98-843. Royalty Relief for New Leases in Deep Water  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 11 (Friday, January 16, 1998)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 2626-2630]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-843]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
    
    Minerals Management Service
    
    30 CFR Part 260
    
    RIN 1010-AC14
    
    
    Royalty Relief for New Leases in Deep Water
    
    AGENCY: Minerals Management Service (MMS), Interior.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Secretary of the Interior is authorized to offer Outer 
    Continental Shelf (OCS) tracts in parts of the Gulf of Mexico for lease 
    with suspension of royalties for a volume, value, or period of 
    production. This applies to tracts in water depths of 200 meters or 
    more. This final rule specifies the royalty-suspension terms for lease 
    sales using this bidding system.
    
    DATES: This final rule is effective February 17, 1998.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Walter Cruickshank, Chief, Washington 
    Division, Office of Policy and Management Improvement, at (202) 208-
    3822.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Background
    
    Legislative
    
        On November 28, 1995, President Clinton signed Public Law 104-58, 
    which included the Outer Continental Shelf Deep Water Royalty Relief 
    Act (``Act''). The Act contains four major provisions concerning new 
    and existing leases. New leases are tracts leased during a sale held 
    after the Act's enactment on November 28, 1995. Existing leases are all 
    other leases.
        First, section 302 of the Act clarifies the Secretary's authority 
    in 43 U.S.C. 1337(a)(3) to reduce royalty rates on existing leases to 
    promote development, increase production, and encourage production of 
    marginal resources on
    
    [[Page 2627]]
    
    producing or non-producing leases. This provision applies only to 
    leases in the Gulf of Mexico west of 87 degrees, 30 minutes West 
    longitude.
        Second, section 302 also provides that ``new production'' from 
    existing leases in deep water (water at least 200 meters deep) 
    qualifies for royalty suspensions if the Secretary determines that the 
    new production would not be economic without royalty relief. The Act 
    defines ``new production'' as production (1) From a lease from which no 
    royalties are due on production, other than test production, before the 
    date of the enactment of the Outer Continental Shelf Deep Water Royalty 
    Relief Act; or (2) resulting from lease development activities under a 
    Development Operations Coordination Document (DOCD), or supplement 
    thereto that would expand production significantly beyond the level 
    anticipated in the DOCD approved by the Secretary after the date of the 
    Act. The Secretary must determine the appropriate royalty-suspension 
    volume on a case-by-case basis, subject to specified minimums for 
    leases not in production before the date of enactment. This provision 
    also applies only to leases in the Gulf of Mexico west of 87 degrees, 
    30 minutes West longitude.
        Third, section 303 establishes a new bidding system that allows the 
    Secretary to offer tracts with royalty suspensions for a period, 
    volume, or value the Secretary determines.
        Fourth, section 304 provides that all tracts offered within 5 years 
    of the date of enactment in deep water (water at least 200 meters deep) 
    in the Gulf of Mexico west of 87 degrees, 30 minutes West longitude, 
    must be offered under the new bidding system. The following minimum 
    volumes of production are not subject to a royalty obligation:
         17.5 million barrels of oil equivalent (MMBOE) for leases 
    in 200 to 400 meters of water;
         52.5 MMBOE for leases in 400 to 800 meters of water; and
         87.5 MMBOE for leases in more than 800 meters.
    
    Regulatory
    
        On February 2, 1996, we published a final rule modifying the 
    regulations governing the bidding systems we use to offer OCS tracts 
    for lease (61 FR 3800). New Sec. 260.110(a)(7) implements the new 
    bidding system under section 303 of the Act.
        We published an advance notice of proposed rulemaking (ANPR) in the 
    Federal Register on February 23, 1996 (61 FR 6958), and informed the 
    public of our intent to develop comprehensive regulations implementing 
    the Act. The ANPR sought comments and recommendations to assist us in 
    that process. In addition, we conducted a public meeting in New Orleans 
    on March 12-13, 1996, about the matters the ANPR addressed.
        On March 25, 1996, we published an interim final rule in the 
    Federal Register (61 FR 12022) specifying the royalty-suspension terms 
    under which the Secretary would make tracts available under the bidding 
    system requirements of sections 303 and 304 of the Act. We issued an 
    interim final rule, in part, because we needed royalty relief rules in 
    place before the lease sale held on April 24, 1996. However, in the 
    interim final rule we asked for comments on any of the provisions and 
    stated that we would consider those comments and issue a final rule. 
    This final rule now modifies some of the provisions in the March 25, 
    1996, interim final rule.
        On May 31, 1996, we published another interim final rule in the 
    Federal Register (61 FR 27263) implementing section 302 of the Act. The 
    interim final rule established the terms and conditions under which the 
    Minerals Management Service (MMS) would suspend royalty payments on 
    certain deep water leases issued as a result of a lease sale held 
    before November 28, 1995. (The rule also contained provisions dealing 
    with royalty relief on producing leases under the authority granted the 
    Secretary by the OCS Lands Act.) We again asked for comments that we 
    would consider before issuing a final rule.
        Simultaneous with the publication of this rule, we are issuing 
    another final rule (RIN 1010-AC13) to replace the interim final rule 
    implementing section 302 of the Act. The final rule will revise 30 CFR 
    203 to establish conditions for suspension of royalty payments on 
    certain deep water leases issued as a result of lease sales held before 
    November 28, 1995.
    
