Leasing of Sulfur or Oil and Gas in the Outer Continental Shelf, 18111-18176 [2016-06513]
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Vol. 81
Wednesday,
No. 61
March 30, 2016
Book 2 of 2 Books
Pages 18111–18446
Part III
Department of the Interior
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Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
30 CFR Parts 550, 556, 559, et al.
Leasing of Sulfur or Oil and Gas in the Outer Continental Shelf; Final
Rule
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 61 / Wednesday, March 30, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
30 CFR Parts 550, 556, 559 and 560
RIN 1010–AD06
[Docket ID: MMS–2007–OMM–0069]
Leasing of Sulfur or Oil and Gas in the
Outer Continental Shelf
Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management (BOEM), Interior.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This final rule updates and
streamlines the existing Outer
Continental Shelf (OCS) leasing
regulations and clarifies implementation
of the Federal Oil and Gas Royalty
Simplification and Fairness Act of 1996,
which amended the Federal Oil and Gas
Royalty Management Act of 1982
(FOGRMA). The final rule reorganizes
leasing requirements to more effectively
communicate the leasing process as it
has evolved over the years. The final
rule makes changes to regulations which
relate to the oil, gas, and sulfur leasing
requirements. The final rule does not,
however, include substantive changes to
regulations which relate to bonding,
which will be the subject of a separate
new proposed rulemaking.
DATES: This final rule will become
effective May 31, 2016.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Peter Meffert, Senior Regulatory
Specialist, Office of Policy, Regulations
and Analysis, Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management, at regulation1@boem.gov,
at 703–787–1610, or Jaron Ming,
Regional Supervisor, Office of Leasing
and Plans, Gulf of Mexico Region,
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, at
jaron.ming@boem.gov, at 504–736–
2761, or David Diamond, Chief, Leasing
Division, Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management, at david.diamond@
boem.gov, at (703) 787–1251.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
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Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
A. Background
1. Why We Need to Publish a Rule
2. What is covered by the rule?
B. Abbreviations of Terms and Acronyms
C. Final Rule as Adopted and Response to
Comments
1. Availability of Public Comments
2. Effects of the Reorganization of MMS
Into Three Distinct Agencies
3. Definitions
4. Delayed Provisions
5. Other Editorial Improvements
II. Derivation Tables
A. Derivation Table for 30 CFR part 550
(‘‘Oil and Gas and Sulfur Operations in
the Outer Continental Shelf’’)
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B. Derivation Table for 30 CFR part 556
(‘‘Leasing of Sulfur or Oil and Gas and
Bonding Requirements in the Outer
Continental Shelf’’)
C. Derivation Table for 30 CFR part 560
(‘‘Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Gas
Leasing’’)
III. Section-by-Section Analysis of the Final
Rulemaking
A. Part 550—Oil and Gas and Sulfur
Operations in the Outer Continental
Shelf
1. Subpart A—General Provisions
2. Subpart D—Leasing Maps and Diagrams
B. Part 556—Leasing of Sulfur or Oil and
Gas and Bonding Requirements in the
Outer Continental Shelf
1. The Table of Contents for Part 556
2. Subpart A—General Provisions
3. Subpart B—Oil and Gas Five Year
Leasing Program
4. Subpart C—Planning and Holding a
Lease Sale
5. Subpart D—Qualifications
6. Subpart E—Issuance of a Lease
7. Subpart F—Lease Term and Obligations
8. Commentary on Subparts G & H—
Transferring Interests in a Lease
9. Subpart G—Transferring All or Part of a
Record Title Interest in a Lease
10. Subpart H—Transferring All or Part of
the Operating Rights in a Lease
11. Subpart I—Bonding or Other Financial
Assurance
12. Subpart J—Bonus or Royalty Credits for
Exchange of Certain Leases
13. Subpart K—Ending a Lease
14. Subpart L—Leases Maintained Under
Section 6 of OCSLA
15. Subpart M—Environmental Studies
C. Part 559—Mineral Leasing: Definitions
D. Part 560—Outer Continental Shelf Oil
and Gas Leasing
1. Subpart A—General Provisions
2. Subpart B—Bidding Systems
3. Subpart C—Operating Allowances
4. Subpart D—Joint Bidding
5. Subpart E—Electronic Filings
IV. Table of Comments and Responses
A. General Comments
B. Section-Specific Comments
V. Legal and Regulatory Analyses
A. Statutes and Executive Orders
1. Improving Regulation and Regulatory
Review (Executive Order (E.O. 13563)
2. Regulatory Planning and Review (E.O.
12866)
3. Regulatory Flexibility Act
4. Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act (SBREFA)
5. Comments from Small Businesses
6. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
7. Takings Implication Assessment (E.O.
12630)
8. Federalism (E.O. 13132)
9. Civil Justice Reform (E.O. 12988)
10. Consultation with Indian Tribal
Governments (E.O. 13175)
11. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
12. Other Changes in the Information
Collection (IC) Between the Proposed
and Final Rules
13. Burden Breakdown Table
14. National Environmental Policy Act of
1969
15. Data Quality Act
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16. Effects on the Energy Supply (E.O.
13211)
List of Subjects
I. Executive Summary
A. Background
On May 27, 2009, the Minerals
Management Service (MMS) published a
proposed rule (Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking or NPRM) in the Federal
Register entitled, ‘‘Leasing of Sulphur or
Oil and Gas and Bonding Requirements
in the Outer Continental Shelf’’ (74 FR
25177, May 27, 2009). Since that time,
the MMS was renamed the Bureau of
Ocean Energy Management, Regulation,
and Enforcement (BOEMRE) and then
was reorganized and divided into three
separate bureaus—the Bureau of Ocean
Energy Management (BOEM), the
Bureau of Safety and Environmental
Enforcement (BSEE) and the Office of
Natural Resources Revenue (ONRR).
The leasing program is under the
authority of BOEM, whose regulations
reside in 30 CFR Chapter V.
1. Why We Need to Publish a Rule
This final rule reorganizes and
reorders the parts of the BOEM
regulations concerning leasing, adds
new sections to standardize or clarify
practices in all three BOEM OCS
regional offices, and eliminates
redundant or otherwise unnecessary
text. The final rule also includes
regulatory provisions which, during the
division of BOEMRE, were
inadvertently assigned to an agency
other than BOEM, but have proven
necessary for BOEM’s use and are
therefore added back into these
regulations. (In this Preamble, the
BOEMRE regulations, as they existed
before BOEMRE was divided into
BOEM, BSEE, and ONRR, are sometimes
referred to as the ‘‘pre-split
regulations.’’)
Additionally, this final rule also
updates and clarifies processes required
by legislation enacted since BOEM’s
regulations were last amended, such as
those required by the Federal Oil and
Gas Royalty Simplification and Fairness
Act of 1996, which amended FOGRMA,
or by more recently promulgated
regulations, such as the Department of
the Interior’s (Department or DOI) nonprocurement debarment rules. The final
rule also includes changes that will
assist BOEM in meeting its stewardship
responsibilities and performing its role
as a responsible regulator.
2. What is covered by the rule?
This final rule revises sections of the
regulations at 30 CFR parts 550, ‘‘Oil
and Gas and Sulfur Operations in the
Outer Continental Shelf,’’ 556, ‘‘Leasing
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of Sulfur or Oil and Gas in the Outer
Continental Shelf,’’ 559, ‘‘Mineral
Leasing: Definitions,’’ and 560, ‘‘Outer
Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing.’’
The changes made in part 550, ‘‘Oil
and Gas and Sulfur Operations in the
Outer Continental Shelf’’ and those
made in part 560, ‘‘Outer Continental
Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing,’’ relate
primarily to simplifying and clarifying
the regulatory language, as well as
creating new, and re-establishing presplit, regulations that had been
inadvertently deleted when the former
BOEMRE was divided into three new
agencies. For example, in October 2010
(as part of the direct final rule RIN
1010–AD70, Reorganization of Title 30,
Code of Federal Regulations (75 FR
61051, October 4, 2010)), during the first
split of the BOEMRE regulations, a
regulation related to operating
allowances was inadvertently deleted
from the BOEM regulations and
included only in the ONRR regulations.
In order for ONRR’s operating allowance
regulations to be effective, however,
they must have counterpart provisions
in the BOEM regulations. The operating
allowance regulation is re-established in
BOEM’s regulations by this final rule.
Most of the final rule consists of
revisions to part 556. Part 556 includes
regulations pertaining to: (1) The oil and
gas leasing program; (2) preparing for a
lease sale; (3) issuing, maintaining,
transferring, and terminating a lease;
and (4) bonding requirements. As
explained in greater detail below, the
final rule addresses the first three
components, but the fourth component,
bonding, is not addressed in this final
rule, except to make minor editorial and
conforming changes. Bonding and
financial assurance will be further
addressed in future rulemakings.
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B. Abbreviations of Terms and
Acronyms
The following are abbreviations of
terms used in the preamble:
API American Petroleum Institute
ASTM American Society for Testing and
Materials
BAST Best Available and Safest
Technology
BOEM Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management
BOEMRE Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management, Regulation, and Enforcement
BSEE Bureau of Safety and Environmental
Enforcement
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CID Conservation Information Document
CPA Central Planning Area of the GOM
CZMA Coastal Zone Management Act
DOI Department of the Interior
DOCD Development Operations
Coordination Document
DOO Designation of Operator
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DPP Development and Production Plan
EIA Environmental Impact Analysis
EO Executive Order
EP Exploration Plan
EPA Eastern Planning Area of the GOM
EPAct Energy Policy Act of 2005
ESIGN Electronic Signatures in Global and
National Commerce Act of 2000
FNOS Final Notice of Sale
FOGRMA Federal Oil and Gas Royalty
Management Act of 1982
FOGRSFA Federal Oil and Gas Royalty
Simplification and Fairness Act of 1996
FR Federal Register
G&G Geological and Geophysical
GDIS Geophysical Data and Information
Statement
GOM Gulf of Mexico
GOMESA Gulf of Mexico Energy Security
Act of 2006
GPEA Government Paperwork Elimination
Act of 1998
H2S Hydrogen sulfide
IC Information Collection
IOAA Independent Offices Appropriations
Act of 1952
LLC Limited Liability Company
MBB Mapping and Boundary Branch
MMS Minerals Management Service
MSL Mean Sea Level
NAD North American Datum
NAICS North American Industry
Classification System
NEPA National Environmental Policy Act
of 1969
NGPA Natural Gas Processors Association
NOAA National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
NPR Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
NTL Notice to Lessees
OCS Outer Continental Shelf
OCSLA Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act
OMB Office of Management and Budget
ONRR Office of Natural Resources Revenue
OPD Official Protraction Diagram
PDP Proved Developed Producing (reserves)
PNOS Proposed Notice of Sale
PRA Paperwork Reduction Act
PSI Pounds Per Square inch
RFA Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980
ROW Right of Way
RSV Royalty Suspension Volume
RUE Right of Use and Easement
SBA Small Business Administration
SBREFA Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996
SEC Securities and Exchange Commission
SLA Submerged Lands Act of 1953
US United States
U.S.C. United States Code
USCG U.S. Coast Guard
USEPA U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency
UTM Universal Transverse Mercator
Coordinate System
WPA Western Planning Area of the GOM
C. Final Rule as Adopted and Response
to Comments
On May 27, 2009, BOEM published a
proposed rule entitled, ‘‘Leasing of
Sulphur or Oil and Gas and Bonding
Requirements in the Outer Continental
Shelf’’ (74 FR 25177). In the six years
since the proposed regulation was
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published, several developments have
brought about the need for the final rule
to appear different from the proposed
rulemaking. The organization of the
final rule is structured differently from
that of the proposed rule to make the
regulations easier for the public to read
and follow. The major reasons for the
other differences between the proposed
rule and the final rule are explained
below:
1. Availability of Public Comments
BOEM received a total of eight
comments from the American Petroleum
Institute (API), Shell Oil Company,
Chevron Oil Company, Anglo Suisse,
Dynamic Offshore Resources, RLI
Insurance Company, and two citizens,
who commented to show their support
of OCS leasing and the oil and gas
program. Each comment was considered
and some resulted in changes to the
proposed rule. BOEM’s responses are
addressed in this Preamble.
All comments can be viewed at
www.BOEM.gov under the Regulations
section and at www.regulations.gov.
2. Effects of the Reorganization of MMS
Into Three Distinct Agencies
Background
On May 19, 2010, the Secretary signed
Secretarial Order 3299 directing the
split of MMS into three new bureaus,
BOEM, BSEE, and ONRR. This split was
accomplished in two phases. In 2010
MMS was split into two agencies, ONRR
and BOEMRE. In 2011 BOEMRE was
itself split into two agencies, BOEM and
BSEE.
Prior to October 4, 2010, the
regulations of BOEM, BSEE, and ONRR
were contained in one set of regulations
(‘‘pre-split’’ regulations), which were
issued by the MMS. On October 4, 2010,
MMS published a final rule in the
Federal Register (75 FR 61051), moving
its regulations related to its royalty and
revenue functions from MMS to ONRR
and creating a new chapter XII. The
name of the remaining organization was
changed from the MMS to BOEMRE. On
October 18, 2011, DOI published a final
rule (76 FR 64432) splitting BOEMRE
regulations into separate BOEM and
BSEE chapters. Pursuant to that split,
BOEM is responsible for the resource
evaluation, planning, and leasing
functions for offshore oil and gas. BSEE
is primarily responsible for the safety
and environmental enforcement of
offshore oil and gas development
activities. BOEM’s regulations were
recodifed into 30 CFR Chapter V.
BSEE’s regulations remained in 30 CFR
Chapter II.
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Assignment and Retention of
Regulations
As time has passed, it has come to
light that some regulations were
incorrectly assigned during the split.
For example, some of the regulatory
provisions assigned to BSEE or ONRR
have proven necessary for BOEM.
Regulatory provisions that fall into this
category have been included in the final
rulemaking, as explained in this
Preamble. Because of the reorganization
of the former MMS, some provisions of
the proposed rule are now outside the
scope of BOEM’s responsibilities and
are not included in this final rule.
In addition, there are some regulatory
provisions that appear in this final
rulemaking that did not appear in the
proposed rule. These regulatory
provisions are not ‘‘substantively new,’’
however. They appeared in the former
MMS regulations. The Final Rule also
differs from the Proposed Rule in that
the Final Rule retains certain provisions
that the Proposed Rule suggested
deleting. Instances of retention of prior
sections of the regulations are also
discussed in this Preamble.
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Administrative Changes
There are some wholly administrative
changes from the proposed rule that
appear in the final rule. These changes
were also primarily necessitated by the
division of MMS into three separate
agencies. For example, the BOEM
regulations are now found in a different
chapter of Title 30 of the Code of
Federal Regulations (CFR) than the
chapter in which the BOEMRE
regulations were found. Before the
BOEMRE regulations were divided into
two sets of independent agency
regulations, they were all contained in
Chapter II of Title 30 of the CFR, within
parts 203 through 291. This means that
the first digit in the section number of
each individual provision was a ‘‘2.’’
After the division of the regulations, all
BSEE regulations remained in Chapter
II, and thus retained the first digit ‘‘2.’’
And, because the proposed rule was
published before the agency split, its
provisions also begin with a ‘‘2.’’ After
the division, however, the BOEM
regulations were moved into Chapter V.
Thus, although the proposed rule
provisions each began with a ‘‘2,’’ all
final BOEM rule provisions begin with
a ‘‘5.’’ Also, in the final rule, internal
citations to section numbers were
changed to maintain correct and
consistent cross-references, and sections
were re-numbered to maintain internal
numerical order. Whenever appropriate,
references to ‘‘MMS’’ from the proposed
rule have been changed to ‘‘BOEM’’ in
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the final rule. These administrative
changes have no effect on the substance
of the regulations, and therefore do not
require notice and comment, but they
do make the regulations clearer, more
consistent, and easier to use.
Removed Provisions
The proposed rule would have added
a new ‘‘expenses . . . with supporting
documentation’’ reporting requirement
to the then-BOEMRE, now-BSEE
regulatory sections 250.1717, 250.1729,
and 250.1743. Section 250.1717
addresses the information that must be
submitted after well plugging and
abandonment. Section 250.1729
addresses the information that must be
submitted after removal of a platform or
other facility, and section 250.1743
addresses the information that must be
submitted after site clearance. The
proposed rule added new requirements
concerning the submittal of information
on the costs of decommissioning.
When BOEMRE was divided into two
agencies, the operational aspects of
decommissioning were placed within
BSEE’s rather than BOEM’s purview. In
the final rulemaking, therefore, BOEM
decided to remove the three provisions
proposing revisions to sections
250.1717, 250.1729, and 250.1743, as
BSEE finalized the rule addressing the
submittal of information on the costs of
decommissioning in their rule entitled
‘‘Oil and Gas and Sulphur Operations in
the Outer Continental Shelf;
Decommissioning Costs,’’ RIN 1014–
AA24, published in the Federal Register
on December 4, 2015.
The other proposed provision that
was removed from the final rule was
proposed rule section 256.621,
concerning the submission of reports
about lease term pipelines when
requesting BOEM’s approval of a lease
assignment. As with decommissioning,
BSEE has been tasked with the
administration of the operational
aspects of pipelines on the OCS;
therefore, the submission of reports on
lease term pipelines is within BSEE’s
jurisdiction. BSEE has proposed to
address the submission of reports
concerning lease term pipelines in a
rule entitled ‘‘Pipelines and Pipeline
Right-of-Way Safety,’’ RIN 1014–AA27.
3. Definitions
Several definitions have been added
in the final rulemaking that did not
appear in the proposed rulemaking to
clarify the meaning of terms used in the
regulations. In each case, the term either
was defined in the BOEMRE regulations
or its definition is apparent from the
context of the prior regulatory language.
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4. Delayed Provisions
The proposed rule included a subpart
E, ‘‘Financial Accountability and Risk
Management,’’ which contained
provisions addressing requirements for
general and additional bonding, surety,
and third-party indemnity. After the
proposed rule was published, BOEM
identified possible conflicts between the
proposed rule’s use/definitions of
certain terms and their use/definitions
within BOEM’s oil spill financial
responsibility regulations (30 CFR part
553). Also, after publication of the
proposed rule, BOEM began a process of
reassessing its bonding and financial
assurance policies, leading to a decision
to publish this final rule with the text
of existing subpart I (Bonding), with
only limited conforming changes. This
decision will enable BOEM and the
regulated public to continue to rely on
the existing financial assurance
regulations until BOEM is ready to make
necessary changes to its policies and to
propose and seek comment on separate
new regulations specific to bonding and
financial assurance to implement these
new policies.
5. Other Editorial Improvements
A consistent change that was made in
the final rule was to add, where
appropriate, the word ‘‘final’’ before the
phrase ‘‘notice of sale.’’ Another change
is eliminating any references to
‘‘Associate Director,’’ since there are no
longer any Associate Directors in
BOEM. The word ‘‘sulphur’’ has been
replaced with a more contemporary
spelling of ‘‘sulfur.’’ All cross-references
and section numbers within this final
rule have been updated.
II. Derivation Tables
The following derivation tables
describe the source(s) of the regulations
in the final rule relative to those in the
prior regulations and/or those in the
proposed rule. These tables are intended
only to provide cross-references to the
other materials. The section-by-section
analysis that follows these derivation
tables provides a detailed explanation of
the changes made with this final rule.
Most sections of the final rule reflect
content from the proposed rule,
however, in some cases, the
organization of the regulations and the
final section numbers have changed
since the rule was proposed. The
derivation tables compare the location
of the various rule sections in the final
rule to the prior section numbers in the
prior regulations that have been
modified and the corresponding section
numbers from the proposed rule, if
appropriate.
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A. Derivation Table for 30 CFR part
550—Oil and Gas and Sulfur
Operations in the Outer Continental
Shelf
Prior regulation that the
final rule would modify for
replace
Final rule section
Subpart A—General Provisions
PERFORMANCE STANDARDS:
550.120—This section provides that BOEM will regulate activities
under a lease, right-of-use and easement, or right-of-way, to
promote the orderly exploration, development, and production
of mineral resources, while preventing waste, protecting the environment and ensuring cooperation with other government
agencies.
550.121—This section provides that BOEM may require additional
measures to ensure the use of Best Available and Safest Technology (BAST) as identified by BSEE to avoid the failure of
equipment that would have a significant effect on health, safety,
property or the environment when economically feasible.
INFORMATION AND REPORTING REQUIREMENTS:
550.197(b)—This subsection provides that BOEM will generally
release geological data and analyzed geological information two
years after the required submittal date for such information or
60 days after a lease sale.
550.197(c)—This subsection provides that BOEM will generally
release geological data and analyzed geological information to
individuals with a need to know that agree to maintain the confidentiality of the relevant information.
550.197(d)—This section provides, in accordance with section 26
of OCSLA, that no proprietary information received by BOEM
will be transmitted to any affected State unless the lessee, or
the permittee and all persons to whom such permittee has sold
such information under promise of confidentiality, agree to such
transmittal.
Subpart D—Leasing Maps and Diagrams
550.400—This section provides that any area of the OCS, which
has been appropriately platted, may be leased for any mineral
not included in an existing lease issued under the Act or meeting the requirements of subsection (a) of section 6 of the Act.
Corresponding section number from the
proposal (if any)
None ...................................
This section was in the regulations before
the split of MMS into three different
agencies and has been reinserted for
consistency.
None ...................................
This section was in the regulations before
the split of MMS into three different
agencies and has been reinserted for
consistency.
550.197(b) ..........................
Section 256.100(b).
550.197(c) ..........................
Section 256.100(b).
None ...................................
New provision required to conform the
regulations to the Outer Continental
Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA) (43 U.S.C.
1352(c)).
.............................................
556.8 ..................................
New subpart.
Section 256.202(a).
B. Derivation Table for 30 CFR Part
556—Leasing of Sulfur or Oil and Gas
and Bonding Requirements in the Outer
Continental Shelf
Prior regulation that the
final rule would modify or
replace
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Final rule section
Subpart A—General Provisions
556.100—This section states that management of Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) resources is to be conducted in accordance
with the findings, purposes, and policy directions provided by
the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act.
556.101—This section sets forth the purpose of the regulations in
this part.
556.102—This section lists the statutory authorities for this part ...
556.103—This section lists related regulations ...............................
556.104—This section provides the legal basis for BOEM’s collection of information in connection with the administration of its
OCS oil, gas and sulfur leasing program and describes how
BOEM will handle and maintain proprietary information.
556.104(c)—This subsection describes BOEM’s treatment of proprietary information received in response to a Call for Information and Nominations.
556.105—This section provides definitions for key terms used
throughout this part of the regulations.
556.106—This section identifies administrative fees that BOEM
requires for various services.
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Corresponding section number from the
proposal (if any)
556.2 ..................................
None.
556.1 ..................................
Section 256.102.
556.4 ..................................
556.7 ..................................
556.0, 556.10 .....................
Undesignated authority section.
None.
Section 256.100.
556.10(a) ............................
Section 256.100(b).
556.5, 556.40 .....................
Section 256.103.
556.63 ................................
Section 256.104.
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Prior regulation that the
final rule would modify or
replace
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Final rule section
556.107—This section sets forth an alternative procedure, to
avoid the use of a corporate seal, for those electronic document
submissions for which a corporate seal is otherwise required by
these regulations.
Subpart B—Oil and Gas Five-Year Leasing Program
556.200—This section reiterates those key provisions of OCSLA
that require the Secretary to prepare an oil and gas leasing program that consists of a five-year schedule of proposed lease
sales.
556.201—This section reiterates the OCSLA requirement that
BOEM consider multiple uses of the OCS in its development of
the Five-Year oil and gas leasing program.
556.202—This section sets forth the steps BOEM takes in initiating the Five-Year program.
556.203—This section provides that BOEM will invite comments
from governors on a draft proposed program at least 60-days
before it publishes a proposed Five-Year program.
556.204—This section states the procedures to be followed to obtain inter-governmental and citizens’ comments on the proposed Five-Year program.
556.205—This section provides that the Secretary must provide a
copy of the proposed Five-Year Program, or any significant revision thereto, to Congress and the President at least 60-days
before approving it.
Subpart C—Planning and Holding a Lease Sale
556.300—This section provides that BOEM will prepare a report
describing the general geology and potential mineral resources
of the area under consideration for a sale.
556.301—This section outlines the process BOEM uses to collect
information to inform its determination as to which areas should
be made available for leasing.
556.302—This section explains the process used to arrive at the
Area ID.
556.303—This section sets forth the information that BOEM will
provide to a State when an area proposed for leasing lies within
three nautical miles of the seaward boundary of that State.
556.304—This section describes the process utilized to prepare a
proposed notice of sale.
556.305—This section outlines the process by which BOEM coordinates with affected States following the proposed notice of
sale.
556.306—This section provides a process for resolving issues or
disputes that may arise between a State and the Federal government when a hydrocarbon-bearing area underlies both the
Federal OCS and State submerged lands.
556.307—This section provides a description of the process that
BOEM will use to evaluate comments and recommendations of
governors and local governments.
556.308—This section sets forth BOEM’s procedures for conducting a lease sale.
556.309—This section sets forth BOEM’s procedures for conducting a Supplemental Sale.
Subpart D—Qualifications
QUALIFICATONS:
556.400—This section provides that, in order to bid on, own, hold,
or operate a lease on the OCS, bidders, record title holders,
and operating rights owners must first obtain a qualification
number from BOEM.
556.401—This section outlines BOEM’s requirements for a prospective lessee to become a qualified bidder.
556.402—This section describes the types of evidence that
BOEM will require in order to qualify a person to hold leases on
the OCS.
556.403—This section describes the circumstances under which a
person may be excluded or disqualified from holding a lease on
the OCS.
556.404—This section details how to comply with the Department’s non-procurement debarment rules.
556.405—This section provides that lessees must notify BOEM of
any merger, name change, or change of business form as soon
as practicable, but in no case later than one year after the
change or action.
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Corresponding section number from the
proposal (if any)
556.46, 556.54, 556.95 ......
None.
None ...................................
Section 256.200.
None ...................................
New provision based on 43 U.S.C.
1344(a)(2)(D).
556.16 ................................
Section 256.202.
556.17(a) ............................
Section 256.203.
556.17(b) ............................
Section 256.204.
556.17(c) ............................
Section 256.205.
556.22 ................................
None.
556.23 ................................
Section 256.300.
556.26, 556.10 ...................
Section 256.301.
556.10, 556.25 ...................
Section 256.302.
556.29 ................................
Section 256.303.
556.29, 556.31 ...................
Section 256.304.
556.25(b)–(d) ......................
None. Added for consistency with OCSLA
section 8(g)(3), as amended in 1986
(43 U.S.C. 1337 (8)(g)(3)).
556.31 ................................
Section 256.305.
556.28, 556.32 ...................
Section 256.306.
556.12 ................................
Section 256.206.
556.35 ................................
Section 256.400.
556.35, 556.46 ...................
Section 256.400.
556.35 ................................
Section 256.401.
556.35(c), 556.46(h) ...........
Section 256.402.
None ...................................
Section 256.403.
585.109 ..............................
Section 256.404.
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Final rule section
Subpart E—Issuance of a Lease
HOW TO BID:
556.500—This section sets forth the procedures for submitting a
bid at a lease sale.
556.501—This section explains what geological and geophysical
information must be submitted with a bid at a lease sale.
RESTRICTIONS ON JOINT BIDDING:
556.511—This section prohibits joint bidding by major oil and gas
producers under certain circumstances.
556.512—This section provides the circumstances under which a
bid for an oil and gas lease will be disqualified and/or rejected.
556.513—This section explains the circumstances under which a
lessee must prepare and send to BOEM a statement describing
its oil and gas production and what the statement is to contain.
556.514—This section details what production must be counted
when determining whether a company should be considered a
‘‘restricted bidder’’.
556.515—This section provides the circumstances under which a
person may be exempted from joint bidding restrictions.
HOW DOES BOEM ACT ON BIDS:
556.516—This section outlines the procedures BOEM will follow
when reviewing bids received for leases on the OCS and when
handling tie bids.
556.517—This section describes the reconsideration procedures
that apply in the event that BOEM rejects a high bid.
AWARDING THE LEASE:
556.520—This section describes the steps involved in the lease
award process.
556.521—This section explains when a lease becomes effective ..
556.522—This section provides that the terms and conditions of
the lease will be stated in the final notice of sale, as well as in
the lease instrument itself.
Subpart F—Lease Term and Obligations
LENGTH OF LEASE:
556.600—This section sets forth the primary term of an oil and
gas lease.
556.601—This section sets forth the methods by which a lessee
many maintain its oil and gas lease beyond the primary term.
556.602—This section sets forth the primary term of a sulfur
lease.
556.603—This section sets forth the methods by which a lessee
many maintain its sulfur lease beyond the primary term.
LEASE OBLIGATIONS:
556.604—This section outlines the rights and obligations of a
record title holder of an OCS lease.
556.605—This section outlines the rights and obligations of an
operating rights owner of an OCS lease.
HELIUM:
556.606—This section provides that BOEM reserves the ownership of, and the right to extract, helium from all gas produced
from an OCS lease, and describes what BOEM will do if it requests you to deliver helium from operations associated with a
lease.
Subpart G—Transferring All or Part of the Record Title Interest in a
Lease
556.700—This section describes how a company may apply for
approval to assign its whole, or a partial, record title interest in
its lease, or in any aliquot(s) thereof, or to sublease operating
rights.
556.701—This section describes the process for obtaining BOEM
approval of an assignment of a record title or operating rights
interest in an OCS lease.
556.702—This section describes when an assignment will result
in a segregated (i.e., new) lease.
556.703—This section addresses the effects of a lease segregation.
556.704—This section sets forth the circumstances under which
BOEM would disapprove an assignment or sublease.
556.705—This section outlines the procedures to follow to transfer an interest in an OCS lease from a deceased natural person.
556.706—This section outlines the process for transferring record
title interests in more than one lease to different parties.
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Corresponding section number from the
proposal (if any)
556.46(a)–(b) ......................
Section 256.410.
551.11, 551.12, 580.51 ......
None.
556.41 ................................
Section 256.411.
556.44 ................................
Section 256.402.
556.40 ................................
Section 256.412.
556.40, 556.43 ...................
Section 256.413.
556.41(d) ............................
Section 256.414.
556.47 ................................
Section 256.416.
556.47(e)(1)–(e)(3) .............
Section 256.417.
556.47 ................................
Section 256.420.
556.50 ................................
556.49 ................................
Section 256.421.
Section 256.306(a)(2).
556.37(a)–(b) ......................
Section 256.600.
556.37(a)–(b), 556.70,
556.71, 556.72.
556.37(c) ............................
Section 256.601.
Section 256.602.
556.37(c) ............................
Section 256.603.
550.146, 556.62, 556.64 ....
Sections 256.605 and 256.612.
550.146, 556.62, 556.64 ....
Sections 256.606 and 256.612.
556.11 ................................
Section 256.630.
556.62, 556.64 ...................
Sections 256.610, 256.611, and 256.612.
556.62(a), 556.65 ...............
Section 256.611.
556.68 ................................
Section 256.613(a)(2).
556.68 ................................
Section 256.613(a)(2).
556.62, 556.64 ...................
Section 256.611.
556.64(e)–(g) ......................
Section 256.614.
None ...................................
Section 256.615.
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Prior regulation that the
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Final rule section
556.707—This section outlines the process for transferring different types of interests in a lease to different parties.
556.708—This section outlines the process for transferring record
title interests in more than one lease to the same party.
556.709—This section outlines the process for transferring the
record title interest in one lease to more than one party.
556.710 –This section sets forth the effect of an assignment of
record title on an assignor’s liability under the lease.
556.711—This section provides that a record title holder who subleases operating rights remains liable for later accruing obligations of the lease, but is only secondarily liable for monetary
obligations accruing thereafter.
556.712—This section describes the effective legal date of the
transfer of a record title interest in a lease.
556.713—This section sets forth the effect of an assignment of
record title on an assignee’s liability under the lease.
556.714—This section describes procedures to be used in assignments between those on the restricted joint bidders list.
556.715—This section provides that a lessee may create, transfer, or assign an economic interest in a lease without BOEM
approval, but that such transferor must send BOEM a copy of
each instrument creating or transferring such a lease interest
within 90 days after the last party executes the transfer instrument.
556.716—This section provides the circumstances under which
the transfer of a record title interest triggers the need to file a
new designation of operator form with BOEM.
Subpart H—Transferring All or Part of the Operating Rights in a Lease
556.800—This section provides that an operating rights owner
may assign all or part of its operating rights interests, subject to
BOEM approval.
556.801—This section describes the process by which an assignor of operating rights must obtain approval of such an assignment.
556.802—This section sets forth the circumstances under which
BOEM may disapprove an assignment of operating rights.
556.803—This section addresses the assignment of operating
rights interests in more than one lease to different parties.
556.804—This section addresses the assignment of operating
rights interests in one lease to more than one party.
556.805—This section sets forth the effect of an assignment of
operating rights on an assignor’s liability under the lease.
556.806—This section describes the effective legal date of the
transfer of an operating rights interest in a lease.
556.807—This section sets forth the effect of an assignment of
operating rights on an assignee’s liability under the lease.
556.808—This section provides that an operating rights owner
may create, transfer, or assign economic interests without
BOEM approval, but that for record keeping purposes, the operating rights owner must send BOEM a copy of each instrument
creating or transferring such interests within 90 days after the
last party executes the transfer instrument.
556.809 ............................................................................................
556.810—This section provides the circumstances under which
the transfer of an operating rights interest triggers the need to
file a new designation of operator form with BOEM.
Subpart I—Bonding or Other Financial Assurance
556.900—This section sets forth general bonding/financial assurance requirements for OCS leases.
556.901—This section sets forth additional bonding/financial assurance requirements for OCS leases.
556.902—This section sets forth the requirements which a bond
or other security must meet.
556.903—This section sets forth what must be done if a bond
lapses.
556.904—This section sets forth the procedures for establishing
lease abandonment accounts as a method of financial assurance.
556.905—This section sets forth the procedures for using a thirdparty guarantee as a method of financial assurance.
556.906—This section sets forth the procedures for terminating
the period of liability of, and cancelling, a bond.
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Corresponding section number from the
proposal (if any)
556.67 ................................
Section 256.615.
556.64(a)(8), 556.67 ..........
Section 256.615.
556.64 ................................
Section 256.616.
556.64 ................................
Section 256.616.
556.64 ................................
Section 256.616.
556.62(c) ............................
Section 256.617.
556.62(e) ............................
Section 256.618.
556.64(i) .............................
Section 256.619.
556.64(a)(7) ........................
Section 256.620.
550.143 ..............................
Section 256.611.
556.62, 556.64 ...................
Section 256.612.
550.143, 556.64 .................
Section 256.613.
556.62 ................................
Section 256.611.
556.67 ................................
Section 256.615.
556.64(a)(8) ........................
Section 256.615.
556.62(d) ............................
Section 256.616.
556.62(c) ............................
Section 256.617.
556.62, 556.64 ...................
Section 256.618.
556.64(a)(7) ........................
Section 256.620.
Reserved ............................
550.143, 556.62 .................
None.
Section 256.611.
556.52 ................................
556.53 ................................
Sections 256.500, 256.502, 256.510, and
256.521.
Sections 256. 501 and 256.510.
556.54 ................................
Sections 256.502 and 256.503.
556.55 ................................
Section 256.520.
556.56 ................................
Section 256.512.
556.57 ................................
Section 256.511.
556.58 ................................
Section 256.522 and 256.523.
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18119
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Final rule section
556.907—This section sets forth the procedures for forfeiting a
bond or other security.
Subpart J—Bonus or Royalty Credits for Exchange of Certain Leases
556.1000—This section sets forth the deadline for applying for
certain bonus or royalty credits which had been available under
the Gulf of Mexico Energy Security Act of 2006 (GOMESA) (43
U.S.C. 1331 note).
Subpart K—Ending a Lease
556.1100—This section provides the circumstances under which
a lease will expire at the end of its primary term.
556.1101—This section sets forth the procedures to follow for relinquishment of a lease.
556.1102—This section provides the circumstances under which
BOEM may cancel or void a producing or a non-producing OCS
lease.
Subpart L—Leases Maintained Under Section 6 of OCSLA
556.1200—This section explains the relationship between
BOEM’s regulations and leases maintained under section 6 of
OCSLA.
556.1201—This section states that the existence of a lease for
other minerals under section 6 of OCSLA in an area does not
preclude the issuance of other leases in the same area.
Subpart M—Environmental Studies
556.1300—This section provides that BOEM will conduct studies
of any area or region included in any oil and gas lease sale, as
needed, to assess and manage impacts on the human, marine
and coastal environments which may be affected by OCS oil
and gas or other mineral activities in such area or region.
Corresponding section number from the
proposal (if any)
556.59 ................................
Sections 256.524, 256.525, and 256.526.
556.90–556.95 ...................
Sections 256.900–256.905.
556.37(b)–(c) ......................
Section 256.700.
556.76 ................................
Section 256.701.
556.77 ................................
Section 256.702.
556.79 ................................
None.
556.80 ................................
None.
556.82 ................................
None.
DERIVATION TABLE FOR 30 CFR PART 560—OUTER CONTINENTAL SHELF OIL AND GAS LEASING
Prior regulation that the
final rule would modify or
replace
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Final rule section
Subpart A—General Provisions
560.100—This section describes the authorities applicable to this
part.
560.101—This section describes the purpose of this part ..............
560.102—This section sets forth the definitions applicable to this
part.
560.103—This section describes BOEM’s information collection
authority.
Subpart B—Bidding Systems
GENERAL PROVISIONS:
560.200—This section describes the purpose of this subpart ........
560.201—This section sets forth the definitions applicable to this
subpart.
560.202—This section describes the bidding systems that BOEM
may utilize.
560.203—This section describes the terms and conditions that
would apply, depending on the bidding systems that BOEM utilizes.
ELIGIBLE LEASES:
560.210—This section describes how royalty suspension volumes
could apply to a lease.
560.211—This section describes when a lease may qualify for
royalty suspensions.
560.212—This section describes how BOEM would assign royalty
suspension volumes for eligible leases.
560.213—This section specifies how long royalty suspension volumes may be effective to eligible leases.
560.214—This section describes how a lessee should measure
the natural gas production on an eligible lease, subject to the
royalty suspension volume.
ROYALTY SUSPENSION LEASES:
560.220—This section describes how royalty suspensions apply
to leases issued in a sale held after November 2000.
560.221—This section describes when a lease issued in a sale
held after November 2000 is entitled to a royalty suspension.
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Corresponding section number from the
proposal (if any)
Undesignated authority section.
560.1 ..................................
559.001—559.002,560.2 ....
None.
None.
560.3 ..................................
None.
560.101 ..............................
560.102 ..............................
None.
None.
560.110 ..............................
None.
560.111 ..............................
None.
560.112 ..............................
None.
560.113 ..............................
None.
560.114 ..............................
None.
560.115 ..............................
None.
560.116 ..............................
None.
560.120 ..............................
None.
560.121 ..............................
None.
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DERIVATION TABLE FOR 30 CFR PART 560—OUTER CONTINENTAL SHELF OIL AND GAS LEASING—Continued
Prior regulation that the
final rule would modify or
replace
Final rule section
560.222—This section describes how long a royalty suspension
volume would be effective for a lease issued in a sale held after
November 2000.
560.223—This section describes how to measure natural gas production for a lease subject to royalty suspension volumes
issued in a sale held after November 2000.
560.224—This section describes how a royalty suspension would
apply if BOEM assigns a lease issued in a sale held after November 2000 to a field that has a lease issued before the enactment of the OCS Deep Water Royalty Relief Act. (43 U.S.C.
1337(3)).
BIDDING SYSTEM SELECTION CRITERIA:
560.230—This section describes what criteria BOEM uses for selecting bidding systems and bidding system components.
Subpart C—Operating Allowances
560.300—This section explains that Operating Allowances can be
specified in an oil and gas leases.
Subpart D—Joint Bidding
Reserved ..........................................................................................
Subpart E—Electronic Filings
560.500—This section describes BOEM’s electronic document
and data transmissions procedures.
560.501—This section describes how BOEM will maintain the
confidentiality of electronic documents and data.
560.502—This section describes under what circumstances electronic document filings will be considered legally binding.
III. Section-by-Section Analysis of the
Final Rulemaking
A. Part 550—Oil and Gas and Sulfur
Operations in the Outer Continental
Shelf
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
1. Subpart A—General Provisions
Section 550.120. What standards will
BOEM use to regulate leases, rights-ofuse and easement, and rights-of-way?
This section provides that BOEM will
regulate activities under a lease, rightof-use and easement, or right-of-way, to
promote the orderly exploration,
development, and production of mineral
resources, while preventing waste,
protecting the environment and
ensuring cooperation with other
government agencies. Final rule section
550.120 did not appear in the proposed
rule, but it was in the pre-split
regulations, at 30 CFR 250.106. When
BOEMRE was split into two agencies,
this regulation was assigned to BSEE,
and it therefore still appears at 30 CFR
250.106. As time has passed, however,
BOEM has found itself hampered in
properly evaluating and approving
certain types of plans (such as
exploration plans (EPs), development
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560.122 ..............................
None.
560.123 ..............................
None.
560.124 ..............................
None.
560.130 ..............................
None.
206.120 ..............................
This section was originally part of MMS
regulations at section 206.120 and was
inadvertently omitted from BOEM regulations during the split of the MMS
rules into those of three different agencies. 75 FR 65051.
560.301—560.303 ..............
The proposed rule amended 30 CFR part
260 by removing subpart D, which consisted of prior regulations sections
560.301—560.303.
None ...................................
None ...................................
This section is derived in part from proposed rule section 256.503(c).
None.
None ...................................
None.
and production plans (DPPs), or
development operations coordination
documents (DOCDs)) without this
provision in its regulations. This section
has therefore been put into the final rule
with minor word changes.
Section 550.121. What must I do to
protect health, safety, property, and the
environment? This section provides
that, when economically feasible, BOEM
may require additional measures to
ensure the use of Best Available and
Safest Technology (BAST) as identified
by BSEE, to avoid the failure of
equipment that would have a significant
effect on safety, health, or the
environment. Final rule section 550.121
did not appear in the proposed rule, but
it was in the pre-split regulations, at 30
CFR 250.107 and tracks section 21(b) of
OCSLA. When BOEMRE was split into
two agencies, this regulation was
assigned to BSEE, and it therefore still
appears at 30 CFR 250.107. As time has
passed, however, BOEM has found itself
hampered in properly evaluating and
approving certain types of plans (e.g.,
EPs) without this provision in the
BOEM regulations. It has therefore been
put into the final rule with some
changes necessary to conform the
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provision to the scope of BOEM’s
enforcement authority.
Section 550.197(b)(5). Data and
information to be made available to the
public or for limited inspection. This
section provides that BOEM will
generally release geological data and
analyzed geological information two
years after the required submittal date
for such information or 60 days after a
lease sale. This final rule provision did
not appear in the proposed rule, but did
appear in the pre-split regulations at
section 250.197(b)(5) (now BOEM
regulation 550.197(b)(5)). However, the
prior section, 550.197(b)(5), states ‘‘[i]f
the primary term specified in the lease
is extended under the heading of
‘Suspensions’ under this subpart, the
extension applies to this provision.’’
Since the agency split, the
determination whether to grant a
suspension is made by BSEE. Because
BOEM does not make these
determinations, ‘‘suspensions’’ are no
longer addressed in this subpart.
Accordingly, the text in this final
rulemaking changes the statement to
say: ‘‘[i]f the primary term specified in
the lease is extended, the extension
applies to this provision,’’ removing the
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reference to ‘‘suspensions’’ and to ‘‘this
subpart’’ while retaining the meaning of
the earlier provision.
