

Five-Year Offshore Oil and Gas Leasing
Program: Status and Issues in Brief
Updated September 29, 2022
Congressional Research Service
https://crsreports.congress.gov
R44692
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Contents
Leasing Program Status ................................................................................................................... 1
Selected Issues for Congress ........................................................................................................... 3
Timing Considerations for the Five-Year Program ................................................................... 3
Potential for Zero-Lease Program ............................................................................................. 4
Regional Leasing Decisions ...................................................................................................... 5
Gulf of Mexico Region ....................................................................................................... 6
Alaska Region ..................................................................................................................... 8
Atlantic Region ................................................................................................................... 9
Pacific Region ................................................................................................................... 10
Role of Congress ............................................................................................................................ 11
Figures
Figure 1. Potential Lease Areas in the 2023-2028 Proposed Program ............................................ 6
Contacts
Author Information ........................................................................................................................ 12
Congressional Research Service
Five-Year Offshore Oil and Gas Leasing Program: Status and Issues in Brief
nder the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA), as amended,1 the Bureau of Ocean
Energy Management (BOEM) within the Department of the Interior (DOI) must prepare
U and maintain forward-looking five-year plans—referred to by BOEM as national
programs or five-year programs—to schedule proposed oil and gas lease sales on the U.S. outer
continental shelf (OCS). The most recent five-year program, covering the period from mid-2017
to mid-2022, expired on June 30, 2022.2 On July 1, 2022, BOEM released a proposed program
(PP) for the 2023-2028 period.3 The PP proposes as many as 11, or as few as zero, offshore oil
and gas lease sales during the 2023-2028 period. The maximum of 11 lease sales would consist of
10 sales in the Gulf of Mexico region and 1 in the Alaska region. Final program decisions will be
made at a later stage of action.
BOEM’s development of a new five-year program typically takes place over the preceding two or
three years, during which successive drafts of the program are published for review and comment.
All available leasing areas are initially examined, and the selection may then be narrowed based
on economic and environmental analysis, including environmental review under the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA),4 to arrive at a final leasing schedule. The final program is
submitted to the President and to Congress for at least 60 days (although the President and
Congress do not have formal approval roles). The proposal may then receive final approval from
the Secretary of the Interior and may take effect.
The 117th Congress has conducted oversight and enacted legislation regarding the next five-year
program. Some introduced measures could further influence the upcoming program and/or future
programs if enacted. For example, Members could enact legislation to address the timing for
publishing a new program, could add new sales or remove scheduled sales from a program, or
could change other terms of program development under the OCSLA. Congress also could
impose leasing moratoria on new areas or, alternatively, could end existing moratoria imposed by
Congress or the President and could mandate lease sales in these previously unavailable areas.
The following discussion summarizes developments related to the 2023-2028 leasing program
and analyzes selected issues for congressional consideration. The broader history, legal and
economic framework, and process for developing the five-year programs are discussed in CRS
Report R44504, Five-Year Offshore Oil and Gas Leasing Program: History and Background.
Leasing Program Status
BOEM published the 2023-2028 PP on July 1, 2022. The PP is the second stage of program
development, following an earlier draft proposed program (DPP) prepared under the Trump
Administration.5 The Trump Administration DPP had proposed a total of 47 OCS oil and gas
1 43 U.S.C. §§1331-1356b; see especially §1344.
2 Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM), 2017-2022 Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing: Proposed
Final Program, November 2016, at https://www.boem.gov/oil-gas-energy/leasing/2017-2022-ocs-oil-and-gas-leasing-
pfp; hereinafter referred to as 2017-2022 PFP.
3 BOEM, 2023-2028 National Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing: Proposed Program, July 2022, at
https://www.boem.gov/oil-gas-energy/national-program/2023-2028-proposed-program; hereinafter referred to as 2023-
2028 PP.
4 National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), 42 U.S.C. §4321. For more information, see CRS Report RL33152, The
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA): Background and Implementation, by Linda Luther.
5 BOEM, 2019-2024 National Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing: Draft Proposed Program, January 2018,
at https://www.boem.gov/NP-Draft-Proposed-Program-2019-2024/; hereinafter referred to as the 2019-2024 DPP. This
draft program would have applied to the five-year period from late 2019 through mid-2024, replacing the final years of
the 2017-2022 program. Although previous five-year programs (since 1982) have not overlapped in this way, the
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Five-Year Offshore Oil and Gas Leasing Program: Status and Issues in Brief
lease sales over a five-year period: 12 in the Gulf of Mexico region, 19 in the Alaska region, 9 in
the Atlantic region, and 7 in the Pacific region.6 By comparison, the Biden Administration’s PP
proposes a maximum of 11 OCS oil and gas lease sales over five years: 10 in the Gulf of Mexico
region, 1 in the Cook Inlet planning area of the Alaska region, and none in the Atlantic or Pacific
regions. The PP also states that fewer lease sales—and potentially no lease sales—might be
included in the final version of the program.
Along with the PP, BOEM published a draft programmatic environmental impact statement
(PEIS).7 The PP and draft PEIS were released with a public comment period of 90 days, ending
on October 6, 2022. After consideration of public comments and any additional analysis, BOEM
would next publish a proposed final program (PFP) and final PEIS. The PFP is submitted to the
President and Congress for at least 60 days, after which the Secretary of the Interior can issue a
record of decision to finalize the program.