    II. Responses to Comments
    
        One respondent--Exxon Exploration Company (Exxon)--submitted 
    comments on the Interim Final Rule for Deep Water Royalty Relief for 
    New Leases, issued March 25, 1996.
        Exxon disagreed with our definition of the term ``Field'' 
    (Sec. 260.102). Exxon said that our definition could be applied in such 
    a way as to place unrelated and widely separated reservoirs within the 
    same field. Exxon offered an alternative definition that it said 
    provides for the creation of fields based on geology by allowing the 
    inclusion of separate reservoirs in the same field when there is a 
    meaningful geologic relationship between those reservoirs and avoids 
    inclusion of reservoirs when such a relationship does not exist.
        Exxon offered this alternative definition:
    
        ``Field means an area consisting of a single hydrocarbon 
    reservoir or multiple hydrocarbon reservoirs all grouped on or 
    related to same local geologic feature or stratigraphic trapping 
    condition. There may be two or more reservoirs in a field that are 
    separated vertically by intervening impervious strata. Separate 
    reservoirs would be considered to constitute separate fields if 
    significant lateral separation exists and/or they are controlled by 
    separate trapping mechanisms. Reservoirs vertically separated by a 
    significant interval of nonproductive strata may be considered as 
    separate fields when their reservoir quality, fluid content, drive 
    mechanisms, and trapping mechanisms are sufficiently different to 
    support such a determination.''
    
        Except for a minor editorial change, we have decided to leave the 
    definition of ``Field'' unchanged from the interim final rule for the 
    following reasons:
         The definition in the interim final rule is similar to, or 
    consistent with, standard definitions used in industry and government, 
    including the American Petroleum Institute, the National Petroleum 
    Council, and the Department of Energy's Energy Information 
    Administration.
         We do not segregate reservoirs vertically since the 
    reservoirs are developed from the same platforms and use the same 
    infrastructure. Affected lessees/operators typically make development 
    decisions based on a primary objective(s) knowing that secondary 
    targets exist which they will pursue subsequently.
         Reservoir quality, fluid content, and drive mechanisms are 
    not appropriate determinants for field designations. These factors are 
    reservoir performance/recovery issues. Indeed, such information is 
    rarely available to MMS at the time field determinations are made. We 
    have not considered these factors in our past field designations and 
    their inclusion now would complicate the process significantly and lead 
    to too much subjectivity.
         Elements of the alternative definition, e.g., ``a 
    significant interval of nonproductive strata'' and ``significant 
    lateral separation'' would be difficult to define and even more 
    difficult to apply consistently.
        We recognize industry's concerns about field designations. This 
    rule establishes, as discussed below, a process whereby lessees may 
    appeal field designations to the Director, MMS.
        Other steps include:
         The MMS Field Naming Handbook, which explains our 
    methodology for
    
    [[Page 2628]]
    
    designating fields, is available on the Internet (www.mms.gov). The 
    Gulf of Mexico Region will entertain suggestions for improvements in 
    the methodology.
         We will elevate the level at which we make field 
    definition decisions in the Gulf of Mexico Region. The Chief, Reserves 
    Section, Office of Resource Evaluation, will make these determinations 
    after a lease has a well into the field qualified as producible.
         As part of the field designation process, affected 
    lessees/operators will have the chance to review and discuss the field 
    designation with Gulf of Mexico Region personnel before MMS makes a 
    final decision.
    
