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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Kevin Crowley and Laura Litvan

Biden wants oil companies to pay penalties on unused drilling leases

U.S. President Joe Biden wants oil drillers to pay penalties when federal leases go unused in an effort to prod the industry into pumping more.

The White House will call on Congress to “make companies pay fees on wells from their leases that they haven’t used in years and on acres of public lands that they are hoarding without producing,” the administration said in a statement Thursday. “Companies that are producing from their leased acres and existing wells will not face higher fees.”

The proposal threatens to widen the gap between Biden and oil explorers who say his administration’s anti-fossil fuel agenda is partly responsibly for chilling investment in new oil wells. The White House has pushed back, saying the companies are plowing the windfall from $100-a-barrel crude into shareholder dividends and buybacks rather than new drilling that would help tamp down sky-high gasoline prices.

The idea got a powerful backer Thursday. Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, a staunch defender of fossil fuels and a key vote in the chamber, said that leasing fees are too low and he would be open to raising them.

“You can hold the lease for almost nothing from the federal government,” Manchin told reporters. “You can’t do it in the private sector. Just make them comparable.”

U.S. oilfields are pumping about 11.7 million barrels a day, about 10% lower than they were prior to the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, despite the doubling in domestic crude prices since the beginning of 2021.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki has faulted oil producers for sitting on 9,000 approved-but-unused permits on leased federal lands. The industry’s defense is not every tract is a viable drilling target and that other White House moves like canceling the Keystone XL pipeline have made executives and investors wary about putting money at risk in new projects.

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