Separately, the previous five-year program, covering the period from mid-2017 through mid-
2022, expired on June 30, 2022. That program, prepared under the Obama Administration,
resembled the maximum-sale scenario of the current PP, in that it scheduled a total of 11 sales,
with 10 in the Gulf of Mexico and 1 in Alaska’s Cook Inlet.8 However, toward the end of the
program’s implementation, the final three scheduled sales—two for the Gulf of Mexico and the
Cook Inlet sale—were canceled.9 Further, the eighth (and most recent) sale that BOEM conducted
under the 2017-2022 program—Lease Sale 257 for the Gulf of Mexico, held on November 17,
2021—was later vacated by a judicial order.10
On August 16, 2022, the President signed into law P.L. 117-169, commonly known as the
Inflation Reduction Act (IRA).11 The law contains several provisions relevant to the five-year
program. First, Section 50264 reinstates vacated Lease Sale 257, requiring BOEM to issue the
leases from that auction.12 It also requires that BOEM hold the other canceled lease sales from the
George W. Bush Administration issued a DPP for a 2010-2015 program that would have replaced the final years of the
2007-2012 program (but, like the 2019-2024 DPP, was not finalized for that period).
6 The full leasing schedule is available on p. 8 of the 2019-2024 DPP, or at https://www.boem.gov/NP-DPP-Lease-
Sale-Schedule-2019-2024/.
7 BOEM, 2023-2028 National Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing Program: Draft Programmatic
Environmental Impact Statement, July 2022, at https://www.boem.gov/oil-gas-energy/national-program/2023-2028-
national-ocs-oil-gas-leasing-draft-peis-vol1. A programmatic EIS typically evaluates the effects of broad proposals or
planning-level decisions.
8 2017-2022 PFP, p. S-4.
9 The canceled sales included Lease Sales 259 and 261 for the Gulf of Mexico and Lease Sale 258 for Alaska’s Cook
Inlet. Reasons for the cancelations included timing issues (stemming partly from President Biden’s “pause” of oil and
gas leasing in Executive Order 14008), multiple court rulings related to the lease sales, and BOEM’s finding of a lack
of industry interest in the Cook Inlet sale. See, for example, BOEM, “Sale 258 Status Update,” at
https://www.boem.gov/oil-gas-energy/leasing/sale-258-status-update; and Anna Phillips, “Biden Pulls 3 Offshore Oil
Lease Sales, Curbing New Drilling This Year,” Washington Post, May 11, 2022, at https://www.washingtonpost.com/
climate-environment/2022/05/11/gulf-of-mexico-leasing-canceled/.
10 Friends of the Earth v. Haaland,—F. 3d.—, 2022 WL 254526 (D.D.C. 2022). For more information on Lease Sale
257, see BOEM, “Lease Sale 257,” at https://www.boem.gov/Sale-257.
11 The amendment in the nature of a substitute for H.R. 5376 that was offered on the Senate floor on August 6, 2022,
included the short title “Inflation Reduction Act of 2022.” Although the short title did not appear in the law as enacted,
this report refers to the measure as the Inflation Reduction Act.
12 In accordance with the law’s requirement, BOEM announced on September 14, 2022, that it had accepted the high
bids from Lease Sale 257, a prerequisite to issuing the leases. BOEM, “In Compliance with IRA, BOEM Reinstates
Lease Sale 257 Bids,” September 14, 2022, at https://www.boem.gov/newsroom/press-releases/compliance-ira-boem-
reinstates-lease-sale-257-bids.
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2017-2022 program, with Lease Sale 258 for Cook Inlet held by December 31, 2022; Lease Sale
259 for the Gulf of Mexico held by March 31, 2023; and Lease Sale 261 for the Gulf of Mexico
held by September 30, 2023.
Second, Section 50265 of the IRA requires minimum amounts of offshore oil and gas leasing as a
precondition for BOEM’s authority to issue leases for offshore wind development. Specifically,
for the 10 years following enactment of the law, BOEM may not issue an offshore wind lease
unless the agency has held an oil and gas lease sale in the previous year and has offered at least
60 million acres for oil and gas development on the OCS. (For comparison, each of the seven
Gulf of Mexico lease sales held in the 2017-2022 program offered 75 million-80 million OCS
acres.) Under these provisions, for instance, if the 2023-2028 PP were finalized with the
maximum scenario of 10 region-wide lease sales in the Gulf and 1 in Alaska’s Cook Inlet, the
precondition for offshore wind leasing likely would be satisfied, as this typically would result in
two Gulf lease sales per year, each offering more than 60 million acres.13 However, if the size or
frequency of Gulf lease sales were significantly reduced, or if BOEM chose the zero-lease option,
this could affect the agency’s authority to lease for offshore wind under the IRA.
Selected Issues for Congress
Timing Considerations for the Five-Year Program
Development of the upcoming five-year program has proceeded more slowly than for previous
programs. In almost all previous program transitions, a new program has been finalized by the
time the earlier one expired, allowing a new leasing schedule to take effect immediately.14 By
contrast, the federal government currently is experiencing a gap between leasing programs. Given
timing requirements associated with the remaining stages of program development, it is unlikely
that a new program would be finalized before the end of 2022. The OCSLA’s implementing
regulations call for a public comment period of at least 90 days on the PP and draft PEIS.15
BOEM then would consider and incorporate comments before publishing a PFP and final PEIS.