    III. Summary of Modifications to the Interim Final Rule
    
        As discussed below, we have modified the interim final rule to:
         Allow for appeals of field designations;
         Clarify when the cumulative royalty-suspension volume 
    ends;
         Describe how MMS will establish and allocate royalty-
    suspension volume in fields that have a combination of eligible leases 
    and leases that are granted a royalty-suspension volume under section 
    302 of the Act; and
         Eliminate the reference to a pressure base standard in the 
    provision for the conversion of natural gas to oil equivalency 
    (Sec. 260.110(d)(14)). The rule now indicates you must measure that 
    natural gas in accordance with the procedures set forth in 30 CFR 250, 
    subpart L.
        1. We have added a new provision (Sec. 260.110(d)(2)) establishing 
    that you or any other affected lessees may appeal to the Director the 
    decision designating your lease as part of a field. The Director's 
    decision is a final agency action subject to judicial review.
        2. The preamble to the interim final rule indicated that a royalty-
    suspension volume would continue until the end of the month in which 
    cumulative production from eligible leases in the field reached the 
    royalty-suspension volume for the field. The interim final rule itself 
    did not include this provision. This final rule now includes a 
    provision (Sec. 260.110(d)(10)) that a royalty-suspension volume will 
    continue through the end of the month in which cumulative production 
    from leases in the field entitled to share the royalty-suspension 
    volume reaches that volume. The purpose of this provision is to avoid 
    the complications that would occur for royalty payors if the royalty 
    rate changed in the middle of the month.
        3. We have modified Sec. 260.110(d)(9) and added a new 
    Sec. 260.110(d)(10) to describe how MMS will establish and allocate 
    royalty-suspension volumes in fields having a combination of pre-Act 
    and eligible leases. (Pre-Act leases are defined as OCS leases issued 
    as a result of a sale held before November 28, 1995; in a water depth 
    of at least 200 meters; and in the Gulf of Mexico west of 87 degrees, 
    30 minutes West longitude. See 30 CFR 203.60 through 203.80). The 
    provisions are necessary to account for and ensure consistency with the 
    deep water royalty relief rules for pre-Act leases (Sec. 203.60). We 
    published the interim final rule for pre-Act leases on May 31, 1996 (61 
    FR 27263), after publication of the interim final rule for new leases 
    in deep water on March 25, 1996.
        We have added wording in Sec. 260.110(d)(9) for cases where an 
    eligible lease is added to a field that includes pre-Act leases granted 
    a royalty-suspension volume under section 302 of the Act. This rule 
    provides that the addition of the eligible lease will not change the 
    field's established royalty-suspension volume. The added lease(s) may 
    share in the suspension volume even if the volume is more than the 
    eligible lease would qualify for based on its water depth.
        The new Sec. 260.110(d)(10) describes a case where pre-Act leases 
    in a field that includes eligible leases apply for and receive a 
    royalty-suspension volume larger than the suspension volume established 
    for the field by the eligible leases. This rule provides that the 
    eligible leases may share in the larger suspension volume to the extent 
    of their actual production until cumulative production by all lessees 
    equals the royalty-suspension volume.
        4. This final rule states that lessees must measure natural gas in 
    accordance with 30 CFR 250, Subpart L. We have eliminated the specific 
    measurement procedures from the interim final rule because a 
    forthcoming final rule will change those procedures.
    
    IV. Administrative Matters
    
    Executive Order (E.O.) 12866
    
        This rule is a significant rule under E.O. 12866 due to novel 
    policy issues arising out of legal mandates. You may obtain a copy of 
    the determination from MMS. The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) 
    has reviewed this rule.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        The Department of the Interior (DOI) has determined that the 
    primary impact of this rule, i.e., royalty relief to spur deep water 
    oil and gas development, may have a significant effect on small 
    entities although we can't estimate their number at this time. The 
    number of small entities affected will depend on how many of them 
    acquire leases that meet the statutory and regulatory criteria for 
    royalty relief at lease sales between November 28, 1995, and November 
    28, 2000.
        Exploration and development activities in the deep water areas of 
    the Gulf of Mexico have traditionally been conducted by the major oil 
    companies because of the expertise and financial resources required. 
    ``Small entities'' (classified by the Small Business Administration as 
    oil and gas producers with fewer than 500 employees) are increasingly 
    active on the OCS, including in deep water, and we expect that trend to 
    continue. The only firm to whom we have granted royalty relief so far 
    under section 302 of the Act is a small entity.
        In any case, this rule will have positive impacts on OCS oil and 
    gas companies, large or small. Royalty relief in the form of a royalty-
    suspension volume is automatically established for leases that meet the 
    statutory and regulatory criteria. No applications or special reports 
    are necessary.
        The beneficial effect of this relief on companies' financial 
    operations will be substantial. Once we determine that a lease is 
    eligible for a royalty-suspension volume, the value of that relief may 
    range from tens of millions of dollars to over $100 million. The 
    suspensions will allow companies to recover more of their investment 
    costs before paying royalties, which may allow greater opportunity for 
    small companies to operate in deep water.
        This rule also will have a very positive impact on small entities. 
    Constructing and equipping the platforms and other infrastructure 
    associated with deep water development are huge projects that involve 
    not only large companies but numerous small businesses nationwide as 
    well. Once the platforms are operational, other small businesses will 
    provide supplies and services.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        This rule contains no reporting and recordkeeping requirements 
    subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
    
