LMOGA urges president to act to support the offshore industry

April 10, 2020
In a letter sent to President Donald Trump on April 2, the Louisiana Mid-Continent Oil & Gas Association urged the administration to take action to protect the offshore industry in the Gulf of Mexico.

Offshore staff

BATON ROUGE, Louisiana – In a letter sent to President Donald Trump on April 2, the Louisiana Mid-Continent Oil & Gas Association (LMOGA) urged the administration to take action to protect the offshore industry in the Gulf of Mexico.

The letter outlines targeted actions to support the survival of offshore energy during this crisis.

Suggested actions include royalty relief, lease term extensions, an extension of decommissioning obligations, and protection of critical inactive infrastructure as a result of storage capacity limits.

The association said it supports royalty suspension or reduction on production associated with federal leases as a temporary emergency measure that reflects certain economic environments and acknowledges price conditions and thresholds. The circumstances of today call for immediate action to reduce or suspend royalty rates for all producers alike. These actions will ensure that a robust industry remains viable to meet energy demands during this crisis and beyond and continue to strengthen national security.

“Our American ingenuity built the energy renaissance our country has enjoyed, and we firmly believe our industry is resilient and will recover from these current crises,” said Tyler Gray, LMOGA President. “However, we find ourselves in a circumstance where there is a need for urgent and bold action.”

LMOGA also recommends a three-year extension of the primary lease term of non-producing federal oil and gas leases in the Gulf of Mexico to allow companies and others across the federal outer continental shelf to better map out their spending and work plans for the years ahead and preserve cash to maintain liquidity in the short term. Granting an extension or providing additional flexibility in decommissioning obligations associated with current and expired offshore leases will also be beneficial to operating companies in the Gulf.

Lastly, global crude oil oversupply will test storage limits in the first half of 2020. If left unattended, production could be forced to shut-in within a few short weeks. The association said it is urging the administration to consider appropriate mechanisms to ensure critical inactive infrastructure is protected in the event production is shut-in.

04/10/2020

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