Your current location is:{Current column} >>Text
U.S. offshore oil auction begins under court order, shadow of climate deal By Reuters
{Current column}3People have watched
Introduction© Reuters. U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks on infrastructure construction projects from th ...

By Nichola Groom
(Reuters) -The Biden administration on Wednesday kicked off an auction of oil drilling rights to 80 million acres in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico days after joining a global agreement that for the first time targeted fossil fuels as the main driver of global warming.
The sale by the Department of Interior is the first under President Joe Biden, whose administration paused drilling sales under a promise to end development on federal properties. But Biden lost a court fight to oil-producing states that sued to reinstate the sales.
Sale statistics released by the administration early on Wednesday indicated higher interest in drilling tracts from oil and gas companies than in recent government sales.
Interior said 307 tracts received bids from 29 companies. At the department's last Gulf lease sale a year ago, 93 tracts received bids from 23 companies.
The auction was being live-streamed early on Wednesday, and early bidders included Exxon Mobil Corp (NYSE:XOM), BP (NYSE:BP) Plc, Royal Dutch Shell (LON:RDSa) Plc and Talos Energy (NYSE:TALO) Inc.
The administration has appealed and a suit by environmental groups seeking to halt the sale is pending. The U.S. is moving ahead to hold onshore lease auctions in several states early next year.
Interior's Bureau of Ocean Energy Management was auctioning almost all available unleased Gulf of Mexico blocks, 80 million acres, at a live-streamed event on Wednesday morning.
It is the first opportunity to test the oil and gas industry's demand for Gulf acreage with energy prices at multi-year highs. U.S. crude futures on Tuesday settled at $80.76 a barrel, up 95% in the last 12 months.
The Trump administration's final Gulf sale, held last November, generated a modest $121 million in high bids. But oil companies Shell, BP and Chevron (NYSE:CVX) are seizing on the higher prices to advance offshore projects.
Despite the court-ordered resumption of auctions, Interior spokesperson Melissa Schwartz said the agency was "conducting a more comprehensive analysis of greenhouse gas impacts from potential oil and gas lease sales than ever before."
Environmentalists called for Biden to halt the sale via executive order. "Biden has the authority to stop this, but instead he’s casting his lot in with the fossil fuel industry," said Kristen Monsell, senior attorney for the Center for Biological Diversity.
Statement: The content of this article does not represent the views of FTI website. The content is for reference only and does not constitute investment suggestions. Investment is risky, so you should be careful in your choice! If it involves content, copyright and other issues, please contact us and we will make adjustments at the first time!
Tags:
Related articles
13F Insights: Buffett, Burry Buy Up Financials; Ackman Targets Discretionaries
{Current column}, and slowing . Source: InvestingPro, Top Ideas Screen: ), 850,000 shares in New York Community Banc ...
Read moreEuropean stock futures edge lower; central banks in focus By
{Current column}- European stock markets are expected to open marginally lower Tuesday, as investors fret about slow ...
Read moreAsia stocks subdued after Powell testimony fails to surprise By Reuters
{Current column}By Ankur BanerjeeSINGAPORE (Reuters) - Asian shares made a tentative start to Thursday after Federal ...
Read more
Popular Articles
- Bank of America hikes year
- Google, one of AI’s biggest backers, warns own staff about chatbots By Reuters
- European shares fall on real estate drag, UK stocks slide after CPI data By Reuters
- Natural gas holds to big June gain as another storage data release looms By
- Mitsubishi Motors to extend suspension of production in China
- JLR taps Everstream Analytics' AI to dodge supply chain problems By Reuters
Latest articles
-
Philippines' finance minister says no reason for rate hike By Reuters
-
Gold treads water before more Fed cues, copper sees profit taking By
-
JPMorgan's Jamie Dimon to meet with group of US House Democrats
-
Crude oil edges higher; Powell testimony, inventories data due By
-
Oil broadly steady amid OPEC+ supply cut uncertainty, demand worries By Reuters
-
European stocks drift lower; seeking direction ahead of central bank meetings By