Section 550.197(c). Data and
information to be made available to the
public or for limited inspection. This
section provides that BOEM may allow
limited data and information inspection,
but only by a person with a direct
interest in related BOEM decisions and
issues in a specific geographic area, and
who agrees in writing to maintain the
confidentiality of geological and
geophysical (G&G) data and information
submitted under this part. Similar to the
last-discussed provision, this section
did not appear in the proposed
rulemaking, but it did appear in the presplit regulations, at 250.197(c) (now
BOEM regulation 550.197(c)). The
provision in the final rulemaking
changes ‘‘MMS’’ to ‘‘BOEM’’ and deletes
a reference to ‘‘part 203,’’ which no
longer exists in the regulations at Title
30. The pre-split regulation listed
several activities done by MMS. Only
the part of that list that is pertinent to
BOEM is retained in this final rule
section.
Section 550.197(d). Data and
information to be made available to the
public or for limited inspection. This
section provides, in accordance with
section 26 of OCSLA, that no
proprietary information received by
BOEM will be transmitted to any
affected State unless the lessee, or the
permittee and all persons to whom such
permittee has sold such information
under promise of confidentiality, agree
to such transmittal. The final rule
includes this provision, which did not
appear in the proposed rule, because
section 26(c) of OCSLA requires a
regulation providing for maintenance of
the confidentiality of privileged or
proprietary information received by
BOEM. (43 U.S.C. 1352(c)).
2. Subpart D—Leasing Maps and
Diagrams
This is a new subpart, which is being
created as part of this rule.
Section 550.400. Leasing maps and
diagrams. This section provides that any
area of the OCS, that has been
appropriately platted, may be leased for
any mineral not included in an existing
lease issued under the Act or meeting
the requirements of subsection (a) of
section 6 of the Act. This section was in
the pre-split regulations at section 256.8
(now BOEM regulation 556.8), but was
omitted in part from the proposed rule.
The Derivation Table in the Preamble to
the proposed rule said the language of
256.8 was ‘‘simplified’’ and placed in
proposed rule section 256.202. Proposed
rule section 256.202, however, is not
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sufficient to ensure that the substance of
former 256.8 is retained in the
regulations. After reviewing these
provisions, BOEM has determined that
the text of former section 256.8 (now
556.8) should be retained. Hence, it has
been included in this final rulemaking
as section 550.400, which retains the
text from prior section 556.8 without
any changes.
B. Part 556—Leasing of Sulfur or Oil
and Gas and Bonding Requirements in
the Outer Continental Shelf
1. The Table of Contents for Part 556
The Table of Contents for part 556 in
the final rulemaking reflects a changed
organization and structure from the
proposed rule. After publication of the
proposed rule, and after BOEMRE was
divided into two agencies, BOEM
analyzed the organization of part 556
and the way in which information was
presented within the sections in the
part, and decided to modify the
organization of the part.
The first three subparts in the final
rule (subpart A—General Provisions,
subpart B—Oil and Gas Five Year
Leasing Program, and subpart C—
Planning and Holding a Lease Sale),
contain the same information as the first
three subparts in the proposed rule; the
fourth subpart, Subpart D, however,
includes more significant organizational
changes. In the proposed rule, Subpart
D—Issuance of a Lease, contained five
subtitles within it: Qualifications, How
to Bid, Restrictions on Joint Bidding,
How Does MMS Act on Bids?, and
Awarding the Lease. In the final rule,
Subpart D includes only one subtitle:
Qualifications. BOEM made this change
in order to separate out the
qualifications provisions and set them
out in a clearer, more sequential
manner. Subpart E in the final rule
picks up the other four subtitles from
the proposed rule’s Subpart D.
In the proposed rule, Subpart E
covered bonding and financial
assurance. These topics are found in
Subpart I in the final rule, but as
previously noted, no substantive
changes have been made to the
provisions in this subpart in the final
rule. Instead of adopting the proposed
rule sections on these topics, BOEM will
retain the prior bonding and financial
assurance provisions—which, with
minor editorial and conforming
revisions, are found at final rule
sections 556.900 through 556.907—until
such time as a new rulemaking is
proposed for these topics.
In the proposed rule, Subpart F was
entitled, ‘‘Maintaining a Lease,’’ and it
contained four subtitles: Initial Period of
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a Lease, Lease Obligations, Transferring
Interest in All or Part of a Lease, and
Helium. In the final rule, Subpart F
contains three subtitles: Length of Lease,
Lease Obligations, and Helium. These
subtitles cover the same regulatory
issues as Subpart F in the proposed rule,
with the exception of the proposed
rule’s subtitle concerning transfers of
interest. In the final rule, regulatory
provisions concerning the transfer of a
record title interest and those provisions
concerning transfers of an operating
rights interest have been split into two
different Subparts—Subpart G and
Subpart H, respectively.
The final rule’s Subpart H was
‘‘Reserved’’ in the proposed rule. In the
final rule, Subpart H includes
provisions addressing the transfer of
operating rights interests. As noted
above, final rule Subpart I addresses
BOEM’s bonding and financial
assurance requirements, which are
substantively unchanged from the prior
BOEM regulations. Provisions dealing
with bonus or royalty credits in
exchange for certain leases, found in
final rule Subpart J, were found in
proposed rule Subpart I. The final rule’s
Subpart K—Ending a Lease, was the
proposed rule’s Subpart G.
Finally, final rule Subpart L—Leases
Maintained under Section 6 of OCSLA
(43 U.S.C. 1335), and Subpart M—
Environmental Studies, did not appear
in the proposed rule. The Derivation
Table in the Preamble to the proposed
rule proposed to eliminate both subparts
as unnecessary, but BOEM has rethought this elimination, and has
decided to retain them. We do so
because, in the case of Subpart L, there
are extant ‘‘Section 6 Leases,’’ and with
respect to Subpart M, OCSLA section 20
requires that the Secretary perform
environmental studies. (43 U.S.C. 1346).
2. Subpart A—General Provisions
Section 556.100. Statement of Policy.
This section states that management of
Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) resources
is to be conducted in accordance with
the findings, purposes, and policy
directions provided by OCSLA. The
corollary to final rule section 556.100 is
prior BOEM regulation 556.2. Both
sections set forth a general policy
statement. The proposed rule did not
contain a section setting forth a
statement of policy. Although this
section is new in the final rule, it is
explanatory in nature and does not
impose any new requirements on the
public. Therefore, BOEM is including it
in this final rule without prior public
notice and comment.
Section 556.101. Purpose. The
proposed rule contained a statement of
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purpose at section 256.102, ‘‘What does
this part cover?’’ In the final rule,
however, BOEM decided to retain the
statement of purpose section from the
prior regulations, which was found at
556.1.
Section 556.102. Authority. In the
final rule, BOEM decided to include a
regulatory section setting forth the
authority(ies) for the issuance of these
regulations, which has been updated to
reflect the amendments made to
FOGRMA by the Federal Oil and Gas
Royalty Simplification and Fairness Act
of 1996, (30 U.S.C. 1701 note). The
proposed rule did not contain a
regulatory section with a list of
authorities, but did contain such a list
at the end of the proposed rule’s Table
of Contents. The list needed to be
updated since the publication of the
proposed rule.
Section 556.103. Cross references. The
proposed rule did not contain a section
setting out cross-references. Current
BOEM regulations section 556.7 lists
pertinent cross-references, and BOEM
decided to include a cross-reference
section in the final rule. We did so
because cross-references enable the
reading public to more quickly find
related regulations. Cross-references do
not impose any new substantive
requirements that require prior public
notice and comment.
Section 556.104. Information
collection and proprietary information.
This section has two major provisions.
The first provides the legal basis for
BOEM’s collection of information in
connection with the administration of
its OCS oil, gas and sulfur leasing
program. The second provision
describes how BOEM will handle and
maintain proprietary information. Final
rule section 556.104 contains the same
information as the corresponding
proposed rule section, section 256.100.
Subsection (b) of the proposed rule
provision addressed ‘‘proprietary
information,’’ but it was unclear
whether the subsection extended to all
proprietary information, or only to such
information received in response to a
Call for Information and Nominations
(‘‘Call’’). To rectify this situation, we
drafted the final rule provision to
address proprietary information
generally, (section 556.104(b)), and
separately, proprietary information
received in response to a Call (section
556.104(c)).
Section 556.105. Definitions. This
section provides definitions for key
terms used throughout this part of the
regulations. As explained further below,
some of these definitions are retained
from the preexisting regulations; others
are identical to definitions included in
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the proposed rule; and finally, a few
definitions are new to this final rule, but
they define terms already used in the
regulations.
The terms and phrases listed in the
next paragraph have been retained from
the regulations as they existed before
BOEMRE was divided into two
agencies, and therefore, as the
regulations were constituted at the time
of publication of the proposed rule.
The list of terms that have been
retained from the pre-split regulations is
as follows: Aliquot or Aliquot Part,
Authorized officer, Average daily
production, Barrel, Crude oil,
Development block, Economic interest,
Initial period, Lease term pipeline,
Lessee, Natural gas, Operating rights,
Operator, Outer Continental Shelf
(OCS), Outer Continental Shelf Lands
Act (OCSLA), Owned, Planning area,
Regional Director, Regional Supervisor,
Security, Single bid, Six-month bidding
period, and Statement of production.
In the following cases, we moved
definitions of terms from a substantive
regulation to this definitions section,
with no change to the meaning
expressed.
Aliquot part. The definition of the
term ‘‘aliquot part’’ from proposed rule
section 256.611, which addresses
transfers of lease interests, was moved
into this definitions section (556.105).
BOEM. The term ‘‘BOEM’’ was
retained, from the prior regulations, in
final rule section 556.105.
Development block. The definition of
the term ‘‘development block’’ was
moved from section 556.12(c)(3) to this
definitions section.
Economic interest. The definition of
the term ‘‘economic interest’’ was
moved from section 556.40 to this
definitions section.
Western Planning Area. Pursuant to a
commenter’s recommendation, a
definition of ‘‘Western Planning Area’’
was added, in final rule section 556.105.
The following terms were retained
unchanged from the prior BOEM
regulations, or remain as described in
the proposed rule: Act, Affected State,
Authorized Officer, Coastal
Environment, Coastal Zone, Coastline,
Desoto Canyon OPD, Destin Dome OPD,
Human Environment, Marine
Environment, Pensacola OPD. The term
‘‘person’’ was added to the regulations,
utilizing the definition from the
proposed rule.
The following definitions have been
added in final rule section 556.105 to
define terms or concepts already used in
the regulations, the definitions of which
were apparent from the context of the
prior regulatory language: BSEE, crude
oil, designated operator, economic
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interest, initial period, primary term,
joint bid, lease, lease interest, lessee,
natural gas, natural gas liquids,
operating rights, operating rights owner,
operating rights tract, operator, owned,
planning area, primary term, regional
director, regional supervisor, RUE,
ROW, security, single bid, six month bid
period, and statement of production. A
few of these terms were updated, as
follows:
• Designated operator. The
requirement to designate an operator is
set out in prior BOEM regulations at
section 550.143. Consistent with the
‘‘designated operator’’ requirements in
that section, BOEM is including a
definition of the term ‘‘designated
operator’’ in the definitions section of
the final rule. Prior section 550.143(a)
states that ‘‘each lessee must submit a
Designation of Operator (DOO) form’’ to
designate an operator. As implemented,
this requirement applies to all record
title owners and to those operating
rights owners that own operating rights
in the aliquots/depths in which the
designated operator, to which the DOO
form applies, will be operating. This
interpretation is reflected in the
definition of ‘‘[d]esignated operator’’ in
the final rule.
• Lease interest. The term ‘‘lease
interest’’ appears, as ‘‘interests in . . .
leases,’’ in the first sentence of prior
BOEM regulations at section 556.62.
The final rule definition lists interests
already recognized in the prior
regulations.
• Minerals. The term has been
redefined to better correspond to its
meaning in OCSLA.
• Natural gas liquids. The definition
of ‘‘Natural gas liquids’’ is taken from
the prior term ‘‘Liquefied petroleum
products.’’ 42 U.S.C. 6213 restricts joint
bidding on leases for those producing
more than an average worldwide daily
production of 1.6 million barrels of
crude oil and/or its equivalent in
natural gas liquids and natural gas
during a 6-month period preceding a
lease sale. Previously, regulations
implementing 42 U.S.C. 6213 referred to
‘‘liquefied petroleum products’’ rather
than ‘‘natural gas liquids,’’ but then
defined ‘‘liquefied petroleum products’’
as natural gas liquids. We dropped
references to ‘‘liquefied petroleum
products,’’ but there is no change in the
concept; only the term has been
changed.
• Operating rights owner. The
definition of the term ‘‘Operating rights
owner’’ has been added into this
definitions section. It is based on the
definition of ‘‘Operating rights’’ in prior
BOEM regulations at section 550.105.
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• Right-of-use and easement. The
prior BOEM regulations, at 30 CFR
550.105, defined the terms ‘‘Easement’’
and ‘‘Right-of-use’’ separately. But the
term that is actually used throughout
the prior regulations is ‘‘right-of-use and
easement.’’ (See, e.g., 30 CFR 550.16—
550.166). The term ‘‘right-of-use and
easement’’ is also used in the proposed
rule (see, e.g., proposed rule sections
256.502(c), 256.410(a), and 256.511(a)).
The term is defined in the final rule
because it appears in final rule section
556.104, concerning BOEM’s
information collections and its handling
of proprietary information.
• Right-of-way. The definition of
‘‘Right-of-way’’ in the final rule is based
on the definition of ‘‘Right-of-way
pipelines’’ in the prior BOEM
regulations at section 550.105, but the
definition has been updated to make
clear that a right-of-way authorization is
issued by BSEE.
• You. The term ‘‘You’’ was defined
in proposed rule provision 256.103 by
providing a list of individuals to whom
it would apply. This list has been
retained in the final rule, but an
introductory sentence has been added to
the definition that defines the word,
rather than merely listing the
individuals to whom the term applies.
Section 556.106. Service fees. This
section identifies various administrative
fees that BOEM requires for various
services. The language in the Service
Fees section, 256.104(b), of the
proposed rulemaking, ‘‘payment . . .
must accompany . . . submission,’’
engendered comments as to whether the
proposed rule would have required
operators to send in checks with their
submission(s). BOEM therefore changed
the language of this provision in the
final rule to reflect that evidence of
payment of the required fee(s) via
pay.gov must accompany document
submission(s) or must be sent to the
office identified by BOEM. The fees in
this rule are being adjusted to reflect the
Implicit Price Deflator change of 3.31
percent (inflation from 2011 through
2013). The fees were last adjusted for
inflation through calendar year 2011 (78
FR 5836).
Section 556.107. Corporate Seal
requirements. This section sets forth an
alternative procedure, to avoid the use
of a corporate seal, for those electronic
document submissions for which a
corporate seal is otherwise required by
these regulations. BOEM’s rules require
the use of a corporate seal in several
instances. The Federal Government is,
however, moving rapidly toward an allelectronic filing and records retention
system. Because of this, BOEM has
added section 556.107 to the final rule,
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which permits document submitters to
electronically file documents with
BOEM using a secure electronic filing
system without the use of corporate
seals. The filer may choose to file a
document electronically; electronic
document submission is not required by
the final rule.
In order to maintain the legal validity
of documents filed electronically
without corporate seals, BOEM is
requiring that those entities who choose
to so file provide BOEM with a one-time
filing of a document containing the
entity’s corporate seal, signed by an
authorized party, and stating that the
entity’s filings made through a secure
electronic filing system will be legally
binding.
Final rule section 556.107 also
enables those who choose not to file
documents electronically to forego
repeated use of the corporate seal by
filing a document similar to the
document discussed in the last
paragraph, which states that future nonelectronic filings will be legally binding
without the use of a corporate seal.
BOEM further recognizes that not all
States issue corporate seals. Therefore,
final rule section 556.107 contains a
paragraph (c), which states that an
entity from a non-corporate seal State
may file a document with BOEM stating
that its state of incorporation does not
use corporate seals. This document
must be signed by an authorized party
and must state that submissions made
by this corporation will be legally
binding.
Final rule section 556.107 does not
have a counterpart in the proposed rule,
but notice and comment on this
provision is unnecessary because the
provision does not require that any
member of the public do anything
differently than was already required by
the prior regulations. Section 556.107
will, however, reduce the burden on
those who choose to use the options it
provides by streamlining the document
submission process for them. The
provision is also in accord with the
Federal-Government-wide effort to
digitize government services. See, e.g.,
the Government Paperwork Elimination
Act, Public Law 105–277, 112 Stat. 2681
(1998).
3. Subpart B—Oil and Gas Five Year
Leasing Program
Sections under this subpart detail the
steps BOEM takes to develop the FiveYear Oil and Gas Leasing Program. The
final rule provisions set forth,
sequentially, the stages in the
development of the Five Year program,
and closely mirror those in the proposed
rule.
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Proposed rule section 256.206, ‘‘Does
MMS offer blocks in a sale that is not
on the 5-year program schedule?’’
appeared under this Subpart B in the
proposed rule. In the final rule, this
section was moved to the next subpart,
Subpart C—Planning and Holding a
Lease Sale, because the section is
substantively concerned with holding a
certain type of lease sale, not with the
development of the Five Year program.
BOEM believes this section is more
appropriately placed within Subpart C.
Section 556.200. What is the Five
Year leasing program? This section
reiterates those key provisions of
OCSLA that require the Secretary to
prepare an oil and gas leasing program
that consists of a five-year schedule of
proposed lease sales. Final rule section
556.200(a) substantially repeats
proposed rule section 256.200. BOEM
received two comments on proposed
rule section 256.200 (section 556.200 in
the final rule) that part of the section
repeated language from OCSLA, and
was therefore ‘‘inconsistent with the
streamlining that MMS has taken with
the proposed regulations.’’ BOEM
considered these comments, but
decided to retain the statutory language
as it is important to explain the goals of
the Five Year program. BOEM received
no other comments on this subpart.
Section 556.201. Does BOEM consider
multiple uses of the OCS? Final rule
section 556.201 reiterates the OCSLA
requirement that BOEM consider
multiple uses of the OCS in its
development of the Five Year oil and
gas leasing program. This approach
derives from a requirement in Section
18 of OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1344(a)(2)(D))
that the leasing program shall be
prepared and maintained in a manner
consistent with, among other things,
‘‘other uses of the sea and seabed,
including fisheries, navigation, existing
or proposed sea lanes, potential sites of
deepwater ports, and other anticipated
uses of the resources and space of the
outer Continental Shelf.’’ Final rule
section 556.201 emphasizes that BOEM
gathers information about multiple uses
of the OCS to assist the Secretary in
making decisions on the Five Year
program, pursuant to the provisions of
43 U.S.C. 1344. For this purpose, BOEM
invites and considers suggestions from
States and local governments, industry,
and any other interested parties,
primarily through public notice and
comment procedures. BOEM also
invites and considers suggestions from
Federal agencies.
Section 256.201 from the proposed
rule has been modified in the final rule.
As originally worded, proposed rule
section 256.201 might have been
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considered confusing because it used
the word ‘‘consult’’ in the context of the
Five Year Program. The term ‘‘consult’’
is a term of art usually associated with
consultation under the Endangered
Species Act (16 U.S.C. 1531–1544) and
government-to-government consultation
with Indian tribes. The Endangered
Species Act does not require
consultation during the preparation of
the Five Year program. OCSLA requires
that BOEM invite and consider
comments and suggestions from other
agencies and from States during its Five
Year program preparation process, 43
U.S.C. 1344(c), and so the final rule
addresses that in sections 556.201
through 556.203.
Section 556.202. How does BOEM
start the Five Year preparation process?
This section sets forth the steps BOEM
takes in initiating the Five Year
program. Final rule section 556.202
substantively repeats proposed rule
section 256.202, but the final rule
changes the statement in the proposed
rule that ‘‘[a]ny area properly included
on the official 5-year diagrams and maps
may be offered for lease for any mineral
not already leased’’ by substituting the
explanation that any ‘‘area not already
leased for oil and gas may be offered for
lease.’’ The statement in the proposed
rule was inaccurate because the Five
Year program applies only to the leasing
of oil and gas.
Section 556.203. What does BOEM do
before publishing a proposed Five Year
program? This section provides that
BOEM will invite comments from
governors on a draft proposed program
at least sixty days before it publishes a
proposed Five Year program. Final rule
section 556.203 repeats proposed rule
section 256.203, with some minor
wording changes.
Section 556.204. How do governments
and citizens comment on a proposed
Five Year program? This section states
the procedures to be followed to obtain
inter-governmental and citizens’
comments on the proposed Five Year
program. Final rule section 556.204
repeats proposed rule section 256.204.
Section 556.205. What does BOEM do
before approving a proposed final Five
Year program or a significant revision of
a previously-approved Five Year
program? This section provides that the
Secretary must provide a copy of the
proposed Five Year Program, or any
significant revision thereto, to Congress
and the President at least sixty days
before approving it. Final rule section
556.205 is substantively the same as
proposed rule section 256.205.
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4. Subpart C—Planning and Holding a
Lease Sale
Sections in this subpart address the
process leading up to a lease sale, the
conduct of a lease sale, and the
circumstances under which a lease sale
that is not on the Five Year Program
schedule may be held. Subpart C in the
final rule generally tracks Subpart C in
the proposed rule, with certain
differences, described in the following
paragraphs, which discuss final rule
sections 556.300 through 556.309.
Section 556.300. What reports may
BOEM and other Federal agencies
prepare before a lease sale? This section
provides that BOEM will prepare a
report describing the general geology
and potential mineral resources of the
area under consideration. Although this
final rule section did not appear in the
proposed rule, it did appear in the prior
BOEM regulations, at prior Subpart C—
Reports from Federal Agencies, which
consists of one section, 556.22,
‘‘General.’’ The Preamble to the
proposed rule stated that the precursor
to prior regulations section 556.22 (i.e.,
256.22) was ‘‘[e]liminated as repetitive
with [OCSLA].’’ BOEM has decided to
retain the section in the final rule
because the regulated public will be
looking to the regulations, and not to
OCSLA, for guidance on BOEM’s
processes and requirements. Final rule
section 556.300 is substantively
identical to the prior BOEM regulation
556.22.
Section 556.301. What is a Call for
Information and Nominations? The
formal lease sale process usually begins
with BOEM’s publication of a Call for
Information and Nominations,
sometimes referred to as the ‘‘Call.’’ The
Call requests indications of interest from
industry in the leasing of specific
blocks, and requests comments on other
relevant information that BOEM can use
in developing a recommendation of
leasing areas for the Secretary. This
section outlines the process BOEM uses
to collect information to inform its
determination as to which areas should
be made available for leasing.
Final rule section 556.301 is
substantively identical to proposed rule
section 256.300, except for the addition
of an additional topic on which the Call
will request comments. The prior
regulations, at section 556.23(b), state
that the Call ‘‘shall also request
comments on areas which should
receive special concern and analysis.’’
The proposed rule did not include
‘‘areas of special concern and analysis’’
as one of the topics on which the Call
will request comments, but the
Preamble to the proposed rule shed no
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light on why this topic was omitted,
stating only that section 256.23 (now
556.23) was ‘‘[r]eorganized.’’ BOEM sees
no reason to omit ‘‘areas of special
concern and analysis’’ from the list of
topics on which the Call will request
comments, and so has retained it in the
list of such topics stated in final rule
section 556.301.
Section 556.302. What does BOEM do
with the information from the Call?
Using the information received in
response to the Call and further analysis
of environmental issues, resource
potential, stated interest, potential use
conflicts, and other relevant
information, the Director will develop a
recommendation of the area to be
included in a lease sale. This
recommendation is often termed the
‘‘Area Identification,’’ or ‘‘Area ID.’’
This section explains the process used
to arrive at the Area ID.
BOEM received one comment on
proposed rule section 256.301, on
which final rule section 556.302 is
based. The comment noted that the
phrase ‘‘as soon as possible,’’ which
appeared in the analogous prior
regulation (section 556.26(c)), had been
deleted by the proposed rule, resulting
in the following statement in section
256.301(b) of the proposed rule: ‘‘[w]e
inform the public of any additions or
deletions from the area proposed for
leasing in the 5-year program that result
from the call process.’’ The commenter
requested that the phrase be retained in
the final rule because whether or not
areas have been deleted from a sale area
is of great importance to potential
bidders that are preparing for lease
sales. BOEM agrees with this comment
and has re-inserted this phrase in final
rule section 556.302(c).
Section 256.301 of the proposed rule
addressed the Area ID stage of BOEM’s
lease sale preparation, but omitted
several aspects that appeared in the
prior BOEM regulations at section
556.26. There is no reason given in the
proposed rule as to why certain aspects
of this stage of the lease sale process
were left out, except the statement that
prior section 256.26 was
‘‘[r]eorganized.’’ Final rule section
556.302 contains the substance of
proposed rule section 256.301, as well
as several paragraphs from the prior
section 556.26. Specifically, three
aspects of prior section 556.26 were not
in the proposed rule, but have been
retained in section 556.302 of the final
rule. First, subparagraph (a)(2) of final
rule section 556.302 states that the
Director may, on his or her own motion,
include in his or her recommendation
areas that were not indicated in
response to a Call. (See section
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556.26(a)). Second, the last sentence of
final rule section 556.302(b) states that
the Director may hold public hearings
on the environmental analysis done on
the areas identified for leasing. (See
section 556.26(b)). Third, subparagraph
556.302(e) of the final rule repeats the
last sentence in section 556.26(a),
stating that, in the case of a
supplemental sale, the Director’s
recommendation will be replaced with
his findings made under this section.
Final rule section 556.302(d) states
that the Director may, upon request,
provide relative indications of interest
in areas received in response to a Call.
Paragraph (d) also addresses the
potentially confidential nature of such
indications of interest and indicates that
BOEM will release this information in
such a way so as not to compromise the
competitive interest of any of the
respondents to the Call. The language of
this final rule paragraph was found in
the prior regulations at section
556.10(d). The substance of this final
rule paragraph 556.302(d) was found in
the proposed rule at section
256.100(b)(1) and (2), but BOEM
believes it is more appropriately placed
in this final rule section, which
addresses the treatment of information
received in response to a Call.
Section 556.303. What does BOEM do
if an area proposed for leasing is within
three nautical miles of the seaward
boundary of a coastal State? Final rule
section 556.303 sets forth the
information that BOEM will provide to
a State when an area proposed for
leasing lies within three nautical miles
of the seaward boundary of that State.
Section 556.303 is the same as proposed
rule section 256.302, except that the
final rule corrects the language of the
provision to be consistent with OCSLA
section 8(g) (43 U.S.C. 1337(g)) in its use
of the term ‘‘nautical miles’’ instead of
the proposed rule’s ‘‘geographical
miles.’’
Section 556.304. How is a proposed
notice of sale prepared? This section
describes the process utilized to prepare
a proposed notice of sale. Final rule
section 556.304 retains all the substance
of proposed rule section 256.303, but for
clarity divides the proposed rule
provision’s one paragraph into multiple
paragraphs. The final rule provision also
has a new title because the proposed
rule provision’s text and its title—
‘‘What happens with an approved
proposed notice of sale?’’—appears to
have addressed an already-approved
notice of sale without explaining how
the agency arrives at the approved
notice. The final rule provision helps
clarify this by retaining some of the
paragraphs from the analogous section
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in the prior regulations, 556.29, which
were left out of proposed rule provision
256.303, but which help to explain
BOEM’s procedures. The Preamble to
the proposed rule stated that proposed
rule provision 256.303 represented a
‘‘[s]implifi[cation]’’ of section 256.29
(now 556.29), but some steps were left
out in the simplifying process, creating
gaps in the regulations. These gaps have
been eliminated with the retention of
certain concepts from the prior
regulations in final rule section 556.305.
Final rule section 556.305(a) states
that the Director of BOEM may, in
consultation with other Federal
agencies, develop lease stipulations and
conditions, which will appear or be
referenced in the proposed notice of
sale. Both the prior regulation section
556.29 and proposed rule section
256.303 contained similar language, but
the proposed rule provision went
further and stated that the proposed
notice of sale also includes ‘‘the
Director’s findings, and all comments
and recommendations received on the
proposal.’’ While reviewing the
proposed rule, BOEM realized that these
last three items are not in the proposed
notice of sale, but accompany it when
it is presented to the Secretary for
approval. This concept that certain
items will accompany the proposed
notice of sale to the Secretary is
correctly expressed in prior section
556.29(b), therefore this language has
been used in final rule section
556.304(b).
BOEM received a comment requesting
that the lease form be attached to or
referenced in the proposed notice of
lease sale because ‘‘the terms of an oil
and gas lease sale are integral to the
lessee/lessor relationship and lessees
. . . should have the right to know the
lease terms in advance of submitting
bids.’’ BOEM agrees with this comment
insofar as potential bidders should be
aware of the lease terms and conditions,
to the extent possible, in advance of the
lease sale. To that end, final rule
provision 556.304(c) makes clear that
the proposed notice of sale references
the lease form.
Section 556.305. How does BOEM
coordinate and consult with States
regarding a proposed notice of sale?
This section outlines the process by
which BOEM coordinates with affected
States following the proposed notice of
sale. Final rule section 556.305 is
substantively the same as proposed rule
section 256.304. One change was made
to the language of the section in the
final rule as a result of a comment. The
comment requested that the section
‘‘actually reference’’ the Coastal Zone
Management Act (CZMA) (16 U.S.C.
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1451–1466) ‘‘so that if the CZMA is
modified or amended or repealed,
[BOEM] can continue to follow the
process outlined in the act, rather than
risking conflict or inconsistency.’’
BOEM agrees with this suggestion, and
has included a reference to the CZMA
in final rule section 556.305(b).
Section 556.306. What if a potentially
oil-or gas-bearing area underlies both
the OCS and lands subject to State
jurisdiction? This section provides a
process for resolving issues or disputes
that may arise between a State and the
Federal government when a
hydrocarbon-bearing area underlies both
the Federal OCS and State submerged
lands. This final rule section did not
appear in the proposed rule. The
substance of the final rule section is,
however, found at prior BOEM
regulation section 556.25(b)–(d). The
Preamble to the proposed rule stated
that this section of the prior regulations
had been left out in an attempt to
simplify the regulations. Upon
reconsideration, however, BOEM
believes that the proposed rule may
have over-simplified the regulations,
resulting in a gap. The proposed rule, at
section 256.302, addressed potentially
leasable areas ‘‘within 3 miles of the
seaward boundary of a coastal State.’’
The proposed rule did not, however,
address potentially leasable areas that
underlie the Federal/State boundary,
resulting in potentially leasable
resources on both sides of this
boundary. The two situations are treated
differently in OCSLA, at sections 8(g)(2)
and 8(g)(3), respectively (43 U.S.C.
1337(g)(2) and 1337(g)(3)). Therefore,
BOEM believes that they should be
treated separately in the regulations and
BOEM has decided to retain the prior
regulations’ provisions in the final rule,
at section 556.306.
Section 556.307. What does BOEM do
with comments and recommendations
received on the proposed notice of sale?
Final rule section 556.307 addresses
BOEM’s treatment of comments
received on the proposed notice of sale,
particularly those received from
governors and local governments. This
section provides a description of the
process that BOEM will use to evaluate
recommendations of governors and local
governments. Section 556.307 is
substantively the same as proposed rule
section 256.305, but the final rule
section has been divided into
paragraphs for ease of reading and
reference. The final rule section, at
paragraph (b), contains one sentence
that does not appear in the proposed
rule, but did appear in the analogous
prior section, 556.31(b). That sentence
merely states that the determination of
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in the final rule to set out the type of
evidence required by BOEM to
demonstrate proof of qualification to
hold leases on the OCS. The proposed
rule laid out the evidence requirements
in a table format, but on reconsideration
BOEM found this format too limiting,
and opted to remove the table and
instead use regulatory text to set forth
the evidence requirements for
qualification. The substance of the
regulations remains the same in the
final rule.
Generally, there were some logical
gaps in the scheme laid out by the
proposed rule sections regarding
‘‘Qualification’’ to hold leases on the
OCS, which BOEM has rectified in the
final rule. For example, BOEM has been
issuing ‘‘qualification numbers’’ to
qualified potential lessees for many
years, but the fact that such a number
must be obtained by a potential lessee
as a first step in the leasing process has
not been clearly spelled out in the
regulations. The lay-out of the proposed
rule sections on qualification appeared
to assume that the reader knew that he
or she must obtain a qualification
number from BOEM in order to be
‘‘qualified’’ to hold leases on the OCS,
without ever saying how that number
would be obtained.
The other minor differences between
the proposed and final rule provisions
dealing with ‘‘Qualifications’’ are set
forth, section-by-section, below.
Section 556.400. When must I
demonstrate that I am qualified to hold
a lease on the OCS? This section
provides that, in order to bid on, own,
5. Subpart D—Qualifications
hold, or operate a lease on the OCS,
Final rule Subpart D—Qualifications,
bidders, record title holders, and
was a sub-subpart in the proposed rule,
operating rights owners must first obtain
under proposed rule Subpart D—
a qualification number from BOEM. The
Issuance of a Lease. The substance of
title of this section was reworded to
the provisions in Subpart D of the final
more clearly describe this purpose.
Final rule section 556.400 is an
rule is the same as that found in sections
outgrowth of proposed rule section
256.400 through 256.404 of the
proposed rule. BOEM decided, however, 256.401(a). Proposed rule section
256.401(a) stated that, a person, in order
that the provisions covering the
to show that he or she was qualified to
qualifications necessary to hold leases
be a lessee, must ‘‘provide [his] MMS
on the OCS were significant enough to
qualification number.’’ The proposed
merit a separate subchapter in the final
rule. BOEM believes it is logical to place rule failed to explain, however, that a
potential lessee first had to obtain a
‘‘Qualifications’’ into its own subpart
and to remove it from under the heading qualification number from BOEM. Final
rule section 556.400 explains that, ‘‘in
‘‘Issuance of a Lease,’’ where it was
order to bid, own, hold, or operate a
found in the proposed rule as one must
lease on the OCS,’’ one must obtain a
qualify before a lease can be issued.
There are six sections within final
qualification number from BOEM. Final
rule Subpart D—Qualifications, which
rule section 556.400 also makes clear
generally correspond with the five
that a bidder must be qualified in order
sections under the subheading
to bid on OCS leases, as was required
‘‘qualifications’’ in the proposed rule.
by prior section 556.46.
Section 556.401. What do I need to
There are, however, a few minor
show to become qualified to hold a lease
differences between the sections in the
on the OCS and obtain a qualification
proposed rule and the sections in the
number? This section outlines BOEM’s
final rule, including the lack of a table
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the ‘‘national interest’’ as meant in this
section, will be based on the findings,
purposes, and policies of OCSLA.
Section 556.308. How does BOEM
conduct a lease sale? Final rule section
556.308 explains that BOEM will
publish a final notice of sale at least 30
days before the scheduled date of a lease
sale. This final notice of sale will
contain all the information needed to
place a bid, as well as the terms and
conditions of the lease, including any
stipulations necessary to mitigate
potential adverse impacts on the
environment.
Final rule section 556.308, paragraphs
(a)–(c), are substantively the same as
proposed rule section 256.306. The final
rule section includes a new paragraph
(d), which was added at the request of
a commenter. The commenter requested
that ‘‘the Notices of Lease Sale should
include the lease form that will be used
to grant successful bids.’’ Therefore,
final rule section 556.308 (d) states:
‘‘[t]he final notice of lease sale
references, or provides a link to, the
OCS lease form which will be issued to
successful bidders.’’
Section 556.309. Does BOEM offer
blocks in a sale that is not on the Five
Year program schedule (called a
Supplemental Sale)? Under certain
circumstances, detailed in proposed
rule section 256.206 and final rule
section 556.309, BOEM is authorized to
offer blocks in an otherwise
unscheduled sale, referred to as a
supplemental sale. The proposed and
final rule sections are the same.
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requirements for a prospective lessee to
become a qualified bidder. Final rule
section 556.401 is essentially proposed
rule section 256.400, with a few minor
additions, which flow from the language
of the proposed rule. Like the proposed
rule provision, the final rule provision
lists those who may become qualified to
hold leases on the OCS, but better
describes the entities previously
identified only as ‘‘associations.’’
Proposed rule section 256.400(c) listed
‘‘[a] private, public or municipal
corporation organized under the laws of
any State of the U.S., the District of
Columbia, or any territory or insular
possession subject to U.S. jurisdiction.’’
A Limited Liability Company (LLC) was
not listed in proposed rule section
256.400(c), but LLC was listed in the
table in proposed rule section 256.401
as one of the entities that may become
qualified to hold leases on the OCS.
Therefore, the final rule provision adds
to the list in section 556.401 a ‘‘Limited
Liability Company or Limited Liability
Corporation organized under the laws of
any State of the United States, the
District of Columbia, or any territory or
insular possession subject to United
States jurisdiction.’’
Proposed rule section 556.400(e)
listed a ‘‘State’’ as one entity potentially
qualified to hold leases on the OCS. The
final rule, at section 556.401(a)(5), using
language from proposed rule section
256.400(c), instead says: ‘‘[a] State, the
District of Columbia, or any territory or
insular possession subject to United
States jurisdiction.’’ Similarly, proposed
rule section 256.400(f) listed a ‘‘political
subdivision of States’’ as also
potentially qualified to hold leases on
the OCS. The final rule, at section
556.401(a)(6) instead says: ‘‘[a] political
subdivision of a State, the District of
Columbia, or any territory or insular
possession subject to United States
jurisdiction.’’
Final rule section 556.401, at
paragraph (a)(7) adds ‘‘Trust’’ to the
types of entities that are potentially
qualified to hold leases on the OCS. A
trust is one of the entities listed in the
table in proposed rule section 256.401,
but it is not among those potentially
qualified entities that were listed in
proposed rule section 256.400. In order
to rectify this oversight, the final rule
section adds ‘‘Trust’’ to the list of those
potentially qualified set forth in final
rule section 556.401, and adds that any
such Trust must also be ‘‘organized
under the laws of any State of the
United States, the District of Columbia,
or any territory or insular possession
subject to United States jurisdiction.’’
Final rule section 556.401(c)
affirmatively states that BOEM may
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issue a qualification number to one who
has provided acceptable evidence of
qualification. This is a clarification of
proposed rule section 256.401(a), which
stated: ‘‘[p]rovide your . . .
qualification number if you have
qualified with us.’’ The final rule merely
affirmatively states that BOEM will
issue that number, if appropriate.
Section 556.402. How do I make the
necessary showing to qualify and obtain
a qualification number? This section
describes the types of evidence that
BOEM will require in order to qualify a
person to hold leases on the OCS.
Section 556.402 replaces proposed rule
section 256.401, including the table in
the latter. There are certain minor
differences between the proposed and
final rule sections, including the
following:
Both proposed rule section 256.401
and final rule section 556.402 list the
evidence needed to show that one is
qualified to hold leases on the OCS. In
the final rule, we added that such
evidence must be ‘‘acceptable to
BOEM.’’ This requirement was implicit
in the proposed rule. There would be no
point in requiring evidence of
qualification if BOEM were obligated to
accept evidence that is not sufficient as
to form or content to enable BOEM to
be certain of the status of the submitter.
In order to be certain of this status, it is
reasonable to expect that only evidence
‘‘acceptable to BOEM’’ will be accepted.
Final rule section 556.402,
subparagraph (c)(3), adds the
requirement that an entity seeking to
qualify to hold leases on the OCS
provide BOEM with a list of persons
authorized to bind the entity, and that
such list be kept current. This
subparagraph reminds the entity that it
is up to the entity, (and therefore, not up
to BOEM) to determine who in its
organization is authorized to bind it.
BOEM believes that the requirement to
provide a list of persons authorized to
bind an organizational entity is a logical
extension of the requirement to provide
the various documents listed in the
proposed rule table at proposed rule
section 256.401. BOEM also believes
that providing and updating this list of
persons, along with the other evidence
required by final rule section 556.402, is
a simpler and more manageable way to
approach the question of who is
authorized to bind a specific entity than
the prior regulations or the language
used in the proposed rule.
Final rule section 556.402 contains
several paragraphs that did not appear
in the analogous section of the proposed
rule (section 256.401). Both proposed
rule section 256.401 and final rule
section 556.402 address traditional
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business entities, such as corporations
and partnerships. There are, however,
other types of business organizations
that are eligible to qualify to hold leases
on the OCS, but that would not have
been covered by the qualifications
provision in the proposed rule.
Paragraph (e) of final rule section
556.402 therefore addresses business
entities with non-traditional business
forms. Some of these non-traditional
business forms do not have standard
positions, such as ‘‘president’’ or
‘‘secretary.’’ Accordingly, paragraph (e)
of final rule section 556.402 does not
name a particular position but states
that an individual from the highest level
of management of an entity with a nontraditional business form, who is
authorized by the entity’s operating
agreement or governance documents to
submit evidence of eligibility to hold
OCS leases, must submit such evidence.
Paragraph (e) is a clarification of
proposed rule sections 256.401(c)(4) and
256.401(d), both of which sought to
ensure that BOEM does business with
the person within a qualified
organization who has the authority to
bind that organization. Paragraph (e) is
a general catch-all meant to ensure that
there are no gaps in BOEM’s regulations
when it comes to the evidence necessary
to demonstrate qualification to hold
leases on the OCS.
Final rule section 556.402(f) states the
entity that obtains a qualification
number is responsible for ensuring that
the number is used only for the
purposes that the entity’s governance
documents allow. This was implicit in
the proposed rule, but the new final
subsection makes it clear that it is not
BOEM’s responsibility to ensure that
entities are not going beyond their
allowed powers in their dealings on the
OCS.
Lastly, final rule section 556.402(h)
makes it clear that one may not hold
leases on the OCS until BOEM has
issued a qualification number. This
concept was also implicit in the
proposed rule and in BOEM’s prior
regulations in the requirement to obtain
the qualification number.
Section 556.403. Under what
circumstances may I be disqualified
from holding a lease on the OCS? This
section describes the circumstances
under which a person may be excluded
or disqualified from holding a lease on
the OCS. Final rule section 556.403
substantively replicates proposed rule
section 256.402, with some minor
language changes. The language at final
rule section 556.403, paragraph (b),
tracks the language of OCSLA more
closely than did the language of the
corresponding section in the proposed
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18127
rule. This was done at the request of a
commenter and ensures that paragraph
(b) (‘‘You may not hold an OCS lease if
. . . The Secretary finds, after notice
and hearing, that you or your principals
fail to meet due diligence requirements
or to exercise due diligence under
section 8(d) of OCSLA . . . on any OCS
lease’’) could not be interpreted to
conflict with section 8(d) of OCSLA
(‘‘No bid for a lease may be submitted
if the Secretary finds, after notice and
hearing, that the bidder is not meeting
due diligence requirements on other
leases.’’ 43 U.S.C. 1337(d)).
Also, the language at final rule section
556.403, paragraph (c), was revised to
make it clear that either BOEM or BSEE
could offer notice and opportunity for a
hearing to determine whether operating
performance is unacceptable, pursuant
to either appropriate BOEM regulations
or appropriate BSEE regulations. This
clarification is necessary because of the
division of BOEMRE into two agencies,
and the fact that both BOEM and BSEE
have a role in determining whether
operating performance is unacceptable.
Section 556.404. What do the nonprocurement debarment rules require
that I do? Final rule section 556.404
details how to comply with the
Department’s non-procurement
debarment rules, specifically those that
relate to entering covered transactions
and notifying BOEM if you know that
you or your principals are excluded or
disqualified, or have been indicted or
convicted of a crime .It is substantively
the same as proposed rule section
256.403, with minor conforming
language changes.
Section 556.405. When must I notify
BOEM of mergers, name changes, or
changes of business form? This section
provides that lessees must notify BOEM
of any merger, name change, or change
of business form as soon as practicable,
but in no case later than one year after
the change or action. Final rule section
556.405 is the same as the proposed rule
section, 256.404, with one exception.
