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The
NewsRoom
Release: #3214
Date: August 8, 2005
Unrestricted RIK Crude Oil Sale Draws Strong Bids
DENVER - More than 97,000 barrels a day of Royalty
in Kind crude oil from the Gulf of Mexico has been sold to six
companies as part of an unrestricted sale conducted by the Department
of the Interior’s Minerals Management Service.
The contracts announced today, for a total of 97,265
barrels per day, are for six-month terms with delivery scheduled to
begin Oct. 1, 2005. Winning bidders include Chevron Products Company,
ExxonMobil Oil Corp., Morgan Stanley Capital Group Inc., Sempra Energy
Trading, Shell Trading Company, and Plains Marketing.
Included in this sale was RIK oil that had
previously been exchanged as part of recent efforts to fill the
Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) to its 700-million-barrel capacity.
MMS completed its last exchanges as part of the administration’s SPR
fill initiative in July, freeing up a portion of that oil for the
unrestricted sale. The sale also included production from leases
within the 8(g) zone offshore the State of Louisiana, which joined MMS
through a Memorandum of Understanding in a joint state-federal
partnership.
While a total of 98,585 barrels per day were offered
in this sale, bids on a small portion of the oil were not accepted
after it was determined that a better return for taxpayers could be
achieved by taking the royalties in value (as cash payments).
The oil sold in the unrestricted sale involves an
aggregation of crude oil royalties taken “in kind,” in the form of
oil, rather than in value or cash payments, from offshore Federal
leases in the Gulf of Mexico. The oil is then competitively sold in
the open marketplace. The RIK program, in its first full year as an
operational program following earlier pilot programs, aims to improve
government efficiencies, reduce regulatory costs and reporting
requirements, shorten the compliance cycle, and return a fair value on
the public’s royalty assets.
MMS, part of the U.S. Department of the Interior,
oversees 1.76 billion acres of the Outer Continental Shelf, managing
offshore energy and minerals while protecting the human, marine, and
coastal environments. The OCS provides 30 percent of oil and 21
percent of natural gas produced domestically, and sand used for
coastal restoration. MMS collects, accounts for, and disburses mineral
revenues from Federal and American Indian lands, and contributes to
the Land and Water Conservation Fund and other special use funds, with
Fiscal Year 2004 disbursements of approximately $8 billion and more
than $143 billion since 1982.
Relevant Web Sites:
MMS Main Website
Media Contacts:
Patrick Etchart (303)
231-3162
MMS: Securing Ocean Energy & Economic Value for
America
U.S. Department of the Interior
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