The PFP must be submitted to Congress and the President for 60 days before final secretarial
approval and implementation.16 BOEM reflects these timing requirements in the PP by scheduling
the first proposed lease sale under the new program for 2023.
It is unclear how the current gap between programs may interact with requirements of the
OCSLA. The OCSLA states that the Secretary of the Interior must “prepare and periodically
revise, and maintain an oil and gas leasing program.”17 Stakeholders have differed in their
interpretations of the extent to which this and other language in the act would require that a
13 The proposed sale for the smaller Cook Inlet likely would not contribute significantly to the required total, as
previous Cook Inlet sales have ranged from 0.4 million to 2.2 million acres offered. BOEM, table of “All Lease
Offerings,” at https://www.boem.gov/sites/default/files/documents/about-boem/Table%201%20SwilerTable%
2024FEB2021.pdf.
14 An exception is the transition to the 2012-2017 program. The 2012-2017 PFP was published on June 28, 2012, two
days before the previous program expired, but because of the required 60-day waiting period before final secretarial
approval, the program did not officially take effect until August 27, 2012 (BOEM, “2012-2017 OCS Oil and Gas
Leasing Program,” at https://www.boem.gov/oil-gas-energy/leasing/2012-2017-ocs-oil-and-gas-leasing-program).
However, this timing still allowed for the program’s first scheduled sale to be held as planned in November 2012.
15 30 C.F.R. §556.204(b). The closing date of the comment period is October 6, 2022.
16 30 C.F.R. §556.205. The President and Congress do not need to affirmatively approve the program for it to take
effect, but the 60-day period could potentially offer time for legislative responses.
17 43 U.S.C. §1344(a).
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program must continuously be in force.18 Some bills introduced in the 117th Congress would
explicitly prohibit a future gap between five-year programs.19 These bills would mandate required
timing for the Secretary of the Interior to begin preparation of a new program and to approve a
final version.
Despite the current gap between programs, BOEM is mandated by the IRA to conduct at least one
offshore oil and gas lease sale in 2022—Lease Sale 258 for Alaska’s Cook Inlet, which was
previously scheduled as part of the 2017-2022 program (but was canceled as the program
approached its expiration date). In accordance with the requirement in the IRA, BOEM
announced on September 21, 2022, a proposed sale notice with a planned date of December 30,
2022, for the Cook Inlet auction.20
Potential for Zero-Lease Program
In each successive stage of development of the five-year program (DPP, PP, and PFP), some sales
proposed in an earlier version of the program might be removed from consideration, on the basis
of further analysis and public comments.21 For example, for the 2017-2022 program, the DPP’s
proposed 14 lease sales eventually were winnowed to 11 sales in the PFP. For the upcoming
program, as discussed, the DPP proposed 47 lease sales, which were narrowed to 11 sales for
consideration in the PP.
The PP notes that these 11 proposed sales represent the maximum that could be finalized and that
some sales may be removed at the PFP stage.22 Further, the PP and accompanying DOI materials
state that the final program might contain no lease sales at all.23 As with the question of a program
gap, stakeholders have disagreed about whether the OCSLA would allow for a zero-lease
program. The question has not been tested, because no previous program has been finalized
without any scheduled sales. Some have contended that the OCSLA’s statement that the program
“shall consist of a schedule of proposed lease sales” indicates that a zero-lease program would not
18 For the view that the OCSLA prohibits a gap between programs, see, for example, DOI Solicitor’s Memorandum M-
37062, “Secretarial Discretion in Promulgating a National Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing Program,”
January 13, 2021, at https://www.doi.gov/sites/doi.gov/files/m-37062.pdf; hereinafter cited as January 2021 DOI
Solicitor’s Memorandum. This memorandum, issued by the DOI Solicitor toward the end of the Trump Administration,
was withdrawn by the Principal Deputy Solicitor during the Biden Administration. For the view that the OCSLA does
not clearly prohibit a gap between programs, see, for example, remarks of Earthjustice attorney Brettny Hardy in
“Biden faces legal fight over delayed offshore leasing plan,” E&E News EnergyWire, April 21, 2022, at
https://www.eenews.net/articles/biden-faces-legal-fight-over-delayed-offshore-leasing-plan/.
19 See, for example, H.R. 6858, H.R. 7012, S. 3214, and S. 3752. Also see the “Role of Congress” section.
20 DOI, “Interior Department Announces Next Steps for Offshore Oil and Gas Leasing to Comply with Provisions in
Inflation Reduction Act,” press release, September 21, 2022, at https://doi.gov/pressreleases/interior-department-
announces-next-steps-offshore-oil-and-gas-leasing-comply.
21 By contrast, it is difficult to add sales at the later program stages that did not appear in earlier versions, because
analyses conducted at the earlier stages would need to be revised to reflect the new proposed sales.
