Interior Department Debunks White House’s '9,000 Permits' Claim
Amanda Eversole
Posted March 1, 2023
Background: For nearly a year, the Biden administration has attempted to redirect scrutiny over its slow-walking of federal oil and natural gas leases by chastising U.S. producers for leaving 9,000 permits to drill on federal lands untapped.
White House Claim: "There are 9,000 unused approved drilling permits," former White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki told reporters last March. "So I would suggest you ask the oil companies why they're not using those, if there's a desire to drill more."
The Facts: While it was already established that this claim is misleading, new reporting reveals that the underlying number isn’t even accurate. According to E&E News in a story published yesterday:
- … President Joe Biden over the past year has stressed that companies hold 9,000 permits to drill on public lands sitting unused.
- Turns out that’s wrong.
- The Bureau of Land Management, which oversees oil and gas development on federal lands, updated its tally in an end-of-the-year report that shows that figure instead should have been much less, standing at about 6,600 untapped permits as of this month.
For Perspective: Doug Ackerman, president of the New Mexico Oil and Gas Association, said it takes upwards of 12 months to get the 30-50 permits required to drill a single well during a House Natural Resources subcommittee hearing earlier this month.
Meanwhile: It’s been 242 days since the Department of the Interior allowed the five-year offshore leasing program to expire and the administration held just one quarterly lease sale in 2022 after not holding any in 2021, as required by law.
Quotable: Reacting to this news, Frank Macchiarola, API’s senior vice president of policy, economics and regulatory affairs, said:
“Despite the administration’s inaccurate and misleading numbers, the reality is that the U.S. natural gas and oil industry is confronting the global energy crisis by continuing to work to meet the energy needs of U.S. consumers and our allies abroad. It is time for the administration to end the finger-pointing and instead support American production with a comprehensive strategy for American energy development – one that includes a final five-year program for offshore leasing and quarterly onshore lease sales.”
About The Author
Amanda Eversole is API’s executive vice president and chief advocacy officer, and leads efforts to integrate API’s diverse functions and develop and implement a strategic plan. Eversole came to API from JPMorgan Chase & Co., where she was managing director and head of public affairs, building the organization’s public affairs function and creating the framework for the firm’s philanthropic activities. Prior to JPMorgan Chase & Co., she served in a number of leadership positions at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, including president of C_TEC, the Chamber Technology Engagement Center. Before joining the U.S. Chamber, she worked for RTC Relationship Marketing in business development. Eversole graduated cum laude from the College of William & Mary with a bachelor of business administration and a minor in French, and she earned an M.B.A. from the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School where she was a Palmer Scholar and graduated first in her class. She serves on the Board of Directors of Our Energy Policy. She lives in Virginia with her husband, their two daughters and their dog, Gus.