The proposed section stated ‘‘[y]ou must
immediately notify BOEM of a name
change,’’ but then allowed up to one
year within which to do so. A
commenter pointed out the
inconsistency between the word
‘‘immediately’’ and the one-year period,
and BOEM has therefore dropped the
word ‘‘immediately’’ from final rule
section 556.405 and replaced it with ‘‘as
soon as practicable.’’
This same commenter opined that
providing BOEM with name changes or
changes of business form would be too
burdensome and that BOEM has
‘‘multiple ways to learn of a merger or
name change.’’ BOEM does not agree
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with these opinions. BOEM has run into
difficulties in the past brought about by
name changes and/or mergers about
which BOEM had not been timely
informed. It is not practicable for BOEM
to monitor filings of name changes and
merger information in each State. BOEM
does not see that it is a burden for
entities doing business on the OCS to
keep BOEM apprised of changes of
name or corporate form, such as may
occur with a merger.
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6. Subpart E—Issuance of a Lease
Subpart E—Issuance of a Lease, is
divided into four subdivisions in the
final rule: ‘‘How to Bid,’’ ‘‘Restrictions
on Joint Bidding,’’ ‘‘How Does BOEM
Act on Bids?’’ and ‘‘Awarding the
Lease.’’ The regulations in the first
subdivision delineate the process of
submitting a bid to BOEM and the
information that must be submitted with
the bid. The next subdivision,
‘‘Restrictions on Joint Bidding,’’
explains the effect of being placed on
BOEM’s Restricted Joint Bidders List
and the reporting requirements for those
placed on the List. ‘‘How Does BOEM
Act on Bids?’’ presents information as to
BOEM’s acceptance or rejection of bids,
the treatment of a tied bid, and the
options available to a high bidder whose
bid was rejected. The last subdivision of
Subpart E, ‘‘Awarding the Lease’’
explains the procedures the bidder must
follow after BOEM accepts its bid.
Following is a section-by-section
analysis of the sections within Subpart
E.
How To Bid
Section 556.500. Once qualified, how
do I submit a bid? Final rule section
556.500 states generally that each bidder
must submit a separate sealed bid for
each tract or bidding unit, along with a
bid deposit. The final rule section
specifies that information regarding the
timing of bid submission, and the
amount and payment method of bid
deposits, will be set forth in the final
notice of sale. Final rule section 556.500
appeared at proposed rule section
256.410.
Paragraph (c) of final rule section
556.500 reaffirms the practice from the
prior regulations (section 556.46(b)) and
the proposed rule (section 256.410(b))
that the final notice of sale will specify
the amount of the bid deposit.
Paragraph (c) adds, however, that if not
so specified, the ‘‘default’’ deposit
amount will be twenty percent of the
bid, the deposit amount that has been
required for many years. As pointed out
by a commenter, a bid deposit of twenty
percent is the ‘‘status quo.’’ Another
commenter noted that the bid deposit is
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‘‘typically set at one-fifth of the bonus
bid amount.’’ BOEM finds it
unnecessary to seek comments on this
‘‘default’’ language, which merely
reflects the ‘‘status quo.’’
Section 556.501. What information do
I need to submit with my bid? Final rule
section 556.501 reiterates requirements,
found in section 26(a)(1)(A) of OCSLA
(43 U.S.C. 1352(a)(1)(A)), to provide
geological and geophysical (G&G) data
to BOEM upon request. Current BOEM
regulations in part 551 of Title 30 of the
CFR, ‘‘Geological and Geophysical
(G&G) Explorations of the Outer
Continental Shelf,’’ already address this
requirement, as applied to G&G
activities permitted ‘‘on unleased lands
or on lands leased to a third party,’’ 30
CFR 551.12(a). Therefore, current part
551 already applies to lands being bid
upon, but BOEM has included section
556.501 in this final rule, because part
556 sets forth bidding and leasing
procedures/requirements, and the
requirement to provide G&G
information with a bid logically falls
within this comprehensive whole.
Including final rule section 556.501
ensures that bidders are aware that they
may need to submit requested G&G
information at the time of bidding.
Restrictions on Joint Bidding
In the prior regulations, there are a
series of definitions and other
provisions that apply only in the
context of restricted joint bidding,
which were not in the proposed rule.
Prior regulation section 556.40 lists 13
definitions, which help explicate the
joint bidding restrictions. The proposed
rule Preamble stated that section 256.40
(now 556.40) was ‘‘[e]liminated as
redundant,’’ but, upon reviewing the
proposed rule and the comments, BOEM
decided that these definitions and
provisions are not ‘‘redundant,’’ but
instructive and helpful to explain the
concepts underlying restrictions on joint
bidding. The definitions have been
retained in the final rule, some in the
final rule definitions section, 556.106,
and some in the provisions under this
subheading of ‘‘Restrictions on Joint
Bidding,’’ made up of final rule sections
556.511 to 556.515.
Further, there are several provisions
previously found at 556.43(d) and (e),
which explain how to measure oil,
natural gas liquids, and natural gas, for
purposes of determining whether a
person’s production has exceeded 1.6
million barrels in the prior period, and
thus whether he or she will be on the
Restricted Joint Bidders List (sometimes
referred to below as the ‘‘List’’). For
example, prior section 556.43(d) stated
that: ‘‘[a]ll measurements of crude oil
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. . . under this section shall be at 60
degrees Fahrenheit.’’ These important
provisions were left out of the proposed
rule with no explanation other than that
section 256.43 (previously 556.43) was
‘‘simplified and reorganized.’’ BOEM
has reconsidered this ‘‘simplification
and reorganization’’ and has determined
that these measurement-describing
provisions should be retained. They
appear in final rule section 556.513(d).
Section 556.511. Are there restrictions
on bidding with others and do those
restrictions affect my ability to bid? This
section prohibits joint bidding by major
oil and gas producers under certain
circumstances. Final rule section
556.511 is substantively the same as
proposed rule section 256.411, but the
final rule section has one additional
paragraph. This additional paragraph,
556.611(d), makes clear that a person on
the Restricted Joint Bidders List may not
enter into a pre-bidding agreement for
the conveyance of any lease interest to
another person on the List. The
prohibition on pre-bid agreements
between persons on the List was
addressed in prior section 556.44 (c),
but was not addressed in the proposed
rule. BOEM has decided to retain this
provision because of its continued
relevance and applicability.
Section 556.512. What bids may be
disqualified? This section provides the
circumstances under which a bid for
any oil and gas lease will be disqualified
and/or rejected. Final rule section
556.512 does not have a counterpart in
the proposed rule, but it was found in
the prior regulations at section 556.44.
The Preamble to the proposed rule
stated that section 256.44 (now 556.44)
was ‘‘simplified,’’ and the reader was
directed to proposed rule section
256.402 in its stead, but this
‘‘simplification’’ would create a
discrepancy. Current section 556.44
addresses disqualification of certain
types of bids involving persons on the
List of Restricted Joint Bidders.
Proposed rule section 256.402 has
nothing to do with joint bidding, but
sets forth three discrete situations where
any person may be disqualified from
holding a lease (exclusion due to the
non-procurement debarment and
suspension system, failure to exercise
due diligence, or unacceptable operating
performance). The substance of prior
section 556.44 did not appear anywhere
in the proposed rule, but BOEM has
decided that it is necessary for a full
understanding of the effects and
ramifications of being placed on the
Restricted Joint Bidders List. Therefore,
the text of prior section 556.44 has been
retained, verbatim, with only necessary
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conforming changes, in final rule
section 556.512.
Section 556.513. When must I file a
statement of production? This section
explains the circumstances under which
a lessee must prepare and send to
BOEM a statement describing its oil and
gas production and what the statement
is to contain. Final rule section 556.513
contains the substance of proposed rule
section 256.412, as well as three
subparagraphs previously found at prior
section 556.40(l) and omitted from the
proposed rule. Proposed rule section
256.412 explained that a person on the
List of Restricted Joint Bidders would
have to file a statement of production
when its production exceeded 1.6
million barrels of oil, natural gas
liquids, and natural gas during the prior
production period. The prior regulations
had the same provision, but the prior
regulations, at section 556.40(l), also
defined what ‘‘Production’’ meant with
respect to each of these resources.
Appropriate portions of the 556.40(l)
definitions have been retained in final
rule section 556.513 to make clear what
is to be included in the measurement of
crude oil, natural gas liquids, and
natural gas when determining
production chargeable to the prior
production period.
Section 556.514. How do I determine
my production for purposes of the
Restricted Joint Bidders List? This
section details what production must be
counted when determining whether a
company should be considered a
‘‘restricted bidder.’’ Final rule section
556.514 replicates proposed rule section
256.413, with some concepts included
from prior sections 556.40 and 556.43.
Section 556.43(d) states that ‘‘[a]ll
measurements of crude oil and liquefied
petroleum products [referred to as
natural gas liquids in the final rule] . . .
shall be at 60 degrees Fahrenheit.’’ The
proposed rule did not include the 60
degree Fahrenheit measurement
parameter, but BOEM has decided to
retain it as a necessary instruction for
those persons who need to determine
their production for purposes of the
Restricted Joint Bidders List. The
measurement parameter is in final rule
section 556.514(a)(1).
Also in final rule section 556.514(a)(1)
is a reference to the equivalency factors
set forth in 42 U.S.C. 6213(b)(2) and (3),
which state, respectively: ‘‘[o]ne barrel
of natural gas equivalent equals 5,626
cubic feet of natural gas measured at
14.73 pounds per square inch [(PSI)
relative to the mean sea level, or] (MSL)
and 60 degrees Fahrenheit’’ and ‘‘[o]ne
barrel of natural gas liquids equivalent
equals 1.454 barrels of natural gas
liquids at 60 degrees Fahrenheit.’’ These
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two equivalencies were found in the
prior regulations at section 556.43(e),
but were omitted from the proposed
rule. BOEM believes that these
equivalencies are also necessary
instructions for persons attempting to
determine whether their production
would place them on the Restricted
Joint Bidders List.
The final rule, at section 556.514(d),
also retains the definition of
‘‘subsidiary’’ found in prior section
556.43(a)(3), but not contained in the
proposed rule. Final rule section
556.514(f), which further explains how
measurements of resources must be
made, was not in the proposed rule, but
was found at prior section 556.40(l)(1)
and (2).
Final rule section 556.514(e) is a
logical extension of the interplay among
prior section 556.40’s definitions of
‘‘economic interest’’ and ‘‘owned’’ and
prior section 556.43(b). The definitions
in prior section 556.40 applied to joint
bidding and restrictions thereon. The
definition of ‘‘economic interest’’
defines certain types of passive
interests, such as a royalty interest or a
net profits interest. The definition of
‘‘owned’’ in prior 556.40 included
‘‘having . . . an economic interest in’’
the production of crude oil, natural gas,
or natural gas liquids. And 556.43(b)
stated that a person is chargeable, for
purposes of joint bidding restrictions,
with production that it ‘‘owns.’’
Therefore, reading these provisions
logically together, a person’s economic
interest in production must be counted
in that production chargeable to him or
her for purposes of determining whether
he or she is on the Restricted Joint
Bidders List. This concept from the
prior regulations is retained in the final
rule in section 556.514(e) and the text
was not changed from how it was
originally proposed.
Section 556.515. May a person be
exempted from joint bidding
restrictions? This section provides the
circumstances under which a person
may be exempted from joint bidding
restrictions. Final rule section 556.515
is based on proposed rule section
256.414. Proposed section 256.414,
however, did not state the specific
regulatory sections from which
exemption from the joint bidding
restrictions or reporting requirements
may be granted. These specific
designations were found in the prior
regulations, at section 556.41(d), and
have been retained in final rule section
556.515.
How Does BOEM Act on Bids?
Section 556.516. What does BOEM do
with my bid? This section outlines the
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procedures BOEM will follow when
reviewing bids received for leases on the
OCS and when handling tie bids.
Section 556.516 of the final rule is based
on proposed rule section 256.416.
Proposed section 256.416(b) stated that
BOEM would accept or reject all bids
within 90 days, or a longer time if
BOEM extended the 90-day period.
Section 556.516(b) of the final rule adds
that BOEM will timely notify bidders in
writing of a decision to extend the 90day period. Proposed section 256.416(d)
states that the Attorney General may
review the results of a sale before BOEM
accepts any bid. This requirement is
repeated in final rule section 556.516(d),
with additional language explaining that
the Attorney General must act within 30
days and may consult with the Federal
Trade Commission. Both of these
strictures are found in section 8(c)(1) of
OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1344(c)(1)).
BOEM received the following
comment: ‘‘There is no policy reason
not to allow co-ownership by agreement
of bidders with a tie bid, when the tie
bidders are on the restricted joint bidder
list. Those parties cannot have
communicated or agreed with respect to
the bid, but going forward could agree
to an assignment creating co-ownership
after the lease is awarded.’’ Neither the
prior regulations (see 30 CFR 556.47(c)),
nor the proposed rule, (see section
256.416(c)), permit tie high bidders who
are both (or all) on the Restricted Joint
Bidders List to accept a lease jointly.
BOEM considered the comment above
but concluded that there is no way to
know whether tie bidders
‘‘communicated or agreed with respect
to the bid.’’ Therefore, BOEM has
decided that the current policy is a
sound one and will not be changed.
There is one significant difference
between proposed rule section 256.416
and final rule section 556.516. Proposed
rule section 256.416(c) addressed tie
bids and stated that if there was no
agreement among the bidders as to who
would receive the lease, BOEM would
‘‘award the lease to the high bidder
selected by lot.’’ The prior regulation, at
section 556.47(e)(2), did not allow a bid
to be awarded by lot, but stated that if
an agreement from the tie bidders was
not submitted to BOEM within 15 days,
‘‘all bids shall be rejected.’’
BOEM has reconsidered the ‘‘award
by lot’’ policy enunciated in the
proposed rule, and has decided not to
adopt that policy. The policy is
inherently unfair to one of the bidders
and is inconsistent with BOEM’s longstanding policy that if no bids are
accepted, the lease will be withheld by
BOEM and offered in the next lease sale.
This policy affords BOEM the
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opportunity to obtain a greater return,
furthering OCSLA’s goal that BOEM
obtain fair market value for OCS leases.
See, section 18(a)(4) of OCSLA (43
U.S.C. 1344(a)(4)). BOEM will therefore
retain the policy in the existing
regulation that all tie bids, for which a
timely agreement delineating who will
receive the lease has not been submitted
to BOEM, will be deemed rejected. This
policy is stated in final rule section
556.516(c)(3).
Section 556.517. What may I do if my
high bid is rejected? This section
describes the reconsideration
procedures that apply in the event that
a high bid is rejected by BOEM.
Proposed rule section 256.417 would
have allowed a bidder whose bid was
rejected to request reconsideration of
that rejection within 15 days, and stated
that the bidder would receive a written
response. The previous regulations at
section 556.47(e), and the proposed rule
at section 256.410, stated that the
request for reconsideration is to be made
to the Secretary. The proposed rule
section did not address whether such a
request could be appealed, but the
previous regulations at 556.47 stated
that decisions on high bids are not
subject to review by the Department’s
Office of Hearings and Appeals.
BOEM received a comment on
proposed section 256.417 that requested
more detail regarding reconsideration of
rejection of a high bid, specifically as to
the review process for a reconsideration
request. In response to the comment,
BOEM has added detail to the final rule
section to clarify the procedures to be
followed by the bidder requesting
reconsideration, and those that will be
followed by BOEM when it receives
such a request. Therefore, final rule
section 556.517 states that the decision
of the authorized officer on bids is the
final action of the Department, and that
the request for reconsideration of such
a decision must be made to the Director,
as the Secretary’s delegate, and must
include evidence as to why the decision
should be reconsidered. The final rule
section retains the section 556.47
statement that the decision on the
reconsideration is not subject to review
by the Department’s Office of Hearings
and Appeals.
Awarding the Lease
Section 556.520. What happens if I
am the successful high bidder and
BOEM accepts my bid? This section
describes the steps involved in the lease
award process. BOEM received several
comments on proposed section 256.420,
which appears at final rule section
556.520, particularly on proposed
section 256.420(c). That paragraph
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stated that if a successful bidder did not
return the executed lease in the
prescribed time or if it otherwise failed
to comply with the regulations, its
deposit would be forfeited ‘‘and [BOEM]
may take appropriate action to collect
the full amount bid.’’ Three commenters
pointed out that, traditionally, in the
scenario posited above, the bidder’s
deposit was forfeited, but BOEM had
never attempted to collect the full
amount bid. One of these commenters
stated that ‘‘[p]ayment of the one-fifth
amount is sufficient penalty,’’ and
payment of amounts beyond that ‘‘is not
warranted.’’ Another of the commenters
pointed out that forfeiting the
‘‘significant penalty’’ of the one-fifth
deposit ‘‘allows lessees to make an
informed decision on leasing if
information relating to the area becomes
available after the bids are made.’’ The
third commenter ‘‘objected’’ to the
forfeiture of the full bid amount, but
also suggested some alternatives for
BOEM’s implementation of this
provision, such as offering the secondhighest qualified bidder the lease if the
high bidder forfeits.
BOEM generally agrees with the
comments. Accordingly, final rule
section 556.520 does not include the
language that, in a forfeiture situation,
BOEM may take action to collect the full
amount bid. Nor will BOEM offer the
lease to the second-highest bidder, as
that could violate BOEM’s mandate to
obtain fair market value for all leases.
Instead, BOEM will retain the current
policy, now expressed in the regulations
at section 556.47(g), that in the case of
forfeiture, the forfeiting bidder will lose
its deposit.
BOEM also received a comment on
another aspect of proposed section
256.420(c). The comment noted that the
proposed section states that a high
bidder must ‘‘execute and return the
lease within 11 business days after
receipt’’ and contrasted that with the
prior regulation, which stated that ‘‘the
bidder shall, not later than the 11th
business day after receipt of the lease,
execute the lease.’’ See, section
556.47(f). The comment pointed out that
while the current language does not
specify that the executed lease must be
returned to BOEM by the 11th day, the
proposed rule section does so specify.
The comment asked if this ‘‘signif[ies] a
change in how the process is
administered?’’ The rule does not
signify a change in the interpretation of
the regulation or in the administration
of the process. The prior regulation was
interpreted to mean that the lease must
be executed and returned by the 11th
business day after it is received, and the
proposed and final rules continue this
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policy, but make the language more
precise.
Section 556.521. When is my lease
effective? Final rule section 556.521 and
proposed rule section 256.421 are the
same. They both state BOEM’s longstanding policy that a lease is effective
on the first day of the month following
the month in which BOEM executes the
lease, but that a lessee may request that
its lease be made effective as of the first
day of the month in which BOEM
executes it. The final rule also adds a
provision that, if BOEM agrees to make
it effective as of the earlier date, it will
so indicate when it executes the lease.
Section 556.522. What are the terms
and conditions of the lease and when
are they published? This section
provides that the terms and conditions
of the lease will be stated in the final
notice of sale, as well as in the lease
instrument itself. Final rule section
556.522 is based on prior section
556.49. The prior section stated that oil
and gas and sulfur lease forms will be
approved by the BOEM Director. The
prior section also mentioned forms for
other minerals. The section was not
included in the proposed rule, the
Preamble of which stated that the
‘‘[d]iscussion of form[s] for other
minerals [was] eliminated as
redundant.’’ However, the proposed rule
eliminated all of prior section 556.49
and BOEM has decided to retain, in
final rule section 556.522, the statement
as to forms for oil and gas and sulfur
leases. Final rule section 556.522 also
echoes final rule section 556.308(a)(2),
which states that the terms and
conditions of the lease will be found in
the final notice of sale.
7. Subpart F—Lease Term and
Obligations
Length of Lease
Section 556.600. What is the primary
term of my oil and gas lease? Final rule
section 556.600 (a) and (b) closely
follows OCSLA and makes clear that the
initial period/primary term of a lease
will be five years, unless BOEM
determines that a longer initial period/
primary term, up to 10 years, is
necessary due to unusually deep water
or unusually adverse conditions.
Proposed section 256.600 stated that an
initial period of an oil and gas lease
‘‘may range from five to ten years,’’ but
provided no clarification as to why
there could be such a range. Section 8(b)
of OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1337(b)) states that
the initial period of a lease must be for
five years, or for up to 10 years, if
extension of the lease term is necessary
due to unusually deep water or other
unusually adverse conditions.
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Final rule section 556.600 (a) and (b)
follows OCSLA’s example, with one
slight difference. OCSLA most
commonly refers to the initial term of a
lease as the ‘‘initial period,’’ but also
refers to the initial term as the ‘‘primary
term.’’ See, e.g., section 8(a)(7)(C) of
OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1337(a)(7)(C)). BOEM
uses the phrase ‘‘primary term’’ in the
final rule.
Proposed rule section 256.600 used
the term ‘‘initial period’’ to refer to the
originally granted length of a lease. The
terms ‘‘primary term’’ and ‘‘initial
period’’ were used interchangeably
throughout BOEM’s prior regulations to
mean the same thing (for example,
556.37(a) and (b) refer to ‘‘initial
period,’’ while 556.68(b) and (c), and
556.70 refer to ‘‘primary term’’) and
BOEM has elected to use the phrase
‘‘primary term’’ rather than ‘‘initial
period’’ in this final rule in order to
better reflect the lease term description
that is most commonly used in the U.S.
oil and gas industry.
The final rule removes the provision
found in BOEM’s previous regulations
at section 556.37 and proposed rule
section 256.600, which stated that, for
leases in water depths between 400 and
800 meters, the primary term will be
eight years, subject to administrative
cancellation if no exploratory well is
begun during the first five years after
lease issuance. No further notice and
comment are required for this change, as
BOEM notified the public of the change
in 2009 and provided an opportunity to
comment, and all lease sales since 2009
have been consistent with this new
practice. Specifically, BOEM stopped
issuing leases with eight-year primary
terms beginning with Central Gulf of
Mexico Lease Sale 213, held on March
17, 2010. On November 16, 2009, eight
months after the publication of the
proposed rule, the MMS published the
Proposed Notice of Sale for Lease Sale
213 (PNOS) (74 FR 58975). The PNOS
notified the public that BOEM was
considering dropping the eight-year
primary term, and replacing it with a
five-year primary term, which could be
extended another three years if certain
conditions were met. The PNOS also
detailed that this five-year primary term,
with a possible three-year extension,
would apply in water depths between 0
and 800 meters, whereas a seven-year
primary term, with a possible three-year
extension, would apply in water depths
between 800 and 1600 meters. In more
than 1600 meters of water, the PNOS
stated that the primary term would be
10 years.
The PNOS also stated that, if a fiveor seven-year primary term were not
extended, the lease would expire,
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removing the need for administrative
cancellation. The MMS received
comments on the change from an eightyear primary term to a five- or sevenyear primary term, as well as on the
change from cancellation to expiration.
The MMS carefully considered these
comments and responded to them in the
Final Notice of Sale for Lease Sale 213
(FNOS). In the FNOS, the MMS stated
that it had decided to no longer offer
leases with eight-year primary terms
and to proceed with offering leases in
Sale 213 with five- and seven-year
primary terms, which would be subject
to extension or expiration.
BOEM has offered five- and/or sevenyear primary terms in all eight lease
sales held since Sale 213 and intends to
continue doing so. To avoid any
confusion about whether BOEM intends
to revert to the pre-2010 practice of
issuing leases for eight year terms
contingent on drilling in the first five
years, however, final rule section
556.600 tracks OCSLA closely in stating
that the primary term of all leases will
be five years, unless BOEM specifies
otherwise. Unlike the prior regulations
and the proposed rule, section 556.600
in the final rule does not attempt to
‘‘specify otherwise’’ in the regulation
itself. Instead, it states, at subsection
556.600(c), that BOEM will specify the
primary term in the final notice of sale
and in the lease instrument, giving
BOEM flexibility for the future.
The new language will not preclude
BOEM from offering eight year leases,
nor does the existing regulation
mandate eight year leases. Thus, the
rule does not change BOEM’s current
practice. Accordingly, pursuant to 5
U.S.C. 553(b)(3)(B), BOEM, for good
cause, finds that notice and public
comment are unnecessary. In any event,
as noted above, the public had an
opportunity to express its views on the
underlying policy in response to the
PNOS published in the Federal Register
in 2009.
Section 556.601. How may I maintain
my oil and gas lease beyond the primary
term? This section lists the ways in
which a lessee may maintain its lease
for a period of time after the end of the
primary term. Final rule section 556.601
is substantively the same as proposed
rule section 256.601, with some minor
language changes for clarity. Proposed
rule section 256.601(a) included, among
the ways of maintaining a lease beyond
its primary term, the granting of a
suspension, but final rule section
556.601(f) retains the more specific
language from prior sections 556.37(b)
and 556.73 that maintenance of a lease
beyond the primary term will not result
from a suspension imposed due to gross
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negligence or willful violation of a lease
provision or regulation.
Section 556.602. What is the primary
term of my sulfur lease? As described in
proposed rule section 256.602, final rule
section 556.602 states that the primary
term of a sulfur lease will be not more
than 10 years, as mandated by section
8(j) of OCSLA. (43 U.S.C. 1337(j)).
Proposed section 256.602 stated that a
sulfur lease is subject to administrative
cancellation if an exploratory well was
not begun in the first five years. BOEM
is no longer following the practice of
cancelling leases in these
circumstances, and this provision has
been dropped from the final rule.
Instead, final rule 556.602 states that the
sulfur lease will expire at the end of the
primary term if not maintained in
accordance with the regulations.
Section 556.603. How may I maintain
my sulfur lease beyond the primary
term? This section lists the ways in
which a lessee may maintain its sulfur
lease after the end of the primary term.
Final rule section 556.603 is
substantively the same as proposed rule
section 256.603, with some minor
language changes for clarity. Proposed
rule section 256.603 included, among
ways of maintaining a lease beyond its
primary term, the granting of a
suspension, but final rule section
556.603 elaborates that such an
extension cannot result from a
suspension imposed due to gross
negligence or willful violation of a lease
provision or regulation, as was stated at
prior section 556.73.
Lease Obligations
Section 556.604. What are my rights
and obligations as a record title owner?
This section outlines the rights and
obligations of a record title holder of an
OCS lease. Final rule section 556.604
includes, with different subsections and
some additional language, proposed rule
sections 256.605 and 256.612. Proposed
rule section 256.605 was entitled,
‘‘What are my obligations as a record
title owner?’’ and proposed rule section
256.612 was entitled, ‘‘May I assign
operating rights?’’ In the final rule,
BOEM has combined these sections, as
they both address the rights and
obligations of a record title owner.
Proposed rule section 256.612 stated
that a record title owner may assign
(sever) operating rights, and refers to
these assignments as ‘‘subleases,’’ which
they are. The term ‘‘assignment of
operating rights’’ has been used in the
past, but is inaccurate when referring to
an initial severance of operating rights.
Operating rights are a part of the whole
of a record title interest. When they are
initially severed, they are actually
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carved out of the record title and
subleased to another party, while the
record title owner retains the rest of the
record title interest, i.e., that part of the
record title from which the operating
rights were severed. This is different
from a true assignment of a record title
interest, wherein the assignor does not
retain the corresponding part of the
record title interest. And it is also
different from a true assignment of an
operating rights interest, which would
occur when one who owns operating
rights transfers his operating rights
interest to another. Final rule section
556.604(b) retains the proposed rule’s
use of the term ‘‘sublease’’ and
specifically states that a record title
owner may sublease its operating rights
to someone else, who is thereby the
sublessee, referred to in the regulations
as the operating rights owner.
Both proposed rule section 256.612
and final rule sections 556.604(b) and
(c) explain that operating rights must be
described by officially designated
aliquot parts, and that, within any
aliquot part, a record title owner may
create a maximum of two subleases by
depth. The one, or two, subleases may
include the entire depth of the lease, but
if they do not, any depth intervals not
subleased are retained by the lessee/
sublessor. Final rule section 556.604(c)
elaborates that if two subleases are
created by depth level, the two
subleases must abut each other, with no
gap in between. The ‘‘no gap’’ concept
did not appear in the proposed rule, but
it is, and has been, BOEM’s longestablished policy, and imposes no new
duty on lessees. Therefore notice and
comment is unnecessary.
Both proposed rule section 256.605(a)
and final rule section 556.604(d) explain
that a record title interest owner is
jointly and severally liable, with all
other record title owners and all
operating rights owners, for all nonmonetary obligations of a lease that
accrue while it holds record title. Final
rule section 556.604(f) also contains the
concept that a record title owner who
obtained its record title through
assignment is responsible for remedying
all existing environmental or
operational problems on a lease, with
subrogation rights against prior lessees.
This concept was found in both the
prior regulations and in the proposed
rule in sections addressing transfers of
lease interests, (556.62(e) and 256.618,
respectively), as it is in the final rule
(556.713 and 556.807), but it is also
appropriately included here, as the
requirement that an assignee remedy all
existing environmental and operational
lease problems is an ‘‘obligation’’ of the
assignee-record title owner.
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Proposed rule section 256.605(b) and
final rule section 556.604(f) both also
address the responsibility of record title
owners for monetary obligations,
pursuant to the Federal Oil and Gas
Royalty Simplification and Fairness Act.
Both sections make clear that, with
respect to operating rights retained by a
record title owner, the record title
owner is primarily liable for monetary
obligations, but with respect to those
operating rights that have been
subleased to others, the record title
owner becomes secondarily liable,
while the sublessee/operating rights
owner is primarily liable.
Section 556.605. What are my rights
and obligations as an operating rights
owner? Proposed rule section 256.606
and final rule section 556.605 both
address the rights and obligations of an
operating rights owner, as opposed to a
record title owner.
Final rule section 556.605(d) was
added as the result of two comments on
the proposed rule. The comments
pointed out that the proposed rule was
inconsistent in that proposed section
256.605(a) stated that operating rights
owners were jointly and severally liable
with record title owners for all nonmonetary obligations, but proposed
section 256.606(c) stated that operating
rights owners were so liable only with
respect to that portion of the lease
subject to their operating rights. To
make clear that the latter concept is
correct, BOEM added final rule section
556.605(d), which states: ‘‘[a]n operating
rights owner is only liable for
obligations arising from that portion of
the lease to which its operating rights
appertain and that accrue during the
period in which the operating rights
owner owned the operating rights.’’
Proposed rule sections 256.606(c) and
(d) are essentially repeated in final rule
sections 556.605 (e) and (g). In both
cases, the former section states that an
operating rights owner is jointly and
severally liable, with all other operating
rights owners and record title owners,
for non-monetary obligations. Also in
both cases, the latter section states that
an operating rights owner is liable for
monetary obligations in proportion to its
share of operating rights. Final rule
section 556.605(g) goes on to point out
that operating rights owners are
primarily liable for these monetary
obligations, while (as stated in final rule
section 556.604(f) and pointed out
above) record title owners are
secondarily liable.
Final rule section 556.605(f) also
makes clear that operating rights owners
that obtained rights through assignment
are responsible for remedying all
existing environmental or operational
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problems on a lease, with subrogation
rights against prior operating rights
owners. As mentioned above, this
concept was found in both the prior
BOEM regulations and in the proposed
rule in sections addressing transfers of
lease interests, (556.62(e) and 256.618,
respectively), as well as in other
sections of the final rule (556.712 and
556.807), but it is also appropriately
included here, as the requirement that
an assignee remedy all existing
environmental and operational lease
problems is an ‘‘obligation’’ of an
assignee of operating rights.
Helium
Section 556.606. What must a lessee
do if BOEM elects to extract helium
from a lease? This section provides that
BOEM reserves the ownership of, and
the right to extract, helium from all gas
produced from an OCS lease, and
describes what BOEM will do if it
requests you to deliver helium from
operations associated with a lease. Final
rule section 556.606 repeats proposed
rule section 256.630. The final rule
makes no changes to the proposed rule,
other than conforming changes, such as
changing ‘‘MMS’’ to ‘‘BOEM.’’
8. Commentary on Subparts G & H—
Transferring Interests in a Lease
The proposed rule followed the
general format of the prior regulations in
addressing together, in one regulatory
subpart, both transfers of record title
interests and transfers of operating
rights interests. These two types of
transfers are not the same, however, and
they may have different consequences.
Addressing them in the same regulatory
sections has sometimes led to confusion
and ambiguity. Therefore, in the final
rule, BOEM divided the provisions
dealing with assignment of different
types of lease interests into two different
subparts. Subpart G includes those
provisions detailing the effects of an
assignment of a record title interest,
while subpart H includes those
provisions detailing the effects of a
sublease or subsequent assignment of an
operating rights interest. None of the
provisions in these subparts contains
anything substantively new relative to
the prior regulations, but the final rule
more clearly separates out and explains
the effects of an assignment of each type
of lease interest on both the assignor
and assignee. Subpart G consists of
sections 556.700 through 556.716, and
subpart H consists of sections 556.800
through 556.810. A section-by-section
analysis of the sections in Subpart G is
presented below, followed by a sectionby-section analysis of the sections in
Subpart H.
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9. Subpart G—Transferring All or Part of
a Record Title Interest in a Lease
Section 556.700. May I assign or
sublease all or any part of the record
title interest in my lease? This section
describes how a company may apply for
approval to assign its whole or partial
record title interest in its lease, or in any
aliquot(s) thereof or to sublease
operating rights. Proposed rule sections
256.610, 256.611, and 256.612 were
collapsed and subsumed into final rule
section 556.700, insofar as they apply to
transfers of record title interests.
Proposed rule section 256.610 stated
that all transfers of lease interests
require BOEM approval. Proposed rule
section 256.611 and proposed rule
section 256.612 repeated this
requirement, with respect to transfers of
‘‘lease interests,’’ and operating rights,
respectively. The requirement that
BOEM approve transfers of record title
interests and severances of operating
rights interests appears in final rule
sections 556.700(a), (b), and (c).
Proposed rule sections 256.611 and
256.612 also specified that transfers
must be properly described by aliquot
parts and/or depth. This requirement of
proper description is retained in final
rule section 556.700(c).
Proposed rule section 256.611
referred to both ‘‘subdivisions’’ and
‘‘aliquot parts’’ when describing
transfers of lease interests, but in final
rule section 556.700, we removed the
reference to subdivisions, retaining only
the reference to aliquot parts, in order
to reduce the potential for confusion.
We also removed the definition of
‘‘aliquot part’’ from this section and
moved it into the definitions section of
the rule, section 556.106.
The last sentence of proposed rule
section 256.611, stating that BOEM may
disapprove a transfer when the assignor
or assignee has unsatisfied obligations
under this chapter, has been moved to
final rule section 556.704, entitled,
‘‘When would BOEM disapprove an
assignment or sublease of an interest in
my lease?’’ Placement in that final rule
section is more appropriate.
Section 556.701. How do I seek
approval of an assignment of the record
title interest in my lease, or a severance
of operating rights from that record title
interest? This section describes the
process for obtaining BOEM approval of
an assignment of a record title or
operating rights interest in an OCS
lease. Final rule section 556.701(a) was
found at proposed rule section
256.613(a). The proposed rule section,
at 256.613(a)(1), set out the official form
numbers and names that one would use
to effectuate and request approval of a
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transfer of lease interest. The final rule,
however, merely states that the BOEM
Regional Director will provide the form
to be used to request and record such a
transfer. BOEM made this change to
retain flexibility as to form name and
number in case these identifiers change
in the future.
Proposed rule section 256.613(b),
which provided that BOEM must
consult with and consider the views of
the Attorney General before approving a
transfer of a lease interest, appears at
final rule section 556.701(b). Finally,
final rule paragraph 556.701(b) retains
from prior section 556.65 the statement
that the Secretary may act on a transfer
if the Attorney General does not
respond to a consultation request within
30 days of that request.
Section 556.702. When will my
assignment result in a segregated lease?
Final rule section 556.702(a) and
proposed rule section 256.613(a)(2) both
make clear that a transfer of 100% of the
record title interest in one or more
aliquots of a lease results in segregating
the lease into two leases, both of which
are referred to as ‘‘segregated leases’’
and are subject to all the terms and
conditions of the original lease.
(Although it would be uncommon, it is
also possible that a lease could be
segregated into more than two leases.)
Final rule section 556.702 also
contains a subsection that was not
found in the proposed rule and was not
in the prior regulations—556.702(b).
This provision in the final rule clarifies
the principles governing lease
segregation. It is an outgrowth and
corollary of the lease segregation
concept expressed in proposed rule
section 256.613(a)(2). Specifically, final
rule section 556.702(b) sets forth the
direct corollary to section 556.702(a) by
making clear that transfer of anything
less than 100% of the record title
interest in a certain aliquot does not
create a new lease, but creates a joint
ownership situation between the
assignee(s) and assignor(s) in the
portion of the lease in which part of the
ownership was transferred.
The last sentence of final rule section
556.702(b) states that a transfer of less
than 100% of the record title to an
aliquot(s) is subject to BOEM approval.
This sentence reiterates the principle
that all transfers of lease interests are
subject to approval by BOEM, pursuant
to section 8(e) of OCSLA (43 U.S.C.
1337(e)), the lease terms (see section 20
of the current lease form, Form BOEM–
2005), and prior regulations. This
sentence was added in the final rule to
ensure that there is no doubt as to
whether a transfer that creates a joint
ownership in a portion of a lease would
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constitute a lease transfer necessitating
BOEM approval.
Section 556.703. What is the effect of
the approval of the assignment of 100
percent of the record title in a particular
aliquot(s) of my lease and of the
resulting lease segregation? Final rule
section 556.703 addresses the effects of
a lease segregation (i.e., a transfer of
100% of a record title interest in a
particular aliquot of a lease, which
creates a new lease to be in effect on the
segregated aliquot). It combines part of
proposed rule section 256.613(a)(2) with
retained parts of BOEM’s prior
regulations from section 556.68.
Proposed rule section 256.613(a)(2)
stated that, in the case of a lease
segregation, the requirement to post the
requisite financial assurance applies to
each new lease. This concept has been
carried through into final rule section
556.703(a).
An important clarification is made in
final rule section 556.703(c). The
proposed rule at section 256.613(a)(2)
stated that upon lease segregation, ‘‘the
newly segregated lease . . . is subject to
all the terms and conditions of your
original lease.’’ The ambiguity of this
language could give rise to an improper
inference in certain circumstances that
the terms of the original lease pertaining
to any applicable royalty suspension
volume (RSV) would apply in full and
equally to each of the segregated leases.
BOEM’s prior regulations in section
556.68(a) were more specific than those
from the proposed rule’s section
256.613(a)(2), but are still ambiguous on
this point. The prior regulation stated
that ‘‘[r]oyalty, minimum royalty and
rental provisions of the original lease
shall apply separately to each segregated
portion.’’ The prior regulation
mentioned royalty provisions
specifically, and stated that such
provisions will apply ‘‘separately’’ to
each lease, but its relationship to any
unused RSV was not clear.
The ambiguity in the prior regulation
may have led some to incorrectly infer
that when a lease is segregated, each
new lease would be allowed the entire
amount of remaining available RSV that
applied to the original lease. Such an
interpretation would not have been
justified. In the case of segregation of a
deep water lease with an RSV into two
leases, for example, that interpretation
would have the substantive effect of
doubling the remaining volume of
royalty-free production. That is not the
intent of offering particular leases with
specified royalty suspension volumes
under the authority of 43 U.S.C.
1337(a)(1)(H) or 1337(a)(3)(C) (the
royalty relief provisions of the OCSLA
enacted in the Deep Water Royalty
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Relief Act of 1995) or 42 U.S.C. 19504
or 19505 (the deep gas and deep water
royalty relief provisions in the Energy
Policy Act of 2005). The correct
interpretation is that if an offshore lease
is divided through segregation, any
remaining unused RSV must be shared
by the segregated leases in a manner not
to exceed the total amount of the
remaining unused RSV.
Final rule section 556.703(c) clarifies
that in a lease segregation, each
segregated lease is not individually
entitled to the whole remaining RSV
allowed to the original lease. Each lease
segregation is unique and presents
different circumstances that might affect
the allocation of RSV. Therefore,
paragraph (c) makes clear that BOEM
will allocate the RSV among segregated
leases on an equitable basis, considering
all of the circumstances. Circumstances
that may affect that allocation include
the reasons for the segregation, whether
the lease is producing, the relative
production of the leases after
segregation, future development plans,
etc. The allocation of any remaining
RSV will be stated in BOEM’s approval
of the assignment and segregation.
Final rule section 556.703(c) grows
out of the proposed rule’s statement at
section 256.613(a)(2) that a newly
segregated lease ‘‘is subject to all the
terms and conditions of [the] original
lease.’’ The final rule section carries
forward the concept that the newly
segregated lease is ‘‘subject to’’ any RSV
provision that applied to the original
lease, but clarifies in what manner that
RSV provision will be applied to the
two now-segregated leases. The
language of final rule section 556.703(c)
also clarifies the prior regulation’s
statement that royalty provisions apply
‘‘separately’’ to each lease. The final
rule’s language continues to apply the
RSV provision ‘‘separately’’ to each
segregated lease, but clarifies that
‘‘separately’’ does not mean ‘‘equally.’’
Final rule section 556.703(d) retains
from prior section 556.68(b) the
principle that each segregated lease
continues in effect for the primary term
specified in the original lease, unless
maintained thereafter pursuant to the
regulations. Paragraph (d) makes
express the principle that with respect
to continuation beyond the primary
term, each segregated lease stands on its
own. To remain in force after the
primary term, each segregated lease
must, on its own, meet the requirements
of section 556.601, regardless of
whether other segregated leases, which
were part of the original lease, meet
such requirements. Production from one
segregated lease will not keep any other
lease that was part of the original lease
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in effect beyond its primary term
(unless, of course, the leases are
included within the same unit). BOEM
believes that the regulations are more
clear with both principles expressly
stated in the final rule.
Section 556.704. When would BOEM
disapprove an assignment or sublease of
an interest in my lease? Final rule
section 556.704 sets forth when a
transfer of a lease interest may be void
or disapproved by BOEM. The final rule
section combines parts of proposed rule
section 256.611 and section 556.62 from
BOEM’s prior regulations. The last
sentence of proposed rule section
256.611 stated that an assignment could
be disapproved if the assignor or
assignee had outstanding obligations
under this chapter of the regulations.
This provision appears at final rule
section 556.704(a)(1). Prior section
556.62 voided assignments made
pursuant to certain prelease agreements.
This provision is found at final rule
section 556.704(b).
Final rule section 556.704 also
contains two provisions, at paragraphs
(a)(2) and (a)(3), which make clear that
BOEM may disapprove an assignment
that is incorrect as to form or that does
not comport with the regulations.
Provision 556.704(a)(2) more clearly
expresses the intent of proposed rule
section 256.613, which listed the names
and numbers of the forms that BOEM
requires to be used to effectuate a
transfer of record title or operating
rights interests. Pursuant to the
proposed rule, BOEM would accept
only transfers submitted on these forms.
Implicit in the requirement to use these
forms is the requirement to complete
them correctly. Transfers attempted to
be submitted on other forms, on
incorrectly completed forms, or using
other documentation would not be
accepted.
In order to allow more flexibility and
avoid restricting BOEM to a particular
form name or number stated in the
regulations, the final rule states that the
Regional Director will provide a form
for use in transfers of record title or
operating rights. As in the proposed
rule, however, only the form provided
by the Regional Director will be
accepted by BOEM, and only when
completed correctly. Therefore, final
rule section 556.704(a)(2) makes clear
that a transfer request submitted to
BOEM may be rejected if not
‘‘acceptable as to form or content.’’ The
latter provision, 556.704(a)(3), provides
that an attempted transfer that does not
comport with the regulations or other
applicable law will be disapproved.
Section 556.705. How do I transfer the
interest of a deceased natural person
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who was a lessee? This section outlines
the procedures to follow to transfer an
interest in an OCS lease from a deceased
natural person. Final rule section
556.705 repeats proposed rule section
256.614, with minor wording changes.
