas resources</subject>
 <subject>Leases</subject>
 <subject>Litigation</subject>
 <subject>Losses</subject>
 <subject>Mineral leases</subject>
 <subject>Natural gas</subject>
 <subject>Natural gas prices</subject>
 <subject>Oil leases</subject>
 <subject>Prices and pricing</subject>
 <subject>Regulatory agencies</subject>
 <subject>Royalty payments</subject>
 <subject>Cost estimates</subject>
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<titleInfo>
 <title>Oil and Gas Royalties: Litigation over Royalty Relief Could Cost the Federal Government Billions of Dollars</title>
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<abstract>Oil and gas production from federal lands and waters is critical
to meeting the nation&apos;s energy needs. This production provided	 
about 31 percent of all oil and 29 percent of all natural gas	 
produced in the United States in fiscal year 2007. Every five	 
years, the federal government decides the areas in the offshore  
waters of the United States it will offer for leasing and	 
establishes a schedule for individual lease sales. The Department
of the Interior&apos;s Minerals Management Service (MMS) has conducted
these sales at least once per year for at least the past 30	 
years. During the sales, oil and gas companies bid for the rights
to explore and develop the oil and gas resources on these leases 
and also agree to pay the federal government royalties on the	 
resources produced. In 1995, a time when oil and natural gas	 
prices were significantly lower than they are today, Congress	 
passed the Outer Continental Shelf Deep Water Royalty Relief Act 
(DWRRA), which authorized MMS to provide &quot;royalty relief&quot; on oil 
and gas produced in the deep waters of the Gulf of Mexico from	 
certain leases issued from 1996 through 2000. This &quot;royalty	 
relief&quot; waived or reduced the amount of royalties that companies 
would otherwise be obligated to pay on the initial volumes of	 
production from leases, which are referred to as &quot;royalty	 
suspension volumes.&quot; The DWRRA also authorized the Secretary of  
the Interior to provide royalty relief to promote oil and gas	 
development or to increase production from leases in the Gulf of 
Mexico. In implementing the DWRRA for leases sold in 1996, 1997, 
and 2000, MMS specified that royalty relief would be applicable  
only if oil and gas prices were below certain levels, known as	 
&quot;price thresholds,&quot; with the intention of protecting the	 
government&apos;s royalty interests if oil and gas prices increased	 
significantly. MMS did not include these same price thresholds	 
for leases it issued in 1998 and 1999, and this action raised	 
Congressional concerns that the federal government would lose	 
billions of dollars in forgone revenues. We reported in April	 
2007 that MMS&apos;s failure to include price thresholds on leases	 
issued in 1998 and 1999 under the DWRRA would likely cost the	 
federal government billions of dollars in forgone royalties, but 
precise costs were impossible to determine because of uncertain  
future prices and production levels. In light of the recent rise 
of oil prices to more than $100 per barrel and natural gas to $8 
per thousand cubic feet and the recent judgment against 	 
MMS-imposed price thresholds, you asked us to: (1) update our	 
scenario that illustrates the potential loss of royalties because
of the absence of price thresholds in leases issued in 1998 and  
1999 and (2) provide an update of the possible consequences of	 
Kerr-McGee&apos;s legal challenge on royalties already collected and  
evaluate the potential for additional forgone royalties if price 
thresholds no longer apply to future production from the 1996,	 
1997, and 2000 DWRRA leases.</abstract>
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<identifier type="preferred citation">GAO-08-792R</identifier>
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<note>Correspondence</note>
<extension>
 <searchTitle>GAO-08-792R; Oil and Gas Royalties: Litigation over Royalty Relief Could Cost the Federal Government Billions of Dollars;
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<subject>
 <topic>Cost analysis</topic>
 <topic>Federal legislation</topic>
 <topic>Future budget projections</topic>
 <topic>Gas leases</topic>
 <topic>Gas resources</topic>
 <topic>Leases</topic>
 <topic>Litigation</topic>
 <topic>Losses</topic>
 <topic>Mineral leases</topic>
 <topic>Natural gas</topic>
 <topic>Natural gas prices</topic>
 <topic>Oil leases</topic>
 <topic>Prices and pricing</topic>
 <topic>Regulatory agencies</topic>
 <topic>Royalty payments</topic>
 <topic>Cost estimates</topic>
</subject>
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