    Takings Implication Assessment
    
        DOI certifies that this rule does not represent a governmental 
    action capable of interference with constitutionally protected property 
    rights. A Takings Implication Assessment prepared pursuant to E.O. 
    12630, Governmental Actions and Interference with
    
    [[Page 2629]]
    
    Constitutionally Protected Property Rights, is not required.
    
    Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
    
        DOI has determined and certifies according to the Unfunded Mandates 
    Reform Act, 2 U.S.C. 1502 et seq., that this final rule will not impose 
    a cost of $100 million or more in any given year on State, local, and 
    tribal governments, or the private sector.
    
    E.O. 12988
    
        DOI has certified to OMB that this regulation meets the applicable 
    standards provided in section 3(b)(2) of E.O. 12988.
    
    National Environmental Policy Act
    
        We examined this rulemaking and have determined that this rule does 
    not constitute a major Federal action significantly affecting the 
    quality of the human environment pursuant to Section 102(2)(C) of the 
    National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4332(2)(C)).
    
    List of Subjects in 30 CFR Part 260
    
        Continental shelf, Government contracts, Minerals royalties, Oil 
    and gas exploration, Public lands--mineral resources.
    
        Dated: September 22, 1997.
    Sylvia V. Baca,
    Assistant Secretary, Land and Minerals Management.
        For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Minerals Management 
    Service (MMS) amends 30 CFR part 260, as follows:
    
    PART 260--OUTER CONTINENTAL SHELF OIL AND GAS LEASING
    
        1. The authority citation for part 260 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 43 U.S.C. 1331 and 1337.
    
        2. In Sec. 260.102, the definitions for ``Eligible lease'' and 
    ``Field'' are revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 260.102  Definitions.
    
