Posted on 06/20/2008 3:16:28 PM PDT by kellynla
A bill introduced in Congress this week would "compel" oil and natural gas companies to produce from federal lands they are leasing. If only it were that easy to find and produce oil. Imagine, an act of Congress that could do what geology could not.
These lawmakers ask why oil and gas companies want more access to federal lands to drill if they aren't using all of the 68 million acres they already have? Anyone with even the most basic understanding of how oil and natural gas are produced and this should include many members of Congress knows that claims of "idle" leases are a diversionary feint.
A company bids for and buys a lease because it believes there is a possibility that it may yield enough oil or natural gas to make the cost of the lease, and the costs of exploration and production, commercially viable. The U.S. government received $3.7 billion from company bids in a single lease sale in March 2008.
However, until the actual exploration is complete, a company does not know whether the lease will be productive. If, through exploration, it finds there is no oil or natural gas underneath a lease or that there is not enough to justify the tremendous investment required to bring it to the surface the company cuts its losses by moving on to more promising leases. Yet it continues to pay rent on the lease, atop a leasing bonus fee.
In addition, if the company does not develop the lease within a certain period of time, it must return it to the federal government, forfeiting all its costs. All during this active exploration and evaluation phase, however, the lease is listed as "nonproducing."
(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...
ping
Yes, the new buzzword/phrase (besides “Drilling now wouldn’t change anything”) is “68 MILLION ACRES!!!! that the oil companies are ignoring—they should develop all those places first—there’s no need to drill in places like ANWR or off of Florida or California!!”
Neal Cavuto highlighted this on his show today.
The Democrats and the MSM make it sound like all of the current leased land definitely has significant amounts of oil, and that all they have to do is start drilling tomorrow. There are a lot of costs and activities such as geologic studies of the land involved with drilling an oil well. And then once they drill, it may come up dry.
The Dems. over simplify this whole energy debate. They are so in love with solar panels and windmills (except those that block Ted Kennedy’s ocean view) that they really want to obstruct further development of our own energy resources.
Congressman Dumbshjt: Drill 'em anyway, and be certain, before we open up any more leases to you.
I saw a Dem on TV yesterday insisting that the oil companies weren’t drilling what they already leased. I guess their knowlege about oil exploration is lacking because why would you try to compell a company to drill where there is no oil?
That sure sounds like an 'obscene profit by the government to me.
I got a letter from Senator Bill Nelson (Socialist-FL) today, saying the same thing. He is trying to divert the blame for failure to utilize our domestic resources away from Congress. He says the oil companies fail to utilize the areas they are currently allowed to drill in, and that the main cause of high oil and gas prices are speculators. He says Congress should rein in the speculators. Apparently he wants to ignore the fact that prices are up due to worldwide demand exceeding supply available on the market. He says Congress is considering new legislation to rein in speculators. Perhaps he thinks Congress can pass laws which regulate traders in foreign countries? He says that President Bush’s proposal to lift the ban on offshore drilling is too little too late, saying it will take decades to get oil. Well, if Congress had not been obstructing the use of domestic energy for the past 30 years, we would now be far less dependent on foreign oil. If Congress had not made the construction of nuclear power plants next to impossible, we would be far less dependent on foreign oil. France currently generates most of its electricity with nuclear plants, but in the US we only generate about 20% with nuclear. Congress is the main reason we are in the current mess.
Ping
Heres a great idea that Ive been suggesting to people I meet at the gas pump:
Three easy steps to energy independence.
1. Make a list of prominent environmentalists, the entire Sierra Club, Green Peace and all congressmen/senators who have voted against domestic oil production.
2. Pick one from the list at random.
3. Hang one a day in a public place until the limits are removed from domestic oil production.
That should get their attention.
I do exactly that, maybe not in the same version as youstated.. but I have copied off a lot and put them in lots of places... and put them in pre paid envelopes..and I bought some stick up notes and write on them to put on the gas pump, so the next person sees them when they pump gas..
The more these leftist loonies talk about this, the more idiotic they make themselves appear. Do they not think that your average guy understands that you can’t pump oil out of land that has no oil under it?
Keep talkin’ Dems. You’re just digging yourself a deeper grave.
Let me just say that if you weren’t planning to vote for McCain because you did not think he was any different from the Dems, then this issue ought to persuade you otherwise. And if you are still not persuaded, then you should seriously examine whether you’re really a conservative.
I heard this discovery being discussed today on talk radio. The secret is now common knowledge. Maybe it will even be discussed on the floor of Congress. The cat's out of the bag now.
Sorry to extract a portion of your sentence construction since that might miss the intent of the sentence. But, the article says that the leases need to be explored and if they turn up commercial quantities they would be developed; otherwise the land is worthless but the oil company owns the lease anyway. Congress doesn't know if oil/gas is present on those leases when they offer them for sale.
Exactly why we should have term limits. With each term they get re-elected to, many of these Congress critters develop an increasing sense of omnipotence. It's scary to think that many of them actually BELIEVE they can legislate "solutions" to problems, either real or perceived.
The other big lie... we shouldn’t drill in ANWR (or anywhere) because it will be 10 years before we see any oil. Thats like saying we are hungry now, but we should not waste time planting seeds because we will not be able to harvest a crop until Fall.
Oh, yes! That’s all I’ve heard the past few days, that damn 68 MILLION ACRES!!! The idiots all stare at the camera like they’re Stepford wives, droning on and on about the blasted 68 million acres. Geez, they’re so STUPID!!!!!!!!!!!! Not an original thought, phrase, or the truth for that matter, ever comes out of their sorry mouths.
Like the article said, that depends on if there is proven (recoverable) oil there. If there is, then fine, go get it. If there isn’t, then they’ve got to go elsewhere.
Just between us chickens, though, I imagine as soon as they find it and set up shop to go get it, that someone will file an environmental lawsuit about the endangered medium light brown earthworm.
Cavuto had some oil company exec or expert on today who said that a good majority of those acres ARE being explored but do not have the promise already shown by ANWR, etc. He also showed a boatload of demmies using the phrase “68 MILLION ACRES!!!” like that explains why it’s okay for them to screw the average consumer by not allowing drilling in the most promising places.
Haven’t heard a Dem being right about anything if he is in office above local level. Not for many years anyway.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.