22 See, for example, 2023-2028 PP, pp. 2-3: “The inclusion of an area for analysis in this Proposed Program is not a
final determination that the area will be included in the PFP, or ultimately offered in a future lease sale. The Secretary
may decide to reduce or completely remove an area from potential leasing at the PFP stage or decide in the future not to
conduct a lease sale that was included in the PFP.”
23 See, for example, 2023-2028 PP, p. 4 (“this Proposed Program retains the Secretary’s discretion at the PFP stage to
determine that no OCS oil and gas lease sales in any planning area should be scheduled during the 2023–2028 period”);
and DOI press release, July 1, 2022, at https://www.doi.gov/pressreleases/interior-department-invites-public-comment-
proposed-five-year-program-offshore-oil-0 (“The Final Program also may include fewer potential lease sales, including
no lease sales”).
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be allowed.24 Others have interpreted the OCSLA as accommodating a zero-lease choice.25
Although no previous five-year program has contained a zero-lease schedule, the possibility has
been contemplated in past programs as a reference scenario (for example, in the context of the
PEIS’s required consideration of a “no-action” alternative).26
The August 2022 enactment of the IRA complicates the option for a zero-lease program as
considered in the PP. As noted above, the IRA mandates that over the next 10 years, BOEM may
not issue offshore wind leases unless the agency has offered at least 60 million acres for offshore
oil and gas leasing during the previous year. For 2022 and 2023, the IRA requires BOEM to hold
specific lease sales (from the earlier 2017-2022 program), and these required sales could
potentially fulfill the minimum oil and gas leasing amounts, allowing for some offshore wind
leasing in the near term.27 Subsequent offshore wind leasing, however, would depend on
decisions about oil and gas lease sales in the 2023-2028 program. It appears that a zero-lease
program—or even a program that scheduled some lease sales but curtailed their acreage to a point
below the IRA’s minimum threshold—would result in periods where offshore wind leasing was
not authorized.
A number of introduced bills in the 117th Congress would effectively prohibit a no-leasing
outcome in future programs.28 Typically, these bills would require that the Secretary conduct a
minimum number of lease sales each year in specified areas, such as the Central and Western
Gulf of Mexico and/or the Alaska region. Still other bills in the 117th Congress would essentially
mandate a no-leasing program by banning offshore oil and gas leasing throughout the OCS.29
Regional Leasing Decisions
Under the OCSLA, BOEM must take into account economic, social, and environmental values in
making its leasing decisions.30 The balancing of these factors could lead to various decisions
regarding leasing in each of the four OCS regions—the Atlantic, Pacific, Alaska, and Gulf of
Mexico regions—and their component planning areas. The regional leasing proposals in the PP
differ from those in the Trump Administration’s DPP. Whereas the DPP proposed lease sales in all
four regions and in every available planning area (where leasing is not prohibited by executive or
24 43 U.S.C. §1344(a). See, for example, January 2021 DOI Solicitor’s Memorandum.
25 See, for example, Earthjustice and Evergreen Collaborative, Meeting the Moment: How President Biden Can Align
the Federal Fossil Fuel Program to Deliver on Climate and Put People Over Profits, June 2022, p. 16, at
https://earthjustice.org/documents/report/meeting-the-moment-how-president-biden-can-align-the-federal-fossil-fuel-
program-to-deliver-on-climate.
26 See, for example, BOEM, Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing Program: 2017-2022 Draft Programmatic
Environmental Impact Statement, March 2016, p. xiii, at https://www.boem.gov/sites/default/files/oil-and-gas-energy-
program/Resource-Evaluation/Resource-Assessment/Draft-Programmatic-Environmental-Impact-Statement-
VolumnI.pdf. The PEIS states: “The evaluation of a No Action Alternative (Alternative C) is required by the CEQ
regulations implementing NEPA (40 CFR 1502.14(d)).... The eventual selection of Alternative C [the no-leasing
option] would be a major departure from past Program decisions, but it must remain a possibility.”
27 In particular, Lease Sales 259 and 261 in the Gulf of Mexico likely would each encompass the required 60 million
acres or more. By contrast, Lease Sale 258 in Alaska’s Cook Inlet likely would not meet this condition; previous Cook
Inlet sales have offered fewer than 3 million acres.
28 See, for example, H.R. 6858, H.R. 7012, S. 3214, and S. 3752. Also see the “Role of Congress” section.
29 See, for example, H.R. 2519 and S. 1115. Also see the “Role of Congress” section.
30 43 U.S.C. §1344(a). Factors that the Secretary of the Interior must consider include the geographical, geological, and
ecological characteristics of the regions; the relative environmental and other natural resource considerations of the
regions; the relative interest of oil and natural gas producers in the regions; and the laws, goals, and policies of the
states that would be affected by offshore exploration and production in the regions, among others. Leasing also must be
conducted to ensure the federal government receives fair market value for leased tracts.
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Five-Year Offshore Oil and Gas Leasing Program: Status and Issues in Brief
congressional action), the PP would allow sales in a maximum of two regions (Gulf of Mexico
and Alaska) with a maximum of one planning area included for the Alaska region (Figure 1).
Figure 1. Potential Lease Areas in the 2023-2028 Proposed Program
(shown in yellow)
Source: BOEM, 2023-2028 National Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing: Proposed Program, July 2022, p. 5,
at https://www.boem.gov/oil-gas-energy/national-program/2023-2028-proposed-program.