    * * * * *
        Eligible lease means a lease that results from a sale held after 
    November 28, 1995; is located in the Gulf of Mexico in water depths 200 
    meters or deeper; lies wholly west of 87 degrees, 30 minutes West 
    longitude; and is offered subject to a royalty-suspension volume 
    authorized by statute.
        Field means an area consisting of a single reservoir or multiple 
    reservoirs all grouped on, or related to, the same general geological 
    structural feature and/or stratigraphic trapping condition. Two or more 
    reservoirs may be in a field, separated vertically by intervening 
    impervious strata, or laterally by local geologic barriers, or by both.
    * * * * *
        3. In Sec. 260.110, paragraph (d) is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 260.110  Bidding systems.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) This paragraph explains how the royalty-suspension volumes in 
    section 304 of the Outer Continental Shelf Deep Water Royalty Relief 
    Act, Public Law 104-58, apply to eligible leases. For purposes of this 
    paragraph, any volumes of production that are not royalty bearing under 
    the lease or the regulations in this chapter do not count against 
    royalty-suspension volumes. Also, for the purposes of this paragraph, 
    production includes volumes allocated to a lease under an approved unit 
    agreement.
        (1) Your eligible lease may receive a royalty-suspension volume 
    only if your lease is in a field where no current lease produced oil or 
    gas (other than test production) before November 28, 1995. Paragraph 
    (d) of this section applies only to eligible leases in fields that meet 
    this condition.
        (2) We will assign your lease to an existing field or designate a 
    new field and will notify you and other affected lessees of that 
    assignment. Within 15 days of that notification, you or any of the 
    other affected lessees may file a written request with the Director, 
    MMS, for reconsideration accompanied by a statement of reasons. The 
    Director will respond in writing either affirming or reversing the 
    assignment decision. The Director's decision is final for the 
    Department and is not subject to appeal to the Interior Board of Land 
    Appeals under 30 CFR part 290 and 43 CFR part 4.
        (3) The Final Notice of Sale will specify the water depth for each 
    eligible lease. Our determination of water depth for each lease is 
    final once we issue the lease. The Notice also will specify the 
    royalty-suspension volume applicable to each water depth. The minimum 
    royalty-suspension volumes for fields are:
        (i) 17.5 million barrels of oil equivalent (MMBOE) in 200 to 400 
    meters of water;
        (ii) 52.5 MMBOE in 400 to 800 meters of water; and
        (iii) 87.5 MMBOE in more than 800 meters of water.
        (4) When production (other than test production) first occurs from 
    any of the eligible leases in a field, we will determine what royalty-
    suspension volume applies to the eligible lease(s) in that field. The 
    determination is based on the royalty-suspension volumes specified in 
    paragraph (d)(3) of this section.
        (5) If a new field consists of eligible leases in different water 
    depth categories, the royalty-suspension volume associated with the 
    deepest eligible lease applies.
        (6) If your eligible lease is the only eligible lease in a field, 
    you do not owe royalty on the production from your lease up to the 
    applicable royalty-suspension volume.
        (7) If a field consists of more than one eligible lease, payment of 
    royalties on the eligible leases' initial production is suspended until 
    their cumulative production equals the field's established royalty-
    suspension volume. The royalty-suspension volume for each eligible 
    lease is equal to each lease's actual production (or production 
    allocated under an approved unit agreement) until the field's 
    established royalty-suspension volume is reached.
        (8) If an eligible lease is added to a field that has an 
    established royalty-suspension volume as the result of an approved 
    application for royalty relief submitted under 30 CFR part 203 or as 
    the result of one or more eligible leases having been assigned 
    previously to the field, the field's royalty-suspension volume will not 
    change even if the added lease is in deeper water. If a royalty-
    suspension volume has been granted under 30 CFR part 203 that is larger 
    than the minimum specified for that water depth, the added eligible 
    lease may share in the larger suspension volume. The lease may receive 
    a royalty-suspension volume only to the extent of its production before 
    the cumulative production from all leases in the field entitled to 
    share in the suspension volume equals the field's previously 
    established royalty-suspension volume.
        (9) If a pre-Act lease(s) receives a royalty-suspension volume 
    under 30 CFR part 203 for a field that already has a royalty-suspension 
    volume due to eligible leases, then the eligible and pre-Act leases 
    will share a single royalty-suspension volume. (Pre-Act leases are OCS 
    leases issued as a result of a sale held before November 28, 1995; in a 
    water depth of at least 200 meters; and in the Gulf of Mexico west of 
    87 degrees, 30 minutes West longitude. See 30 CFR part 203). The 
    field's royalty-suspension volume will be the larger of the volume for 
    the eligible leases or the volume MMS grants in response to the pre-Act 
    leases' application. The suspension volume for each lease will be its 
    actual production from the field until cumulative production from all 
    leases in the field equals the suspension volume.
    
    [[Page 2630]]
    
        (10) A royalty-suspension volume will continue through the end of 
    the month in which cumulative production from leases in a field 
    entitled to share the royalty-suspension volume reaches that volume.
        (11) If we reassign a well on an eligible lease to another field, 
    the past production from that well will count toward the royalty-
    suspension volume, if any, specified for the field to which it is 
    reassigned. The past production will not count toward the royalty 
    suspension volume, if any, for the field from which it was reassigned.
        (12) You may receive a royalty-suspension volume only if your 
    entire lease is west of 87 degrees, 30 minutes West longitude. A field 
    that lies on both sides of this meridian will receive a royalty-
    suspension volume only for those eligible leases lying entirely west of 
    the meridian.
        (13) Your lease may obtain more than one royalty-suspension volume. 
    If a new field is discovered on your eligible lease that already 
    benefits from the royalty-suspension volume for another field, 
    production from that new field receives a separate royalty suspension.
        (14) You must measure natural gas production subject to the 
    royalty-suspension volume as follows: 5.62 thousand cubic feet of 
    natural gas, measured in accordance with 30 CFR part 250, subpart L, 
    equals one barrel of oil equivalent.
    
    [FR Doc. 98-843 Filed 1-15-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4310-MR-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
2/17/1998
Published:
01/16/1998
Department:
Minerals Management Service
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
98-843
Dates:
This final rule is effective February 17, 1998.
Pages:
2626-2630 (5 pages)
RINs:
1010-AC14: Deep Water Royalty Relief -- Tracts Offered Between November 28, 1995, and November 28, 2000
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/1010-AC14/deep-water-royalty-relief-tracts-offered-between-november-28-1995-and-november-28-2000
PDF File:
98-843.pdf
CFR: (3)
30 CFR 260.110(d)(10)
30 CFR 260.102
30 CFR 260.110