Section 556.706. What if I want to
transfer record title interests in more
than one lease at the same time, but to
different parties? Final rule section
556.706 repeats proposed rule section
256.615 with some minor language
changes. Both the proposed and final
rule sections address a lessee or other
interest holder who desires to transfer
interests it owns in different leases to
different parties. Both sections note that
in this situation, each transfer requires
its own instrument, which must be
originally executed and filed in
duplicate with BOEM.
Section 556.707. What if I want to
transfer different types of lease interests
(not only record title interests) in the
same lease to different parties? This
section outlines the process for
transferring different types of interests
in a lease to different parties. Final rule
section 556.707 derives from proposed
rule section 256.615. That proposed rule
section addressed the situation where
interests in different leases are being
transferred to different parties. The
proposed rule said nothing, however,
about the corollary situation: Where the
interest holder desires to transfer
different types of lease interests in the
same lease to different parties. Final
rule section 556.707 was added to cover
this corollary situation. It states that
even if an interest holder is transferring
interests in the same lease, if they are
different types of interests and being
transferred to different parties, each
transfer requires its own separate
instrument, which must be duly
executed and filed in duplicate with
BOEM.
Section 556.708. What if I want to
transfer my record title interests in more
than one lease to the same party? This
final rule section addresses lessees who
desire to transfer interests in more than
one lease to the same party. Final rule
section 556.708 derives from the first
sentence of proposed rule section
256.615. As noted by both proposed rule
section 256.615 and final rule section
556.708, a lessee may not transfer record
title interest in more than one lease
using the same instrument. If a lessee
wishes to transfer record title interest in
more than one lease at the same time,
the lessee must submit separate,
originally executed forms for each
transfer. Final rule section 556.708 also
retains the statement from prior section
556.64(a)(8) that a separate fee applies
to each individual transfer of interest.
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Section 556.709. What if I want to
transfer my record title interest in one
lease to multiple parties? This section
describes the requirements associated
with transferring the record title interest
in a lease to multiple parties. There is
no analogous section in the proposed
rule to final rule section 556.709, but
the final rule section is a clarification of
proposed rule section 256.615. That
proposed rule section addressed the
situations where interests in different
leases are being transferred to different
parties, or to the same party. The
proposed rule did not address, however,
the corollary situation, where the
interest holder desires to transfer
different portions of its record title
interest in the same lease to multiple
parties. Final rule section 556.709 was
added to cover this corollary situation.
It states that if a record title owner is
transferring its record title interests in a
single lease to multiple parties, it may
use a single instrument. This differs
from the circumstance addressed in
section 556.707 where transfers of more
than one type of interest in the single
lease require use of more than one
instrument. Final rule section 556.709
also retains the statement from prior
section 556.64(a)(8) that where multiple
transfers of interest are accomplished, a
separate fee applies to each individual
transfer of interest.
Section 556.710. What is the effect of
an assignment of a lease on an assignor’s
liability under the lease? Final rule
section 556.710 was found at proposed
rule section 256.616. Both the proposed
and final rule sections state the longestablished regulatory concept that after
an assignment an assignor remains
liable for all monetary and nonmonetary obligations that accrued
before approval of the assignment.
Proposed rule section 256.616 applied
to assignments in general, but final rule
section 556.710 applies only to transfers
of record title interests, and an
analogous final rule section, 556.805,
applies only to transfers of operating
rights interests.
Section 556.711. What is the effect of
a record title holder’s sublease of
operating rights on the record title
holder’s liability? This section provides
that a record title holder who subleases
operating rights remains liable for later
accruing obligations of the lease, but is
only secondarily liable for monetary
obligations accruing thereafter. Parts of
proposed rule section 256.616 appear at
final rule section 556.711, specifically
in 556.711(a) and (b). These two
paragraphs, along with final rule section
556.709, retain all of proposed rule
section 256.616 and make clear the
extent of the liability retained by a party
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who assigns its record title interest.
BOEM received a comment on proposed
rule section 256.616 requesting that the
final sentence be deleted because it was
ambiguous. BOEM agrees with the
comment and has deleted that sentence.
The scenario it addressed in the
proposed rule has been addressed
without ambiguity in final rule section
556.711(a).
Final rule section 556.711(c) arises
from FOGRMA, and states that a
sublessee of operating rights is primarily
liable for monetary obligations, but the
record title holder, even after the
sublease, remains secondarily liable for
monetary obligations.
Section 556.712. What is the effective
date of a transfer? This section describes
the effective date of the transfer of a
record title interest in a lease. Final rule
section 556.712 is a combination of
proposed rule section 256.617 and
section 556.62(c) of BOEM’s prior
regulations. In the proposed rule,
section 256.617 stated that an
assignment is effective on the first day
of the month following the request to
assign, not following the date that
BOEM approved the assignment. This
left open the possibility, for example,
that if you made a request to assign in
April, it would become effective on the
first of May, even if BOEM did not
approve it until the fifteenth of May or
later. The final rule section clarifies
that, unless requested otherwise (see
below), the effective date of a transfer of
a lease interest is the first day of the
next month after BOEM approves the
transfer.
Final rule section 556.712, like
proposed rule section 256.617, allows
the parties to a transfer to specify a date
on which their transfer will become
effective. The proposed rule stated that
BOEM would record the assignment as
effective as of the date specified by the
parties. The prior regulation, at section
556.62(c), did not affirmatively state
that BOEM would accept the date
specified by the parties. The prior
regulation used the word ‘‘request’’ to
refer to the parties’ choice of a different
effective date, and stated that the
effective date would be specified in
BOEM’s approval. After further
consideration of this issue, BOEM has
decided to retain the idea in the prior
regulation, and to clarify any ambiguity
by stating that BOEM must approve a
request for a specified effective date for
a transfer of record title interest.
Both proposed rule section 256.617
and final rule section 556.712 also make
clear that the transferor’s obligations
continue to accrue until BOEM
approves the transfer, no matter when
the effective date is specified to be. In
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other words, the proposed and final
rules clarify that if the parties to a
transfer specify an effective date that
falls before BOEM’s approval of the
transfer, this date is ‘‘effective’’ between
the parties, but it does not have any
effect on the obligations of the transferor
to BOEM. The accrual of those
obligations is ended only by BOEM’s
approval of the transfer.
Section 556.713. What is the effect of
an assignment of a lease on an
assignee’s liability under the lease?
With respect to an assignee of a record
title interest, final rule section 556.713
repeats proposed rule section 256.618.
Both sections recite the obligations of an
assignee, which include complying with
the lease terms and regulations,
remedying existing environmental and
operational problems, and performing
decommissioning.
Section 556.714. As a restricted joint
bidder, may I transfer an interest to
another restricted joint bidder? Final
rule section 556.714 requires a person
on the Restricted Joint Bidders List,
when transferring less than 100% of its
interest in a lease to another person on
the same list, to file with BOEM all
agreements applicable to the acquisition
of the interest transferred. Final rule
paragraph 556.714(a) retains the
language to this effect found in prior
section 556.64(i). This same
requirement was also found in proposed
rule section 256.619, and it engendered
a comment that objected to proposed
rule section 256.619 on several grounds.
The comment stated that the documents
requested by proposed section 256.619
may be ‘‘sensitive,’’ i.e., confidential,
and that the section is too broad and
vague with an ‘‘unascertainable’’ intent.
The comment also stated that because
BOEM approves assignments, BOEM
will be aware of the chain of title
through which the assignor received its
interest, rendering unnecessary the
filing of agreements relating to the
assignor’s acquisition of that interest.
The commenter suggested that BOEM
‘‘should only be interested in the timing
and nature of the agreement whereby
one restricted joint bidder acquired from
another restricted joint bidder.’’
For the most part, BOEM disagrees
with this comment. Proposed rule
section 256.619 did not introduce a new
concept, but restated what was
originally in prior section 556.64(i). Nor
does BOEM find the section overly
vague. The filing of the requested
agreements or the provision of the
description of the transaction (see
below) is necessary to allow the
Department of Justice to properly review
the antitrust implications of
assignments between restricted joint
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bidders, as is required for all
assignments by section 8(e) of OCSLA
(43 U.S.C. 1337(e)). Also, the final rule
section does, as one comment noted,
demonstrate BOEM’s interest in ‘‘the
timing and nature of the agreement
whereby one restricted joint bidder
acquired [a lease interest] from another
restricted joint bidder.’’ The final rule,
by retaining the language from prior
section 556.64(i), makes clear that
BOEM is seeking information about
acquisitions only from a transferor that
was on the Restricted Joint Bidders List
at the time of its acquisition of the
interest, and that is now transferring
less than its entire interest to an entity
that was on the same list.
In response to the comment, however,
BOEM has noted in section 556.714(d)
that a person submitting the requested
agreements may request they be treated
confidentially and BOEM will do so to
the extent authorized by its regulations
and applicable Departmental
regulations. Further, as suggested by the
commenter, section 556.714(a) allows
the assignor/submitter to choose
whether to submit the requested
agreements or instead to provide BOEM
with a description of the timing and
nature of the transfer agreement,
together with a statement certifying the
truth of this description.
Section 556.715. Are there any
interests I may transfer or record
without BOEM approval? This section
provides that a lessee may create,
transfer, or assign an economic interest
in a lease without BOEM approval, but
that such transferor must send BOEM a
copy of each instrument creating or
transferring such a lease interest within
90 days after the last party executes the
transfer instrument. Final rule section
556.715 (along with final rule section
556.808) is the successor to proposed
rule section 256.620. Final rule section
556.715 and proposed section 256.620
are substantively similar, but the
language of the proposed section was
changed somewhat in the final rule. The
proposed rule section stated that a
lessee could create or transfer ‘‘carried
working interests, overriding royalty
interests, or payments out of
production’’ without BOEM approval. In
the final rule, instead of listing these
three types of interests, section
556.715(a) states that a lessee may
create, transfer, or assign ‘‘economic
interests’’ without BOEM approval. The
term ‘‘economic interest’’ is defined in
final rule section 556.106 to encompass
‘‘any right to, or any right dependent
upon, production of crude oil, natural
gas, or liquefied petroleum products,’’
and includes, among others, the three
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types of interests listed in the proposed
section.
Final rule section 556.714 also makes
clear that the 90-day deadline set forth
in prior section 556.64(a)(2) applies to
filings memorializing transfers of
economic interests. Prior section
556.64(a)(2) did not explicitly state that
the 90-day deadline applies to such
filings. The 90-day filing deadline
appears in final rule section 556.701
with respect to the filings of transfers of
record title interests and the severance
of operating rights interests, and the
final rule makes clear that the deadline
also applies to filings of transfers of
economic interests by so stating in final
rule section 556.714.
BOEM received one comment on
proposed section 256.620, which
expressed concerns about
confidentiality of documents and asked
whether the section intended to require
the submission of joint operating
agreements to BOEM. The comment
notes this provision, i.e., section
256.620, and its requirements are ‘‘not
[] new,’’ and that is correct—this
provision is currently found at section
556.64(a)(7). The final rule section does
not impose any new requirements and
does not require the filing of joint
operating agreements as they do not
necessarily create economic interests,
only rights to such interests. Once those
interests are created, however,
documents respecting them must be
filed with BOEM. As to confidentiality,
documents will be treated in accordance
with BOEM’s regulation at section
556.104 and any applicable
Departmental regulations.
Section 556.716. What must I do with
respect to the designation of operator on
a lease when a transfer of record title is
submitted? This section provides the
circumstances under which the transfer
of a record title interest triggers the need
to file a new designation of operator
form with BOEM. Final rule section
556.716 is based on several prior and
proposed rule sections. Proposed rule
section 256.611 and prior section 556.62
explained how a record title, or other
lease interest, may be transferred, but
did not mention the need, which often
arises upon such a transfer, to file a new
designation of operator form. Prior
regulation section 550.143 stated that,
when there is a change of designated
operator, you must file a new
designation of operator form with
BOEM. Prior section 550.143 was,
however, in a part of the regulations that
does not address transfers of lease
interests. Because, as stated above, the
need to file a new designation of
operator form often arises when lease
interests are transferred, BOEM added
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section 556.716 here in part 556, to
augment section 550.143 and ensure
that parties to a transfer are aware of
their duties with respect to designation
of an operator.
10. Subpart H—Transferring All or Part
of the Operating Rights in a Lease
Section 556.800. As an operating
rights owner, may I assign all or part of
my operating rights interest? This
section provides that an operating rights
owner may assign all or part of its
operating rights interests, subject to
BOEM approval. Final rule section
556.800 repeats proposed rule section
256.612 with minor language changes.
Section 556.801. How do I seek
approval of an assignment of my
operating rights? This section describes
the process by which an assignor of
operating rights must obtain approval of
such an assignment. Final rule section
556.801 is based on proposed rule
section 256.613. The proposed rule
section applied to all transfers of lease
interests, but final rule section 556.801
applies only to assignments of operating
rights from one operating rights owner
to another, in accordance with the
approach in the final rule to separate
regulatory sections concerning transfers
of operating rights and those concerning
transfers of record title interests.
Both proposed rule section 256.613
and final rule section 556.801 require
that BOEM approve transfers of
operating rights. Documents
memorializing such transfers must be
filed within 90 days of the transfer. Both
sections also note BOEM may consult
with the Attorney General. The final
rule section states the Regional Director
will provide the form on which to
record the transfer of operating rights,
instead of citing particular forms as was
done in the proposed rule. For the same
reasons laid out above in the discussion
of final rule section 556.716, final rule
section 556.801 reiterates the
requirement found at prior regulation
section 550.143 that a new operating
rights owner must file a designation of
operator form.
One paragraph of final rule section
556.801 did not appear in the proposed
rule: 556.801(c) states that if an
operating rights owner transfers an
undivided interest in its operating
rights, that transfer creates a joint
ownership of the operating rights in the
transferor and the transferee. This
provision did not appear in the
proposed rule, but it is merely a
description of the well-accepted legal
consequences of such a transfer. As with
a record title interest, an operating
rights owner can transfer less than
100% of a certain part of its operating
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rights interest, retaining some
percentage of interest in that part. This
is referred to as the transfer of an
‘‘undivided interest’’ and creates coownership.
Section 556.802. When would BOEM
disapprove the assignment of all or part
of my operating rights interest? Final
rule section 556.802 sets forth the
circumstances under which BOEM
would disapprove an assignment of an
operating rights interest. The final rule
section is based on proposed rule
section 256.611. The last sentence of
proposed rule section 256.611 stated an
assignment could be disapproved if the
assignor or assignee had outstanding
obligations under this chapter of the
regulations. This provision appears at
final rule section 556.802(a).
Final rule section 556.802 also
contains two provisions, at paragraphs
(b) and (c), which make clear that BOEM
may disapprove an assignment of
operating rights interests that is
incorrect as to form or does not comport
with the regulations. The former
provision, 556.802(b), derives from
proposed rule section 256.613, which
listed the names and numbers of the
forms that BOEM requires to be used to
effectuate a transfer of record title or
operating rights interests. Pursuant to
the proposed rule, BOEM would accept
only transfers submitted on—and
consistent with—these forms.
In order to allow more flexibility and
avoid restricting BOEM to a particular
form name or number stated in the
regulations, the final rule states the
Regional Director will provide a form
for use in transfers of record title or
operating rights. As in the proposed
rule, only the form provided by the
Regional Director will be accepted by
BOEM and only when completed
correctly. Therefore, final rule section
556.802(b) makes clear that a transfer
request submitted to BOEM may be
rejected if not ‘‘acceptable as to form or
content.’’ The latter provision,
556.802(c), provides that an attempted
transfer that does not comport with the
regulations and/or applicable law will
be disapproved.
Section 556.803. What if I want to
assign operating rights interests in more
than one lease at the same time, but to
different parties? This section addresses
the assignment of operating rights
interests in more than one lease to
different parties. Final rule section
556.803 is based on proposed rule
section 256.615. Both the first sentence
of the proposed rule section and the
final rule section address the situation
where a lessee or other interest holder
desires to transfer interests it owns in
different leases to different parties. Final
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rule section 556.803, however, applies
only to an operating rights owner who
desires to simultaneously assign its
operating rights in multiple leases. The
limited application of final rule section
556.803 is in keeping with the final
rule’s separation of regulatory sections
concerning transfers of record title by
record title holders and those
concerning transfers of operating rights
by operating rights owners.
Section 556.804. What if I want to
assign my operating rights in a lease to
multiple parties? This section addresses
the assignment of operating rights
interests in one lease to more than one
party. There was no analogous section
in the proposed rule to final rule section
556.804, but the final rule section
developed out of proposed rule section
256.615. That proposed rule section,
also discussed immediately above,
addressed the transfer of interests in
different leases to different parties, or to
the same party. The proposed rule did
not address, however, the corollary
situation, where the interest holder
desires to transfer different portions of
its operating rights interests in the same
lease to multiple parties. Final rule
section 556.804 was added to cover this
corollary situation. It states that if an
operating rights owner is transferring its
operating rights in a single lease to
multiple parties, it may use a single
instrument. Final rule section 556.804
also retains the statement from prior
section 556.64(a)(8), which states that
where multiple transfers of interest are
accomplished using one instrument, a
separate fee applies to each individual
transfer of interest.
Section 556.805. What is the effect of
an operating rights owner’s assignment
of operating rights on the assignor’s
liability? This final rule section states
the long-established regulatory concept
that after an assignment, the assignor
remains liable for all monetary and nonmonetary obligations that accrued
before approval of the assignment. Final
rule section 556.805 was found at
proposed rule section 256.616. That
proposed rule section applied to
assignments in general, but final rule
section 556.805 applies only to
assignments of operating rights
interests.
Section 556.806. What is the effective
date of an assignment of operating
rights? This section describes the
effective date of the transfer of an
operating rights interest in a lease. Final
rule section 556.806 is a combination of
proposed rule section 256.617 and prior
section 556.62(c). In the proposed rule,
analogous provision 256.617 stated an
assignment is effective on the first day
of the month following the request to
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assign, not following the date that
BOEM approved the assignment. As
explained above, in the discussion of
final rule section 556.712, this left open
the possibility that an assignment could
ostensibly become ‘‘effective’ before it
was approved. Final rule section
556.806 clarifies that (unless requested
otherwise, see below) the effective date
of an assignment of an operating rights
interest is the first day of the month
after the month in which BOEM
approves the transfer.
Final rule section 556.806, like
proposed rule section 256.617, allows
the parties to a transfer to specify a date
on which their transfer will become
effective. The proposed rule stated that
BOEM would record the assignment as
effective as of the date specified by the
parties. The prior regulation, at section
556.62(c), did not affirmatively state
that BOEM would accept the date
specified by the parties. The prior
regulation used the word ‘‘request’’ to
refer to the parties’ choice of a different
effective date, and stated that the
effective date would be specified in
BOEM’s approval. After further
consideration of this issue, BOEM has
decided, in the final rule, to retain the
idea in the prior regulation, and to
clarify any ambiguity by stating that
BOEM must approve a request for a
specified effective date for a transfer of
an operating rights interest.
Both proposed rule section 256.617
and final rule section 556.806 also make
clear that the transferor’s obligations do
not end until BOEM approves the
transfer, no matter when the effective
date is specified to be. In other words,
the proposed and final rules clarify that
if the parties to a transfer specify an
effective date that falls before BOEM’s
approval of the transfer, this date is
‘‘effective’’ between the parties, but it
does not have any effect on the
obligations of the transferor to BOEM.
The accrual of those obligations is
ended only by BOEM’s approval of the
transfer.
Section 556.807. What is the effect of
an assignment of operating rights on an
assignee’s liability? This section recites
the obligations of an assignee, which
include complying with the lease terms
and regulations, remedying existing
environmental and operational
problems on the leasehold, and
performing decommissioning
obligations. Final rule section 556.807
repeats proposed rule section 256.618,
but only with respect to an assignee of
an operating rights interest. Proposed
rule section 256.618 addressed both
assignees of record title interests and
operating rights interests, but consistent
with the final rule’s separate treatment
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of these two types of interests, this final
rule section addresses only the effect of
an assignment of operating rights on an
assignee’s liability.
Section 556.808. As an operating
rights owner, are there any interests I
may assign without BOEM approval?
This section provides that an operating
rights owner may create, transfer, or
assign economic interests without
BOEM approval, but that for record
keeping purposes, the operating rights
owner must send BOEM a copy of each
instrument creating or transferring such
interests within 90 days after the last
party executes the transfer instrument.
Final rule section 556.808 (along with
final rule section 556.715) is the
successor to proposed rule section
256.620. Final rule section 556.808 is
substantively similar to proposed
section 256.620, but the final rule
section applies to operating rights
owners and contains somewhat different
language from the proposed section. The
proposed rule section stated that you
could create or transfer ‘‘carried
working interests, overriding royalty
interests, or payments out of
production’’ without BOEM approval. In
the final rule, instead of listing these
three types of interests, section
556.808(a) states that you may create,
transfer, or assign ‘‘economic interests’’
without BOEM approval. The term
‘‘economic interest’’ is defined in final
rule section 556.106 to encompass ‘‘any
right to, or any right dependent upon,
production of crude oil, natural gas, or
natural gas liquids,’’ and includes,
among others, the three types of
interests listed in the proposed section.
Final rule section 556.808 also makes
clear that the 90-day deadline set forth
in prior regulation section 556.64(a)(2)
also applies to filings memorializing
transfers of economic interests. Prior
section 556.64(a)(2) did not explicitly
state that the 90-day deadline applies to
such filings. The 90-day filing deadline
appears in final rule section 556.801
with respect to the filings of
assignments of operating rights
interests, and the final rule makes clear
that the deadline also applies to filings
of transfers of economic interests by so
stating in final rule section 556.808.
BOEM received one comment on
proposed section 256.620, which
expressed concerns about
confidentiality of documents and asked
whether the section intended to require
the submission of joint operating
agreements to BOEM. The comment
notes that this provision, i.e., 256.620,
and its requirements are ‘‘not [ ] new’’
and that is correct—this provision is
currently found at 556.64(a)(7). The
final rule section does not impose any
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new requirements and does not require
the filing of joint operating agreements
as they do not necessarily create
economic interests, only rights to such
interests. Once those interests are
created, however, documents respecting
them must be filed with BOEM. As to
confidentiality, documents will be
treated in accordance with final rule
section 556.104 and any applicable
Departmental regulations.
Section 556.810. What must I do with
respect to the designation of operator on
a lease when a transfer of operating
rights ownership is submitted? This
section provides the circumstances
under which the transfer of an operating
rights interest triggers the need to file a
new designation of operator form with
BOEM. Final rule section 556.810 is a
clarification and extension of several
prior and proposed rule sections.
Proposed rule section 256.611 and
section 556.62 from BOEM’s previous
regulations explained how a record title
or operating rights interest may be
transferred, but did not mention the
need, which often arises upon such a
transfer, to file a new designation of
operator form. Current section 550.143
states that, when there is a change of
designated operator, you must file a new
designation of operator form with
BOEM. Current section 550.143 is,
however, in a part of the regulations that
does not address transfers of lease
interests. Because the need to file a new
designation of operator form often arises
when lease interests are transferred,
such as operating rights interests, BOEM
added section 556.810 here in part 556
to augment prior BOEM regulation
section 550.143, and to ensure that
parties to an operating rights transfer are
aware of their duties with respect to
designation of an operator.
11. Subpart I—Bonding or Other
Financial Assurance
Part 560, section 560.500(b) in the
final rule, addresses the electronic filing
of documents concerning bonding or
other financial assurance. The substance
of final rule section 560.500(b) was in
proposed rule section 256.503(c), which
established the circumstances under
which BOEM may require, rather than
request, electronic document
submission. The proposed and final rule
sections provide that BOEM reserves the
right to mandate the submission of
financial assurance information
electronically after publishing a 90 daynotice to that effect in the Federal
Register. Submission of financial
assurance data electronically would
contribute significantly to streamlining
the bonding process and facilitate a
more efficient transfer of data and
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information between BOEM and the
regulated community. BOEM received
no comments on proposed rule section
256.503(c). Accordingly, although no
other substantive changes related to
bonding are made in the final rule, this
provision was retained from the
proposed rule at section 560.500(b).
Other than the electronic filing
change that appears in final rule section
560.500(b) and minor administrative
changes made to subpart I, as noted
below, the regulatory sections in the
subpart remain the same as in the prior
regulations, where they are located at 30
CFR subpart I, consisting of prior
sections 556.52 through 556.59.
Sections 556.900–556.907. These
sections establish bonding requirements
for the lessee of an OCS oil and gas or
sulfur lease. BOEM is not making any
substantive changes to Subpart I—
Bonding or Other Financial Assurance—
relative to the prior regulations. The
only changes made to this subpart in the
final rule are administrative or
conforming changes necessary to avoid
inconsistency with the rest of BOEM’s
regulations. These changes are: (1)
Editorial improvement; (2) correction of
the inadvertent deletion of crossreferences to former MMS regulations
now administered by BSEE and ONRR;
(3) changes in the section numbers and
conforming changes needed in the text
due to the section number changes; (4)
changing references to ‘‘Associate
Director’’ to ‘‘Director,’’ as there are no
‘‘Associate Directors’’ within BOEM;
and (5) consistently referring to
decommissioning obligations as
‘‘decommissioning obligations,’’ rather
than by listing some or all of the
constituent parts of decommissioning.
12. Subpart J—Bonus or Royalty Credits
for Exchange of Certain Leases
Section 556.1000. Leases formerly
eligible for a bonus or royalty credit.
This section provides that bonus or
royalty credits issued by BOEM
pursuant to the Gulf of Mexico Energy
Security Act of 2006 (GOMESA) (43
U.S.C. 1331 note) are no longer
available. The deadline for applying for
such a bonus or royalty credit was
October 14, 2010; therefore, lessees may
no longer apply for such credits. The
proposed rule contained several
sections addressing these credits
because it was published in May 2009,
before the October 2010 deadline. The
final rule has only one section
addressing these credits—section
556.1000.
Although the GOMESA lease
exchange/credit program is no longer
active, section 556.1000 has been
included in the final rule because
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GOMESA did not specify a deadline to
apply for lease credits. The October 14,
2010, deadline was set by BOEM in its
regulations, and must be retained to
forestall future requests for lease credits
under GOMESA.
13. Subpart K—Ending a Lease
Section 556.1100. How does a lease
expire? This section provides the
circumstances under which a lease will
expire at the end of its primary term.
Final section 556.1100 is substantively
the same as proposed rule section
256.700, with minor wording changes.
The final rule section is also divided
into two paragraphs, one addressing oil
and gas leases, and one addressing
sulfur leases.
BOEM received one comment noting
that proposed section 256.700 listed the
ways to maintain a lease beyond the
primary term, but failed to list
production from unitized leases as one
of those ways. The comment suggested
that BOEM add in section 256.700 a
reference to production from unitized
leases as one of the ways to maintain a
lease. Final rule section 556.1100 refers
back to final rule section 556.601 for the
ways in which to maintain a lease
beyond the primary term, which
includes, at 556.601(e), production from
unitized leases.
Section 556.1101. May I relinquish
my lease or an aliquot part thereof?
Final rule section 556.1101 repeats the
substance of proposed rule section
256.701. Both sections name the form
that must be filed in triplicate by all
lessees to effect a lease relinquishment
and both note that the relinquishment is
effective on the date of filing. Both
sections also make clear that a
relinquishment does not relieve the
relinquisher(s) of any accrued
obligations, but to express this concept
the final rule section has retained the
language in prior section 556.76, rather
than using the proposed language.
Prior section 556.76 also stated that
no filing fee is required for a
relinquishment. The proposed rule,
however, said nothing on this subject. It
did not contain the statement in the
prior regulations that no filing fee is
required, but neither did it say that a
filing fee was required for a
relinquishment. The final rule retains
the ‘‘no filing fee’’ statement from prior
regulations at section 556.76.
Section 556.1102. Under what
circumstances will BOEM cancel my
lease? This section provides the
circumstances under which BOEM may
cancel a producing or a non-producing
OCS lease. Final rule section 556.1102
contains the substance of proposed rule
section 256.702, with some minor
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wording changes for clarity. Both
sections state that failure to comply
with a provision of a lease or of the
regulations may result in lease
cancellation, but the final rule section
also makes clear that failure to provide
requested financial assurance may result
in lease cancellation or assessment of
civil penalties. (See final rule section
556.1102(f).) Final rule section
556.1102(f) is a clarification of proposed
rule subsections 256.702(b) and (c).
Both these subsections state that failure
to comply with any provision of the
regulations may result in lease
cancellation, and this includes failure to
comply with those regulations requiring
the maintenance of financial assurance.
Proposed rule section 256.702
generally referred to section 5(a) of
OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1334(a)), whereas
final rule section 556.1102 was written
to more closely follow sections
5(a)(2)(A) and (B) of OCSLA (43 U.S.C.
1334(a)(2)(A) and 1334(a)(2)(B)). Both
the final and proposed rule sections
repeat section 5(a)’s directive that a
lease may be cancelled any time BOEM
finds that continued activity will
probably cause harm or damage to inter
alia, life or property, that such threat of
harm or damage will not disappear or
acceptably decrease in a reasonable
time, and that the advantages of lease
cancellation outweigh the advantages of
continuing the lease. But final rule
section 556.1102 paragraphs (d) and (e)
also include section 5(a)’s requirements
that cancellation pursuant to the terms
above must be subsequent to a hearing
and may not occur unless and until
operations under the lease have been
suspended or prohibited by the
Department continuously for a period of
five years.
14. Subpart L—Leases Maintained
Under Section 6 of OCSLA
Subpart L consists of two final rule
sections, 556.1200 and 556.1201, which
have been retained from prior sections
556.79 and 556.80, respectively. These
two sections were not in the proposed
rule. The Preamble to the proposed rule
stated that prior section 256.79 (now
556.79) was ‘‘[e]liminated as
unnecessary repetition’’ of OCSLA
section 6(b) (43 U.S.C. 1335(b)) and
prior section 256.80 (now 556.80) was
‘‘covered in 30 CFR part 281’’ (now part
581).
BOEM has reconsidered its decision
to eliminate subpart L from its
regulations, and, for the reasons
outlined below, has decided to retain it
in this final rule.
Section 556.1200. Effect of regulations
on lease. Final rule section 556.1200
makes clear the relationship between
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BOEM’s regulations and the lease
provisions of those leases maintained
under section 6 of OCSLA (43 U.S.C.
1335). Section 6 of OCSLA applies to a
specific group of leases—State-issued
OCS leases issued before December 21,
1948.
BOEM has retained this provision,
derived from prior section 556.79, even
though it includes some repetition of
Section 6 of OCSLA. Retaining this in
final rule section 556.112 is helpful to
BOEM’s stakeholders because it clarifies
the interplay between BOEM’s
regulations and Section 6 leases.
Section 556.1201. Section 6(a) leases
and leases other than those for oil, gas,
or sulfur. BOEM has determined that the
proposed rule was incorrect in asserting
that prior part 556, subpart L, which
consisted of prior sections 556.79 and
556.80, was an unnecessary duplication
of provisions in another part of the
regulations. BOEM has therefore
decided to retain, in final rule section
556.1201, the substance of prior section
556.80. Final rule section 556.1201
states that the existence of a Section 6
oil and gas lease does not preclude the
issuance, in the same area, of other
types of leases under OCSLA. BOEM
has determined that this section should
be retained to clarify the circumstances
surrounding Section 6 leases.
15. Subpart M—Environmental Studies
Section 556.1300. Environmental
studies. Subpart M—Environmental
Studies consists of section 556.1300 in
the final rule and provides that BOEM
will conduct studies of any area or
region included in any oil and gas lease
sale as needed to assess and manage
impacts on the human, marine and
coastal environments, which may be
affected by OCS oil and gas or other
mineral activities in such area or region.
Subpart M in the previous regulations
consisted of section 556.82. The
proposed rule deleted subpart M as an
‘‘unnecessary recitation of internal
procedures,’’ but section 20(c) of
OCSLA specifically states that the
‘‘Secretary shall, by regulation, establish
procedures for carrying out his duties
[to conduct environmental studies]
under this section.’’ (43 U.S.C. 1346(c)).
BOEM has determined to retain subpart
M to comply with section 20 of OCSLA
and to set forth in the regulations,
procedures for the conduct of
environmental studies with minor
revisions to clarify text.
C. Part 559—Mineral Leasing:
Definitions
Prior part 559 was moved into final
rule part 560, as explained below, in the
discussion of final rule part 560.
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2. Subpart B—Bidding Systems
D. Part 560—Outer Continental Shelf
Oil and Gas Leasing
The final rule updates the authority
citation for part 560 and amends the
Table of Contents for part 560 by
removing prior subpart D, reserving the
subpart, and adding new subparts C and
E.
Also, in this final rule, BOEM has
moved the definitions from prior part
559 into final rule part 560 and deleted
part 559. Prior part 559 consisted of
only two sections. The first section,
559.001, stated that ‘‘[t]he purpose of
this part 559 is to define various terms
appearing in part 560.’’ The second
section, 559.002, listed these
definitions. This relocation did not
appear in the proposed rule, but it is
merely an administrative change, which
streamlines the regulations and does not
trigger the need for notice and comment.
The wording of the definition of
‘‘person’’ in part 560 has been made
consistent with that in part 556, but no
change is being made to the other
definitions except their re-location
within the regulations.
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1. Subpart A—General Provisions
Section 560.100. Authority. This
section provides a listing of the statutes
that provide the legal basis for the
regulations promulgated under this part.
The authority provisions of part 560
have been revised in this new section,
and the titles of the public laws
corresponding to the relevant statutes
have been added. FOGRMA (30 U.S.C.
1701–1759) has been updated to include
the amendments made to it by the
Federal Oil and Gas Royalty
Simplification and Fairness Act of 1996,
(FOGRSFA, 30 U.S.C. 1701 note).
Section 560.101. What is the purpose
of this part? This final rule section
retains the language of section 560.1 in
the prior regulations, with no changes,
but redesignated.
Section 560.102. What definitions
apply to this part? This section
consolidates and updates the definitions
previously located in part 559 with the
definitions previously located in section
560.2.
Section 560.103. What is BOEM’s
authority to collect information? This
section provides that BOEM may not
conduct or sponsor a collection of
information unless the information
collection displays a currently valid
OMB control number, and specifies the
circumstances under which comments
regarding any aspect of the collection of
information under this part may be
submitted to BOEM. This section is
unchanged from section 560.3 but has
been redesignated.
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Sections 560.200–560.230. These
provisions establish the bidding systems
that BOEM may use to offer and sell
Federal leases for the exploration,
development, and production of oil and
gas resources located on the OCS. No
changes were made to this subpart,
except that all section numbers have
been changed to conform to the
numbering convention used throughout
the final rule.
3. Subpart C—Operating Allowances
Section 560.300. Operating
allowances. The final rule includes a
new subpart C, which consists of one
section—556.300—that reestablishes a
provision concerning operating
allowances in the BOEM regulations.
Operating allowance provisions were
originally added into MMS (later
BOEMRE) regulations by RIN 1010–
AB93, 61 FR 3800, Bidding Systems for
Leases in the Outer Continental Shelf.
When the MMS was reorganized into
ONRR, BOEM, and BSEE, the operating
allowance sections of the regulations
were moved from the BOEMRE
regulations to the ONRR regulations, but
the corresponding sections were not
included in the BOEM regulations.
Under the current organizational
structure of the Department, ONRR will
collect royalty as calculated using the
operating allowance, but BOEM must
first issue leases that contain the
operating allowance. In order to
effectuate the ONRR regulations related
to operating allowances, therefore,
counterpart provisions must also be reestablished within the BOEM
regulations.
Subpart C re-establishes the operating
allowance provisions in BOEM’s
regulations. It does not make any change
to the regulatory provisions with respect
to what sort of operating allowance
would be available or when one might
be granted.
4. Subpart D—Joint Bidding
Both the proposed and final rules
amend part 560 by removing subpart D,
which concerned joint bidding. All the
provisions in the prior subpart D have
been moved to part 556 in the final rule
(see sections 556.511–556.515, and
556.106, definitions of ‘‘average daily
production,’’ ‘‘barrel,’’ ‘‘crude oil,’’
‘‘economic interest,’’ ‘‘joint bid,’’
‘‘natural gas,’’ ‘‘natural gas liquids,’’
‘‘owned,’’ ‘‘single bid,’’ ‘‘six-month
bidding period,’’ and ‘‘statement of
production’’). The regulation sections
that were in part 560, subpart D, more
appropriately belong in part 556,
subpart E, under the subheading,
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‘‘Restrictions on Joint Bidding,’’ because
subpart E contains the full panoply of
regulations relating to the restrictions on
joint bidding. There is no clear rationale
supporting retention of these sections in
part 560 as well, and including these
provisions twice in the regulations may
cause confusion. Therefore, part 560,
subpart D is being removed.
5. Subpart E—Electronic Filings
In part 560, the final rule includes a
new subpart E, ‘‘Electronic Filings,’’
which provides that BOEM may notify
lessees and other parties that it will
allow or request the submission of
information electronically through
BOEM’s secure electronic filing system,
through an alternate secure electronic
filing system supported and maintained
by the Department, or through some
other electronic filing system that
BOEM has approved for this purpose.
This subpart did not appear in the
proposed rule, nor did it appear in the
prior regulations, but notice and an
opportunity to comment on these new
provisions are unnecessary because the
subpart does not impose any
requirements. Rather, it provides that
anyone submitting documents to BOEM
may do so electronically. The
electronic-submittal option will likely
reduce the burden on those making the
submissions. Moreover, the option
furthers the Federal government’s move
toward all-electronic document
production, submission, and filing, a
goal evidenced by the Government
Paperwork Elimination Act (GPEA),
Public Law 105–277, 112 Stat. 2681
(1998), and the U.S. Office of
Management and Budget’s guidance for
implementing that Act (Memorandum
00–10 OMB Procedures and Guidance
on Implementing the Government
Implementation of the Government
Paperwork Elimination Act, April 25,
2000). Because subpart E imposes no
requirements on the public, it
constitutes a procedural rule that does
not require notice and comment.
Subpart E consists of three sections,
which are individually addressed
below.
Section 560.500. Electronic
documents and data transmission. Final
rule section 560.500 lists the types of
information that may be filed
electronically. The section also makes
clear that if BOEM sends a document in
an electronic format, return of the
document using the same format or in
print is acceptable (560.500(c)), and that
BOEM may electronically approve or
execute documents referenced in this
section (560.500(d)).
Final rule section 560.500(b) repeats
proposed rule section 256.503(c), which
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established the circumstances under
which BOEM may require, rather than
request, electronic document
submission. The proposed and final rule
sections provide that BOEM reserves the
right to mandate the submission of
financial assurance information
electronically after publishing a 90 daynotice to that effect in the Federal
Register. Submission of financial
assurance data electronically would
contribute significantly to streamlining
the bonding process and facilitate a
more efficient transfer of data and
information between BOEM and the
regulated community. BOEM received
no comments on proposed rule section
256.503(c). Accordingly, although most
other changes related to bonding were
removed from the final rule, this
provision was retained at section
560.500(b).
Section 560.501. How long will the
confidentiality of electronic document
and data transmissions be maintained?
Final rule section 560.501 states that
electronically-submitted confidential
information will be maintained as
confidential for the same amount of
time that corresponding non-electronic
information would be so maintained.
Section 560.502. Are electronically
filed document transmissions legally
binding? Final rule section 560.502 has
been included to ensure that electronic
submission will not be a bar to legal
viability. Pursuant to section 560.502,
documents that are properly submitted
through an approved electronic format
will be considered legally binding
(assuming they are properly prepared,
executed, or whatever else may be
necessary in each individual case),
without the need to also submit a paper
Proposed rule section
(30 CFR)
256.101 ................................
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256.103 ................................
256.200 ................................
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copy of such document. In other words,
if all else has been done properly with
regard to a document submission, the
fact that it has been submitted
electronically will not bar it from being
legally binding.
Final rule section 560.502 was not in
the proposed rule and is being included
in the final rule without a period of
notice and comment. The Government
Paperwork Elimination Act, found
within the Omnibus Consolidated and
Emergency Supplemental
Appropriations Act of 1999 (Public Law
105–277, 112 Stat. 2681 (1999)), at
sections 1701 et seq., authorizes
agencies to consider properly submitted
electronic submissions as legally
binding. The Government Paperwork
Elimination Act, at section 1707,
specifically addresses the question of
whether, and how, electronically filed
documents are legally binding. It states:
‘‘Electronic records submitted or
maintained in accordance with
procedures developed under this title,
or electronic signatures or other forms of
electronic authentication used in
accordance with such procedures, shall
not be denied legal effect, validity, or
enforceability because such records are
in electronic form.’’ Pub. L. 105–277,
112 Stat. 2681–751 (1999).
Further, section 7001(a) of the
Electronic Signatures in Global and
National Commerce Act (ESIGN) (15
U.S.C. 7001–7031) states:
‘‘Notwithstanding any statute,
regulation, or other rule of law (other
than this subchapter and subchapter II
of this chapter), with respect to any
transaction in or affecting interstate or
foreign commerce—(1) a signature,
contract, or other record relating to such
transaction may not be denied legal
effect, validity, or enforceability solely
because it is in electronic form; and (2)
a contract relating to such transaction
may not be denied legal effect, validity,
or enforceability solely because an
electronic signature or electronic record
was used in its formation.’’
Final rule section 560.502 is
administrative and serves to reduce the
burden on those submitting filings to
BOEM, but more importantly it is
necessary to effectuate BOEM’s
electronic filing system and to ensure
electronic submissions are considered
legally valid documents.
IV. Table of Comments and Responses
We do not provide responses to
comments on subpart I because no
substantive changes were made to that
subpart as part of this final rule.
A. General Comment
Comment: In an effort to streamline
the regulations, the proposed rule
eliminated several sections that repeat
provisions of OCSLA. But in other
instances, the proposed rule added
language that is found in relevant
statutes. BOEM should carefully review
the proposed rule and eliminate
instances in which the substance of
statutes is simply repeated. Specifically,
BOEM should consider proposed
sections 556.101, 556.200 (second
sentence), 556.304(b), 556.402(b) in this
regard.
Response: We kept added statutory
language when it was considered
necessary for clarity.
B. Section-Specific Comments
Comments received
BOEM Response
The American Petroleum Institute (API) submitted comments on many sections of the proposed rule, which
are discussed throughout the following Table.
Section 256.101 references 18 U.S.C. 1001, which is
unnecessary and potentially creates confusion. In the
event 18 U.S.C. 1001 were revised, amended or repealed, MMS would need to do the same here. It’s
redundant and unnecessary.
The definition for ‘‘authorized officer’’ should be retained in proposed section 256.103, as it is still used
in the regulations. The proposal includes definitions
for the ‘‘Central Planning Area’’ and the ‘‘Eastern
Planning Area,’’ but not for the ‘‘Western Planning
Area.’’ For completeness, MMS should consider including a definition for the ‘‘Western Planning Area.’’
Section 256.200—The second sentence appears to be
repeated from OCSLA and its repetition is not necessary. See, 43 U.S.C. 1344(a)(3). Repeating language from the statute is inconsistent with the
streamlining approach that MMS has taken with the
proposed regulations.
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BOEM agrees with the comment and has removed the
provision referencing 18 U.S.C. 1001 from the final
rule.
We revised the definition for ‘‘Secretary’’ to include both
the terms ‘‘official’’ and ‘‘designated employee’’ who
are ‘‘authorized to act on behalf of the Secretary.’’
We have added the definition for the ‘‘Western Planning Area.’’
The second sentence is short and explicit and therefore
has been retained.
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Proposed rule section
(30 CFR)
Comments received
BOEM Response
256.301 ................................
Section 256.301 eliminates the requirement that MMS
inform the public as soon as possible, when areas
are deleted from leasing. This requirement should be
retained. It should be recognized that deleting areas
from leasing is of great importance to lessees who
are spending resources in preparing for lease sales,
and this information should be published as soon as
possible.