Gulf of Mexico Region
Almost all U.S. offshore oil and gas production currently takes place in the Gulf of Mexico.31 The
Gulf has the most mature oil and gas development infrastructure of the four planning regions and
some of the highest concentrations of oil and gas resources, according to BOEM estimates.32
31 The Gulf accounts for about 99% of U.S. offshore oil and gas production. BOEM, 2023-2028 PP, p. 7.
32 BOEM, “Assessment of Undiscovered Technically Recoverable Oil and Gas Resources of the Nation’s Outer
Continental Shelf,” 2021, at https://www.boem.gov/sites/default/files/documents/oil-gas-energy/resource-evaluation/
2021_National_Assessment_Map_BTU.pdf; hereinafter cited as BOEM, 2021 UTRR map. BOEM estimates the
undiscovered, technically recoverable resources (UTRR) for each region—resources that could be produced using
conventional techniques without any economic considerations. BOEM estimates the Gulf of Mexico to have the highest
UTRR of any OCS region with regard to oil; the Gulf is second to the Alaska region in terms of UTRR for natural gas.
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The PP’s maximum proposal of 10 region-wide lease sales for the Gulf, supporting a semiannual
auction schedule, accords with the 2017-2022 program, which scheduled the same number of
Gulf sales. Although the PP retains a maximum scenario matching the earlier program, with 10
sales and a region-wide leasing approach (under which all eligible areas of the region would be
offered at each lease sale), it also contemplates two other, more restricted Gulf leasing
scenarios.33 In the “Subarea Option,” the PFP would narrow the available areas within the Gulf to
a more targeted set of lease blocks to be auctioned at each sale. For example, a targeted approach
could exclude “acreage that has not recently seen extensive bidding activity,” “biologically
sensitive areas,” and “areas of potential conflict with other uses and users of the marine
environment.”34 This approach draws on recommendations that DOI promulgated in its
November 2021 comprehensive review of the federal onshore and offshore oil and gas
programs.35 However, depending on the acreage that BOEM would offer for lease under the
Subarea Option, this option could trigger the IRA’s restriction against offshore wind leasing when
less than 60 million offshore acres are offered for oil and gas leasing in a given year.
The other scenario in the PP would be the “No Sale Option,” where no sales at all would be
scheduled for the Gulf. This would be a departure from past programs, which have scheduled at
least two and sometimes more Gulf lease sales annually. Also, if no Gulf sales were conducted
under the 2023-2028 program, this would appear to prohibit offshore wind leasing under the IRA
during the program period.36
In calculations conducted for the PP, BOEM estimates that there would be “incremental net
benefits” from the proposed Gulf lease sales as opposed to a no-sale option, taking into account
the energy substitutes that would replace the OCS production in a no-leasing scenario.37 However,
BOEM notes that this calculation is based on current baseline data and assumes continuation of
current laws and policies. BOEM states that if energy markets “change substantially over the next
few years,” this could impact the anticipated substitutions and thus the net benefits.38 BOEM
further states that if “the U.S. and other nations move towards a net-zero future,” the agency’s
calculations “would likely be significantly different.”39 BOEM provides a separate, qualitative
discussion of potential costs and benefits of Gulf leasing (and OCS leasing generally) if the
United States pursued the goal of net-zero emissions by 2050.40 In this scenario, BOEM
anticipates that there could “still be a role” for oil and gas leasing in the Gulf but that the
incremental net benefits of leasing likely would decrease, taking into account economic values
and environmental and social costs, among other factors.41
33 For discussion, see 2023-2028 PP, Chapter 2.
34 2023-2028 PP, pp. 7-8.
35 DOI, Report on the Federal Oil and Gas Leasing Program: Prepared in Response to Executive Order 14008,
November 2021, at https://www.doi.gov/sites/doi.gov/files/report-on-the-federal-oil-and-gas-leasing-program-doi-
eo14008.pdf. The report recommended (p. 13) that BOEM reconsider its traditional practice of area-wide leasing and
instead consider sales for “smaller areas” based on specified criteria.
36 Although the IRA does not require that the acreage offered for oil and gas leasing be in the Gulf of Mexico, the only
other area proposed for sale in the PP is Alaska’s Cook Inlet, whose relatively small size would limit its ability to
contribute to the required acreage.
37 2023-2028 PP, Section 5.3.4. BOEM defines “incremental net benefits” as the net benefits value of a leasing option
minus the net benefits value of a no-sale option. For further discussion, see Section 5.3.1 of the PP.
38 2023-2028 PP, Section 5.3.4.
39 2023-2028 PP, Section 5.3.5.
40 2023-2028 PP, Section 5.3.5.
41 Ibid.
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One part of the Gulf that is not analyzed as a potential leasing area under any scenario in the PP is
the Eastern Gulf close to the state of Florida. The Gulf of Mexico Energy Security Act of 2006
(GOMESA) had prohibited leasing in a defined area of the Gulf off the Florida coast.42 Although
the GOMESA moratorium expired on June 30, 2022, President Trump effectively extended this
moratorium through June 2032 by withdrawing the area from leasing consideration until that
time, using his presidential authority under Section 12(a) of the OCSLA.43 Some Members of
Congress and other stakeholders wish to make the Eastern Gulf leasing moratorium permanent.
