Aug 9: The   Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has issued a report analyzing a proposal   requested by the Chairman of the House Budget Committee, and now Mitt Romney's   Vice Presidential running mate, Paul Ryan (R-WI) -- to immediately   open most Federal lands to oil and gas leasing. CBO indicates that the proposal   would open two categories of property now unavailable for development: (1) lands   where leasing is statutorily prohibited, notably, the Arctic National Wildlife   Refuge (ANWR); and (2) onshore and offshore areas that are closed to leasing   under current administrative policies, including sections of the Outer   Continental Shelf (OCS) and certain onshore areas in which oil and gas leasing   is either restricted or temporarily prohibited. CBO estimates that about 70   percent of undiscovered oil and gas resources on federal lands are available for   leasing under current laws and administrative policies.  CBO expects that opening ANWR to   development would: 
      - Yield about $5 billion in additional     receipts over the next 10 years, primarily in the form of bonus payments made     by private firms for the opportunity to explore for and develop resources in     particular areas.     
- Increase royalties by roughly $2     billion to $4 billion a year during the 20232035 period if oil and natural     gas eventually were produced from those lands. Those estimates are quite     uncertain.     
- Provide the state of Alaska between     50 percent and 90 percent of those federal receipts if the specifications in     the authorizing legislation were similar to those in recent legislation.     
    CBO anticipates that   new legislation directing the Department of the Interior to immediately offer   most other federal lands for oil and gas leasing without any restrictions would   accelerate the collection of around $2 billion of future leasing receipts into   the next decade. Most of that revenue would come from OCS leases, and a portion   of the proceeds would be shared with state governments. CBO expects that state   and local policies toward resource development, particularly in California, will   play a major role in determining whether or when those resources are developed.   
      CBO also   estimates that under current laws and policies, the government's gross proceeds   from all federal oil and gas leases on public lands will total about $150   billion over the next decade, 20122022. Neither Representative Ryan, or Budget   Committee Ranking Member Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) responded to the report.   An LA Times article on the report indicated that the CBO estimate of opening   ANWR, parts of the Atlantic, Pacific and Florida coasts together would yield $7   billion over the next decade -- "less than 5% of the $150 billion the federal   budget already stands to get over that period from oil and gas leases on federal   land already open to drilling."    
   
        Access a summary from CBO (click here). Access the   complete 9-page CBO analysis (click   here). Access the LA Times article(click   here). [#Energy/OilGas]    
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