Section 256.304(b)—The Coastal Zone Management
Act (CZMA) (16 U.S.C. 1451 et seq.) sets out the
process for consistency determinations by the affected States. While MMS may be merely setting out
the process it uses in order to ensure consistency
with the States, the regulation should actually reference the CZMA so that if the CZMA is modified or
amended or repealed, MMS can continue to follow
the process outlined in that act, rather than risking
conflict or inconsistency.
Shell Exploration and Production Company (Shell)
Comments.
Section 256.303—The terms of an oil and gas lease
are integral to the lessee/lessor relationship and lessees who are bidding millions of dollars on leases
should have the right to know the lease terms in advance of submitting bids. Accordingly, Shell requests
that the form of lease on which successful lease bids
will be granted be attached to or referenced in the
notice of lease sale.
We have not deleted this provision. See final rule section 556.302(c), which states: ‘‘BOEM will seek to inform the public, as soon as possible, of changes
from the area(s) proposed for leasing that occur after
the Call process.’’
256.304(b) ............................
256.303 ................................
256.402(b) ............................
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256.404 ................................
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Section 256.402(b) should clarify that this section does
not impact the statutory requirements under OCSLA
that provide for a finding by the Secretary that the
bidder is not meeting due diligence requirements and
that provide for notice and hearing.
Section 256.402(c) should cite to the statutory provisions authorizing the prohibition based upon unacceptable operating performance.
Section 256.404—This new provision will create unnecessary additional administrative burdens. MMS has
multiple ways to learn of a merger or name change,
including, without limitation, the filing of merger and
name change documents with the Secretary of State
in most States and the submission of new designation of operator and other MMS forms. This additional
obligation need not be imposed on lessees. In addition, MMS should delete ‘‘immediately’’ as it is inconsistent with the one year limit. The API suggested
using ‘‘as soon as practicable,’’ but not ‘‘immediately.’’
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We cite the CZMA at section 556.305(b), where we
refer to the consistency determination.
We agree with this suggestion and have incorporated
this requirement into sections 556.304(c) and
556.308.
The final notice of sale will replicate the terms and conditions in the lease form. The following is a sample
statement from a recent notice of sale: ‘‘BOEM will
use the recently revised Form BOEM–2005 (October
2011) to convey leases; it can be viewed at:
https://www.boem.gov/About-BOEM/Procurement-Business-Opportunities/BOEM–OCS-Operation-Forms/
BOEM–OCS-Operation-Forms.aspx.
The lease form will be amended with the specific terms,
conditions and stipulations applicable to the individual
lease.’’
We agree with this comment and changed the language, which is now found at final rule section
556.403(b), to more closely track the language of
section 8(d) of OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1337(d)).
Section 8(a)(1) of OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1337(a)(1))
states: ‘‘The Secretary is authorized to grant to the
highest responsible qualified bidder or bidders by
competitive bidding, under regulations promulgated in
advance, any oil and gas lease on submerged lands
of the outer Continental Shelf . . .’’ The Secretary has
determined through promulgated regulations that acceptable operating performance under 30 CFR parts
250 and 550 on any other OCS lease is necessary to
be considered a ‘‘responsible’’ bidder. This provision
is not new. The prior regulations, at 30 CFR
556.35(c), provided that, ‘‘BOEM may disqualify you
from acquiring any new lease holdings or lease assignments if your operating performance is unacceptable according to 30 CFR 550.135.’’ We disagree
that the citation to the statutory provisions codified
from section 8(a)(1) of the OCSLA is necessary as
the regulation is clear and the concept is longstanding in the prior regulations.
We disagree with this comment, but in final rule section
556.405, we replaced ‘‘immediately’’ with ‘‘as soon as
practicable.’’ The new provision is needed to address
the problems that the Bureau has had in the past
with name changes and/or mergers about which
BOEM is not informed in a timely fashion. It is not
practical for BOEM to monitor all filings with all Secretaries of State in the United States.
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18143
Proposed rule section
(30 CFR)
Comments received
BOEM Response
256.416(b) ............................
Section 256.416(b)—There is no policy reason not to
allow co-ownership by agreement of bidders with a
tie bid, when the tie bidders are on the restricted joint
bidders list. Those parties cannot have communicated or agreed with respect to the bid, but going
forward could agree to an assignment creating coownership after the lease is awarded.
256.417 ................................
Section 256.417—The protest procedure has been
eliminated entirely. MMS should specify or refer to an
appeal process: to whom appeals are made, how
long the agency has to make a decision, who will
make the decision, and to whom that decision will be
appealed.
Section 256.420—MMS should retain the status quo
that the failure to pay the remaining 4/5ths lease
bonus results in a forfeiture of the 1/5th payment.
Payment of the 1/5th amount is sufficient penalty and
MMS may still offer and lease the tract at the next
lease sale. Payment of amounts beyond the 1/5th is
not warranted. As a result, MMS should strike the
words ‘‘and MMS may take appropriate action to collect the full amount bid.’’ In addition, the existing rule,
§ 256.47(g), states that the successful bidder has 11
business days to execute the lease and otherwise
comply with the applicable regulations. This proposed
rule required that a lessee ‘‘execute and return’’ a
lease within 11-business days after receipt (emphasis
added.) Can MMS confirm whether the addition of
the words ‘‘and return’’ signify a change in how the
process is administered? If this does constitute a
change, then can MMS explain the rationale behind
this change?
As discussed above, API objects to forfeiture of the full
bid amount, because forfeiture of the 1/5th payment
is sufficient. However, in the event that this option is
retained, MMS should consider providing some flexibility within this provision in the event that the full bid
amount is collected. The bidder should not suffer forfeiture of the lease if the full bid amount has been
paid. MMS should also consider giving the second
highest qualified bidder the opportunity to receive the
lease in the event that the high bidder forfeits the
lease under these provisions.
We disagree with the recommended policy change
proffered in this comment. The presumption that an
agreement (whether written or oral, formal or informal) could not have been made prior to, or simultaneously with, the submission of bids by two or more
bidders on the restricted joint bidders list is flawed.
Collusive bidding practices are a possibility that is
addressed explicitly in existing regulation, for example, section 556.44 specifically disqualifies bids
where collusive bidding is evident. We clarified the
language of paragraph (c) of final rule section
556.516 to address the treatment of tie high bids
submitted by two bidders on the Restricted Joint Bidders List. Paragraph (c) states that only those tied
bidders, ‘‘not otherwise prohibited from bidding together’’ may accept a lease jointly. Because two bidders on the restricted joint bidders list would ‘‘otherwise [be] prohibited from bidding together,’’ this provision retains the current policy of not allowing tied restricted joint bidders to accept a lease jointly. The
use of the plural lessee(s) at section 556.516(c)(2)
implies that there could be more than two tied bidders and that they could agree to allow more than
one of the tied bidders to become lessees. We deleted the words ‘‘or they may decide’’ as the language did not clearly state how to notify us of their
decision.
A procedure to request reconsideration of a rejected
bid has been retained in the rule, but the difference
in the proposed and prior regulations is that ‘‘Secretary’’ has been replaced by ‘‘BOEM Director.’’
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256.420 ................................
256.420(c) ............................
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Chevron comments:
Chevron does not view section 256.420(c) as a clarification but a significant change.
Delete the phrase from section 256.420(c) ‘‘and MMS
may take appropriate action to collect the full amount
bid, if so provided for in the notice of sale.’’
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BOEM agrees with this comment and has decided to
limit the penalty for failure to pay the remainder to
the amount of the bid deposit. Prior section 556.47(f)
stated that ‘‘If a bid is accepted, such notice shall
transmit three copies of the lease to the successful
bidder.’’ As provided in the prior 30 CFR 1218.155,
the bidder shall, not later than the 11th business day
after receipt of the lease, execute the lease, pay the
first-year’s rental, and unless deferred, pay the balance of the bonus bid.’’ 30 CFR 1218.155(c) made it
clear that the payment must be ‘‘ . . . received by
the Federal Reserve Bank of New York no later than
noon, eastern standard time, on the 11th business
day after receipt of the lease forms by the successful
bidder.’’ The new regulation makes it clear that the
leases must be signed and returned to BOEM within
11-business days after the receipt. This has always
been the rule and is not a change of BOEM processes.
Prior BOEM regulation section 556.47(g) said that if a
bidder fails to execute the lease as required by the
regulations, BOEM will collect or retain only the deposit. The final rulemaking, at section 556.520(c),
says the same. Granting the second highest bidder
the opportunity to receive the lease in the event that
the high bidder forfeits the lease under this provision
may not result in BOEM receiving fair market value
for the lease (see section 18(A)(4) of OCSLA) and is
contrary to the present BOEM policy of offering all
blocks that are not awarded in a particular lease sale
in the next lease sale for that planning area.
Same response as above.
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Proposed rule section
(30 CFR)
Comments received
256.605(a) and 256.606(c) ..
Shell comment:
MMS should reconsider allowing MMS to collect the full
amount bid in the event a successful bidder does not
pay the remaining 4/5th of the bid. Currently, lessees
are permitted to suffer the significant penalty of forfeiting the 1/5th advance payment and this process
allows lessees to make an informed decision on leasing if information relating to the area becomes available after the bids are made.
API Comment:
Section 256.605(a) is inconsistent with proposed section 256.606(c). In the former, operating rights and
record title owners are jointly and severally liable for
all non-monetary obligations, but in the latter, operating rights owners are only responsible for liabilities
insofar as their interest in the lease.
Section 256.616—The last sentence is ambiguous. The
liabilities for an assignor are covered in section
256.605. The last sentence should be deleted.
256.616 ................................
256.619 ................................
BOEM Response
Shell Comment:
MMS should remove the last sentence of Proposed
Section 256.616, which is ambiguous and which concept is addressed in Section 256.605. Also, proposed
Section 256.605(a) is inconsistent with Section
256.606(c).
API Comment:
Section 256.619—The new rule poses the question,
‘‘As a restricted bidder, may I assign interest to another restricted joint bidder?’’ The new rule answers
in the affirmative but also states that ‘‘you must submit to MMS a copy of any agreements relating to the
acquisition of the lease or interest,’’ API is concerned
about the submission of commercial agreements
under this provision. The types of agreements requested are potentially highly sensitive. MMS should
only be interested in the timing and nature of the
agreement whereby one restricted joint bidder acquired from another restricted joint bidder. Agreements whereby a restricted joint bidder acquired the
interest assigned are irrelevant (unless they came
from another restricted joint bidder). Further, because
assignments are approved, MMS will already know
the chain of title by which the assigning party received the interest. Further, this provision is so broad
as to be unascertainable as to the intent, raising further questions about implementation and what documents are sufficient to meet the requirement.
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
256.620(a) ............................
Section 256.620(a)—This is not a new provision, but
API questions the effectiveness or the need for filing
with MMS contractually created interests that typically
are not placed on record in any other public record.
Theoretically, any time a co-owner stands out or
goes ‘‘non-consent’’ under a joint operating agreement; it assigns its interests in the well until payout.
Does MMS intend those joint operating agreements
to be filed? We also have concerns about confidentiality of agreements; therefore, this rule should only
apply to recorded documents.
256.700 ................................
Section 256.700—This provision should reference section 256.601(d), relating to the effect of production
from unitized leases, as an additional circumstance
that maintains a lease.
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Same response as above.
We separated into two sections those provisions that
concern the rights and obligations of record title owners (section 556.604) and those that concern the
rights and obligations of operating rights owners
(section 556.605).
We renumbered this item 556.710 and clarified it as follows:
‘‘Until there is a BOEM-approved assignment of interest, you, as the assignor, remain liable for the performance of all lease obligations that accrued while
you held record title interest, until all such obligations
are fulfilled.’’
See above.
We disagree with the comment. The requirement to
provide the agreements between two parties on the
restricted joint bidders list is not new, but simply represents a restatement of the prior 30 CFR 556.64(i),
which required that ‘‘the assignor or transferor shall
file a copy, prior to approval of the assignment, of all
agreements applicable to the acquisition of that lease
or a fractional interest.’’ The agreements are necessary for the Department of Justice to properly review the antitrust implications of these types of assignments. The new provision, now at final rule section 556.714, adds the option of both parties providing BOEM with ‘‘a description of the timing and
nature of the agreement(s) by which the assignor or
transferor acquired the interest it now wishes to
transfer.’’ Thus, the company on the restricted joint
bidders list has a choice of submitting what has previously been required under prior section 30 CFR
556.64(i), or may submit a description of the timing
and nature of the agreement, subject to the applicability of 18 U.S.C. 1001. The implementation of this
provision will not raise any questions as to which
documents are needed as that portion of the provision at issue is not a new requirement of the regulations.
This language is essentially identical to the language of
the prior section 556.64(a)(7), but it is found at section 556.715 in the final rule. BOEM is not changing
any legal requirement except that we may require filing of these interests electronically. Joint Operating
Agreements are not required to be filed with BOEM
as they do not necessarily create economic interests,
only rights to such interests. However, once those interests are created, instruments creating these interests must be filed with BOEM, just as instruments
creating these interests were required to be filed
under prior section 556.64(a)(8).
We added the reference at final rule section 556.601(e)
to clarify the effect of production from a BSEE approved unit on individual lease terms.
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Proposed rule section
(30 CFR)
Comments received
BOEM Response
N/A .......................................
Anglo Suisse Offshore Partners comment:
NTL (Notice to Lessees) No. 2008–N07 grossly overestimates the amount of supplemental bonding required.
NTL No. 2008–N07 also requires MMS staff to recalculate a lessee’s PDP reserve values rather than
using third party Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) reserve reports.
Additional Issues:
• Waiver criteria on supplemental bonds .......................
• Amount of bond vs. net worth .....................................
• Credit for net worth in calculating bonding amounts ..
• New surety rules for issuance of bonds ......................
Should MMS attempt to value a company, rather than
rely on the SEC to do so?
We have noted the comment. BOEM disagrees and
has decided not to make any changes at this time to
the NTL. There is nothing in the rule that prevents
BOEM from taking SEC reserve reports into account,
but BOEM is not obligated to use those numbers if it
believes that they are inaccurate or insufficiently substantiated.
N/A .......................................
V. Legal and Regulatory Analyses
A. Statutes and Executive Orders
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
1. Improving Regulation and Regulatory
Review (Executive Order (E.O. 13563)
E.O. 13563, Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review (January 18, 2011),
together with follow-up memoranda EO
Guidance Memorandum, M–11–10
(February 2, 2011) and Retrospective
Analysis Guidance Memorandum, M–
11–19 (April 25, 2011), require that the
regulatory system protect public health,
welfare, safety, and the environment
while promoting economic growth,
innovation, competitiveness, and job
creation. The regulatory system must be
based on the best available science,
while allowing public participation and
an open exchange of ideas, thus
promoting predictability and reducing
uncertainty. The regulatory system must
identify and use the best, most
innovative and least burdensome tools
for achieving regulatory ends and it
must take into account benefits and
costs, both quantitative and qualitative.
It must ensure that regulations are
accessible, consistent, written in plain
language, and easy to understand. It
must also measure, and seek to improve,
the actual results of regulatory
requirements.
E.O. 13563 supplements and reaffirms
the principles, structures, and
definitions governing contemporary
regulatory review that were established
in E.O. 12866 of September 30, 1993. As
stated in that E.O., and to the extent
permitted by law, each agency must,
among other things: (1) Propose or adopt
a regulation only upon a reasoned
determination that its benefits justify its
costs (recognizing that some benefits
and costs are difficult to quantify); (2)
tailor its regulations to impose the least
burden on society, consistent with
obtaining regulatory objectives, taking
into account, among other things, and to
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These issues are beyond the scope of the final rule
and may be addressed in future rulemaking.
the extent practicable, the costs of
cumulative regulations; (3) select, in
choosing among alternative regulatory
approaches, those approaches that
maximize net benefits (including
potential economic, environmental,
public health and safety, and other
advantages, distributive impacts, and
equity); (4) to the extent feasible, specify
performance objectives, rather than
specifying the behavior or manner of
compliance that regulated entities must
adopt; and (5) identify and assess
available alternatives to direct
regulation, including providing
information upon which the public can
base choices, or providing economic
incentives to encourage the desired
behavior, such as user fees or
marketable permits.
2. Regulatory Planning and Review (E.O.
12866)
This final rule is not a significant rule,
as determined by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB), and is
not subject to review under E.O. 12866,
Regulatory Planning and Review
(September 30, 1993). This rule
primarily updates existing regulations
that govern the Federal leasing process
for offshore sulfur and oil and gas
subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of
the United States. The rule is rewritten
in simple, clear language, and
reorganized to reflect the steps in the
leasing process as they have evolved
over time. Minor changes will make
certain practices uniform among the
OCS regional offices.
(1) This final rule does not have an
annual effect of $100 million or more on
the economy. It will not adversely affect
in a material way the economy,
productivity, competition, jobs, the
environment, public health or safety, or
State, local, or tribal governments or
communities. The rule rewrites 30 CFR
part 556 in plain language, as well as
portions of 30 CFR parts 550 and 560,
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and contains similar reporting and
recordkeeping requirements and
attendant costs as the prior regulations.
A cost-benefit analysis was not
performed because this is a rule of
administrative procedure for which
such an analysis is not required.
However, an overall economic analysis
was performed pursuant to the
Regulatory Flexibility Act.
(2) This rule does not create a serious
inconsistency or otherwise interfere
with an action taken or planned by
another agency.
(3) This rule does not alter the
budgetary effects of entitlements, grants,
user fees, or loan programs or the rights
or obligations of their recipients.
Nominal user fees imposed by the rule
are not material in size or nature. The
final rule includes a new fee for
recording certain secondary lease
interests, $29, and continues existing
fees for submitting non-required
documents, $29, and requesting
approval of the assignment or transfer of
certain lease interests, $198.
(4) This rule does not raise novel legal
or policy issues arising out of legal
mandates, the President’s priorities, or
the principles set forth in E.O. 12866.
The final rule supersedes the existing
regulations.
3. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Department certifies that this
final rule does not have a significant
economic effect on a substantial number
of small entities under the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601–612).
The changes in this final rule affect
lessees and potential lessees, of which
there are approximately 130 different
companies. These companies are
generally classified under the North
American Industry Classification
System (NAICS) Code 211111, which
includes companies that extract crude
petroleum and natural gas. For this
NAICS code classification, a small
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company is one with fewer than 500
employees. BOEM estimates that of the
130 lessees and operators that explore
for and produce oil and gas on the OCS,
approximately 90 are small businesses
(70 percent).
The costs associated with the
information collection (IC) activities
related to this rulemaking should not
have any significant economic effect on
small businesses. This rule contains
most of the same burden hour
requirements and non-hour cost
burdens as were in effect with BOEM’s
prior regulations. The changes in
reporting requirements that are
implemented with this rule do not
significantly increase the IC burden on
respondents—large or small. BOEM
estimates an annual cumulative increase
of 2,441 hours in the paperwork burden
for all lessees over that imposed by the
prior regulations. There is also a new
$29 non-hour cost burden for recording
certain secondary lease interests
resulting in an annual increase of
$20,300 ($29 × an estimated 700 filings).
A regulatory flexibility analysis is not
required. Accordingly, a small entity
compliance guide is also not required.
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
4. Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA)
This final rule is not a major rule
under 5 U.S.C. 801–808), the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act. This rule:
(a) Will not have an annual effect on
the economy of $100 million or more;
(b) Will not cause a major increase in
costs or prices for consumers,
individual industries, Federal, State, or
local government agencies, or
geographic regions; and
(c) Will not have significant adverse
effects on competition, employment,
investment, productivity, innovation, or
the ability of United States-based
enterprises to compete with foreignbased enterprises.
5. Comments From Small Businesses
The Small Business and Agriculture
Regulatory Enforcement Ombudsman
and 10 Regional Fairness Boards were
established to receive comments from
small businesses about Federal agency
enforcement actions. The Ombudsman
will annually evaluate the enforcement
activities and rate each agency’s
responsiveness to small business. If you
wish to comment on the actions of
BOEM, call 1–888–734–3247. You may
comment to the Small Business
Administration (SBA) without fear of
retaliation. Allegations of
discrimination/retaliation filed with the
Small Business Administration will be
investigated for appropriate action.
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6. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
This final rule does not impose an
unfunded mandate on State, local, or
tribal governments or the private sector
of more than $100 million per year. The
final rule does not have a significant or
unique effect on State, local, or tribal
governments or the private sector. A
statement containing the information
required by the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act (2 U.S.C. 1531–1538) is not
required.
7. Takings Implication Assessment (E.O.
12630)
Under the criteria in E.O. 12630,
Governmental Action and Interference
with Constitutionally-Protected Property
Rights (March 15, 1988), this final rule
does not have significant takings
implications. The rule is not a
governmental action capable of
interference with constitutionallyprotected property rights. A takings
implication assessment is not required.
8. Federalism (E.O. 13132)
Under the criteria in E.O. 13132,
Federalism (August 4, 1999), this final
rule does not have sufficient federalism
implications to require a Federalism
Assessment. This final rule does not
substantially and directly affect the
relationship between the Federal and
State governments. To the extent that
State and local governments play a role
in OCS activities, this rule does not
affect that role.
9. Civil Justice Reform (E.O. 12988)
This rule complies with the
requirements of E.O. 12988, Civil Justice
Reform (February 7, 1996). Specifically,
this rule:
(a) Meets the criteria of section 3(a)
requiring that all regulations be
reviewed to eliminate errors and
ambiguity and be written to minimize
litigation; and
(b) Meets the criteria of section 3(b)(2)
requiring that all regulations be written
in clear language and contain clear legal
standards.
10. Consultation With Indian Tribal
Governments (E.O. 13175)
Under the criteria in E.O. 13175,
Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribal Governments (November
9, 2000), we have evaluated this final
rule and determined it has no
substantial effect on Federallyrecognized Indian tribes.
11. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This rule contains new IC
requirements; therefore, a submission to
OMB under the Paperwork Reduction
Act (PRA) of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501–
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3521) was required. The OMB has
approved the IC for the final rulemaking
and assigned OMB Control Number
1010–0006 for a total of 19,454 burden
hours and $766,053 non-hour cost
burdens.
The title of the IC is ‘‘Leasing of
Sulfur or Oil and Gas in the Outer
Continental Shelf (30 CFR part 550, part
556, and part 560)’’. Respondents are
Federal sulfur or oil and gas lessees
and/or operators. Some responses to this
IC are required to obtain or retain a
benefit, and some are mandatory. The
frequency of response varies but is
primarily on occasion. The IC does not
include questions of a sensitive nature.
BOEM will protect proprietary
information according to section 26 of
OCSLA; the Freedom of Information Act
(5 U.S.C. 552), its implementing
regulations at 43 CFR part 2; and the
regulations at 30 CFR 556.104(b) and
550.197, addressing proprietary data
and data and information to be made
available to the public or for limited
inspection.
This rulemaking is a partial rewrite of
30 CFR part 556, Leasing of Sulfur or
Oil and Gas and Bonding Requirements
in the Outer Continental Shelf and of 30
CFR part 560, OCS Oil and Gas Leasing.
It also refers to, but does not change
current requirements and burdens
already approved by OMB under 30 CFR
part 550, subpart A (1010–0114). BOEM
uses the information collected in the
rulemaking to help determine specific
areas of leasing interest, to determine if
applicants are qualified to hold leases in
the OCS, to identify parties ineligible to
bid jointly, and to track owners of, and
operators on, leaseholds.
In response to the proposed rule (74
FR 25177, May 27, 2009), BOEM
received comments from the American
Petroleum Institute, Shell Exploration
and Production Company, Chevron
North America Exploration and
Production, Anglo Suisse Offshore
Partners, LLC. (and Anglo Suisse Texas
Offshore Partners, LLC.), Dynamic
Offshore Resources, RLI Insurance
Company, and two private citizens.
Comments that addressed aspects of the
information collection for this
rulemaking are summarized below. All
comments are addressed in detail in the
preamble of this final rule.
Commenting on proposed rule section
256.404, one company indicated that it
is burdensome to submit merger or
name change information and that
BOEM can obtain the information from
the Secretary of State in most States. In
the final rule, BOEM is retaining the
requirement to submit such information
in order to address the problems that the
Bureau has had in the past with name/
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merger changes of which BOEM was not
timely informed. It is not practical for
BOEM to monitor all filings with the
Secretaries of State in each State. In
final rule section 556.405, however,
BOEM replaced the immediate filing
with a requirement that the filing be
accomplished as soon as practicable. No
change in the burden resulted.
Concerning proposed rule sections
256.619 and 256.620, one company
questioned submitting commercial
agreements relating to certain transfers
between restricted joint bidders because
of the information’s sensitivity. In final
rule section 556.714, BOEM provided an
option for the submission of a
description of the timing and nature of
the agreement(s) by which the assignor
or transferor acquired the interest it now
wishes to transfer. No change in the
hour burden resulted. However,
partially in response to the comment,
BOEM added a general provision to the
part (section 556.104(b)) to protect
proprietary information (+ 125 hours).
In addition, between the proposed
and final rules, several actions occurred
that affected the information collection.
• The MMS was reorganized, per
Secretarial Orders 3302 and 3299,
resulting in a realignment of the
regulations, with the leasing regulations
going to BOEM, under 30 CFR chapter
5 (e.g., 30 CFR part 256 is now 30 CFR
part 556).
• The IC burden for 30 CFR part 550,
subpart J, bonding requirements for
pipelines and pipeline rights-of-way,
was consolidated into the collection
being revised for this rulemaking for 30
CFR part 556 (1010–0006) due to the
regulations realignment. The
consolidation was approved by OMB on
11/14/2011.
• The proposed rule included a total
rewrite of 30 CFR part 556; however, the
final rule does not make substantive
revisions to the regulations for general
and supplemental bonding in prior part
556 (subpart I). After the proposed rule
was published, questions arose about
possible inconsistencies between the
revised bonding regulations and p
regulations for oil-spill financial
responsibility under 30 CFR part 553.
Also, since the publication of the
proposed rule, BOEM has decided to
engage in an overhaul of its financial
assurance processes, and subpart I will
be revised in a separate rulemaking.
Therefore, the regulations and the
associated IC burden for 30 CFR part
550, subpart I, will remain in effect, but
the sections in subpart I have been
renumbered to fit within the numbering
scheme of this rule (e.g., prior section
556.52 is now section 556.900).
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• In the final rule, BOEM rearranged
discussions to make the regulations
easier to read and follow. Thus, all rule
sections and citations have been
renumbered from the proposed rule, as
explained in the preamble of the final
rule.
• The information collection for prior
30 CFR part 556 regulations (1010–
0006) was renewed by OMB, thereby
updating burden hours based on public
outreach. BOEM has therefore used
those updated estimates where relevant
instead of those used in the proposed
rulemaking.
12. Other Changes in the Information
Collection (IC) Between the Proposed
and Final Rules
• The proposed rule included
regulatory text concerning the reporting
of decommissioning costs in 30 CFR
part 250, subpart Q, and text concerning
reports on lease-term pipelines in
section 256.621. Due to the realignment
of regulations and bureau
responsibilities, BOEM removed these
requirements from the final rule as they
were addressed in the Bureau of Safety
and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE)
regulations (¥820 hours for removing
Subpart Q and ¥1,500 hours for
removing section 256.621 in the final
rule).
• The final rule also removed the
provisions under proposed rule sections
256.902(a) and 256.905 for requesting/
transferring a bonus or royalty credit,
because the program has officially
ended (¥2 hours from current
collection).
• BOEM also divided the IC
requirements for commenting on the 5Year Program and responding to Calls
for Information, etc. (sections 556.201–
204 and sections 556.301–302) into
general (not considered IC per the PRA)
and specific, in accordance with the
currently approved collection for part
556 (+ 596 hours). Where applicable, all
estimates were updated according to the
recent Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) approved renewal of the
30 CFR part 556 information collection.
• BOEM also included a burden that
was overlooked in the proposed rule
(section 256.100, now section
556.302(d)) for requesting a summary of
interest on Calls for Information (+ 5
hours).
• The proposed rule (section 256.620)
introduced a new cost recovery fee ($27)
for filing required documents for record
purposes. In the final rule (section
556.715(a)), the fee has been increased
to $29 in accordance with changes
BOEM made, due to inflation, to other
such fees on January 28, 2013 (78 FR
5837).
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18147
• To make the regulations easier to
follow, in the final rule BOEM split the
discussion (requirements and associated
fee) of assignment/transfer of record title
and that of operating rights interests (30
CFR part 256, subpart G, in the
proposed rule) into two subparts (30
CFR part 556, subparts G and H). With
this reorganization, BOEM discovered
that it had not properly counted the
number of submissions for transfers of
operating rights; therefore, in the final
rule, BOEM is reporting an adjustment
increase for such transfers of record
title/operating rights (+ 421 hours; +
$83,358 non-hour costs).
In addition, to streamline activities,
reduce the burden in the future, and
assist respondents, the final rule
includes:
• A clarification of the proposed rule
(section 256.611) and BOEM’s prior
regulations (section 556.62), which both
explained how a record title, or other
lease interest may be transferred, but
did not mention the need to file a new
Designation of Operator form (BOEM–
1123, 30 CFR part 550, subpart A),
which often arises when a lease interest
is transferred. This clarification in part
556 (sections 701(c); 715(b); 801(b);
810(b)) will result in a one-time increase
in the number of submissions after the
rule becomes effective (+ 80 hours);
otherwise the requirement is covered
under OMB Control No. 1010–0114.
• A clarification that geophysical
statements and maps are included with
bid submissions (sections 556.500–501).
This requirement and its hour burden
have always been part of the bid process
but not specifically stated (no change in
hour burden).
• A provision (section 556.107) to
allow a company’s one-time submission
of documentation, with a corporate seal,
to establish the legal status of future
submissions without such seals, where
such seals would otherwise be required
(+ 67 hours as a one-time burden but
expected to reduce the net burden for
companies in the future).
• An expansion of a provision from
the proposed rule (section 256.503(c)) to
allow implementation of electronic
submission systems (e.g., for bonding
information) (sections 556.107; 560.500)
(+ 800 hours as a one-time increase to
allow companies to adjust their
processes; however, we expect this
provision to reduce the hour burden of
each affected requirement in the future).
The following table shows the
breakdown of the hour and non-hour
cost burdens for this final rulemaking.
13. Burden Breakdown Table
[Italics show expansion of existing
requirements; bold indicates new
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requirements; regular font shows
current requirements. Where applicable,
updated estimates from the existing
collection are being used instead of
those in the proposed rulemaking.]
Non-hour cost burdens
30 CFR part 556 and
NTLs
Reporting requirement *
Hour burden
Average number of
annual responses
500 .........................
Annual burden
hours
Subpart A
104(b) New ....................
Submit confidentiality agreement ...........................
0.25 ........................
125
106 .................................
Cost recovery/service fees; confirmation receipt ...
Cost recovery/service fees and associated
documentation are covered under individual requirements throughout the part.
0
107 New .........................
Submit required documentation electronically
through BOEM-approved system; comply with
filing specifications, as directed by notice in the
Federal Register in accordance with § 560.500.
Burden covered in § 560.500.
0
107 New .........................
File seals, documents, statements, signatures,
etc., to establish legal status of all future submissions (paper and/or electronic).
10 min ....................
400 .........................
67
Subtotal ...................
.................................................................................
................................
900 .........................
192
Subpart B
201–204 .........................
Submit nominations, suggestions, and general
comments in response to Request for Information/Comments, proposed 5-year leasing program, etc., including information from States/
local governments, Federal agencies, industry,
and others.
Not considered IC as defined in 5 CFR
1320.3(h)(4).
0
201–204 .........................
Submit nominations & specific information requested in response to Request for Information/
Comments, proposed 5-year leasing program,
etc., including from States/local governments,
Federal agencies, industry, and others.
4 .............................
69 ...........................
276
Subtotal ...................
.................................................................................
................................
69 ...........................
276
Subpart C
301; 302 .........................
Submit response & specific information requested
in Requests for Industry Interest and Calls for
Information and Nominations, etc., on areas
proposed for leasing; including information from
States/local governments.
4 .............................
20 responses/sale ×
2 sales/call × 2
calls/year = 80.
320
302(d) New ....................
Request summary of interest (nonproprietary information) for Calls for Information/Requests for
Interest, etc.
1 .............................
5 .............................
5
305; 306 .........................
States or local governments submit comments,
recommendations, and other responses on
size, timing, or location of proposed lease sale.
Request extension; enter agreement.
4 .............................
25 ...........................
100
Subtotal ...................
.................................................................................
................................
110 .........................
425
107 .........................
214
Subpart D
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400–402; 405 .................
Establish file for qualification; submit evidence/
certification for lessee/bidder qualifications. Provide updates; obtain BOEM approval & qualification number.
2 .............................
403(c) .............................
Request hearing on disqualification .......................
Requirement not considered IC under 5
CFR 1320.3(h)(9).
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18149
Non-hour cost burdens
30 CFR part 556 and
NTLs
Reporting requirement *
403; 404 New ................
Hour burden
Average number of
annual responses
Annual burden
hours
Notify BOEM if you or your principals are excluded, disqualified, or convicted of a crime—
Federal non-procurement debarment and suspension requirements; request exception; enter
transaction.
1.5 ..........................
50 ...........................
405 .................................
Notify BOEM of all mergers, name changes, or
changes of business.
Requirement not considered IC under 5
CFR 1320.3(h)(1).
0
Subtotal ...................
.................................................................................
................................
157 .........................
289
2,000 ......................
10,000
75
Subpart E
500; 501 .........................
Submit bids, deposits, and required information,
including GDIS & maps; in manner specified.
Make data available to BOEM.
5 .............................
500(e); 517 ....................
Request reconsideration of bid decision ................
Requirement not considered IC under 5
CFR 1320.3(h)(9).
0
501(e) New ....................
Apply for reimbursement ........................................
Burden covered in 1010–0048, 30 CFR
part 551.
0
511(b); 517 ....................
Submit appeal due to restricted joint bidders list;
appeal bid decision.
Requirement not considered IC under 5
CFR 1320.3(h)(9).
0
513; 514 .........................
File statement and detailed report of production.
Make documents available to BOEM.
2 .............................
200
515 .................................
Request exemption from bidding restrictions; submit appropriate information.
Requirement not considered IC under 5
CFR 1320.3(h)(9).
0
516 .................................
Notify BOEM of tie bid decision; file agreement on
determination of lessee.
3.5 ..........................
2 .............................
7
520; 521; 600(c) ............
Execute lease (includes submission of evidence
of authorized agent/completion and request effective date of lease); submit required data and
rental.
1 .............................
852 .........................
852
520(b) New ....................
Provide acceptable bond for payment of a deferred bonus. (We do not expect this to occur,
hence minimum burden).
0.25 ........................
1 .............................
1
Subtotal ...................
.................................................................................
................................
2,955 ......................
11,060
100 .........................
Subparts F, G, H
References to requests of approval for various operations or submit plans or applications. Burden included with other approved collections for BOEM 30 CFR part 550 (Subpart A 1010–
0114; Subpart B 1010–0151) and for BSEE 30 CFR part 250 (Subpart A 1014–0022; Subpart
D 1014–0018).
0
701(c); 716(b); 801(b);
810(b) New.
Submit new designation of operator (BOEM–
1123). One-time increase to existing requirements and burdens already covered in 1010–
0114. Extra burden will be deleted in next renewal. No fee.
0.5 ..........................
160 .........................
80
700–715 .........................
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Subpart F, G, H .............
File application and required information for assignment/transfer of record title/lease interest
(form BOEM–0150; form is 30 min.) (includes
sell, sublease, sever, exchange, transfer); request effective date/confidentiality; provide notifications.
1 .............................
1,414 ......................
1,414
$198 fee × 1,414 forms = $279,972
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Non-hour cost burdens
30 CFR part 556 and
NTLs
Reporting requirement *
800–810 .........................
File application and required information for assignment/transfer of operating rights interest
(form BOEM–0151; form is 30 min.) (includes
sell, sublease, sever, exchange, transfer); request effective date; provide notifications.
Hour burden
Average number of
annual responses
1 .............................
421 .........................
Annual burden
hours
421
$198 fee × 421 forms = $83,358
715(a); 808(a) ................
File required instruments creating or transferring
working interests, etc., for record purposes.
1 .............................
Submit ‘‘non-required’’ documents, for record purposes that respondents want BOEM to file with
the lease document.
Accepted as a service.
.................................................................................
11,518 ....................
0
$29 fee × 11,518 filings = $334,022
(Accepted on behalf of lessees as a service;
BOEM does not require or need them.).
Subtotal ...................
2,369
$29 fee × 2,369 filings = $68,701
New Fee ........................
715(b); 808(b) ................
2,369 ......................
................................
15,882 ....................
4,284
$766,053
Subpart I
Submit OCS Mineral Lessee’s and Operator’s
Bond (Form BOEM–2028); execute bond.
Demonstrate financial worth/ability to carry out
present and future financial obligations, request
approval of another form of security, or request
reduction in amount of supplemental bond required on BOEM-approved forms. Monitor and
submit required information.
0.33 ........................
135 .........................
45
3.5 ..........................
166 .........................
581
900(e); 901; 902; 903(a)
Submit OCS Mineral Lessee’s and Operator’s
Supplemental Plugging & Abandonment Bond
(Form BOEM–2028A); execute bond.
0.25 ........................
141 .........................
35
900(f), (g) .......................
Submit authority for Regional Director to sell
Treasury or alternate type of securities.
2 .............................
12 ...........................
24
901 .................................
Submit EP, DPP, and DOCDs ...............................
IC burden covered in 1010–0151, 30 CFR
part 550, subpart B.
0
901(f) ..............................
Submit oral/written comment on adjusted bond
amount and information.
Requirement not considered IC under 5
CFR 1320.3(h)(9).
0
903(b) .............................
Notify BOEM of any lapse in previous bond/action
filed alleging lessee, surety, or guarantor is insolvent or bankrupt.
1 .............................
4 .............................
4
904 .................................
Provide plan/instructions to fund lease-specific
abandonment account and related information;
request approval to withdraw funds.
12 ...........................
2 .............................
24
905 .................................
Provide third-party guarantee, indemnity agreement, financial and required information, related
notices, reports, and annual update; notify
BOEM if guarantor becomes unqualified.
19 ...........................
46 ...........................
874
905(d)(3); 906 ................
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
900(a)–(e); 901; 902;
903(a).
900(c), (d), (f), (g);
901(c), (d), (f); 902(e).
Provide notice of and request approval to terminate period of liability, cancel bond, or other security; provide required information.
0.5 ..........................
378 .........................
189
907(c)(2) ........................
Provide information to demonstrate lease will be
brought into compliance.
16 ...........................
5 .............................
80
Subtotal ...................
.................................................................................
................................
889 .........................
1,856
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E:\FR\FM\30MRR3.SGM
30MRR3
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 61 / Wednesday, March 30, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
18151
Non-hour cost burdens
30 CFR part 556 and
NTLs
Reporting requirement *
Hour burden
Average number of
annual responses
Annual burden
hours
Request relinquishment (form BOEM–0152) of
lease; submit required information.
Request additional time to bring lease into compliance.
1 .............................
247 .........................
247
1 .............................
1 .............................
1
1102(c) ...........................
Comment on cancellation ......................................
Requirement not considered IC under 5
CFR 1320.3(h)(9).
0
Subtotal ...................
.................................................................................
................................
248 .........................
248
30 CFR Part 556
Total.
.................................................................................
................................
21,210 ....................
18,630
Subpart K
1101 ...............................
1102 ...............................
$766,053 Non-Hour Cost Burdens
30 CFR Part 550
Subpart J
Reporting requirement *
Hour burden
Average number of
annual responses
550.1011(a) ....................
Provide surety bond (form BOEM–2030) and required information.
GOM 0.25 ..............
52 ...........................
13
Pacific 3.5 ..............
3 .............................
11
.................................................................................
................................
55 ...........................
24
30 CFR Part 560
Reporting requirement *
Hour burden
Average number of
annual responses
560.224(a) ......................
Request BOEM to reconsider field assignment of
a lease.
Requirement not considered IC under 5
CFR 1320.3(h)(9).
0
560.500 New ..................
Submit required documentation electronically
through BOEM-approved system; comply with
filing specifications, as directed by notice in the
Federal Register (e.g., bonding info.).
1 .............................
800 .........................
800
30 CFR Part 560
Total.
.................................................................................
................................
800 .........................
800
Total Reporting For
Collection.
.................................................................................
................................
22,065 ....................
19,454
30 CFR Part 550,
Subpart J, Total.
Annual burden
hours
Annual burden
hours
$766,053 Non-Hour Cost Burdens
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
* In the future, BOEM may require electronic filing of certain submissions.
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and you are not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid OMB
control number. The public may
comment, at any time, on the accuracy
of the IC burden estimate in this rule
and may submit any comments to the
Information Collection Clearance
Officer, Office of Policy, Regulations,
and Analysis; Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management; U.S. Department of the
Interior; VAM–BOEM DIR; 45600
Woodland Rd, Sterling, Virginia 20166.
14. National Environmental Policy Act
of 1969
This rule does not constitute a major
Federal action significantly affecting the
quality of the human environment.
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BOEM has considered the rule under
the criteria of the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) (42
U.S.C. 4321–4370h) and 516
Departmental Manual 15. This rule
meets the criteria set forth in 43 CFR
46.210(5) for a Departmental
‘‘categorical exclusion’’ in that this final
rule is ‘‘. . . of an administrative,
financial, legal, technical, or procedural
nature or whose environmental effects
are too broad, speculative, or conjectural
to lend themselves to meaningful
analysis. . . .’’ This rule also meets the
criteria set forth in 516 Departmental
Manual 15.4(C)(1) for a BOEM
‘‘categorical exclusion’’ in that its
impacts are limited to administrative,
economic or technological effects.
Further, BOEM has analyzed this rule to
PO 00000
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determine if it meets any of the
extraordinary circumstances that require
an environmental assessment or an
environmental impact statement as set
forth in 43 CFR 46.215 and has
concluded that it does not.
15. Data Quality Act
In developing this rule, we did not
conduct or use a study, experiment, or
survey requiring peer review under the
Data Quality Act (44 U.S.C. 3516–3521),
Public Law 106–554, app. C section 515,
114 Stat. 2763, 2763A–153–154).
16. Effects on the Energy Supply (E.O.
13211)
This rule is not a significant energy
action under the definition in E.O.
13211, Actions Concerning Regulations
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 61 / Wednesday, March 30, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
That Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use (May 18, 2001). A
statement of energy effects is not
required.
resources, Mineral royalties, Oil and gas
exploration, Outer continental shelf,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
List of Subjects
Dated: March 10, 2016.
Amanda C. Leiter,
Acting Assistant Secretary—Land and
Minerals Management.
30 CFR Part 550
Administrative practice and
procedure, Continental shelf,
Environmental impact statements,
Environmental protection, Federal
lands, Government contracts,
Investigations, Mineral resources, Oil
and gas exploration, Outer continental
shelf, Penalties, Pipelines, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements, Rightsof-way, Sulfur.
30 CFR Part 556
Administrative practice and
procedure, Continental shelf,
Environmental protection, Federal
lands, Government contracts,
Intergovernmental relations, Oil and gas
exploration, Outer continental shelf,
Mineral resources, Rights-of-way,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
30 CFR Part 559
Continental shelf, Federal lands,
Federal lease, Gas, Government
contracts, Mineral resources, Mineral
royalties, Oil and gas exploration, Outer
continental shelf, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
30 CFR Part 560
Continental shelf, Federal lands,
Government contracts, Mineral
If
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management, (BOEM) amends 30 CFR
parts 550, 556, 559 and 560 as follows:
PART 550—OIL AND GAS AND
SULFUR OPERATIONS IN THE OUTER
CONTINENTAL SHELF
1. Revise the authority citation for 30
CFR part 550 to read as follows:
■
Authority: 31 U.S.C. 9701, 43 U.S.C. 1334.
Subpart A—General Provisions
■
2. Add § 550.120 to read as follows:
§ 550.120 What standards will BOEM use
to regulate leases, rights-of-use and
easement, and rights-of-way?