Among other concerns, they contend that oil and gas leasing in Gulf waters around Florida could
damage the state’s beaches and fisheries, which support strong tourism and fishing industries, and
could jeopardize mission-critical defense activities such as those at Pensacola’s Eglin Air Force
Base. By contrast, others advocate for shrinking the area covered by the ban, or eliminating the
ban before its scheduled expiration date. They emphasize the economic significance of oil and
gas resources off the Florida coast and contend that development would create jobs, strengthen
the state and national economies, and contribute to U.S. energy security.
Alaska Region
Congress has debated offshore leasing in the Alaska region. Decreases in the areal extent of
summer polar ice, along with estimates of substantial undiscovered oil and gas resources in Arctic
waters, have contributed to increased interest by some in offshore oil and gas exploration in the
region.44 However, the region’s severe weather and perennial sea ice, and its relative lack of
infrastructure to extract and transport offshore oil and gas, continue to pose technical and
financial challenges to new exploration. Previous periods of low energy prices have diminished
short-term incentives for development in the Alaska region because Alaskan production is
relatively costly. Among Alaska’s 15 BOEM planning areas, the Beaufort Sea and Cook Inlet are
the only two areas with existing federal leases, and only the Beaufort Sea has producing wells in
federal waters. Some stakeholders, including the State of Alaska and some Members of Congress,
seek to expand offshore oil and gas activities in the region. Other Members of Congress and
many environmental groups oppose offshore oil and gas drilling in the region, due to concerns
about potential oil spills and the possible contributions of these activities to climate change.
The Trump Administration had stated its interest in promoting offshore development in the
Alaska region, and the 2019-2024 DPP scheduled lease sales in all 15 Alaska planning areas.
Among others, the DPP included three sales in the Beaufort Sea and three in the Chukchi Sea, the
areas of the Alaska region estimated to have the highest concentrations of undiscovered oil and
gas resources.45 (Industry interest in some other Alaska region planning areas may be lower, as
many are thought to have relatively low or negligible petroleum potential.) However, large parts
of the Beaufort and Chukchi Sea planning areas are now withdrawn indefinitely from leasing
disposition following a March 2019 judicial ruling and a January 2021 executive order by
42 P.L. 109-432. Specifically, the law banned oil and gas leasing in the Eastern Gulf of Mexico Planning Area within
125 miles of the coast of Florida, in all areas in the Gulf of Mexico east of a prescribed “Military Mission Line,” and in
the part of the Central Gulf of Mexico Planning Area that is within 100 miles of Florida, through June 30, 2022. This
report refers to the GOMESA moratorium area as the “Eastern Gulf” moratorium area for simplicity.
43 President Trump withdrawal memorandum, September 8, 2020. Section 12(a) of the OCSLA (43 U.S.C. §1341(a))
provides that “[t]he President of the United States may, from time to time, withdraw from disposition any of the
unleased lands of the outer Continental Shelf.”
44 For more information, see the section on “Oil, Gas, and Mineral Exploration” in CRS Report R41153, Changes in
the Arctic: Background and Issues for Congress, coordinated by Ronald O'Rourke.
45 BOEM, 2021 UTRR map.
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President Biden.46 The Biden Administration’s PP, in contrast to the DPP, includes a potential sale
in one Alaska planning area—the Cook Inlet planning area—which is adjacent to existing areas of
natural gas production in state waters.
Supporters of increased leasing in the Alaska OCS region contend that growth in offshore oil and
gas development is critical for Alaska’s economic health as the state’s onshore oil fields mature.
They further assert that offshore energy development in the region will play a growing role
nationally by reducing U.S. dependence on oil and gas imports and supporting U.S. interests in
the Arctic economy, as other nations, including Russia and China, invest in Arctic projects. These
stakeholders contend that oil and gas activities can be conducted safely in the region and point to
a history of successful well drilling in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas in the 1980s and 1990s.
Those who favor few or no Alaska offshore lease sales, by contrast, are concerned that it would
be challenging to respond to a major oil spill in the region, because of the icy conditions and lack
of spill-response infrastructure.47 Opponents of increased leasing in the region also express
concern that it would represent a long-term investment in oil and gas as an energy source, which
could slow national efforts to address climate change. They contend, too, that new leasing
opportunities are unnecessary, since industry has pulled back on investing in the Arctic.48 Others
assert, however, that tepid industry interest in the region is due more to the overly demanding
federal regulatory environment than to market conditions.49
Among those favoring expanded leasing in the region are some Alaska Native communities, who
see offshore development as a source of jobs and investment in financially struggling localities.
Other Alaska Native communities have opposed offshore leasing, citing concerns about
environmental threats to subsistence lifestyles. Alaska’s former governor submitted comments on
the DPP supporting sales in Cook Inlet and the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas but opposing sales in
the other Alaska planning areas.50
Atlantic Region
No offshore oil and gas lease sales have occurred in the Atlantic region since 1983, due in part to
congressional bans on Atlantic leasing in annual Interior appropriations acts from FY1983 to
FY2008, along with presidential moratoria on leasing in the region during those years. Starting
with FY2009, Congress no longer included an Atlantic leasing moratorium in appropriations acts.
