U.S. Shale Gas and Federal Lands
Updated February 24, 2026 (IG10049)

Summary

U.S. Shale Gas and Onshore Federal Lands

The United States has been the largest producer of natural gas since the advent of shale gas development in the early 2000s. Shale gas production has mostly taken place on private lands, with the largest contribution coming from the Marcellus Shale in Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Ohio. Of the top five states for natural gas production and revenue generation from federal lands, only New Mexico is also among the top five producers of gas overall. Given that most of the rise in U.S. production has been on private lands, federal revenues from natural gas have not increased as rapidly as gas production on nonfederal lands.

Most shale formations are not on federal lands

Onshore federal lands

Current shale play

Prospective shale play

Includes onshore surface acres of federal land administered by federal land management agencies (Bureau of Land Management, Fish and Wildlife Service, Forest Service, National Park Service) in the 50 states and the District of Columbia. This excludes Department of Defense, Bureau of Reclamation, and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers lands and other lands administered by other federal agencies. Excludes Tribal lands.

62%

Shale gas production is 81% of overall U.S. gross production

Plays that overlap are at different geologic depths

2024 U.S. Total

Top 5 States % Total US

Top 5 States

Rest of U.S. onshore

Total Gross Natural Gas Production*1

43,564 bcf

69%

TX 12,918

PA 7,422

LA 3,609

NM 3,625

WV 3,418

Rest of US 12,580

Natural Gas Production on Federal Lands1

4,160 bcf

96%

bcf

NM 2,297

WY 973

CO 456

UT 145

ND 136

US 153

Production on Federal Lands as % of Total Gross Production, by State 10%3

WY 72%

NM 64%

UT 45%

CO 25%

MO 18%

US <1%

U.S. Federal Natural Gas Revenue1

$1.4 billion

96%

$ in millions

NM $876

WY $270

CO $72

UT $57

ND $48

US $49

Western states account for most natural gas production and revenues on federal lands. Data are from 2024, the latest year of available data for all categories. Data from these four graphs are for natural gas from all sources, including shale and non-shale.

bcf = billion cubic feet

*Gross production = Full well-stream volume, including all natural gas plant liquids and all nonhydrocarbon gases, but excluding lease condensate. Also includes amounts delivered as royalty payments or consumed in field operations.

Notes: 1. U.S. Energy Information Administration, Natural Gas Gross Withdrawals and Production, Natural Gas Gross Withdrawals (eia.gov). 2. Office of Natural Resources Revenue (ONRR), Query Natural Resources Revenue Data (revenuedata.doi.gov). Excludes Tribal lands. 3. In 2024, production of natural gas on federal lands accounted for 10% of total U.S. gross natural gas production. Map geography created by CRS using data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration, U.S. Geological Survey, and ESRI. Information as of February 23, 2026. Prepared by Michael Ratner, Specialist in Energy Policy; Lexie Ryan, Analyst in Energy Policy; Mari Lee, Visual Information Specialist; and Molly Cox, Geospatial Information Systems Analyst.