BOEM will regulate all activities
under a lease, a right-of-use and
easement, or a right-of-way to:
(a) Promote the orderly exploration,
development, and production of mineral
resources;
(b) Prevent injury or loss of life;
(c) Prevent damage to or waste of any
natural resource, property, or the
environment; and
(d) Ensure cooperation and
consultation with affected States, local
BOEM will release
(5) Your lease is still in efGeological data, analyzed
fect and within the primary
geological information.
term specified in the lease.
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
*
*
*
*
*
(c) BOEM may allow limited data and
information inspection, but only by a
person with a direct interest in related
BOEM decisions and issues in a specific
geographic area, and who agrees in
writing to maintain the confidentiality
of geological and geophysical (G&G)
data and information submitted under
this part that BOEM uses to:
(1) Promote operational safety;
(2) Protect the environment; or
(3) Make field determinations.
(d) No proprietary information
received by BOEM under 43 U.S.C. 1352
will be transmitted to any affected State
unless the lessee, or the permittee and
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3. Add § 550.121 to read as follows:
§ 550.121 What must I do to protect health,
safety, property, and the environment?
The Director may require additional
measures to ensure the use of Best
Available and Safest Technology
(BAST) as identified by BSEE:
(a) To avoid the failure of equipment
that would have a significant effect on
safety, health, or the environment;
(b) If it is economically feasible; and
(c) If the incremental benefits justify
the incremental costs.
§§ 550.145 and 550.146 [Redesignated as
§§ 550.146 and 550.147]
4. Redesignate §§ 550.145 and 550.146
as §§ 550.146 and 550.147, respectively.
■ 5. Amend § 550.197 as follows:
■ a. Revise the first sentence of the
introductory text.
■ b. Revise paragraph (b)(5).
■ c. Revise paragraph (c).
■ d. Add paragraph (d).
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
■
§ 550.197 Data and information to be made
available to the public or for limited
inspection.
BOEM will protect data and
information that you submit under this
chapter, as described in this section.
* * *
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
Special provisions
Two years after the required submittal These release times apply only if the
date or 60 days after a lease sale if
provisions in this table governing highany portion of an offered lease is withresolution systems and the provisions
in 50 miles of a well, whichever is later.
in § 552.7 do not apply. If the primary
term specified in the lease is extended, this provision applies to the
extension.
6. Add subpart D to part 550 to read
as follows:
■
Subpart D—Leasing Maps and
Diagrams
Leasing maps and diagrams.
(a) Any area of the OCS, which has
been appropriately platted as provided
in paragraph (b) of this section, may be
leased for any mineral not included in
an existing lease issued under the Act
or meeting the requirements of
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■
At this time
all persons to whom such permittee has
sold such information under promise of
confidentiality, agree to such
transmittal.
§ 550.400
governments, other interested parties,
and relevant Federal agencies.
Frm 00042
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
subsection (a) of section 6 of the Act.
Before any lease is offered or issued an
area may be:
(1) Withdrawn from disposition
pursuant to section 12(a) of the Act; or
(2) Designated as an area or part of an
area restricted from operation under
section 12(d) of the Act.
(b) BOEM will prepare leasing maps
and official protraction diagrams of
areas of the OCS. The areas included in
each mineral lease will be in accordance
with the appropriate leasing map or
official protraction diagram.
■
7. Revise part 556 to read as follows:
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 61 / Wednesday, March 30, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
PART 556—LEASING OF SULFUR OR
OIL AND GAS AND BONDING
REQUIREMENTS IN THE OUTER
CONTINENTAL SHELF
Subpart A–General Provisions
Sec.
556.100 Statement of policy.
556.101 Purpose.
556.102 Authority.
556.103 Cross references.
556.104 Information collection and
proprietary information.
556.105 Acronyms and definitions.
556.106 Service fees.
556.107 Corporate seal requirements.
Subpart E—Issuance of a Lease
How To Bid
556.500 Once qualified, how do I submit
a bid?
556.501 What information do I need to
submit with my bid?
Subpart B–Oil and Gas Five Year Leasing
Program
556.200 What is the Five Year leasing
program?
556.201 Does BOEM consider multiple
uses of the OCS?
556.202 How does BOEM start the Five
Year program preparation process?
556.203 What does BOEM do before
publishing a proposed Five Year
program?
556.204 How do Governments and citizens
comment on a proposed Five Year
program?
556.205 What does BOEM do before
approving a proposed final Five Year
program or a significant revision of a
previously-approved Five Year program?
Subpart C—Planning and Holding a Lease
Sale
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
556.300 What reports may BOEM and other
Federal agencies prepare before a lease
sale?
556.301 What is a Call for Information and
Nominations?
556.302 What does BOEM do with the
information from the Call?
556.303 What does BOEM do if an area
proposed for leasing is within three
nautical miles of the seaward boundary
of a coastal State?
556.304 How is a proposed notice of sale
prepared?
556.305 How does BOEM coordinate and
consult with States regarding a proposed
notice of sale?
556.306 What if a potentially oil or gas
bearing area underlies both the OCS and
lands subject to State jurisdiction?
556.307 What does BOEM do with
comments and recommendations
received on the proposed notice of sale?
556.308 How does BOEM conduct a lease
sale?
556.309 Does BOEM offer blocks in a sale
that is not on the Five Year program
schedule (called a Supplemental Sale)?
Subpart D—Qualifications
556.400 When must I demonstrate that I
am qualified to hold a lease on the OCS?
556.401 What do I need to show to become
qualified to hold a lease on the OCS and
obtain a qualification number?
556.402 How do I make the necessary
showing to qualify and obtain a
qualification number?
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21:37 Mar 29, 2016
Jkt 238001
556.403 Under what circumstances may I
be disqualified from holding a lease on
the OCS?
556.404 What do the non-procurement
debarment rules require that I do?
556.405 When must I notify BOEM of
mergers, name changes, or changes of
business form?
Restrictions on Joint Bidding
556.511 Are there restrictions on bidding
with others and do those restrictions
affect my ability to bid?
556.512 What bids may be disqualified?
556.513 When must I file a statement of
production?
556.514 How do I determine my
production for purposes of the restricted
joint bidders list?
556.515 May a person be exempted from
joint bidding restrictions?
How does BOEM act on bids?
556.516 What does BOEM do with my bid?
556.517 What may I do if my bid is
rejected?
Awarding the Lease
556.520 What happens if I am the
successful high bidder and BOEM
accepts my bid?
556.521 When is my lease effective?
556.522 What are the terms and conditions
of the lease and when are they
published?
Subpart F—Lease Terms and Obligations
Length of Lease
556.600 What is the primary term of my oil
and gas lease?
556.601 How may I maintain my oil and
gas lease beyond the primary term?
556.602 What is the primary term of my
sulfur lease?
556.603 How may I maintain my sulfur
lease beyond the primary term?
Lease Obligations
56.604 What are my rights and obligations
as a record title owner?
556.605 What are my rights and obligations
as an operating rights owner?
Helium
556.606 What must a lessee do if BOEM
elects to extract helium from a lease?
Subpart G—Transferring All or Part of the
Record Title Interest in a Lease
556.700 May I assign or sublease all or any
part of the record title interest in my
lease?
556.701 How do I seek approval of an
assignment of the record title interest in
my lease, or a severance of operating
rights from that record title interest?
556.702 When will my assignment result in
a segregated lease?
556.703 What is the effect of the approval
of the assignment of 100 percent of the
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
18153
record title in a particular aliquot(s) of
my lease and the resulting lease
segregation?
556.704 When would BOEM disapprove an
assignment or sublease of an interest in
my lease?
556.705 How do I transfer the interest of
a deceased natural person who was a
lessee?
556.706 What if I want to transfer record
title interests in more than one lease at
the same time, but to different parties?
556.707 What if I want to transfer different
types of lease interests (not only record
title interests) in the same lease to
different parties?
556.708 What if I want to transfer my
record title interests in more than one
lease to the same party?
556.709 What if I want to transfer my
record title interest in one lease to
multiple parties?
556.710 What is the effect of an assignment
of a lease on an assignor’s liability under
the lease?
556.711 What is the effect of a record title
holder’s sublease of operating rights on
the record title holder’s liability?
556.712 What is the effective date of a
transfer?
556.713 What is the effect of an assignment
of a lease on an assignee’s liability under
the lease?
556.714 As a restricted joint bidder, may I
transfer an interest to another restricted
joint bidder?
556.715 Are there any interests I may
transfer or record without BOEM
approval?
556.716 What must I do with respect to the
designation of operator on a lease when
a transfer of record title is submitted?
Subpart H—Transferring Operating Rights
in All or Part of a Lease
556.800 As an operating rights owner, may
I assign all or part of my operating rights
interest?
556.801 How do I seek approval of an
assignment of my operating rights?
556.802 When would BOEM disapprove
the assignment of all or part of my
operating rights interest?
556.803 What if I want to assign operating
rights interests in more than one lease at
the same time, but to different parties?
556.804 What if I want to assign my
operating rights interest in a lease to
multiple parties?
556.805 What is the effect of an operating
rights owner’s assignment of operating
rights on the assignor’s liability?
556.806 What is the effective date of an
assignment of operating rights?
556.807 What is the effect of an assignment
of operating rights on an assignee’s
liability?
556.808 As an operating rights owner, are
there any interests I may assign without
BOEM approval?
556.809 [Reserved]
556.810 What must I do with respect to the
designation of operator on a lease when
a transfer of operating rights ownership
is submitted?
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 61 / Wednesday, March 30, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Subpart I—Bonding or Other Financial
Assurance
556.900 Bond requirements for an oil and
gas or sulfur lease.
556.901 Additional bonds.
556.902 General requirements for bonds.
556.903 Lapse of bond.
556.904 Lease-specific abandonment
accounts.
556.905 Using a third-party guarantee
instead of a bond.
556.906 Termination of the period of
liability and cancellation of a bond.
556.907 Forfeiture of bonds and/or other
securities.
Subpart J—Bonus or Royalty Credits for
Exchange of Certain Leases
556.1000 Leases formerly eligible for a
bonus or royalty credit.
Subpart K—Ending a Lease
556.1100 How does a lease expire?
556.1101 May I relinquish my lease or an
aliquot part thereof?
556.1102 Under what circumstances will
BOEM cancel my lease?
Subpart L—Leases Maintained Under
Section 6 of OCSLA
556.1200 Effect of regulations on lease.
556.1201 Section 6(a) leases and leases
other than those for oil, gas, or sulfur.
Subpart M—Environmental Studies
556.1300 Environmental studies.
Authority: 30 U.S.C. 1701 note, 30 U.S.C.
1711, 31 U.S.C. 9701, 42 U.S.C. 6213, 43
U.S.C. 1331 note, 43 U.S.C. 1334, 43 U.SC.
1801–1802.
Subpart A—General Provisions
§ 556.100
Statement of policy.
The management of Outer Continental
Shelf (OCS) resources is to be conducted
in accordance with the findings,
purposes, and policy directions
provided by the Outer Continental Shelf
Lands Act Amendments of 1978
(OCSLA or the Act) (43 U.S.C. 1332,
1801, 1802), and other executive,
legislative, judicial and departmental
guidance. The Secretary of the Interior
(the Secretary) will consider available
environmental information in making
decisions affecting OCS resources.
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
§ 556.101
Purpose.
The purpose of the regulations in this
part is to establish the procedures under
which the Secretary will exercise the
authority to administer a leasing
program for oil and gas, and sulfur. The
regulations pertaining to the procedures
under which the Secretary will exercise
the authority to administer a program to
grant rights-of-use and easements are
found in part 550 of this chapter.
§ 556.102
Authority.
(a) The Outer Continental Shelf Lands
Act (OCSLA) (43 U.S.C. 1334)
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Jkt 238001
authorizes the Secretary of the Interior
to issue, on a competitive basis, leases
for oil and gas, and sulfur, in submerged
lands of the OCS. The Act authorizes
the Secretary to grant rights-of-way and
easements through the submerged lands
of the OCS.
(b) The Federal Oil and Gas Royalty
Management Act of 1982 (FOGRMA) (30
U.S.C. 1711) governs oil and gas royalty
management and requires the
development of enforcement practices
to ensure the prompt and proper
collection of oil and gas revenues owed
to the U.S.
(c) The Independent Offices
Appropriations Act of 1952 (IOAA) (31
U.S.C. 9701) authorizes fees and charges
for Federal government services.
(d) The Energy Policy and
Conservation Act of 1975 (42 U.S.C.
6213) prohibits joint bidding by major
oil and gas producers.
(e) The Gulf of Mexico Energy
Security Act of 2006 (GOMESA) (Pub. L.
109–432, 43 U.S.C. 1331 note):
(1) Shares leasing revenues with Gulf
producing states and the Land & Water
Conservation Fund for coastal
restoration projects; and
(2) Allows companies to exchange
certain existing leases in moratorium
areas for bonus and royalty credits to be
used on other Gulf of Mexico leases.
§ 556.103
Cross references.
The following includes some of the
major regulations relevant to offshore oil
and gas development:
(a) For other applicable Bureau of
Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) oil
and gas regulations, see 30 CFR parts
550 through 560.
(b) For Bureau of Safety and
Environmental Enforcement (BSEE)
regulations governing exploration,
development and production, and oil
spill response, see 30 CFR chapter II.
(c) For Office of Natural Resources
Revenue (ONRR) regulations related to
rentals, royalties, and fees, see 30 CFR
chapter XII.
(d) For BOEM regulations governing
the appeal of an order or decision issued
under the regulations in this part, see 30
CFR part 590.
(e) For regulations on the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), see
40 CFR 1500–1508 and 43 CFR part 46.
(f) For ocean dumping sites, see the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(USEPA) listing—40 CFR part 228.
(g) For air quality, see USEPA
regulations at 40 CFR part 55 and BOEM
regulations at 30 CFR part 550 subparts
B and C.
(h) For related National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
programs, see:
PO 00000
Frm 00044
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
(1) Marine Sanctuary regulations, 15
CFR part 922;
(2) Fishermen’s Contingency Fund, 50
CFR part 296;
(3) Coastal Zone Management Act
(CZMA), 15 CFR part 930;
(4) Essential Fish Habitat, 50 CFR
600.90.
(i) For U.S. Coast Guard (USCG)
regulations on the oil spill liability of
vessels and operators, see 33 CFR parts
132, 135, and 136.
(j) For USCG regulations on port
access routes, see 33 CFR part 164.
(k) For Department of Transportation
regulations on offshore pipeline
facilities, see 49 CFR part 195.
(1) For Department of Defense
regulations on military activities on
offshore areas, see 32 CFR part 252.
§ 556.104 Information collection and
proprietary information.
(a) Information collection. (1) The
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) approved the collection of
information under 44 U.S.C. 3501–
3521), and assigned OMB Control
Number 1010–0006. The title of this
collection of information is ‘‘Leasing of
Sulfur or Oil and Gas in the Outer
Continental Shelf (30 CFR part 550, part
556, and part 560).’’
(2) BOEM collects this information to
determine if an applicant seeking to
obtain a lease or right-of-use and
easement (RUE) on the OCS is qualified
to hold such a lease or RUE and to
determine whether any such applicant
can meet the monetary and nonmonetary requirements associated with
a lease or RUE. Responses to this
information collection are either
required to obtain or retain a benefit or
are mandatory under OCSLA (43 U.S.C.
1331–1356a). BOEM will protect
proprietary information collected
according to section 26 of OCSLA (43
U.S.C. 1352), and this section.
(3) The Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501–3521) requires us
to inform the public that an agency may
not conduct or sponsor, and that no one
is required to respond to, a collection of
information unless it displays a current
and valid OMB control number.
(4) Send comments regarding any
aspect of the collection of information
under this part, including suggestions
for reducing the burden, to the
Information Collection Clearance
Officer, Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management, by mail at 45600
Woodland Road, Sterling, VA 20166 or
by email to regulation1@boem.gov, or by
phone at (703) 787–1025.
(b) Proprietary information. (1) Any
proprietary information maintained by
BOEM will be subject to the
requirements of 43 CFR part 2.
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(2) No proprietary information
received by BOEM under 43 U.S.C.
1352(c) will be transmitted to any
affected State unless the lessee, to
whom such information applies, or the
permittee and all persons, to whom
such permittee has sold such
information under promise of
confidentiality, agree to such
transmittal.
(c) Proprietary information in
response to a Call for Information and
Nominations (Call).
(1) A specific indication of interest in
an area received in response to a Call
issued by the Secretary is proprietary
information.
(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (c)(1)
of this section, BOEM may provide a
summary of indications of interest in
areas received in response to a Call for
a proposed sale.
§ 556.105
Acronyms and definitions.
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(a) Acronyms and terms used in this
part have the following meanings:
ASTM American Society for Testing and
Materials
BAST Best Available and Safest Technology
BOEM Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management
BSEE Bureau of Safety and Environmental
Enforcement
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CPA Central Planning Area of the GOM
CZMA Coastal Zone Management Act
DOI Department of the Interior
DOCD Development Operations
Coordination Document
DOO Designation of Operator
DPP Development and Production Plan
EIA Environmental Impact Analysis
EP Exploration Plan
EPA Eastern Planning Area of the GOM
EPAct Energy Policy Act of 2005
FNOS Final Notice of Sale
FOGRMA Federal Oil and Gas Royalty
Management Act of 1982
G&G Geological and Geophysical
GDIS Geophysical Data and Information
Statement
GOM Gulf of Mexico
GOMESA Gulf of Mexico Energy Security
Act of 2006
IOAA Independent Offices Appropriations
Act of 1952
LLC Limited Liability Company
MBB Mapping and Boundary Branch
NAD North American Datum
NEPA National Environmental Policy Act
of 1969
NGPA Natural Gas Processors Association
NOAA National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
NTL Notice to Lessees
OCS Outer Continental Shelf
OCSLA Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act
OMB Office of Management and Budget
ONRR Office of Natural Resources Revenue
OPD Official Protraction Diagram
PNOS Proposed Notice of Sale
PRA Paperwork Reduction Act
ROW Right of way
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RSV Royalty Suspension Volume
RUE Right of Use and Easement
SLA Submerged Lands Act of 1953
U.S. United States
U.S.C. United States Code
USCG U.S. Coast Guard
USEPA U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency
UTM Universal Transverse Mercator
coordinate system
WPA Western Planning Area of the GOM
(b) As used in this part, each of the
terms and phrases listed below has the
meaning given in the Act or as defined
in this section.
Act means the Outer Continental
Shelf Lands Act, as amended (OCSLA)
(43 U.S.C. 1331–1356a).
Affected State means, with respect to
any program, plan, lease sale, or other
activity proposed, conducted, or
approved pursuant to the provisions of
OCSLA, any State:
(i) The laws of which are declared,
pursuant to section 4(a)(2) of OCSLA (43
U.S.C. 1333(a)(2)), to be the law of the
United States for the portion of the OCS
on which such activity is, or is proposed
to be, conducted;
(ii) Which is, or is proposed to be,
directly connected by transportation
facilities to any artificial island or
structure referred to in section 4(a)(1) of
OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1333(a)(1));
(iii) Which is receiving, or in
accordance with the proposed activity
will receive, oil for processing, refining,
or transshipment that was extracted
from the OCS and transported directly
to that State by means of one or more
vessels or by a combination of means,
including a vessel;
(iv) Which is designated by the
Secretary as a State in which there is a
substantial probability of significant
impact on or damage to the coastal,
marine, or human environment; or a
State in which there will be significant
changes in the social, governmental, or
economic infrastructure resulting from
the exploration, development, and
production of oil and gas anywhere on
the OCS; or
(v) In which the Secretary finds that
because of such activity, there is, or will
be, a significant risk of serious damage,
due to factors such as prevailing winds
and currents, to the marine or coastal
environment in the event of any oil
spill, blowout, or release of oil or gas
from one or more vessels, pipelines, or
other transshipment facilities.
Aliquot or Aliquot part means an
officially designated subdivision of a
lease’s area, which can be a half of a
lease (1⁄2), a quarter of a lease (1⁄4), a
quarter of a quarter of a lease (1⁄4 1⁄4), or
a quarter of a quarter of a quarter of a
lease (1⁄4 1⁄4 1⁄4).
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Authorized officer means any person
authorized by law or by delegation of
authority to or within BOEM to perform
the duties described in this part.
Average daily production means the
total of all production in an applicable
production period that is chargeable
under § 556.514 divided by the exact
number of calendar days in the
applicable production period.
Barrel means 42 U.S. gallons. All
measurements of crude oil and natural
gas liquids under this section must be
at 60 °F.
(i) For purposes of computing
production and reporting of natural gas,
5,626 cubic feet of natural gas at 14.73
pounds per square inch equals one
barrel.
(ii) For purposes of computing
production and reporting of natural gas
liquids, 1.454 barrels of natural gas
liquids at 60 °F equals one barrel of
crude oil.
Bidding unit means one or more OCS
blocks, or any portion thereof, that may
be bid upon as a single administrative
unit and will become a single lease. The
term ‘tract,’’ as defined in this section,
may be used interchangeably with the
term ‘‘bidding unit.’’
BOEM means Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management of the U.S. Department of
the Interior.
Bonus or royalty credit means a legal
instrument or other written
documentation approved by BOEM, or
an entry in an account managed by the
Secretary, that a bidder or lessee may
use in lieu of any other monetary
payment for a bonus or a royalty due on
oil or gas production from certain
leases, as specified in, and permitted by,
the Gulf of Mexico Energy Security Act
of 2006, Pub. L. 109–432 (Div. C, Title
1), 120 Stat. 3000 (2006), codified at 43
U.S.C. 1331, note.
BSEE means Bureau of Safety and
Environmental Enforcement of the U.S.
Department of the Interior.
Central Planning Area (CPA) means
that portion of the Gulf of Mexico that
lies southerly of Louisiana, Mississippi,
and Alabama. Precise boundary
information is available from the BOEM
Leasing Division, Mapping and
Boundary Branch (MBB).
Coastal environment means the
physical, atmospheric, and biological
components, conditions, and factors
that interactively determine the
productivity, state, condition, and
quality of the terrestrial ecosystem from
the shoreline inland to the boundaries
of the coastal zone.
Coastal zone means the coastal waters
(including the lands therein and
thereunder) and the adjacent shorelands
(including the water therein and
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thereunder), strongly influenced by each
other and in proximity to the shorelines
of one or more of the several coastal
States, and includes islands, transition
and intertidal areas, salt marshes,
wetlands, and beaches, whose zone
extends seaward to the outer limit of the
United States territorial sea and extends
inland from the shore lines to the extent
necessary to control shorelands, the
uses of which have a direct and
significant impact on the coastal waters,
and the inland boundaries of which may
be identified by the several coastal
States, under section 305(b)(1) of the
Coastal Zone Management Act (CZMA)
of 1972, 16 U.S.C. 1454(b)(1).
Coastline means the line of mean
ordinary low water along that portion of
the coast in direct contact with the open
sea and the line marking the seaward
limit of inland waters.
Crude oil means a mixture of liquid
hydrocarbons, including condensate
that exists in natural underground
reservoirs and remains liquid at
atmospheric pressure after passing
through surface separating facilities, but
does not include liquid hydrocarbons
produced from tar sand, gilsonite, oil
shale, or coal.
Designated operator means a person
authorized to act on your behalf and
fulfill your obligations under the Act,
the lease, and the regulations, who has
been designated as an operator by all
record title holders and all operating
rights owners that own an operating
rights interest in the aliquot/depths in
which the designated operator, to which
the Designation of Operator form
applies, will be operating, and who has
been approved by BOEM to act as
designated operator.
Desoto Canyon OPD means the
Official Protraction Diagram (OPD)
designated as Desoto Canyon that has a
western edge located at the universal
transverse mercator (UTM) X coordinate
1,346,400 in the North American Datum
of 1927 (NAD27).
Destin Dome OPD means the Official
Protraction Diagram (OPD) designated
as Destin Dome that has a western edge
located at the Universal Transverse
Mercator (UTM) X coordinate 1,393,920
in the NAD27.
Development block means a block,
including a block susceptible to
drainage, which is located on the same
general geologic structure as an existing
lease having a well with indicated
hydrocarbons; a reservoir may or may
not be interpreted to extend on to the
block.
Director means the Director of the
BOEM of the U.S. Department of the
Interior, or an official authorized to act
on the Director’s behalf.
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Eastern Planning Area (EPA) means
that portion of the Gulf of Mexico that
lies southerly and westerly of Florida.
Precise boundary information is
available from the BOEM Leasing
Division, Mapping and Boundary
Branch.
Economic interest means any right to,
or any right dependent upon,
production of crude oil, natural gas, or
natural gas liquids and includes, but is
not limited to: a royalty interest; an
overriding royalty interest, whether
payable in cash or kind; a working
interest that does not include a record
title interest or an operating rights
interest; a carried working interest; a net
profits interest; or a production
payment.
Human environment means the
physical, social, and economic
components, conditions, and factors
that interactively determine the state,
condition, and quality of living
conditions, employment, and health of
those affected, directly or indirectly, by
activities occurring on the OCS.
Initial period or primary term means
the initial period referred to in 43 U.S.C.
1337(b)(2).
Joint bid means a bid submitted by
two or more persons for an oil and gas
lease under section 8(a) of the Act.
Lease means an agreement that is
issued under section 8 or maintained
under section 6 of the Act and that
authorizes exploration for, and
development and production of,
minerals on the OCS. The term also
means the area covered by that
agreement, whichever the context
requires.
Lease interest means one or more of
the following ownership interests in an
OCS oil and gas or sulfur lease: a record
title interest, an operating rights
interest, or an economic interest.
Lessee means a person who has
entered into a lease with the United
States to explore for, develop, and
produce the leased minerals and is
therefore a record title owner of the
lease, or the BOEM-approved assigneeowner of a record title interest. The term
lessee also includes the BOEMapproved sublessee- or assignee-owner
of an operating rights interest in a lease.
Marine environment means the
physical, atmospheric, and biological
components, conditions, and factors
that interactively determine the
productivity, state, conditions, and
quality of the marine ecosystem,
including the waters of the high seas,
the contiguous zone, transitional and
intertidal areas, salt marshes, and
wetlands within the coastal zone and on
the OCS.
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Mineral means oil, gas, and sulfur; it
also includes sand, gravel, and salt used
to facilitate the development and
production of oil, gas, and sulfur.
Natural gas means a mixture of
hydrocarbons and varying quantities of
non-hydrocarbons that exist in the
gaseous phase.
Natural gas liquids means liquefied
petroleum products produced from
reservoir gas and liquefied at surface
separators, field facilities, or gas
processing plants worldwide, including
any of the following:
(i) Condensate—natural gas liquids
recovered from gas well gas (associated
and non-associated) in separators or
field facilities; or
(ii) Gas plant products—natural gas
liquids recovered from natural gas in gas
processing plants and from field
facilities. Gas plant products include the
following, as classified according to the
standards of the Natural Gas Processors
Association (NGPA) or the American
Society for Testing and Materials
(ASTM):
(A) Ethane—C2H6
(B) Propane—C3H8
(C) Butane—C4H10, including all
products covered by NGPA
specifications for commercial butane,
including isobutane, normal butane, and
other butanes—all butanes not included
as isobutane or normal butane;
(D) Butane-Propane Mixtures—All
products covered by NGPA
specifications for butane-propane
mixtures;
(E) Natural Gasoline—A mixture of
hydrocarbons extracted from natural
gas, that meets vapor pressure, end
point, and other specifications for
natural gasoline set by NGPA;
(F) Plant Condensate—A natural gas
plant product recovered and separated
as a liquid at gas inlet separators or
scrubbers in processing plants or field
facilities; and
(G) Other Natural Gas plant products
meeting refined product standards (i.e.,
gasoline, kerosene, distillate, etc.).
Operating rights means an interest
created by sublease out of the record
title interest in an oil and gas lease,
authorizing the owner to explore for,
develop, and/or produce the oil and gas
contained within a specified area and
depth of the lease (i.e., operating rights
tract).
Operating rights owner means the
holder of operating rights.
Operating rights tract means the area
within the lease from which the
operating rights have been severed on
an aliquot basis from the record title
interest, defined by a beginning and
ending depth.
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Operator means the person designated
as having control or management of
operations on the leased area or a
portion thereof. An operator may be a
lessee, the operating rights owner, or a
designated agent of the lessee or the
operating rights owner.
Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) means
all submerged lands lying seaward and
outside of the area of lands beneath
navigable waters as defined in the
Submerged Lands Act (43 U.S.C. 1301–
1315) and of which the subsoil and
seabed appertain to the United States
and are subject to its jurisdiction and
control.
Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act
(OCSLA) means the Outer Continental
Shelf Lands Act (43 U.S.C. 1331–1356a),
as amended.
Owned, as used in the context of
restricted joint bidding or a statement of
production, means:
(i) With respect to crude oil—having
either an economic interest in or a
power of disposition over the
production of crude oil;
(ii) With respect to natural
gas—having either an economic interest
in or a power of disposition over the
production of natural gas; and
(iii) With respect to natural gas
liquids—having either an economic
interest in or a power of disposition
over any natural gas liquids at the time
of completion of the liquefaction
process.
Pensacola OPD means the Official
Protraction Diagram (OPD) designated
as Pensacola that has a western edge
located at the UTM X coordinate
1,393,920 in the NAD27.
Person means a natural person, where
so designated, or an entity, such as a
partnership, association, State, political
subdivision of a State or territory, or a
private, public, or municipal
corporation.
Planning area means a large portion
of the OCS, consisting of contiguous
OCS blocks, defined for administrative
planning purposes.
Primary term or initial period means
the initial period referred to in 43 U.S.C.
1337(b)(2).
Regional Director means the BOEM
officer with responsibility and authority
for a Region within BOEM.
Regional Supervisor means the BOEM
officer with responsibility and authority
for leasing or other designated program
functions within a BOEM Region.
Right-of-Use and Easement (RUE)
means a right to use a portion of the
seabed at an OCS site other than on a
lease you own, for the construction and/
or use of artificial islands, facilities,
installations, and other devices,
established to support the exploration,
development or production of oil and
gas, mineral, or energy resources from
an OCS or State submerged lands lease.
Right-of-Way (ROW) means an
authorization issued by BSEE under the
authority of section 5(e) of the OCSLA
(43 U.S.C. 1334(e)) for the use of
submerged lands of the Outer
Continental Shelf for pipeline purposes.
Secretary means the Secretary of the
Interior or an official or a designated
employee authorized to act on the
Secretary’s behalf.
Security or securities means any note,
stock, treasury stock, bond, debenture,
evidence of indebtedness, certificate of
interest or participation in any profitsharing agreement; collateral-trust
certificate; pre-organization certificate
or subscription; transferable share;
investment contract; voting-trust
certificate; certificate of deposit for a
security; fractional undivided interest in
oil, gas, or other mineral rights; or, in
general, any interest or instrument
commonly known as a ‘‘security’’ or any
certificate of interest or participation in,
temporary or interim certificate for,
receipt for, guarantee of, or warrant or
right to subscribe to or purchase any of
the foregoing.
Single bid means a bid submitted by
one person for an oil and gas lease
under section 8(a) of the Act.
Six-month bidding period means the
6-month period of time:
(i) From May 1 through October 31; or
(ii) from November 1 through April
30.
Statement of production means, in the
context of joint restricted bidders, the
following production during the
applicable prior production period:
(i) The average daily production in
barrels of crude oil, natural gas, and
natural gas liquids which it owned
worldwide;
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(ii) The average daily production in
barrels of crude oil, natural gas, and
natural gas liquids owned worldwide by
every subsidiary of the reporting person;
(iii) The average daily production in
barrels of crude oil, natural gas, and
natural gas liquids owned worldwide by
any person or persons of which the
reporting person is a subsidiary; and
(iv) The average daily production in
barrels of crude oil, natural gas, and
natural gas liquids owned worldwide by
any subsidiary, other than the reporting
person, of any person or persons of
which the reporting person is a
subsidiary.
Tract means one or more OCS blocks,
or any leasable portion thereof, that will
be part of a single oil and gas lease. The
term tract may be used interchangeably
with the term ‘‘bidding unit.’’
We, us, and our mean BOEM or the
Department of the Interior, depending
on the context in which the word is
used.
Western Planning Area (WPA) means
that portion of the Gulf of Mexico that
lies south and east of Texas. Precise
boundary information is available from
the Leasing Division, Mapping and
Boundary Branch.
You means any party that has, or may
have, legal obligations to the Federal
government with respect to any
operations on the OCS in which it is or
may become involved. Depending on
the context of the regulation, the term
‘‘you’’ may include a lessee (record title
owner), an operating rights owner, a
designated operator or agent of the
lessee, a predecessor lessee, a holder of
a State or Federal RUE, or a pipeline
ROW holder.
§ 556.106
Service fees.
(a) The table in this paragraph shows
the fees you must pay to BOEM for the
services listed. BOEM will adjust the
fees periodically according to the
Implicit Price Deflator for Gross
Domestic Product and publish a
document showing the adjustment in
the Federal Register. If a significant
adjustment is needed to arrive at a new
fee for any reason other than inflation,
then a proposed rule containing the new
fees will be published in the Federal
Register for comment.
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SERVICE FEE TABLE
Service—processing of the following:
Fee amount
(1) Assignment of record title interest in Federal oil and gas lease(s) for BOEM approval. ......................
(2) Sublease or Assignment of operating rights interest in Federal oil and gas lease(s) for BOEM approval. .......................................................................................................................................................
(3) Required document filing for record purpose, but not for BOEM approval. ..........................................
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30 CFR Citation
$198
198
29
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§ 556.701(a)
§ 556.801(a)
§ 556.715(a)
§ 556.808(a)
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SERVICE FEE TABLE—Continued
Service—processing of the following:
Fee amount
(4) Non-required document filing for record purposes. ...............................................................................
(b) Evidence of payment via pay.gov
of the fees listed in paragraph (a) of this
section must accompany the submission
of a document for approval or filing, or
be sent to an office identified by the
Regional Director.
(c) Once a fee is paid, it is
nonrefundable, even if your service
request is withdrawn.
(d) If your request is returned to you
as incomplete, you are not required to
submit a new fee with the amended
submission.
(e) The pay.gov Web site is accessible
at https://www.pay.gov/paygov/ or
through the BOEM Web site at https://
www.boem.gov/Fees-for-Services.
(f) The fees listed in the table above
apply equally to any document or
information submitted electronically
pursuant to part 560, subpart E, of this
chapter.
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§ 556.107
Corporate seal requirements.
(a) If you electronically submit to
BOEM any document or information
referenced in § 560.500 of this chapter,
any requirement to use a corporate seal
under this chapter will be satisfied, and
you will not need to affix your corporate
seal to such document or information,
if:
(1) You properly file with BOEM a
paper, with a corporate seal and the
signature of the authorized person(s),
stating that electronic submissions made
by you will be legally binding, as set
forth in § 560.502 of this chapter; and
(2) You make electronic submissions
to BOEM through a secure electronic
filing system that conforms to the
requirements of § 560.500; or,
(b) You may file with BOEM a nonelectronic document, containing a
corporate seal and the signature of an
authorized person(s), attesting that
future documents and information filed
by you by electronic or non-electronic
means will be legally binding without
an affixed corporate seal. If you file such
a non-electronic attestation document
with BOEM, any requirement for use of
a corporate seal under the regulations of
this chapter will be satisfied, and you
will not need to affix your corporate seal
to submissions where they would have
been otherwise required.
(c) If the State or territory in which
you are incorporated does not issue or
require corporate seals, the document
referred to in paragraphs (a) and (b) of
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this section need not contain a corporate
seal, but must still contain the signature
of the authorized person(s), a statement
that the State in which you are
incorporated does not issue or require
corporate seals, and a statement that
submissions made by you will be legally
binding.
(d) Any document, or information
submitted without corporate seal must
still contain the signature of an
individual qualified to sign who has the
requisite authority to act on your behalf.
(e) Any document or information
submitted pursuant to this section is
submitted subject to the penalties of 18
U.S.C. 1001, as amended by the False
Statements Accountability Act of 1996.
Subpart B—Oil and Gas Five Year
Leasing Program
§ 556.200 What is the Five Year leasing
program?
Section 18(a) of OCSLA (43 U.S.C.
1344(a)), requires the Secretary to
prepare an oil and gas leasing program
that consists of a five-year schedule of
proposed lease sales to best meet
national energy needs, showing the size,
timing, and location of leasing activity
as precisely as possible. BOEM prepares
the five year schedule of proposed lease
sales consistent with the principles set
out in section 18(a)(1) and (2)(A)-(H) of
OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1344(a)(1) and (2)(A)(H)) to obtain a proper balance among
the potential for environmental damage,
the potential for the discovery of oil and
gas, and the potential for adverse impact
on the coastal zone, as required by
OCSLA section 18(a)(3) (43 U.S.C.
1344(a)(3)).
§ 556.201 Does BOEM consider multiple
uses of the OCS?
BOEM gathers information about
multiple uses of the OCS in order to
assist the Secretary in making decisions
on the 5-year program pursuant to
provisions of 43 U.S.C. 1344. For this
purpose, BOEM invites and considers
suggestions from States and local
governments, industry, and any other
interested parties, primarily through
public notice and comment procedures.
BOEM also invites and considers
suggestions from Federal agencies.
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29
§ 556.715(b)
§ 556.808(b)
§ 556.202 How does BOEM start the Five
Year program preparation process?
To begin preparation of the Five Year
program, BOEM invites and considers
nominations for any areas to be
included or excluded from leasing, by
doing the following:
(a) BOEM prepares and makes public
official protraction diagrams and leasing
maps of OCS areas. In any area properly
included in the official Five Year
diagrams and maps, any area not
already leased for oil and gas may be
offered for lease.
(b) BOEM invites and considers
suggestions and relevant information
from governors of States, local
governments, industry, Federal
agencies, and other interested parties,
through a publication of a request for
information in the Federal Register.
Any local government must first submit
its comments on the request for
information to its State governor before
sending the comments to BOEM.
(c) BOEM sends a letter to the
governor of each affected State asking
the governor to identify specific laws,
goals, and policies that should be
considered. Each State governor, as well
as the Department of Commerce, is
requested to identify the relationship
between any oil and gas activity and the
State under sections 305 and 306 of the
CZMA, 16 U.S.C. 1454 and 1455.
(d) BOEM asks the Department of
Energy for information on regional and
national energy markets and
transportation networks.
§ 556.203 What does BOEM do before
publishing a proposed Five Year program?
After considering the comments and
information described in § 556.202,
BOEM will prepare a draft proposed
Five Year program.
(a) At least 60 days before publication
of a proposed program, BOEM will send
a letter, together with the draft proposed
program, to the governor of each
affected State, inviting the governor to
comment on the draft proposed
program.
(b) A governor, whether for purposes
of preparing that State’s comments or
otherwise, may solicit comments from
local governments that he determines
may be affected by an oil and gas leasing
program.
(c) If a governor’s comments on the
draft proposed program are received by
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BOEM at least 15 days before
submission of the proposed program to
Congress and its publication for
comment in the Federal Register, BOEM
will reply to the governor in writing.
§ 556.204 How do governments and
citizens comment on a proposed Five Year
program?
BOEM publishes the proposed
program in the Federal Register for
comment by the public. At the same
time, BOEM sends the proposed
program to the governors of the affected
States and to Congress and the Attorney
General of the United States for review
and comment.
(a) Governors are responsible for
providing a copy of the proposed
program to affected local governments
in their States. Local governments may
comment directly to BOEM, but must
also send their comments to the
governor of their State.
(b) All comments from any party are
due within 90 days after publication of
the request for comments in the Federal
Register.
§ 556.205 What does BOEM do before
approving a proposed final Five Year
program or a significant revision of a
previously-approved Five Year program?
At least 60 days before the Secretary
may approve a proposed final Five Year
program or a significant revision to a
previously approved final Five Year
program, BOEM will submit a proposed
final program or proposed significant
revision to the President and Congress.
BOEM will also submit comments
received and indicate the reasons why
BOEM did or did not accept any specific
recommendation of the Attorney
General of the United States, the
governor of a State, or the executive of
a local government.
Subpart C—Planning and Holding a
Lease Sale
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
§ 556.300 What reports may BOEM and
other Federal agencies prepare before a
lease sale?
For an oil and gas lease sale in a Five
Year program, and as the need arises for
other mineral leasing pursuant to part
581 of this chapter, BOEM will prepare
a report describing the general geology
and potential mineral resources of the
area under consideration. The Director
may request other interested Federal
agencies to prepare reports describing,
to the extent known, any other valuable
resources contained within the general
area and the potential effect of mineral
operations upon the resources or upon
the total environment or other uses of
the area.
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§ 556.301 What is a Call for Information
and Nominations?
BOEM issues a Call for Information
and Nominations (‘‘Call’’) on an area
proposed for leasing in the Five Year
program through publication in the
Federal Register and other publications.
A Call may include more than one
proposed sale. Comments are requested
from industry and the public on:
(a) Industry interest in the area
proposed for leasing, including
nominations or indications of interest in
specific blocks within the area;
(b) Geological conditions, including
bottom hazards;
(c) Archaeological sites on the seabed
or near shore;
(d) Potential multiple uses of the
proposed leasing area, including
navigation, recreation, and fisheries;
(e) Areas that should receive special
concern and analysis; and
(f) Other socioeconomic, biological,
and environmental information.
§ 556.302 What does BOEM do with the
information from the Call?
(a) Based upon information and
nominations received in response to the
Call, and in consultation with
appropriate Federal agencies, the
Director will develop a recommendation
of areas proposed for leasing for the
Secretary for further consideration for
leasing and/or environmental analysis.
(1) In developing the
recommendation, the Director will
consider available information
concerning the environment, conflicts
with other uses, resource potential,
industry interest, and other relevant
information, including comments
received from State and local
governments and other interested
parties in response to the Call.
(2) The Director, on his/her own
motion, may include in the
recommendation areas in which interest
has not been indicated in response to a
Call. In making a recommendation, the
Director will consider all available
environmental information.
(3) Upon approval by the Secretary,
the Director will announce the area
identified in the Federal Register.
(b) BOEM will evaluate the area(s)
identified for further consideration for
the potential effects of leasing on the
human, marine, and coastal
environments, and may develop
measures to mitigate adverse impacts,
including lease stipulations, for the
options to be analyzed. The Director
may hold public hearings on the
environmental analysis after an
appropriate notice.
(c) BOEM will seek to inform the
public, as soon as possible, of changes
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18159
from the area(s) proposed for leasing
that occur after the Call process.
(d) Upon request, the Director will
provide relative indications of interest
in areas, as well as any comments filed
in response to a Call for a proposed sale.
However, no information transmitted
will identify any particular area with
the name of any particular party so as
not to compromise the competitive
position of any participants in the
process of indicating interest.
(e) For supplemental sales provided
for by § 556.308, the Director’s
recommendation will be replaced by a
statement describing the results of the
Director’s consideration of the factors
specified above in this section.
§ 556.303 What does BOEM do if an area
proposed for leasing is within three nautical
miles of the seaward boundary of a coastal
State?
For an area proposed for leasing that
is within three nautical miles of the
seaward boundary of a coastal State, as
governed by section 8(g)(1) of OCSLA
(43 U.S.C. 1337(g)(1)):
(a) BOEM provides the governor of the
coastal State, subject to the
confidentiality requirements in this
chapter:
(1) A schedule for leasing; and
(2) An estimate of the potential oil
and gas resources.
(b) At the request of the governor of
a coastal State, BOEM will provide to
that governor, subject to the
confidentiality requirements in this
chapter:
(1) Information concerning
geographical, geological, and ecological
characteristics; and
(2) An identification of any field,
geological structure, or trap, or portion
thereof, that lies within three nautical
miles of the State’s boundary.
§ 556.304 How is a proposed notice of sale
prepared?
(a) The Director will, in consultation
with appropriate Federal agencies,
develop measures, including lease
stipulations and conditions, to mitigate
adverse impacts on the environment,
which will be contained, or referenced,
in the proposed notice of sale.