In 2008, President George W. Bush also removed the long-standing administrative withdrawal for
46 League of Conservation Voters v. Trump, 363 F.Supp.3d 1013 (D.Alaska 2019). Executive Order 13990, “Protecting
Public Health and the Environment and Restoring Science to Tackle the Climate Crisis,” Section 4(b), 86 Federal
Register 7037. Also see CRS Report R41153, Changes in the Arctic: Background and Issues for Congress, coordinated
by Ronald O'Rourke, section on “Oil, Gas, and Mineral Exploration.”
47 For more information, see CRS Report R41153, Changes in the Arctic: Background and Issues for Congress,
coordinated by Ronald O'Rourke, sections on “Oil, Gas, and Mineral Exploration” and “Oil Pollution and Response.”
The Obama Administration issued Arctic offshore drilling regulations that focused on ways in which companies would
need to compensate for the lack of spill-response infrastructure, such as by having a separate rig available at drill sites
to drill a relief well in case of a loss of well control. DOI, “Requirements for Exploratory Drilling on the Arctic Outer
Continental Shelf,” 81 Federal Register 46477, July 15, 2016.
48 For example, the 2017-2022 final program stated that active leases on the Arctic OCS had declined by more than
90% between February 2016 and November 2016, as companies relinquished leases in the face of low oil prices and
Shell Oil Company’s disappointing exploratory drilling effort in the Chukchi Sea in 2015 (2017-2022 PFP, p. S-7).
49 For more information, see CRS Report R41153, Changes in the Arctic: Background and Issues for Congress,
coordinated by Ronald O'Rourke, section on “Oil, Gas, and Mineral Exploration.”
50 Letter from Governor Bill Walker to BOEM, March 9, 2018, at https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=BOEM-
2017-0074-10660.
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the region.51 These changes meant that lease sales could potentially be conducted for the Atlantic.
However, no Atlantic lease sale has taken place in the intervening years.52
Political leaders in the Atlantic states, and stakeholders within each state, disagree about whether
oil and gas drilling should occur in the region.53 Supporters of leasing contend that oil and gas
development would lower energy costs for regional consumers, bring jobs and economic
investment, and strengthen U.S. energy security. Opponents express concerns that oil and gas
development would undermine national and state clean energy goals and that oil spills could
threaten coastal communities. Also of concern for leasing opponents is the potential for oil and
gas activities to damage the tourism and fishing industries in the Atlantic region and to conflict
with military and space-related activities of the Department of Defense and National Aeronautics
and Space Administration (NASA). In recent years, the Atlantic region has been a focus for
BOEM’s offshore wind leasing; some see this as potentially compatible with oil and gas
development, some favor one or the other type of energy for the region, and some oppose both
wind and oil and gas development as conflicting with other uses of the Atlantic.54
The Trump Administration’s DPP proposed nine lease sales for the Atlantic region, including
sales in all Atlantic region planning areas. However, subsequent to publication of the DPP,
President Trump withdrew from leasing consideration, from July 2022 through June 2032, the
waters off of North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida.55 Thus, these areas are no
longer eligible for consideration in the PP or PFP. The PP, while analyzing several options,
proposes no Atlantic lease sales. The PP states that “frontier areas” such as the Atlantic, with no
recent history of leasing, are less certain to yield production benefits than the better-explored Gulf
of Mexico, would require higher-impact infrastructure buildout, and would likely be of lower
interest to industry “under a scenario in which domestic fossil energy needs fall in response to
global decarbonization.”56
Pacific Region
The DPP proposed seven lease sales in the Pacific region, including sales in all of the region’s
planning areas, but the PP proposes no Pacific lease sales. No federal oil and gas lease sales have
been held for the Pacific since 1984, although active leases with production remain in the
Southern California planning area.57 Like the Atlantic region, the Pacific region was subject to
51 President George W. Bush, “Memorandum on Modification of the Withdrawal of Certain Areas of the United States
Outer Continental Shelf from Leasing Disposition,” Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents 44 (July 14, 2008).
52 An Atlantic lease sale (Sale #220) was scheduled in the five-year program for 2007-2012, but it was canceled by
then-Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar following the April 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill. See BOEM, “Virginia
Lease Sale 220 Information,” at https://www.boem.gov/Oil-and-Gas-Energy-Program/Leasing/Regional-Leasing/Gulf-
of-Mexico-Region/Lease-Sales/220/Virginia-Lease-Sale-220-Information.aspx.
53 See, for example, summaries of state comments in the 2019-2024 DPP, pp. A-19 to A-23; and PP, pp. A-10 to A-16.
54 For more information on offshore wind leasing, see CRS Report R46970, Offshore Wind Energy: Federal Leasing,
Permitting, Deployment, and Revenues, by Laura B. Comay and Corrie E. Clark.
55 President Trump withdrawal memorandum, September 8, 2020; and President Donald Trump, “Presidential
Determination on the Withdrawal of Certain Areas of the United States Outer Continental Shelf from Leasing
Disposition,” September 25, 2020, at https://trumpwhitehouse.archives.gov/presidential-actions/presidential-
determination-withdrawal-certain-areas-united-states-outer-continental-shelf-leasing-disposition/.
56 2023-2028 PP, p. 4.
