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Interior Department Radio News Service print
10/04/2007: Record Oil and Gas Lease Sale Attracts $ 2.9 Billion for Offshore Tracts in the Central Gulf of Mexico
Audio Summary Length
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SOUNDBITE: A Federal sale of offshore oil and natural gas leases in the Central Gulf of Mexico attracted the second highest total of high bids in U.S. offshore leasing history. The U.S. Department of the Interior’s Minerals Management Service, which conducted Oil and Gas Lease Sale 205, received a total of 1,428 bids on 723 tracts with one tract going for $90,488,445. MMS Regional Director for the Gulf of Mexico, Lars Herbst said the historic sale emphasizes the Gulf’s strategic value for America’s energy security and the significant economic benefits of environmentally safe oil and gas production. (text)

:11
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SOUNDBITE: There were 84 companies participating in the sale. The deepest tract to receive a bid is in 3,398 meters or just over 11,148 feet of water. Herbst says a combination of factors including newly available tracts and a trend toward deep water production is the reason for the competitive sale. (text)

:21
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SOUNDBITE:  Each high bid on a block will now go through a thorough evaluation process to ensure that the public receives fair market value before a lease is awarded. Developing these oil and gas rights in the Gulf assures that it will continue to provide the nation with 25 percent of domestically produced oil and 15 percent of domestically produced natural gas. (text)

:19
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SOUNDBITE:  More production also means more jobs which generate hundreds of millions of dollars annually to help Gulf States meet the educational, environmental and infrastructure needs of their communities. (text)

:15

The sale offered 5,359 tracts, comprising about 28.7 million acres in federal areas offshore Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama.  Approximately 40 percent of the tracts receiving bids in this sale are in ultra-deep water.


10/04/2007: Record Oil and Gas Lease Sale Attracts $ 2.9 Billion for Offshore Tracts in the Central Gulf of Mexico
Audio Summary Length
Audio file

SOUNDBITE: A Federal sale of offshore oil and natural gas leases in the Central Gulf of Mexico attracted the second highest total of high bids in U.S. offshore leasing history. The U.S. Department of the Interior’s Minerals Management Service, which conducted Oil and Gas Lease Sale 205, received a total of 1,428 bids on 723 tracts with one tract going for $90,488,445. MMS Regional Director for the Gulf of Mexico, Lars Herbst said the historic sale emphasizes the Gulf’s strategic value for America’s energy security and the significant economic benefits of environmentally safe oil and gas production. (text)

:11
Audio file

SOUNDBITE: There were 84 companies participating in the sale. The deepest tract to receive a bid is in 3,398 meters or just over 11,148 feet of water. Herbst says a combination of factors including newly available tracts and a trend toward deep water production is the reason for the competitive sale. (text)

:21
Audio file

SOUNDBITE:  Each high bid on a block will now go through a thorough evaluation process to ensure that the public receives fair market value before a lease is awarded. Developing these oil and gas rights in the Gulf assures that it will continue to provide the nation with 25 percent of domestically produced oil and 15 percent of domestically produced natural gas. (text)

:19
Audio file

SOUNDBITE:  More production also means more jobs which generate hundreds of millions of dollars annually to help Gulf States meet the educational, environmental and infrastructure needs of their communities. (text)

:15

The sale offered 5,359 tracts, comprising about 28.7 million acres in federal areas offshore Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama.  Approximately 40 percent of the tracts receiving bids in this sale are in ultra-deep water.