(b) A proposed notice of sale will be
submitted to the Secretary for approval.
All comments and recommendations
received and the Director’s findings or
actions thereon, will also be forwarded
to the Secretary.
(c) Upon approval by the Secretary,
BOEM will send a proposed notice of
sale to the governors of affected States
and publish the notice of its availability
in the Federal Register. The proposed
notice of sale references or provides a
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link to the lease form, and contains a
description of the area proposed for
leasing, the proposed lease terms and
conditions of sale, and proposed
stipulations to mitigate potential
adverse impacts on the environment.
§ 556.305 How does BOEM coordinate and
consult with States regarding a proposed
notice of sale?
(a) Within 60 days after receiving the
proposed notice of sale, governors of
affected States may submit comments
and recommendations to BOEM
regarding the size, timing, and location
of the proposed sale. Local governments
may comment to BOEM directly, but
must also send their comments to the
governor of their State.
(b) BOEM will provide a consistency
determination under the Coastal Zone
Management Act (CZMA) (16 U.S.C.
1456) to each State with an approved
coastal zone management program that
will determine whether the proposed
sale is consistent, to the maximum
extent practicable, with the enforceable
policies of the State’s approved coastal
zone management program.
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
§ 556.306 What if a potentially oil- or gasbearing area underlies both the OCS and
lands subject to State jurisdiction?
(a) Whenever the Director or the
governor of a coastal State determines
that a common potentially hydrocarbonbearing area may underlie the Federal
OCS and State submerged lands, the
Director or the governor will notify the
other party in writing of the
determination.
(b) Thereafter the Director will
provide to the governor of the coastal
State, subject to the confidentiality
requirements in this chapter:
(1) An identification of the areas
proposed for leasing and a schedule for,
leasing; and
(2) An estimate of the oil and gas
resources.
(c) At the request of the governor of
the coastal State, the Director will
provide to such governor, subject to the
confidentiality requirements in this
chapter:
(1) All geographical, geological, and
ecological characteristics of the areas
proposed for leasing; and
(2) An identification of any field,
geological structure, or trap that lies
within 3 miles of the State’s seaward
boundary.
(d) If BOEM intends to lease such
blocks or tracts, the Director and the
governor of the coastal State may enter
into an agreement for the equitable
disposition of the revenues from
production of any common potentially
hydrocarbon-bearing area, pursuant to
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OCSLA section 8(g)(3) (43 U.S.C.
1337(g)(3)). Any revenues received by
the United States under such an
agreement are subject to the
requirements of OSCLA section 8(g)(2)
(43 U.S.C. 1337(g)(2)).
(e) If the Director and the governor do
not enter into an agreement under
paragraph (d) of this section within 90
days, BOEM may nevertheless proceed
with the leasing of the tracts, in which
case all revenues will be deposited in a
separate account in the Treasury of the
United States, pending disposition of
27% (twenty-seven percent) of the
revenues to the relevant coastal state(s),
pursuant to the requirements of OCSLA
section 8(g)(2). (43 U.S.C. 1337(g)(2)).
§ 556.307 What does BOEM do with
comments and recommendations received
on the proposed notice of sale?
(a) BOEM will consider all comments
and recommendations received in
response to the proposed notice of sale.
(b) If the Secretary determines, after
providing opportunity for consultation,
that a governor’s comments, and those
of any affected local government,
provide a reasonable balance between
the national interest and the well-being
of the citizens of the State, the Secretary
will accept the recommendations of a
State and/or local government(s). Any
such determination of the national
interest will be based on the findings,
purposes and policies of the Act set
forth in 43 U.S.C. 1332 and 43 U.S.C.
1801.
(c) BOEM will send to each governor
written reasons for its determination to
accept or reject each governor’s
recommendation, and/or to implement
any alternative means to provide for a
reasonable balance between the national
interest and the interests of the citizens
of the State.
§ 556.308 How does BOEM conduct a
lease sale?
(a) BOEM publishes a final notice of
sale in the Federal Register and in other
publications, as appropriate, at least 30
days before the date of the sale. The
final notice:
(1) States the place, time, and method
for filing bids and the place, date, and
hour for opening bids; and
(2) Contains or references a
description of the areas offered for lease,
the lease terms and conditions of sale,
and stipulations to mitigate potential
adverse impacts on the environment.
(b) Oil and gas tracts are offered for
lease by competitive sealed bid in
accordance with the terms and
conditions in the final notice of sale and
applicable laws and regulations.
(c) Unless BOEM finds that a larger
area is necessary for reasonable
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economic production, no individual
tract for oil and gas leasing will exceed
5,760 acres in area. If BOEM finds that
an area larger than 5,760 acres is
necessary in any particular area, the size
of any such tract will be specified in the
final notice of sale.
(d) The final notice of sale references,
or provides a link to, the OCS lease form
which will be issued to successful
bidders.
§ 556.309 Does BOEM offer blocks in a
sale that is not on the Five Year program
schedule (called a Supplemental Sale)?
(a) Except as provided in paragraph
(c) of this section, BOEM may offer a
block within a planning area included
in the Five Year program in an
otherwise unscheduled sale, if the
block:
(1) Received a bid that was rejected in
an earlier sale;
(2) Had a high bid that was forfeited
in a scheduled sale; or
(3) Is a development block subject to
drainage.
(b) For an unscheduled sale, BOEM
may disclose the classification of the
block as a development block.
(c) Blocks in the Central or Western
Gulf of Mexico Planning Areas cannot
be offered in a sale that is not on the
schedule.
Subpart D—Qualifications
§ 556.400 When must I demonstrate that I
am qualified to hold a lease on the OCS?
In order to bid on, own, hold, or
operate a lease on the OCS, bidders,
record title holders, and operating rights
owners must first obtain a qualification
number from BOEM.
§ 556.401 What do I need to show to
become qualified to hold a lease on the
OCS and obtain a qualification number?
(a) You may become qualified to hold
a lease on the OCS and obtain a
qualification number in accordance
with § 556.402, if you submit evidence
demonstrating that you are:
(1) A natural person who is a citizen
or national of the United States;
(2) A natural person who is an alien
lawfully admitted for permanent
residence in the United States, as
defined in 8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(20);
(3) A private, public, or municipal
corporation or Limited Liability
Company or Limited Liability
Corporation (either/both sometimes
herein referred to as ‘‘LLC’’) organized
under the laws of any State of the
United States, the District of Columbia,
or any territory or insular possession
subject to United States jurisdiction;
(4) An association of such citizens,
nationals, resident aliens, or
corporations;
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(5) A State, the District of Columbia,
or any territory or insular possession
subject to United States jurisdiction;
(6) A political subdivision of a State,
the District of Columbia, or any territory
or insular possession subject to United
States jurisdiction; or
(7) A Trust organized under the laws
of any State of the United States, the
District of Columbia, or any territory or
insular possession subject to United
States jurisdiction;
(b) Statements and evidence
submitted to demonstrate qualification
under paragraphs (a)(1) through (6) of
this section are subject to the penalties
of 18 U.S.C. 1001.
(b) BOEM may issue you a
qualification number after you have
provided evidence acceptable to BOEM.
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
§ 556.402 How do I make the necessary
showing to qualify and obtain a
qualification number?
(a) If BOEM has already issued you a
qualification number, you may present
that number to BOEM. If not, in order
to become qualified, you must provide
the information in paragraph (b) or (c)
of this section before BOEM will issue
you a BOEM qualification number.
(b) A natural person must be a citizen
or national of the United States, or a
resident alien, to qualify. A United
States citizen or national must submit
written evidence acceptable to BOEM
attesting to United States citizenship or
national status. A resident alien must
submit an original or a photocopy of the
United States Citizenship and
Immigration Services form evidencing
legal status as a resident alien.
(c) A person who is not a natural
person must submit evidence (refer to
paragraph (d) of this section) acceptable
to BOEM that:
(1) It is authorized to conduct
business under the laws of a State, the
District of Columbia, or any territory or
insular possession subject to United
States jurisdiction under which it is
organized;
(2) Under the operating rules of its
business, it is authorized to hold OCS
leases; and
(3) Includes an up-to-date list of
persons, and their titles, who are
authorized to bind the corporation,
association or other entity when
conducting business on the OCS. It is up
to you, in accordance with your
organizational structure or rules, to
identify the individual, or group of
individuals, who has actual authority to
bind your organization, and the title(s)
they will use when they sign documents
to bind the organization. You must
maintain and regularly update the
information as to who has the authority
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to bind the organization whenever that
information changes.
(d) Acceptable evidence under
paragraph (c) of this section includes,
but is not limited to:
(1) For a corporation,
(i) A statement by the Secretary of the
corporation, over corporate seal,
certifying that the corporation is
authorized to hold OCS leases; and
(ii) Evidence of authority of holders of
positions entitled to bind the
corporation, certified by Secretary of the
corporation, over corporate seal, such
as:
(A) Certified copy of resolution of the
board of directors with titles of officers
authorized to bind corporation;
(B) Certified copy of resolutions
granting corporate officer authority to
issue a power of attorney; or
(C) Certified copy of power of attorney
or certified copy of resolution granting
power of attorney.
(2) For a Limited or General
Partnership,
(i) A statement by an authorized party
certifying that the partnership is
authorized to hold OCS leases;
(ii) A copy of your signed partnership
formation documents, including a
partnership agreement;
(iii) A statement from each partner
indicating, as appropriate, U.S.
citizenship or incorporation or
organization under the laws of a State,
the District of Columbia, or any territory
or insular possession subject to U.S.
jurisdiction; and
(iv) Documentation evidencing the
existence of the partnership and that it
was properly created, either from the
Secretary of State of the State in which
the partnership is registered or by an
equivalent State or governmental office.
(3) For a Limited Liability Company
or Limited Liability Corporation,
(i) A certificate of formation of the
LLC;
(ii) A statement by an individual
authorized to bind the LLC, as listed
under (c)(4) above, certifying that the
LLC is authorized to hold OCS leases;
(iii) A statement from each member
indicating, as appropriate, U.S.
citizenship, or incorporation or
organization under the laws of a State,
the District of Columbia, or any territory
or insular possession subject to U.S.
jurisdiction; and
(iv) Evidence of authority of holders
of positions entitled to bind the LLC,
certified by an individual authorized to
bind the LLC.
(4) For a Trust,
(i) A copy of the trust agreement or
document establishing the trust and all
amendments, properly certified by the
trustee; and
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18161
(ii) A statement indicating the law
under which the trust is established and
that the trust is authorized to hold OCS
leases.
(e) In the event that a person may be
eligible to hold OCS leases, but that type
of person is not listed in paragraphs (c)
or (d) of this section, evidence of such
eligibility will be submitted and
certified by the highest level of
management of the person authorized to
do so pursuant to its operating
agreement or governance documents.
(f) Any person who obtains a
qualification number from BOEM is
responsible to ensure that it is not using
the qualification number approved by
BOEM for any purpose that its operating
rules do not allow.
(g) Any evidence submitted in
response to paragraphs (c), (d), or (e) of
this section is submitted subject to 18
U.S.C. 1001.
(h) A person may not hold leases on
the OCS until the evidence requested in
this section has been accepted and
approved by BOEM and BOEM has
issued a qualification number to that
person.
(i) If use of a corporate seal is required
by this section, you may meet the
requirement as specified in § 556.107.
§ 556.403 Under what circumstances may I
be disqualified from holding a lease on the
OCS?
You may not hold an OCS lease if:
(a) You or your principals are
excluded or disqualified from
participating in a transaction covered by
Federal non-procurement debarment
and suspension (2 CFR parts 180 and
1400), unless the Department explicitly
approves an exception for a transaction
pursuant to the regulations in those
parts;
(b) The Secretary finds, after notice
and hearing, that you or your principals
(including in the meaning of ‘‘you,’’ for
purposes of this subparagraph, a bidder
or prospective bidder) fail to meet due
diligence requirements or to exercise
due diligence under section 8(d) of
OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1337(d)) on any OCS
lease; or
(c) BOEM disqualifies you from
holding a lease on the OCS based on
your unacceptable operating
performance. BOEM will give you
adequate notice and opportunity for a
hearing before imposing a
disqualification, unless BSEE has
already provided such notice and
opportunity for a hearing.
§ 556.404 What do the non-procurement
debarment rules require that I do?
You must comply with the
Department’s non-procurement
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debarment regulations at 2 CFR parts
180 and 1400.
(a) You must notify BOEM if you
know that you or your principals are
excluded, disqualified, have been
convicted or are indicted of a crime as
described in 2 CFR part 180, subpart C.
You must make this notification before
you sign a lease, sublease, or an
assignment of record title interest or
operating rights interest, or become a
lease or unit operator. This paragraph
does not apply if you have previously
provided a statement disclosing this
information, and you have received an
exception from the Department, as
described in 2 CFR 180.135 and 2 CFR
1400.137.
(b) If you wish to enter into a covered
transaction with another person at a
lower tier, as described in 2 CFR
180.200, you must first:
(1) Verify that the person is not
excluded or disqualified under 2 CFR
part 180; and
(2) Require the person to:
(i) Comply with 2 CFR part 180,
subpart C; and
(ii) Include the obligation to comply
with 2 CFR part 180, subpart C in its
contracts and other transactions.
(c) After you enter into a covered
transaction, you must immediately
notify BOEM in writing if you learn
that:
(1) You failed to disclose pertinent
information earlier; or
(2) Due to changed circumstances,
you or your principals now meet any of
the criteria in 2 CFR 180.800.
§ 556.405 When must I notify BOEM of
mergers, name changes, or changes of
business form?
You must notify BOEM of any merger,
name change, or change of business
form as soon as practicable, but in no
case later than one year after the earlier
of the effective date or the date of filing
the change or action with the Secretary
of State or other authorized official in
the State of original registry.
Subpart E—Issuance of a Lease
How To Bid
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
§ 556.500
a bid?
Once qualified, how do I submit
(a) You must submit a separate sealed
bid for each tract or bidding unit to the
address provided and by the time
specified in the final notice of sale. You
may not bid on less than an entire tract
or bidding unit.
(b) BOEM requires a deposit for each
bid. The final notice of sale will specify
the amount and method of payment.
(c) Unless otherwise specified in the
final notice of sale, the bid deposit
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amount will be 20 percent of the
amount of the bid for any given tract or
bidding unit.
(d) You may not submit a bid on an
OCS tract if, after notice and hearing
under section 8(d) of OCSLA (43 U.S.C.
1337(d)), the Secretary finds that you
are not meeting the diligence
requirements on any OCS lease.
(e) If the authorized officer within
BOEM rejects your high bid, the
decision is final for the Department,
subject only to reconsideration upon
your written request as set out in
§ 556.517.
§ 556.501 What information do I need to
submit with my bid?
In accordance with OCSLA section
18(a)(4) (43 U.S.C. 1344(a)(4)), BOEM
must evaluate every bid to ensure that
the federal government receives fair
market value for every lease. Section
26(a)(1)(A) of OCSLA (43 U.S.C.
1352(a)(1)(A)) provides that, in
accordance with regulations prescribed
by the Secretary, any lessee or permittee
conducting any exploration for, or
development or production of, oil or gas
must provide the Secretary access to all
data and information (including
processed, analyzed, and interpreted
information) obtained from that activity
and must provide copies of that data
and information as the Secretary may
request.
(a) As part of the lease sale process,
every bidder submitting a bid on a tract,
or participating as a joint bidder in such
a bid, may at the time of bid be required
to submit various information,
including a Geophysical Data and
Information Statement (GDIS)
corresponding to that tract, as well as
the bidder’s exclusive/proprietary
geophysical data in order for BOEM to
properly evaluate the bid. If a GDIS
required, each GDIS must include, as
required by § 551.12(b) and (c) of this
chapter:
(1) A list of geophysical surveys or
other information used as part of the
decision to bid or participate in a bid on
the block.
(2) An accurate and complete record
of each geophysical survey conducted,
including digital navigational data and
final location maps. The bidder and any
joint bidder must include a map for
each survey identified in the GDIS that
illustrates the actual areal extent of the
proprietary geophysical data.
(b) If a bidder is required to submit a
GDIS, the GDIS must be submitted even
if the bidder did not rely on proprietary
geophysical data and information in
deciding to bid or participate as a joint
bidder in the bid for any particular
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block, and must include entries for all
such blocks.
(c) The bidder must submit each GDIS
in a separate and sealed envelope, or in
an electronically readable spreadsheet
format, with proprietary seismic data
maps also available in an electronic
format. Each bidder must submit the
GDIS even if its joint bidder or bidders
on a specific block also have submitted
a GDIS.
(d) If BOEM requires additional
information related to bidding, it will
describe the additional information
requirements in the final notice of sale.
(e) BOEM will reimburse bidders for
the costs of complying with the
requirements of this section, in
accordance with § 550.196 (on lease)
and/or § 551.13 (off lease) of this
chapter.
(f) Bids that are not made in
compliance with this section will be
considered incomplete and invalid.
Restrictions on Joint Bidding
§ 556.511 Are there restrictions on bidding
with others and do those restrictions affect
my ability to bid?
The Energy Policy and Conservation
Act of 1975, 42 U.S.C. 6213, prohibits
joint bidding by major oil and gas
producers under certain circumstances.
BOEM implements 42 U.S.C. 6213 as
follows:
(a) BOEM publishes twice yearly in
the Federal Register a restricted joint
bidders list. A person appearing on this
list is limited in its ability to submit a
joint bid. The list:
(1) Consists of the persons chargeable
with an average worldwide daily
production in excess of 1.6 million
barrels of crude oil and/or its equivalent
in natural gas liquids and natural gas for
the prior production period; and
(2) Is based upon the statement of
production that filed as required by
§ 556.513.
(b) If BOEM places you on the
restricted joint bidders list, BOEM will
send you a copy of the order placing
you on the list. You may appeal this
order to the Interior Board of Land
Appeals under 30 CFR part 590, subpart
A.
(c) If you are listed in the Federal
Register in any group of restricted
bidders, you may not bid:
(1) Jointly with another person in any
other group of restricted bidders for the
applicable 6-month bidding period; or
(2) Separately during the 6-month
bidding period if you have an agreement
with another restricted bidder that will
result in joint ownership in an OCS
lease.
(d) If you are listed in the Federal
Register in any group of restricted
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bidders, you may not make any prebidding agreement for the conveyance of
any potential lease interest, whether by
assignment, sale, transfer, or other
means, to any person on the list of
restricted joint bidders.
(e) Even if you are not listed in the
Federal Register in any group of
restricted bidders, you are prohibited
from making any pre-bidding agreement
for the assignment, sale, transfer, or
other conveyance of any potential lease
interest to two or more persons in
different groups on the list of restricted
joint bidders.
(f) As a bidder, you are prohibited
from unlawful combination with, or
intimidation of, bidders under 18 U.S.C.
1860.
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
§ 556.512
What bids may be disqualified?
The following bids for any oil and gas
lease will be disqualified and rejected in
their entirety:
(a) A joint bid submitted by two or
more persons who are on the effective
List of Restricted Joint Bidders; or
(b) A joint bid submitted by two or
more persons when:
(1) One or more of those persons is
chargeable for the prior production
period with an average daily production
in excess of 1.6 million barrels of crude
oil, natural gas and natural gas liquids
and has not filed a Statement of
Production, as required by § 556.513 of
this part for the applicable 6-month
bidding period, or
(2) Any of those persons have failed
or refused to file a detailed report of
production when required to do so
under § 556.513, or
(c) A single or joint bid submitted
pursuant to an agreement (whether
written or oral, formal or informal,
entered into or arranged prior to or
simultaneously with the submission of
such single or joint bid, or prior to or
simultaneously with the award of the
bid upon the tract) that provides:
(1) For the assignment, transfer, sale,
or other conveyance of less than a 100
percent interest in the entire tract on
which the bid is submitted, by a person
or persons on the List of Restricted Joint
Bidders, effective on the date of
submission of the bid, to another person
or persons on the same List of Restricted
Joint Bidders; or
(2) For the assignment, sale, transfer
or other conveyance of less than a 100
percent interest in any fractional
interest in the entire tract (which
fractional interest was originally
acquired by the person making the
assignment, sale, transfer or other
conveyance, under the provisions of the
act) by a person or persons on the List
of Restricted Joint Bidders, effective on
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the date of submission of the bid, to
another person or persons on the same
List of Restricted Joint Bidders; or
(3) For the assignment, sale, transfer,
or other conveyance of any interest in a
tract by a person or persons not on the
List of Restricted Joint Bidders, effective
on the date of submission of the bid, to
two or more persons on the same List of
Restricted Joint Bidders; or
(4) For any of the types of
conveyances described in paragraphs
(c)(1), (2), or (3) of this section where
any party to the conveyance is
chargeable for the prior production
period with an average daily production
in excess of 1.6 million barrels of crude
oil, natural gas and natural gas liquids
and has not filed a Statement of
Production pursuant to § 556.513 for the
applicable six-month bidding period.
Assignments expressly required by law,
regulation, lease or lease stipulation will
not disqualify an otherwise qualified
bid; or
(d) A bid submitted by or in
conjunction with a person who has filed
a false, fraudulent or otherwise
intentionally false or misleading
detailed Report of Production.
§ 556.513 When must I file a statement of
production?
(a) You must file a statement of
production if your average worldwide
daily production exceeded 1.6 million
barrels for the prior production period,
as determined using the method set
forth in § 556.514. Your statement of
production must specify that you were
chargeable with an average daily
production in excess of 1.6 million
barrels for the prior production period.
(b) The prior production periods are
as follows:
For the bidding period
of
The prior production
period is the
preceding
(1) May through October.
(2) November through
April.
July through December.
January through
June.
(c) You must file the statement of
production by the following deadlines:
For the bidding period
of
You must file the
statement by
(1) May through October.
(2) November through
April.
March 17.
September 17.
(d) If you are required to file a
statement of production, BOEM may
require you to submit a detailed report
of production.
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(1) The detailed report of production
must list crude oil, natural gas liquids,
and natural gas produced worldwide
from reservoirs during the prior
production period, and therefore
chargeable to the prior production
period.
(i) The amount of crude oil chargeable
to the prior production period will be
established by measurement of volumes
delivered at the point of custody
transfer (e.g., from storage tanks to
pipelines, trucks, tankers, or other
media for transport to refineries or
terminals), with adjustments for net
differences between opening and
closing inventories, and basic sediment
and water.
(ii) The amount of natural gas liquids
chargeable to the prior production
period must include gas liquefied at
surface separators, field facilities, or gas
processing plants.
(iii) The amount of natural gas
chargeable to the prior production
period must include adjustments, where
applicable, to reflect the volume of gas
returned to natural reservoirs, and the
reduction of volume resulting from the
removal of natural gas liquids and nonhydrocarbon gases.
(2) You must submit the detailed
report of production within 30 days
after receiving BOEM’s request.
(3) BOEM may inspect and copy any
document, record of production,
analysis, and other material to verify the
accuracy of any earlier statement of
production.
(e) If you submit a statement of
production that misrepresents your
chargeable production, the Department
may cancel any lease awarded in
reliance upon the statement.
§ 556.514 How do I determine my
production for purposes of the restricted
joint bidders list?
(a) To determine the amount of
production chargeable to you, add
together:
(1) Your average daily production in
barrels of crude oil, natural gas liquids,
and natural gas worldwide, all
measured at 60 °F, using the
equivalency or conversion factors for
natural gas liquids and natural gas set
out in 42 U.S.C. 6213(b)(2) and (3); and
(2) Your proportionate share of the
average daily production owned by any
person that has an interest in you and/
or in which you have an interest.
(b) For the purpose of paragraph (a)(1)
of this section, your production
includes 100 percent of production
owned by:
(1) You;
(2) Every subsidiary of yours;
(3) Every person of which you are a
subsidiary; and
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(4) Every subsidiary of any person of
which you are a subsidiary.
(c) For purposes of paragraph (a)(2) of
this section, interest means at least a
five percent ownership or control of you
or the reporting person and includes
any interest:
(1) From ownership of securities or
other evidence of ownership; or,
(2) By participation in any contract,
agreement, or understanding regarding
control of the person or their production
of crude oil, natural gas liquids, or
natural gas.
(d) For purposes of this section,
subsidiary means a person, 50 percent
or more of whose stock or other interest
having power to vote for the election of
a controlling body, such as directors or
trustees, is directly or indirectly owned
or controlled by another person.
(e) For purposes of this section,
production chargeable to you includes,
but is not limited to, production
obtained as a result of a production
payment or a working, net profit,
royalty, overriding royalty, or carried
interest.
(f) For purposes of this section,
production must be measured with
appropriate adjustments for:
(1) Basic sediment and water;
(2) Removal of natural gas liquids and
non-hydrocarbon gases; and
(3) Volume of gas returned to natural
reservoirs.
§ 556.515 May a person be exempted from
joint bidding restrictions?
BOEM may exempt you from some or
all of the reporting requirements listed
in § 556.513, and/or some or all of the
joint bidding restrictions listed in
§§ 556.511 and/or 556.512(a), (b), and/or
(c), if, after opportunity for a hearing,
BOEM determines that the extremely
high costs in an area will preclude
exploration and development without
an exemption.
How Does BOEM Act on Bids?
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
§ 556.516
bid?
What does BOEM do with my
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§ 556.517 What may I do if my high bid is
rejected?
(a) The decision of the authorized
officer on bids is the final action of the
Department, subject only to
reconsideration of the rejection of the
high bid by the Director, in accordance
with paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) Within 15 days of bid rejection,
you may file a written request for
reconsideration with the Director, with
a copy to the authorized officer. Such
request must provide evidence as to
why the Director should reconsider your
bid. You will receive a written response
either affirming or reversing the
rejection of your bid.
(c) The Director’s decision on the
request for reconsideration is not subject
to appeal to the Interior Board of Land
Appeals in the Department’s Office of
Hearings and Appeals.
Awarding the Lease
(a) BOEM opens the sealed bids at the
place, date, and hour specified in the
final notice of sale for the sole purpose
of publicly announcing and recording
the bids. BOEM does not accept or reject
any bids at that time.
(b) BOEM reserves the right to reject
any and all bids received, regardless of
the amount offered. BOEM accepts or
rejects all bids within 90 days of
opening. BOEM reserves the right to
extend that time if necessary, and in
that event, BOEM will notify bidder(s)
in writing prior to the expiration of the
initial 90-day period, or of any
extension. Any bid not accepted within
VerDate Sep<11>2014
the prescribed 90-day period, or any
extension thereof, will be deemed
rejected. If your bid is rejected, BOEM
will refund any money deposited with
your bid, plus any interest accrued.
(c) If the highest bids are a tie, BOEM
will notify the bidders who submitted
the tie bids. Within 15 days after
notification, those bidders, if qualified,
and not otherwise prohibited from
bidding together, may:
(1) Agree to accept the lease jointly.
The bidders must notify BOEM of their
decision and submit a copy of their
agreement to accept the lease jointly.
(2) Agree between/among themselves
which bidder will accept the lease. The
bidders must notify BOEM of their
decision.
(d) If no agreement is submitted
pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section,
BOEM will reject all the tie bids.
(e) The Attorney General, in
consultation with the Federal Trade
Commission, has 30 days to review the
results of the lease sale before BOEM
may accept the bid(s) and issue the
lease(s).
§ 556.520 What happens if I am the
successful high bidder and BOEM accepts
my bid?
(a) If BOEM accepts your bid, BOEM
will provide you with the appropriate
number of copies of the lease for you to
execute and return to BOEM. Within 11
business days after you receive the lease
copies, you must:
(1) Execute all copies of the lease;
(2) Pay the first year’s rental;
(3) Pay the balance of the bonus bid,
unless deferred under paragraph (b)
below;
(4) Comply with subpart I of this part;
and,
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(5) Return all copies of the executed
lease, including any required bond or
other form of security approved by the
Regional Director, to BOEM.
(b) If provided for in the final notice
of sale, BOEM may defer any part of the
bonus and bid payment for up to five
years after the sale according to a
schedule included in the final notice of
sale. You must provide a bond
acceptable to BOEM to guarantee
payment of a deferred bonus bid.
(c) If you do not make the required
payments and execute and return all
copies of the lease and any required
bond within 11 business days after
receipt, or if you otherwise fail to
comply with applicable regulations,
your deposit will be forfeited. However,
BOEM will return any deposit with
interest if the tract is withdrawn from
leasing before you execute the lease.
(d) If you use an agent to execute the
lease, you must include evidence with
the executed copies of the lease that a
person who is on the list of persons
referenced in § 556.402(c)(3) authorized
the agent to act for you.
(e) After you comply with all
requirements in this section, and after
BOEM has executed the lease, BOEM
will send you a fully executed lease.
§ 556.521
When is my lease effective?
Your lease is effective on the first day
of the month following the date that
BOEM executes the lease. You may
request in writing, before BOEM
executes the lease, that your lease be
effective as of the first day of the month
in which BOEM executes the lease. If
BOEM agrees to make the lease effective
as of the earlier date, BOEM will so
indicate when it executes the lease.
§ 556.522 What are the terms and
conditions of the lease and when are they
published?
The terms and conditions of the lease
will be stated in the final notice of sale
and contained in the lease instrument
itself. Oil and gas leases and leases for
sulfur will be issued on forms approved
by the Director.
Subpart F—Lease Term and
Obligations
Length of Lease
§ 556.600 What is the primary term of my
oil and gas lease?
(a) The primary term of an oil and gas
lease will be five years, unless BOEM
determines that:
(1) The lease is located in unusually
deep water or involves other unusually
adverse conditions; and,
(2) A lease term longer than five years
is necessary to explore and develop the
lease.
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(b) If BOEM determines that the
criteria in paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) of
this section are met, it may specify a
longer primary term, not to exceed 10
years.
(c) BOEM will specify the primary
term in the final notice of sale and in
the lease instrument.
(d) The lease will expire at the end of
the primary term, unless maintained
beyond that term in accordance with the
provisions of § 556.601.
§ 556.601 How may I maintain my oil and
gas lease beyond the primary term?
You may maintain your oil and gas
lease beyond the expiration of the
primary term as long as:
(a) You are producing oil or gas in
paying quantities;
(b) You are conducting approved
drilling or well reworking operations
with the objective of establishing
production in paying quantities, in
accordance with 30 CFR 250.180;
(c) You are producing from, or drilling
or reworking, an approved well adjacent
to or adjoining your lease that extends
directionally into your lease in
accordance with 30 CFR 256.71;
(d) You make compensatory payments
on your lease in accordance with 30
CFR 256.72;
(e) Your lease is included in a BSEEapproved unit, in accordance with 30
CFR part 250, subpart M; or
(f) Your lease is subject to a
suspension of production or a
suspension of operations, in accordance
with 30 CFR 250.168 through 250.180,
for reasons other than gross negligence
or a willful violation of a provision of
your lease or any governing regulations.
§ 556.602 What is the primary term of my
sulfur lease?
(a) Your sulfur lease will have a
primary term of not more than 10 years,
as specified in the lease.
(b) BOEM will announce the primary
term prior to the lease sale.
(c) The lease will expire at the end of
the primary term unless maintained
beyond that term in accordance with the
provisions of § 556.603.
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
§ 556.603 How may I maintain my sulfur
lease beyond the primary term?
You may maintain your sulfur lease
after the primary term as long as you are
producing sulfur in paying quantities,
conducting drilling, well reworking or
plant construction, or other operations
for the production of sulfur or you are
granted a suspension by BSEE; or your
lease is subject to a suspension directed
by BSEE for reasons other than gross
negligence or a willful violation of a
provision of your lease or governing
regulations.
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Lease Obligations
§ 556.604 What are my rights and
obligations as a record title owner?
(a) As a record title owner, you are
responsible for all administrative and
operating performance on the lease,
including paying any rent and royalty
due.
(b)(1) A record title owner owns
operating rights to the lease, unless and
until he or she severs the operating
rights by subleasing them to someone
else.
(2) A sublease of operating rights from
record title may be for a whole or
undivided fractional interest in the
entire lease or a described aliquot
portion of the lease and/or a depth
interval. The sublease creates an
operating rights interest in the
sublessee, herein referred to as the
operating rights owner.
(c) Within any given aliquot, the
record title owner may sublease
operating rights for up to a maximum of
two depth divisions, which may result
in a maximum of three different depth
intervals. But, if the one, or two, depth
divisions to which operating rights are
subleased do not include the entire
depth of the lease, whatever depth
division(s) has not been subleased,
remains part of the lessee/sublessor’s
record title interest. The depth intervals
for which operating rights are subleased
must be defined by a beginning and
ending depth and the ending of one
depth level must abut the beginning of
the next depth level, with no gap in
between.
(d) Every current and prior record title
owner is jointly and severally liable,
along with all other record title owners
and all prior and current operating
rights owners, for compliance with all
non-monetary terms and conditions of
the lease and all regulations issued
under OCSLA, as well as for fulfilling
all non-monetary obligations, including
decommissioning obligations, which
accrue while it holds record title
interest.
(e) Record title owners that acquired
their record title interests through
assignment from a prior record title
owner are also responsible for
remedying all existing environmental or
operational problems on any lease in
which they own record title interests,
with subrogation rights against prior
lessees.
(f) For monetary obligations, your
obligation depends on the source of the
monetary obligation and whether you
have retained or severed your operating
rights.
(1) With respect to those operating
rights that you have retained, you are
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18165
primarily liable under 30 U.S.C. 1712(a)
for your pro-rata share of all other
monetary obligations pertaining to that
portion of the lease subject to the
operating rights you have retained,
based on your share of operating rights
in that portion of the lease.
(2) With respect to all monetary
obligations arising from or in
connection with those operating rights
that have been severed from your record
title interest, your obligation is
secondary to that of the sublessee(s) or
later assignee(s) of the operating rights
that were severed from your record title
interest, as prescribed in 30 U.S.C.
1712(a).
§ 556.605 What are my rights and
obligations as an operating rights owner?
(a) As an operating rights owner, you
have the right to enter the leased area to
explore for, develop, and produce oil
and gas resources, except helium gas,
contained within the aliquot(s) and
depths within which you own operating
rights, according to the lease terms,
applicable regulations, and BOEM’s
approval of the sublease or subsequent
assignment of the operating rights.
(b) Unless otherwise prohibited, you
have the right to authorize another party
to conduct operations on the part of the
lease to which your operating rights
appertain.
(c) An owner of operating rights who
is designating a new designated operator
must file a designation of operator
under § 550.143 of this chapter.
(d) An operating rights owner is only
liable for obligations arising from that
portion of the lease to which its
operating rights appertain and that
accrue during the period in which the
operating rights owner owned the
operating rights.
(e) You are jointly and severally liable
with other operating rights owners and
the record title owners for all nonmonetary lease obligations pertaining to
that portion of the lease subject to your
operating rights, which accrued during
the time you held your operating rights
interest.
(f) An operating rights owner that
acquires its operating rights interests
through assignment from a prior
operating rights owner is also
responsible, with subrogation rights
against prior operating rights owners,
for remedying existing environmental or
operational problems, to the extent that
such problems arise from that portion of
the lease to which its operating rights
appertain, on any lease in which it owns
operating rights.
(g) You are primarily liable for
monetary obligations pertaining to that
portion of the lease subject to your
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operating rights, and the record title
owners are secondarily liable. If there is
more than one operating rights owner in
a lease, each operating rights owner is
primarily liable for its pro-rata share of
the monetary obligations that pertain to
the portion of the lease that is subject to
its operating rights.
Helium
§ 556.606 What must a lessee do if BOEM
elects to extract helium from a lease?
(a) BOEM reserves the ownership of,
and the right to extract, helium from all
gas produced from your OCS lease.
Under section 12(f) of OCSLA (43 U.S.C.
1341(f)), upon our request, you must
deliver all or a specified portion of the
gas containing helium to BOEM at a
point on the leased area or at an onshore
processing facility that BOEM
designates.
(b) BOEM will determine reasonable
compensation and pay you for any loss
caused by the extraction of helium,
except for the value of the helium itself.
BOEM may erect, maintain, and operate
on your lease any reduction work and
other equipment necessary for helium
extraction. Our extraction of helium will
be conducted in a manner to not cause
substantial delays in the delivery of gas
to your purchaser.
Subpart G—Transferring All or Part of
the Record Title Interest in a Lease
§ 556.700 May I assign or sublease all or
any part of the record title interest in my
lease?
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
(a) With BOEM approval, you may
assign your whole, or a partial record
title interest in your entire lease, or in
any aliquot(s) thereof.
(b) With BOEM approval, you may
sever all, or a portion of, your operating
rights.
(c) You must request approval of each
assignment of a record title interest and
each sublease of an operating rights
interest. Each instrument that transfers
a record title interest must describe, by
aliquot parts, the interest you propose to
transfer. Each instrument that severs an
operating rights interest must describe,
by officially designated aliquot parts
and depth levels, the interest proposed
to be transferred.
§ 556.701 How do I seek approval of an
assignment of the record title interest in my
lease, or a severance of operating rights
from that record title interest?
(a) The Regional Director will provide
the form to record an assignment of
record title interest in a Federal OCS oil
and gas or sulfur lease, or a severance
of operating rights from that record title
interest. You must submit to BOEM two
originals of each instrument that
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transfers ownership of record title
within 90 days after the last party
executes the transfer instrument. You
must pay the service fee listed in
§ 556.106 with your request and your
submission must include evidence of
payment via pay.gov.
(b) Before BOEM approves an
assignment or transfer, it must consult
with, and consider the views of, the
Attorney General. The Secretary may act
on an assignment or transfer if the
Attorney General has not responded to
a request for consultation within 30
days of said request.
(c) A new record title owner or
sublessee must file a designation of
operator, in accordance with § 550.143
of this chapter, along with the request
for the approval of the assignment.
§ 556.702 When will my assignment result
in a segregated lease?
(a) When there is an assignment by all
record title owners of 100 percent of the
record title to one or more aliquots in
a lease, the assigned and retained
portions become segregated into
separate and distinct leases. In such
case, both the new lease and the
remaining portion of the original lease
are referred to as ‘‘segregated leases’’
and the assignee(s) becomes the record
title owner(s) of the new lease, which is
subject to all the terms and conditions
of the original lease.
(b) If a record title holder transfers an
undivided interest, i.e., less than 100
percent of the record title interest in any
given aliquot(s), that transfer will not
segregate the portions of the aliquots, or
the whole aliquots, in which part of the
record title was transferred, into
separate leases from the portion(s) in
which no interest was transferred.
Instead, that transfer will create a joint
ownership between the assignee(s) and
assignor(s) in the portions of the lease
in which part of the record title interest
was transferred. Any transfer of an
undivided interest is subject to approval
by BOEM.
§ 556.703 What is the effect of the
approval of the assignment of 100 percent
of the record title in a particular aliquot(s)
of my lease and of the resulting lease
segregation?
(a) The bonding/financial assurance
requirements of subpart I of this part
apply separately to each segregated
lease.
(b) The royalty, minimum royalty, and
rental provisions of the original lease
will apply separately to each segregated
lease.
(c) BOEM will allocate among the
segregated leases, on a basis that is
equitable under the circumstances, any
remaining unused royalty suspension
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volume or other form of royalty
suspension or royalty relief that had
been granted to the original lease, not to
exceed in aggregate the total remaining
amount.
(d) Each segregated lease will
continue in full force and effect for the
primary term of the original lease and so
long thereafter as each segregated lease
meets the requirements outlined in
§ 556.601. A segregated lease that does
not meet the requirements of § 556.601
does not continue in force even if
another segregated lease, which was
part of the original lease, continues to
meet those requirements.
§ 556.704 When would BOEM disapprove
an assignment or sublease of an interest in
my lease?
(a) BOEM may disapprove an
assignment or sublease of all or part of
your lease interest(s):
(1) When the transferor or transferee
has unsatisfied obligations under this
chapter or 30 CFR chapters II or XII;
(2) When a transferor attempts a
transfer that is not acceptable as to form
or content (e.g., not on standard form,
containing incorrect legal description,
not executed by a person authorized to
bind the corporation, transferee does not
meet the requirements of § 556.401,
etc.); or,
(3) When the transfer does not
conform to these regulations, or any
other applicable laws or regulations
(e.g., departmental debarment rules).
(b) A transfer will be void if it is made
pursuant to any prelease agreement that
would cause a bid to be disqualified,
such as those described in § 556.511(c),
(d), or (e).
§ 556.705 How do I transfer the interest of
a deceased natural person who was a
lessee?
(a) An heir or devisee must submit
evidence by means of a certified copy of
an appropriate court order or decree that
the person is deceased; or, if no court
action is necessary, a certified copy of
the will and death certificate or
notarized affidavits of two disinterested
parties with knowledge of the facts.
(b) The heir or devisee, if the lawful
successor in interest, must submit
evidence that he/she is the person
named in the will or evidence from an
appropriate judgment of a court or
decree that he/she is the lawful
successor in interest, along with the
required evidence of his/her
qualifications to hold a lease under
subpart D of this part.
(c) If the heir or devisee does not
qualify to hold a lease under subpart D
of this part, he/she will be recognized as
the successor in interest, but he/she
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must divest him/herself of this interest
in the lease, to a person qualified to be
a hold a lease, within two years.
§ 556.706 What if I want to transfer record
title interests in more than one lease at the
same time, but to different parties?
You may not transfer interests in more
than one lease to different parties using
the same instrument. If you want to
transfer the interest in more than one
lease at the same time, you must submit
duplicate, originally executed forms for
each transfer. The forms used for each
transfer must be accompanied by a
cover letter executed by one of the
parties to the transfer (or an authorized
agent thereof) and evidence of payment
via pay.gov.
§ 556.707 What if I want to transfer
different types of lease interests (not only
record title interests) in the same lease to
different parties?
You may not transfer different types
of lease interests in a lease to different
parties using the same instrument. You
must submit duplicate, originally
executed forms for each transfer, to a
different party, of a different type of
lease interest. The form used to transfer
each type of lease interest must be
accompanied by a cover letter executed
by one of the parties to the transfer (or
an authorized agent thereof) and
evidence of payment via pay.gov.
§ 556.708 What if I want to transfer my
record title interests in more than one lease
to the same party?
You may not transfer your record title
interests in more than one lease to the
same party using the same instrument.
If you want to transfer record title
interests in more than one lease at the
same time, you must submit separate,
originally executed forms for each
transfer. The forms used for each
transfer must be accompanied by a
cover letter executed by one of the
parties to the transfer (or an authorized
agent thereof), and evidence of payment
via pay.gov. A separate fee applies to
each individual transfer of interest.
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
§ 556.709 What if I want to transfer my
record title interest in one lease to multiple
parties?
You may transfer your record title
interest in one lease to multiple parties
using the same instrument. That
instrument must be submitted in
duplicate originals, accompanied by a
cover letter executed by one of the
parties to the transfer (or an authorized
agent thereof). In such a multiple
transfer of interests using a single
instrument, a separate fee applies to
each individual transfer of interest, and
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evidence of payment via pay.gov must
accompany the instrument.
§ 556.713 What is the effect of an
assignment of a lease on an assignee’s
liability under the lease?
§ 556.710 What is the effect of an
assignment of a lease on an assignor’s
liability under the lease?
As assignee, you and any subsequent
assignees are liable for all obligations
that accrue after the effective date of
your assignment. As assignee, you must
comply with all the terms and
conditions of the lease and regulations
issued under OCSLA, and in addition,
you must remedy all existing
environmental and operational
problems on the lease, properly
abandon all wells, and reclaim the site,
as required under 30 CFR part 250.
If you assign your record title interest,
as an assignor you remain liable for all
obligations, monetary and nonmonetary, that accrued in connection
with your lease during the period in
which you owned the record title
interest, up to the date BOEM approves
your assignment. BOEM’s approval of
the assignment does not relieve you of
these accrued obligations. Even after
assignment, BOEM or BSEE may require
you to bring the lease into compliance
if your assignee or any subsequent
assignee fails to perform any obligation
under the lease, to the extent the
obligation accrued before approval of
your assignment. Until there is a BOEMapproved assignment of interest, you, as
the assignor, remain liable for the
performance of all lease obligations that
accrued while you held record title
interest, until all such obligations are
fulfilled.