57 A federal oil and natural gas lease is for a specific 5-10 year period, but if a discovery is made within the term of the
lease, the lease is extended for as long as oil and/or natural gas is produced in paying quantities or approved drilling
operations are conducted.
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congressional and presidential leasing moratoria for most of the past 40 years.58 These restrictions
were lifted in FY2009, but no lease sales have since taken place for the Pacific. The governors of
California, Oregon, and Washington have expressed their opposition to new offshore oil and gas
leasing in the region.59 (Administratively, the Pacific region also includes the state of Hawaii, but
Hawaii is not part of the oil and gas leasing program because no known hydrocarbon resources
are present offshore of the state.)
Congressional stakeholders disagree over whether oil and gas leasing should occur in the Pacific.
Members of Congress who favor broad oil and gas leasing across the entire OCS have introduced
legislation in previous Congresses that would have required BOEM to hold sales in the Pacific
region.60 Members concerned about environmental damage from oil and gas activities in the
region have introduced legislation that would permanently prohibit Pacific oil and gas leasing.61
Role of Congress
Congress can influence the Administration’s development and implementation of a five-year
program by submitting public comments during formal comment periods, by evaluating programs
in committee oversight hearings, and, more directly, by enacting legislation with program
requirements.62 Some Members of Congress have pursued these types of influence with respect to
the upcoming five-year program. For example, Members submitted public comments on both the
DPP and a previous request for information (RFI), and the House Natural Resources Committee
held a hearing to examine DOI’s priorities for the program.63
Some Members also have proposed legislative modifications to the five-year program. One
measure, the IRA (P.L. 117-169), has been enacted. As discussed, among other provisions, the
IRA conditions future offshore wind leasing on minimum levels of oil and gas lease sales under
the five-year program and requires that BOEM conduct remaining lease sales from the 2017-2022
program despite the program’s expiration. Other bills in the 117th Congress (H.R. 4334, H.R.
6858, H.R. 7012, H.R. 7094, H.R. 7292, S. 69, S. 3214, S. 3752, S. 3762, S. 4228) would
mandate minimum numbers of oil and gas lease sales in the Gulf of Mexico and/or Alaska regions
(not tied to a wind leasing condition).64 Many of these bills also would require that future five-
year programs be prepared and approved within a time frame that would prevent gaps between
58 Different portions of the Pacific region were subject to different restrictions during this period.
59 See, for example, 2023-2028 PP, pp. A-6 to A-9.
60 See, for example, H.R. 1487 and S. 791 in the 114th Congress.
61 See, for example, H.R. 3927 in the 114th Congress, H.R. 169, H.R. 731, and S. 31 in the 115th Congress, and H.R.
279, H.R. 310, H.R. 1941, and S. 2013 in the 116th Congress. For 117th Congress bills, see the “Role of Congress”
section.
62 Congress also has a role under the OCSLA of reviewing each five-year program once it is finalized, but the OCSLA
does not require that Congress directly approve the final program in order for it to be implemented. Congress could
make changes to the final program during or after the 60-day review period through legislation.
63 For Members’ comments on the DPP, see 2023-2028 PP, pp. A-125 to A-133. For Members’ comments on the RFI,
see 2019-2024 DPP, pp. A-75 to A-77. For the oversight hearing, see House Committee on Natural Resources,
Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources, Evaluating Federal Offshore Oil and Gas Development on the Outer
Continental Shelf, oversight hearing, July 12, 2017, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CHRG-115hhrg26252/pdf/
CHRG-115hhrg26252.pdf.
64 Also see, for example, H.R. 1756 and S. 883 in the 115th Congress, and H.R. 4294 in the 116th Congress. Some
proposals from earlier Congresses would have facilitated additional sales in five-year programs in other ways (e.g., by
making it easier for the Interior Secretary to add new sales to programs or by requiring that the Secretary include in
each program unexecuted lease sales from earlier programs). See, for example, H.R. 4239 and S. 665 in the 115th
Congress.
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programs. H.R. 1325 would allow state governors to nominate areas for inclusion in a five-year
leasing program; and H.R. 543, H.R. 859, H.R. 4266, H.R. 4344, S. 76, S. 3752, S. 3762, and
others would facilitate wider options for leasing by restricting the President’s authority to
withdraw areas from leasing consideration. By contrast, other bills in the 117th Congress—H.R.
455, H.R. 544, H.R. 569, H.R. 653, H.R. 2519, H.R. 2836, H.R. 3048, H.R. 3053, H.R. 3116,
H.R. 3764, H.R. 5376, H.R. 5707, S. 58, S. 1115, and S. 1851—would establish new moratoria or
extend existing moratoria, thus curtailing leasing options in the upcoming program and future
five-year programs. Some of these bills would permanently prohibit leasing in large areas, such as
throughout the Pacific and Atlantic regions or throughout the entire OCS.
Either during development or after final publication of the upcoming program, Congress could
affect the program by pursuing bills such as these or other legislation. Alternatively, Congress
could choose not to intervene, allowing the new program to proceed as developed by BOEM.
Author Information
Laura B. Comay
Specialist in Natural Resources Policy
Disclaimer
This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan
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under the direction of Congress. Information in a CRS Report should not be relied upon for purposes other
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