Click here to keep up to date on changes to facilities and services in response to Coronavirus (COVID-19).
Spotlight
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Due to the increasing cases of COVID-19 in New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas, the Bureau of Land Management will be adjusting services at its offices, effective Nov. 9. Before you visit your local BLM office, please call that office to confirm services and availability of staff.
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SANTA FE, N.M. – Beginning Nov. 24, Bureau of Land Management offices will begin online personal Christmas tree permit sales to harvest piñon and juniper. Permits are available through Dec. 23 and cost $5 per tree. To ensure the community's safety, the BLM will only have the permits available online this year. Permits can be purchased by visiting forestproducts.blm.gov.
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The Bureau of Land Management is selling fuelwood permits for personal use to the public. Fuelwood permits cost $10 - $12 per cord and are available in person at select locations or online.
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The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) New Mexico is announcing a public comment period on the environmental analysis for its April 15, 2021, oil and gas lease sale.
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The Bureau of Land Management Taos Field Office has adjusted the hours of operation for the Santa Cruz Lake Recreation Area.
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Beginning Nov. 9, the Bureau of Land Management Taos Field Office plans to conduct an up to 200-acre prescribed burn near San Pedro in two units.
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Beginning November 15, and continuing through the end of 2020, the Bureau of Land Management Socorro Field Office plans to burn piles of juniper and piñon cuttings in three locations in Catron County, weather permitting.
New Mexico BLM Offices
Popular Links
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The reports available on this website are generated from the information stored in the BLM rangeland administration electronic database. They include allotment information and operator information.
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BLM New Mexico (including Oklahoma, Texas, and Kansas) has one of the largest oil and gas programs in the Bureau. The four-state area has over 45 million acres of mineral estate and more than 2 million acres of Native American mineral estate.
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Frequently requested maps from the Bureau of Land Management New Mexico.
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BLM New Mexico’s outdoor recreation activities are as diverse as the landscape and cultures of the state. Almost all of this land is open for recreational use, such as hiking, cycling, hunting, fishing, camping (including dispersed camping), and much more.
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BLM employees in New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas, and Kansas care for 13.5 million acres of public lands plus 42 million acres of Federal oil, natural gas, and minerals
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The BLM operates and maintains a helium storage reservoir, enrichment plant, and pipeline system near Amarillo, Texas, that supplies over 40 percent of domestic demand for helium.
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The four-state area manages over 42 million acres of mineral estate, including the San Juan Basin and Permian Basin, two of the most productive basins in the country.
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BLM-New Mexico manages over 2.1 million National Conservation Land acres, including national conservation areas, national monuments, wilderness areas, and wilderness study areas.