§ 556.711 What is the effect of a record
title holder’s sublease of operating rights
on the record title holder’s liability?
(a) A record title holder who
subleases operating rights remains liable
for all obligations of the lease, including
those obligations accruing after BOEM’s
approval of the sublease, subject to
§ 556.604(e) and (f).
(b) Neither the sublease of operating
rights, nor subsequent assignment of
those rights by the original sublessee,
nor by any subsequent assignee of the
operating rights, alters in any manner
the liability of the record title holder for
nonmonetary obligations.
(c) Upon approval of the sublease of
the operating rights, the sublessee and
subsequent assignees of the operating
rights become primarily liable for
monetary obligations, but the record
title holder remains secondarily liable
for them, as prescribed in 30 U.S.C.
1712(a) and § 556.604(f)(2).
§ 556.712
transfer?
What is the effective date of a
Any transfer is effective at 12:01 a.m.
on the first day of the month following
the date on which BOEM approves your
request, unless you request an earlier
effective date and BOEM approves that
earlier date, but such earlier effective
date, if prior to the date of BOEM’s
approval, does not relieve you of
obligations accrued between that earlier
effective date and the date of approval.
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§ 556.714 As a restricted joint bidder, may
I transfer an interest to another restricted
joint bidder?
(a) Where the proposed assignment or
transfer is by a person who, at the time
of acquisition of an interest in the lease,
was on the List of Restricted Joint
Bidders, and that assignment or transfer
is of less than the entire interest held by
the assignor or transferor and to a
person or persons on the same List of
Restricted Joint Bidders, the assignor or
transferor must file, prior to the
approval of the assignment, a copy of all
agreements applicable to the acquisition
of that lease or fractional interest, or a
description of the timing and nature of
the agreement(s) by which the assignor
or transferor acquired the interest it now
wishes to transfer.
(b) Such description of the timing and
nature of the transfer agreement must be
submitted together with a certified
statement that attests to the truth and
accuracy of any information reported
concerning that agreement, subject to
the penalties of 18 U.S.C. 1001.
(c) If you wish to transfer less than
your entire interest to another restricted
joint bidder, BOEM may request the
opinion of the Attorney General before
acting on your request.
(d) You may request that any
submission to BOEM made pursuant to
this part be treated confidentially.
Please note such a request on your
submission. BOEM will treat this
request for confidentiality in accordance
with the regulations at § 556.104 and the
regulations at 43 CFR part 2.
§ 556.715 Are there any interests I may
transfer or record without BOEM approval?
(a) You may create, transfer, or assign
economic interests without BOEM
approval. However, for record purposes,
you must send BOEM a copy of each
instrument creating or transferring such
interests within 90 days after the last
party executes the transfer instrument.
For each lease affected, you must pay
the service fee listed in § 556.106 with
your documents submitted for record
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purposes and your submission must
include evidence of payment via
pay.gov.
(b) For recordkeeping purposes, you
may also submit other legal documents
to BOEM for transactions that do not
require BOEM approval. If you submit
such documents for record purposes not
required by this part, you must pay the
service fee listed in § 556.106 with your
document submissions for each lease
affected. Your submission must include
evidence of payment via pay.gov.
§ 556.716 What must I do with respect to
the designation of operator on a lease when
a transfer of record title is submitted?
(a) If a transfer of ownership of the
record title interest only changes the
percentage ownership of the record title,
no new parties or new aliquots are
involved in the transaction, and no
change of designated operator is made,
you will not need to submit a new
designation of operator form.
(b) In all cases other than that in
paragraph (a) of this section, you must
submit new designation of operator
forms in accordance with § 550.143 of
this chapter. In the event that you are
transferring multiple record title
interests, you must comply with this
requirement for each interest that does
not fall within paragraph (a) of this
section.
Subpart H—Transferring All or Part of
the Operating Rights in a Lease
§ 556.800 As an operating rights owner,
may I assign all or part of my operating
rights interest?
An operating rights owner may assign
all or part of its operating rights
interests, subject to BOEM approval.
Each instrument that transfers an
interest must describe, by officially
designated aliquot parts and depth
levels, the interest proposed to be
transferred.
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
§ 556.801 How do I seek approval of an
assignment of my operating rights?
(a) The Regional Director will provide
the form to document the assignment of
an operating rights interest. You must
request approval of each assignment of
operating rights and submit to BOEM
two originals of each instrument that
transfers ownership of operating rights
within 90 days after the last party
executes the transfer instrument. You
must pay the service fee listed in
§ 556.106 with your request and your
submission must include evidence of
payment via pay.gov.
(b) A new operating rights owner
must file a designation of operator, in
accordance with § 550.143, along with
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the request for the approval of the
assignment.
(c) If an operating rights owner
assigns an undivided ownership interest
in its operating rights, that assignment
creates a joint ownership in the
operating rights.
(d) Before BOEM approves a sublease
or re-assignment of operating rights,
BOEM may consult with and consider
the views of the Attorney General.
§ 556.802 When would BOEM disapprove
the assignment of all or part of my
operating rights interest?
BOEM may disapprove an assignment
of all or part of your operating rights
interest:
(a) When the transferor or transferee
has outstanding or unsatisfied
obligations under this chapter or 30 CFR
chapter II or XII;
(b) When a transferor attempts a
transfer that is not acceptable as to form
or content (e.g., not on standard form,
containing incorrect legal description,
not executed in accordance with
corporate governance, transferee does
not meet the requirements of § 556.401,
etc.); or
(c) When the transfer does not
conform to these regulations, or any
other applicable laws or regulations
(e.g., departmental debarment rules).
§ 556.803 What if I want to assign
operating rights interests in more than one
lease at the same time, but to different
parties?
You may not assign operating rights
interests in more than one lease to
different parties using the same
instrument. If you want to transfer
operating rights interests in more than
one lease at the same time, you must
submit two originally executed forms
for each transfer. Each request for a
transfer of operating rights interest must
be accompanied by a cover letter
executed by one of the parties to the
transfer (or an authorized agent thereof)
and evidence of payment via pay.gov.
§ 556.804 What if I want to assign my
operating rights interest in a lease to
multiple parties?
You may assign your operating rights
interest in one lease to multiple parties
using the same instrument. That
instrument must be submitted in
duplicate originals, accompanied by a
cover letter executed by one of the
parties to the transfer (or an authorized
agent thereof). In such a multiple
transfer of interests using a single
instrument, a separate fee applies to
each individual transfer of interest and
evidence of payment via pay.gov must
accompany the instrument.
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§ 556.805 What is the effect of an
operating rights owner’s assignment of
operating rights on the assignor’s liability?
An operating rights owner (who does
not hold record title) who assigns the
operating rights remains liable for all
obligations of the lease that accrued
during the period in which the assignor
owned the operating rights, up to the
effective date of the assignment,
including decommissioning obligations
that accrued during that period. BOEM’s
approval of the assignment does not
alter that liability. Even after
assignment, BOEM or BSEE may require
the assignor to bring the lease into
compliance if the assignee or any
subsequent assignee fails to perform any
obligation under the lease, to the extent
the obligation accrued before approval
of the assignment.
§ 556.806 What is the effective date of an
assignment of operating rights?
An assignment is effective at 12:01
a.m. on the first day of the month
following the date on which BOEM
approves your request, unless you
request an earlier effective date and
BOEM approves that earlier date. Such
an earlier effective date, if prior to the
date of BOEM’s approval, does not
relieve you of obligations accrued
between that earlier effective date and
the date of approval.
§ 556.807 What is the effect of an
assignment of operating rights on an
assignee’s liability?
As assignee, you and any subsequent
assignees are liable for all obligations
that accrue after the effective date of
your assignment. As assignee, you must
comply with all the terms and
conditions of the lease and regulations
issued under OCSLA. In addition, you
must remedy all existing environmental
and operational problems on the lease,
properly abandon all wells, and reclaim
the site, as required under 30 CFR part
250.
§ 556.808 As an operating rights owner,
are there any interests I may assign without
BOEM approval?
(a) You may create, transfer, or assign
economic interests without BOEM
approval. However, for record purposes,
you must send BOEM a copy of each
instrument creating or transferring such
interests within 90 days after the last
party executes the transfer instrument.
For each lease affected, you must pay
the service fee listed in § 556.106 with
your documents submitted for record
purposes, and your submission must
include evidence of payment via
pay.gov.
(b) For record keeping purposes, you
may also submit other legal documents
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to BOEM for transactions that do not
require BOEM approval. If you submit
such documents for record purposes
that are not required by these
regulations, for each lease affected, you
must pay the service fee listed in
§ 556.106 with your document
submissions, and your submission must
include evidence of payment via
pay.gov.
§ 556.809
[Reserved]
§ 556.810 What must I do with respect to
the designation of operator on a lease when
a transfer of operating rights ownership is
submitted?
(a) If a transfer of ownership of
operating rights only changes the
percentage ownership; no new parties,
new aliquots, or new depths are
involved in the transaction; and no
change of designated operator is made,
you will not need to submit a new
designation of operator form.
(b) In all cases other than that in
paragraph (a) of this section, you must
submit new designation of operator
forms, in accordance with § 550.143 of
this chapter. In the event that you are
transferring multiple operating rights
interests, you must comply with this
requirement for each interest that does
not fall within paragraph (a) of this
section.
Subpart I—Bonding or Other Financial
Assurance
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
§ 556.900 Bond requirements for an oil
and gas or sulfur lease.
This section establishes bond
requirements for the lessee of an OCS
oil and gas or sulfur lease.
(a) Before BOEM will issue a new
lease or approve the assignment of an
existing lease to you as lessee, you or
another record title owner for the lease
must:
(1) Maintain with the Regional
Director a $50,000 lease bond that
guarantees compliance with all the
terms and conditions of the lease; or
(2) Maintain a $300,000 area-wide
bond that guarantees compliance with
all the terms and conditions of all your
oil and gas and sulfur leases in the area
where the lease is located; or
(3) Maintain a lease or area-wide bond
in the amount required in § 556.901(a)
or (b).
(b) For the purpose of this section,
there are three areas. The three areas
are:
(1) The Gulf of Mexico and the area
offshore the Atlantic Coast;
(2) The area offshore the Pacific Coast
States of California, Oregon,
Washington, and Hawaii; and
(3) The area offshore the Coast of
Alaska.
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(c) The requirement to maintain a
lease bond (or substitute security
instrument) under paragraph (a)(1) of
this section and § 556.901(a) and (b)
may be satisfied if your operator or an
operating rights owner provides a lease
bond in the required amount that
guarantees compliance with all the
terms and conditions of the lease. Your
operator or an operating rights owner
may use an areawide bond under this
paragraph to satisfy your bond
obligation.
(d) If a surety makes payment to the
United States under a bond or
alternative form of security maintained
under this section, the surety’s
remaining liability under the bond or
alternative form of security is reduced
by the amount of that payment. See
paragraph (e) of this section for the
requirement to replace the reduced
bond coverage.
(e) If the value of your surety bond or
alternative security is reduced because
of a default or for any other reason, you
must provide additional bond coverage
sufficient to meet the security required
under this subpart within 6 months, or
such shorter period of time as the
Regional Director may direct.
(f) You may pledge United States
Department of the Treasury (Treasury)
securities instead of a bond. The
Treasury securities you pledge must be
negotiable for an amount of cash equal
to the value of the bond they replace.
(1) If you pledge Treasury securities
under this paragraph (f), you must
monitor their value. If their market
value falls below the level of bond
coverage required under this subpart,
you must pledge additional Treasury
securities to raise the value of the
securities pledged to the required
amount.
(2) If you pledge Treasury securities,
you must include authority for the
Regional Director to sell them and use
the proceeds in the event that the
Regional Director determines that you
fail to satisfy any lease obligation.
(g) You may pledge alternative types
of security instruments instead of
providing a bond if the Regional
Director determines that the alternative
security protects the interests of the
United States to the same extent as the
required bond.
(1) If you pledge an alternative type of
security under this paragraph, you must
monitor the security’s value. If its
market value falls below the level of
bond coverage required under this
subpart, you must pledge additional
securities to raise the value of the
securities pledged to the required
amount.
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(2) If you pledge an alternative type of
security, you must include authority for
the Regional Director to sell the security
and use the proceeds when the Regional
Director determines that you failed to
satisfy any lease obligation.
(h) If you fail to replace a deficient
bond or to provide additional bond
coverage upon demand, the Regional
Director may:
(1) Assess penalties under part 550,
subpart N of this chapter;
(2) Suspend production and other
operations on your leases in accordance
with 30 CFR 250.173; and
(3) Initiate action to cancel your lease.
§ 556.901
Additional bonds.
(a) This paragraph explains what
bonds you must provide before lease
exploration activities commence.
(1)(i) You must furnish the Regional
Director a $200,000 bond that
guarantees compliance with all the
terms and conditions of the lease by the
earliest of:
(A) The date you submit a proposed
exploration plan (EP) for approval; or
(B) The date you submit a request for
approval of the assignment of a lease on
which an EP has been approved.
(ii) The Regional Director may
authorize you to submit the $200,000
lease exploration bond after you submit
an EP, but before approval of drilling
activities under the EP.
(iii) You may satisfy the bond
requirement of this paragraph (a) by
providing a new bond or by increasing
the amount of your existing bond.
(2) A $200,000 lease exploration bond
pursuant to paragraph (a)(1) of this
section need not be submitted and
maintained if the lessee either:
(i) Furnishes and maintains an
areawide bond in the sum of $1 million
issued by a qualified surety and
conditioned on compliance with all the
terms and conditions of oil and gas and
sulfur leases held by the lessee on the
OCS for the area in which the lease is
situated; or
(ii) Furnishes and maintains a bond
pursuant to paragraph (b)(2) of this
section.
(b) This paragraph explains what
bonds you (the lessee) must provide
before lease development and
production activities commence.
(1)(i) You must furnish the Regional
Director a $500,000 bond that
guarantees compliance with all the
terms and conditions of the lease by the
earliest of:
(A) The date you submit a proposed
development and production plan (DPP)
or development operations coordination
document (DOCD) for approval; or
(B) The date you submit a request for
approval of the assignment of a lease on
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which a DPP or DOCD has been
approved.
(ii) The Regional Director may
authorize you to submit the $500,000
lease development bond after you
submit a DPP or DOCD, but before he/
she approves the installation of a
platform or the commencement of
drilling activities under the DPP or
DOCD.
(iii) You may satisfy the bond
requirement of this paragraph by
providing a new bond or by increasing
the amount of your existing bond.
(2) You need not submit and maintain
a $500,000 lease development bond
pursuant to paragraph (b)(1) of this
section if you furnish and maintain an
areawide bond in the sum of $3 million
issued by a qualified surety and
conditioned on compliance with all the
terms and conditions of oil and gas and
sulfur leases you hold on the OCS for
the area in which the lease is located.
(c) If you can demonstrate to the
satisfaction of the authorized officer that
you can satisfy your decommissioning
obligations for less than the amount of
lease bond coverage required under
paragraph (b)(1) of this section, the
authorized officer may accept a lease
surety bond in an amount less than the
prescribed amount, but not less than the
amount of the cost for
decommissioning.
(d) The Regional Director may
determine that additional security (i.e.,
security above the amounts prescribed
in § 556.900(a) and paragraphs (a) and
(b) of this section) is necessary to ensure
compliance with the obligations under
your lease, the regulations in this
chapter, and the regulations in 30 CFR
chapters II and XII.
(1) The Regional Director’s
determination will be based on his/her
evaluation of your ability to carry out
present and future financial obligations
demonstrated by:
(i) Financial capacity substantially in
excess of existing and anticipated lease
and other obligations, as evidenced by
audited financial statements (including
auditor’s certificate, balance sheet, and
profit and loss sheet);
(ii) Projected financial strength
significantly in excess of existing and
future lease obligations based on the
estimated value of your existing OCS
lease production and proven reserves
for future production;
(iii) Business stability based on five
years of continuous operation and
production of oil and gas or sulfur in the
OCS or in the onshore oil and gas
industry;
(iv) Reliability in meeting obligations
based on:
(A) Credit rating; or
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(B) Trade references, including names
and addresses of other lessees, drilling
contractors, and suppliers with whom
you have dealt; and
(v) Record of compliance with laws,
regulations, and lease terms.
(2) You may satisfy the Regional
Director’s demand for additional
security by increasing the amount of
your existing bond or by providing
additional bond or bonds.
(e) The Regional Director will
determine the amount of additional
bond required to guarantee compliance.
The Regional Director will consider
potential underpayment of royalty and
cumulative decommissioning
obligations.
(f) If your cumulative potential
obligations and liabilities either increase
or decrease, the Regional Director may
adjust the amount of additional bond
required.
(1) If the Regional Director proposes
an adjustment, the Regional Director
will:
(i) Notify you and the surety of any
proposed adjustment to the amount of
bond required; and
(ii) Give you an opportunity to submit
written or oral comment on the
adjustment.
(2) If you request a reduction of the
amount of additional bond required,
you must submit evidence to the
Regional Director demonstrating that the
projected amount of royalties due the
Government and the estimated costs of
decommissioning are less than the
required bond amount. If the Regional
Director finds that the evidence you
submit is convincing, the Regional
Director may reduce the amount of
additional bond required.
§ 556.902
General requirements for bonds.
(a) Any bond or other security that
you, as lessee, operating rights owner or
operator, provide under this part must:
(1) Be payable upon demand to the
Regional Director;
(2) Guarantee compliance with all of
your obligations under the lease,
regulations in this chapter, and
regulations under 30 CFR chapters II
and XII; and
(3) Guarantee compliance with the
obligations of all lessees, operating
rights owners and operators on the
lease.
(b) All bonds and pledges you furnish
under this part must be on a form or in
a form approved by the Director. Surety
bonds must be issued by a surety that
the Treasury certifies as an acceptable
surety on Federal bonds and that is
listed in the current Treasury Circular
No. 570. You may obtain a copy of the
current Treasury Circular No. 570 from
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the Surety Bond Branch, Financial
Management Service, Department of the
Treasury, East-West Highway,
Hyattsville, MD 20782.
(c) You and a qualified surety must
execute your bond. When either party is
a corporation, an authorized official for
the party must sign the bond and attest
to it by an imprint of the corporate seal.
(d) Bonds must be non-cancellable,
except as provided in § 556.906 of this
part. Bonds must continue in full force
and effect even though an event occurs
that could diminish, terminate, or
cancel a surety obligation under State
surety law.
(e) Lease bonds must be:
(1) A surety bond;
(2) Treasury securities as provided in
§ 556.900(f);
(3) Another form of security approved
by the Regional Director; or
(4) A combination of these security
methods.
(f) You may submit a bond to the
Regional Director executed on a form
approved under paragraph (b) of this
section that you have reproduced or
generated by use of a computer. If you
do, and if the document omits terms or
conditions contained on the form
approved by the Director, the bond you
submit will be deemed to contain the
omitted terms and conditions.
§ 556.903
Lapse of bond.
(a) If your surety becomes bankrupt,
insolvent, or has its charter or license
suspended or revoked, any bond
coverage from that surety terminates
immediately. In that event, you must
promptly provide a new bond in the
amount required under §§ 556.900 and
556.901 to the Regional Director and
advise the Regional Director of the lapse
in your previous bond.
(b) You must notify the Regional
Director of any action filed alleging that
you, your surety, or your guarantor are
insolvent or bankrupt. You must notify
the Regional Director within 72 hours of
learning of such an action. All bonds
must require the surety to provide this
information to you and directly to
BOEM.
§ 556.904 Lease-specific abandonment
accounts.
(a) The Regional Director may
authorize you to establish a leasespecific abandonment account in a
federally insured institution in lieu of
the bond required under § 556.901(d).
The account must provide that, except
as provided in paragraph (a)(3) of this
section, funds may not be withdrawn
without the written approval of the
Regional Director.
(1) Funds in a lease-specific
abandonment account must be payable
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upon demand to BOEM and pledged to
meet your decommissioning obligations.
(2) You must fully fund the leasespecific abandonment account to cover
all decommissioning costs as estimated
by BOEM within the timeframe the
Regional Director prescribes.
(3) You must provide binding
instructions under which the institution
managing the account is to purchase
Treasury securities pledged to BOEM
under paragraph (d) of this section.
(b) Any interest paid on funds in a
lease-specific abandonment account
will be treated as other funds in the
account unless the Regional Director
authorizes in writing the payment of
interest to the party who deposits the
funds.
(c) The Regional Director may allow
you to pledge Treasury securities that
are made payable upon demand to the
Regional Director to satisfy your
obligation to make payments into a
lease-specific abandonment account.
(d) Before the amount of funds in a
lease-specific abandonment account
equals the maximum insurable amount
as determined by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation or the Federal
Savings and Loan Insurance
Corporation, the institution managing
the account must use the funds in the
account to purchase Treasury securities
pledged to BOEM under paragraph (c) of
this section. The institution managing
the lease specific-abandonment account
will join with the Regional Director to
establish a Federal Reserve Circular 154
account to hold these Treasury
securities, unless the Regional Director
authorizes the managing institution to
retain the pledged Treasury securities in
a separate trust account. You may obtain
a copy of the current Treasury Circular
No. 154 from the Surety Bond Branch,
Financial Management Service,
Department of the Treasury, East-West
Highway, Hyattsville, MD 20782.
(e) The Regional Director may require
you to create an overriding royalty or
production payment obligation for the
benefit of a lease-specific account
pledged for the decommissioning of a
lease. The required obligation may be
associated with oil and gas or sulfur
production from a lease other than the
lease bonded through the lease-specific
abandonment account.
§ 556.905 Using a third-party guarantee
instead of a bond.
(a) When the Regional Director may
accept a third-party guarantee. The
Regional Director may accept a thirdparty guarantee instead of an additional
bond under § 556.901(d) if:
(1) The guarantee meets the criteria in
paragraph (c) of this section;
(2) The guarantee includes the terms
specified in paragraph (d) of this
section;
(3) The guarantor’s total outstanding
and proposed guarantees do not exceed
25 percent of its unencumbered net
worth in the United States; and
(4) The guarantor submits an
indemnity agreement meeting the
criteria in paragraph (e) of this section.
(b) What to do if your guarantor
becomes unqualified. If, during the life
of your third-party guarantee, your
guarantor no longer meets the criteria of
paragraphs (a)(3) and (c)(3) of this
section, you must:
(1) Notify the Regional Director
immediately; and
(2) Cease production until you
comply with the bond coverage
requirements of this subpart.
(c) Criteria for acceptable guarantees.
If you propose to furnish a third party’s
guarantee, that guarantee must ensure
compliance with all lessees’ lease
obligations, the obligations of all
operating rights owners, and the
obligations of all operators on the lease.
The Regional Director will base
acceptance of your third-party guarantee
on the following criteria:
(1) The period of time that your thirdparty guarantor (guarantor) has been in
18171
continuous operation as a business
entity where:
(i) Continuous operation is the time
that your guarantor conducts business
immediately before you post the
guarantee; and
(ii) Continuous operation excludes
periods of interruption in operations
that are beyond your guarantor’s control
and that do not affect your guarantor’s
likelihood of remaining in business
during exploration, development,
production, and decommissioning.
(2) Financial information available in
the public record or submitted by your
guarantor, on your guarantor’s own
initiative, in sufficient detail to show to
the Regional Director’s satisfaction that
your guarantor is qualified based on:
(i) Your guarantor’s current rating for
its most recent bond issuance by either
Moody’s Investor Service or Standard
and Poor’s Corporation;
(ii) Your guarantor’s net worth, taking
into account liabilities under its
guarantee of compliance with all the
terms and conditions of your lease, the
regulations in this chapter and 30 CFR
chapters II and XII, and your guarantor’s
other guarantees;
(iii) Your guarantor’s ratio of current
assets to current liabilities, taking into
account liabilities under its guarantee of
compliance with all the terms and
conditions of your lease, the regulations
in this chapter and 30 CFR chapters II
and XII, and your guarantor’s other
guarantees; and
(iv) Your guarantor’s unencumbered
fixed assets in the United States.
(3) When the information required by
paragraph (c) of this section is not
publicly available, your guarantor may
submit the information in the following
table. Your guarantor must update the
information annually within 90 days of
the end of the fiscal year or by the date
prescribed by the Regional Director.
The guarantor should submit
That
(i) Financial statements for the most recently completed fiscal year,
Include a report by an independent certified public accountant containing the accountant’s audit opinion or review opinion of the statements. The report must be prepared in
conformance with generally accepted accounting principles and contain no adverse
opinion.
Your guarantor’s financial officer certifies to be correct.
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(ii) Financial statements for completed quarters in the
current fiscal year, and
(iii) Additional information as requested by the Regional Director.
(d) Provisions required in all thirdparty guarantees. Your third-party
guarantee must contain each of the
following provisions.
(1) If you, your operator, or an
operating rights owner fails to comply
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Your guarantor’s financial officer certifies to be correct.
with any lease term or regulation, your
guarantor must either:
(i) Take corrective action; or,
(ii) Be liable under the indemnity
agreement to provide, within 7 calendar
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days, sufficient funds for the Regional
Director to complete corrective action.
(2) If your guarantor complies with
paragraph (d)(1) of this section, this
compliance will not reduce its liability.
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(3) If your guarantor wishes to
terminate the period of liability under
its guarantee, it must:
(i) Notify you and the Regional
Director at least 90 days before the
proposed termination date;
(ii) Obtain the Regional Director’s
approval for the termination of the
period of liability for all or a specified
portion of your guarantor’s guarantee;
and
(iii) Remain liable for all work and
workmanship performed during the
period that your guarantor’s guarantee is
in effect.
(4) You must provide a suitable
replacement security instrument before
the termination of the period of liability
under your third-party guarantee.
(e) Required criteria for indemnity
agreements. If the Regional Director
approves your third-party guarantee, the
guarantor must submit an indemnity
agreement.
(1) The indemnity agreement must be
executed by your guarantor and all
persons and parties bound by the
agreement.
(2) The indemnity agreement must
bind each person and party executing
the agreement jointly and severally.
(3) When a person or party bound by
the indemnity agreement is a corporate
entity, two corporate officers who are
authorized to bind the corporation must
sign the indemnity agreement.
(4) Your guarantor and the other
corporate entities bound by the
indemnity agreement must provide the
Regional Director copies of:
(i) The authorization of the signatory
corporate officials to bind their
respective corporations;
(ii) An affidavit certifying that the
agreement is valid under all applicable
laws; and
(iii) Each corporation’s corporate
authorization to execute the indemnity
agreement.
(5) If your third-party guarantor or
another party bound by the indemnity
agreement is a partnership, joint
venture, or syndicate, the indemnity
agreement must:
(i) Bind each partner or party who has
a beneficial interest in your guarantor;
and
(ii) Provide that, upon demand by the
Regional Director under your third-party
guarantee, each partner is jointly and
severally liable for compliance with all
terms and conditions of your lease.
(6) When forfeiture is called for under
§ 556.907, the indemnity agreement
must provide that your guarantor will
either:
(i) Bring your lease into compliance;
or
(ii) Provide, within 7 calendar days,
sufficient funds to permit the Regional
Director to complete corrective action.
(7) The indemnity agreement must
contain a confession of judgment. It
must provide that, if the Regional
Director determines that you, your
operator, or an operating rights owner is
in default of the lease, the guarantor:
(i) Will not challenge the
determination; and
(ii) Will remedy the default.
(8) Each indemnity agreement is
deemed to contain all terms and
conditions contained in this paragraph
(e), even if the guarantor has omitted
them.
§ 556.906 Termination of the period of
liability and cancellation of a bond.
This section defines the terms and
conditions under which BOEM will
terminate the period of liability of a
bond or cancel a bond. Terminating the
period of liability of a bond ends the
period during which obligations
continue to accrue, but does not relieve
the surety of the responsibility for
obligations that accrued during the
period of liability. Canceling a bond
relieves the surety of all liability. The
liabilities that accrue during a period of
liability include obligations that started
to accrue prior to the beginning of the
period of liability and had not been met,
and obligations that begin accruing
during the period of liability.
(a) When you or the surety under your
bond requests termination:
(1) The Regional Director will
terminate the period of liability under
your bond within 90 days after BOEM
receives the request; and
(2) If you intend to continue
operations, or have not met all
decommissioning obligations, you must
provide a replacement bond of an
equivalent amount.
(b) If you provide a replacement bond,
the Regional Director will cancel your
previous bond and the surety that
provided your previous bond will not
retain any liability, provided that:
(1) The new bond is equal to or
greater than the bond that was
terminated, or you provide an
alternative form of security, and the
Regional Director determines that the
alternative form of security provides a
level of security equal to or greater than
that provided for by the bond that was
terminated;
(2) For a base bond submitted under
§ 556.900(a) or under § 556.901(a) or (b),
the surety issuing the new bond agrees
to assume all outstanding liabilities that
accrued during the period of liability
that was terminated; and
(3) For additional bonds submitted
under § 556.901(d), the surety issuing
the new additional bond agrees to
assume that portion of the outstanding
liabilities that accrued during the period
of liability that was terminated and that
the Regional Director determines may
exceed the coverage of the base bond,
and of which the Regional Director
notifies the provider of the bond.
(c) This paragraph applies if the
period of liability is terminated for a
bond, but the bond is not replaced by
a bond of an equivalent amount. The
surety that provided your terminated
bond will continue to be responsible for
accrued obligations:
(1) Until the obligations are satisfied;
and
(2) For additional periods of time in
accordance with paragraph (d) of this
section.
(d) When your lease expires or is
terminated, the surety that issued a
bond will continue to be responsible,
and the Regional Director will retain
other forms of security as shown in the
following table:
The period of liability will end
Your bond will be cancelled
(1) Base bonds submitted under
§ 556.900(a), § 556.901(a), or (b).
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For the following type of bond
When the Regional Director determines that you have met all of
your obligations under the lease,
Seven years after the termination of the lease, 6 years after completion of all bonded obligations, or at the conclusion of any appeals
or litigation related to your bonded obligation, whichever is the latest. The Regional Director will reduce the amount of your bond or
return a portion of your security if the Regional Director determines
that you need less than the full amount of the base bond to meet
any possible future problems.
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18173
For the following type of bond
The period of liability will end
Your bond will be cancelled
(2) Additional bonds
under § 556.901(d).
When the Regional Director determines that you have met all
your obligations covered by the
additional bond,
When you meet your bonded obligations, unless the Regional Director: (i) Determines that the future potential liability resulting from
any undetected problem is greater than the amount of the base
bond; and
(ii) Notifies the provider of the bond that the Regional Director will
wait 7 years before cancelling all or a part of the bond (or longer
period as necessary to complete any appeals or judicial litigation
related to your bonding obligation).
submitted
(e) For all bonds, the Regional
Director may reinstate your bond as if
no cancellation or release had occurred
if:
(1) A person makes a payment under
the lease and the payment is rescinded
or must be repaid by the recipient
because the person making the payment
is insolvent, bankrupt, subject to
reorganization, or placed in
receivership; or
(2) The responsible party represents to
BOEM that it has discharged its
obligations under the lease, and the
representation was materially false
when the bond was canceled or
released.
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
§ 556.907 Forfeiture of bonds and/or other
securities.
This section explains how a bond or
other security may be forfeited.
(a) The Regional Director will call for
forfeiture of all or part of the bond, other
form of security, or guarantee you
provide under this part if:
(1) You (the party who provided the
bond) refuse, or the Regional Director
determines that you are unable to
comply with any term or condition of
your lease; or
(2) You default on one of the
conditions under which the Regional
Director accepts your bond, third-party
guarantee, and/or other form of security.
(b) The Regional Director may pursue
forfeiture of your bond without first
making demands for performance
against any lessee, operating rights
owner, or other person authorized to
perform lease obligations.
(c) The Regional Director will:
(1) Notify you, the surety on your
bond or other form of security, and any
third-party guarantor of a determination
to call for forfeiture of the bond,
security, or guarantee under this
section.
(i) This notice will be in writing, and
will provide the reason for the forfeiture
and the amount to be forfeited.
(ii) The Regional Director must base
the amount he/she determines is
forfeited upon his/her estimate of the
total cost of corrective action to bring
your lease into compliance.
(2) Advise you, your third-party
guarantor, and any surety that you, your
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guarantor, and any surety may avoid
forfeiture if, within five working days:
(i) You agree to, and demonstrate that
you will bring your lease into
compliance within the timeframe that
the Regional Director prescribes;
(ii) Your third-party guarantor agrees
to and demonstrates that it will
complete the corrective action to bring
your lease into compliance within the
timeframe that the Regional Director
prescribes; or
(iii) Your surety agrees to and
demonstrates that it will bring your
lease into compliance within the
timeframe that the Regional Director
prescribes, even if the cost of
compliance exceeds the face amount of
the bond or other surety instrument.
(d) If the Regional Director finds you
are in default, he/she may cause the
forfeiture of any bonds and other
security deposited as your guarantee of
compliance with the terms and
conditions of your lease and the
regulations in this chapter and 30 CFR
chapters II and XII.
(e) If the Regional Director determines
that your bond and/or other security is
forfeited, the Regional Director will:
(1) Collect the forfeited amount; and
(2) Use the funds collected to bring
your leases into compliance and to
correct any default.
(f) If the amount the Regional Director
collects under your bond and other
security is insufficient to pay the full
cost of corrective actions he/she may:
(1) Take or direct action to obtain full
compliance with your lease and the
regulations in this chapter; and
(2) Recover from you, any co-lessee,
operating rights owner, and/or any
third-party guarantor responsible under
this subpart all costs in excess of the
amount he/she collects under your
forfeited bond and other security.
(g) The amount that the Regional
Director collects under your forfeited
bond and other security may exceed the
costs of taking the corrective actions
required to obtain full compliance with
the terms and conditions of your lease
and the regulations in this chapter and
30 CFR chapters II and XII. In this case,
the Regional Director will return the
excess funds to the party from whom
they were collected.
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Subpart J—Bonus or Royalty Credits
for Exchange of Certain Leases
§ 556.1000 Leases formerly eligible for a
bonus or royalty credit.
Bonus or royalty credits were
available to lessees with leases:
(a) In effect on December 20, 2006,
and located in:
(1) The Eastern Planning Area and
within 125 miles of the coastline of the
State of Florida; or,
(2) The Central Planning Area and
within the Desoto Canyon OPD, the
Destin Dome OPD, or the Pensacola
OPD and within 100 miles of the
coastline of the State of Florida.
(b) The deadline for applying for such
a bonus or royalty credit was October
14, 2010; therefore, lessees may no
longer apply for such credits.
Subpart K—Ending a Lease
§ 556.1100
How does a lease expire?
(a) Your oil and gas lease will
automatically expire at the end of its
primary term unless you have taken
action, as set forth in § 556.601, to
maintain the lease beyond the primary
term.
(b) Your sulfur lease will
automatically expire at the end of its
primary term unless you have taken
action, as set forth in § 556.603, to
maintain the lease beyond the primary
term.
§ 556.1101 May I relinquish my lease or an
aliquot part thereof?
(a) A record title owner may
relinquish a lease or an aliquot part of
a lease if all record title owners of a
lease or any aliquot part(s) of the lease
file three original copies of a request to
relinquish with BOEM on Form BOEM–
0152, entitled, ‘‘Relinquishment of
Federal Oil and Gas Lease.’’ No filing
fee is required.
(b) A relinquishment will be subject
to the continued obligation of the record
title owner and the surety to make all
payments due, including any accrued
rentals, royalties and deferred bonuses,
and to abandon all wells and condition
or remove all platforms and other
facilities on the land to be relinquished
to the satisfaction of the Director.
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(c) The effective date of the
relinquishment is the date on which the
relinquishment is filed with the proper
BOEM regional office.
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
§ 556.1102 Under what circumstances will
BOEM cancel my lease?
(a) BOEM may cancel your nonproducing lease if you fail to comply
with any provision of OCSLA, the lease,
or applicable regulations if the failure
continues for 30 days after mailing of
notice to your post office address of
record by registered mail and you have
not requested and been granted any
additional time within which to correct
the failure. Such cancellation is subject
to judicial review under section 23 of
OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1349).
(b) Your producing lease may be
cancelled if you fail to comply with any
provision of OCSLA, the lease, or
applicable regulations. The Secretary
will cancel a producing lease after the
judicial proceedings required under
section 5(d) of OCSLA (43 U.S.C.
1334(d)).
(c) BOEM may cancel your lease if it
determines that the lease was obtained
by fraud or misrepresentation. You will
have notice and an opportunity to be
heard before BOEM cancels your lease.
(d) BOEM may cancel your lease at
any time if it determines, after a hearing,
that continued activity will probably
cause serious harm or damage to life
(including fish and other aquatic life),
property, any mineral, national security
or defense, or the marine, coastal, or
human environment; that the threat of
harm or damage will not disappear or
decrease to an acceptable level within a
reasonable period of time; and the
advantages of cancellation outweigh the
advantages of continuing the lease.
(e) BOEM may cancel your lease at
any time after operations under the
lease have been suspended or
temporarily prohibited by the
Department continuously for a period of
five years pursuant to paragraph (d) of
this section, absent your request for a
shorter period.
(f) If, upon demand, you fail to
provide a bond, or alternative type of
security instrument acceptable to
BOEM, the Regional Director may assess
penalties or cancel your lease in
accordance with part 550, subpart N of
this chapter;
(g) Title 30, part 550, subpart A of the
CFR provides the procedures for lease
cancellation and compensation, if
applicable.
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Subpart L—Leases Maintained Under
Section 6 of OCSLA
§ 556.1200
Effect of regulations on lease.
(a) All regulations in this part, insofar
as they are applicable, will supersede
the provisions of any lease that is
maintained under section 6(a) of the
Act. However, the provisions of a lease
relating to area, minerals, rentals,
royalties (subject to sections 6(a)(8) and
(9) of the Act), and term (subject to
section 6(a)(10) of the Act and, as to
sulfur, subject to section 6(b)(2) of the
Act) will continue in effect, and, in the
event of any conflict or inconsistency,
will take precedence over these
regulations.
(b) A lease maintained under section
6(a) of the Act is also subject to all
operating and conservation regulations
applicable to the OCS. In addition, the
regulations relating to geophysical and
geological exploratory operations and to
pipeline ROW(s) are applicable, to the
extent that those regulations are not
contrary to or inconsistent with the
lease provisions relating to area,
minerals, rentals, royalties and term.
The lessee must comply with any
provision of the lease as validated, the
subject matter of which is not covered
in the regulations in this part.
§ 556.1201 Section 6(a) leases and leases
other than those for oil, gas, or sulfur.
The existence of an oil and gas lease
maintained under section 6(a) of the Act
precludes only the issuance in the same
area of an oil and gas lease under
OCSLA, but does not preclude the
issuance of other types of leases under
OCSLA. However, no other lease may
authorize or permit the lessee
thereunder unreasonably to interfere
with or endanger operations under the
existing lease. The United States will
not grant any sulfur leases on any area
that is included in a lease covering
sulfur under section 6(b) of the Act.
Subpart M—Environmental Studies
§ 556.1300
Environmental studies.
(a) The Director will conduct a study
or studies of any area or region included
in any oil and gas lease sale or other
lease in order to establish information
needed for assessment and management
of impacts on the human, marine and
coastal environments which may be
affected by OCS oil and gas or other
mineral activities in such area or region.
The purposes of such studies will
include, to the extent practicable,
analyses of the impacts of pollutants
introduced into the environments and
impacts of offshore activities on the
seabed and affected coastal areas.
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(b) Studies will be planned and
carried out in cooperation with the
affected States and interested parties
and, to the extent possible, will not
duplicate studies done under other
laws. Where appropriate, the Director
will, to the maximum extent practicable,
coordinate with the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA) in executing its environmental
studies responsibilities. The Director
may also make agreements for the
coordination with, or the use of the
services or resources of, any other
Federal, State or local government
agency in the conduct of such studies.
(c) Any study of an area or region
required by paragraph (a) of this section
for a lease sale will be commenced not
later than six months prior to holding a
lease sale for that area. The Director may
use information collected in any prior
study. The Director may initiate studies
for an area or region not identified in
the leasing program.
(d) After the leasing and developing of
any area or region, the Director will
conduct such studies as are deemed
necessary to establish additional
information and will monitor the
human, marine and coastal
environments of such area or region in
a manner designed to provide
information, which can be compared
with the results of studies conducted
prior to OCS oil and gas development.
This will be done to identify any
significant changes in the quality and
productivity of such environments, to
establish trends in the area studies, and
to design experiments identifying the
causes of such changes. Findings from
such studies will be used to recommend
modifications in practices that are
employed to mitigate the effects of OCS
activities and to enhance the data/
information base for predicting impacts
which might result from a single lease
sale or cumulative OCS activities.
(e) Information available or collected
by the studies program will, to the
extent practicable, be provided in a form
and in a timeframe that can be used in
the decision-making process associated
with a specific leasing action or with
longer term OCS minerals management
responsibilities.
PART 559—[REMOVED]
8. Under the authority of section 5(a)
of OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1334(a)), remove
part 559.
■
PART 560—OUTER CONTINENTAL
SHELF OIL AND GAS LEASING
9. The authority citation for part 560
continues to read as follows:
■
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Authority: Section 104, Public Law 97–
451, 96 Stat. 2451 (30 U.S.C. 1714), Public
Law 109–432, Div C, Title I, 120 Stat. 3000;
30 U.S.C. 1751; 31 U.S.C. 9701; 43 U.S.C.
1334; 33 U.S.C. 2704, 2716; E.O. 12777, as
amended; 43 U.S.C. 1331 et seq., 43 U.S.C.
1337.
10. Revise the Table of Contents for 30
CFR part 560 to read as follows:
■
Subpart A—General Provisions
560.100 Authority
560.100 What is the purpose of this part?
560.102 What definitions apply to this part?
560.103 What is BOEM’s authority to
collect information?
Subpart B—Bidding Systems
General Provisions
560.200 What is the purpose of this
subpart?
560.201 What definitions apply to this
subpart?
560.202 What bidding systems may BOEM
use?
560.203 What conditions apply to the
bidding systems that BOEM uses?
Eligible Leases
560.210 How do royalty suspension
volumes apply to eligible leases?
560.211 When does an eligible lease qualify
for a royalty suspension volume?
560.212 How does BOEM assign and
monitor royalty suspension volumes for
eligible leases?
560.213 How long will a royalty suspension
volume for an eligible lease be effective?
550.214 How do I measure natural gas
production on my eligible lease?
Royalty Suspensions (RS) Leases
560.220 How does royalty suspension apply
to leases issued in a sale held after
November 2000?
560.221 When does a lease issued in a sale
held after November 2000 get a royalty
suspension?
560.222 How long will a royalty suspension
volume be effective for a lease issued in
a sale held after November 2000?
560.223 How do I measure natural gas
production for a lease issued in a sale
held after November 2000?
560.224 How will royalty suspension apply
if BOEM assigns a lease issued in a sale
held after November 2000 to a field that
has a pre-Act lease?
Bidding System Selection Criteria
560.230 What criteria does BOEM use for
selecting bidding systems and bidding
system components?
Subpart C—Operating Allowances
560.300 Operating allowances.
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
Subpart D—[Reserved]
Subpart E—Electronic Filings
560.500 Electronic document and data
transmissions.
560.501 How long will the confidentiality
of electronic document and data
transmissions be maintained?
560.502 Are electronically filed document
transmissions legally binding?
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Subpart B—Bidding Systems
11. Redesignate §§ 560.101, 560.102,
560.110 and 560.111 as §§ 560.200,
560.201, 560.202 and 560.203,
respectively.
■ 12. Redesignate §§ 560.112, 560.113,
560.114, 560.115 and 560.116 as
§§ 560.210, 560.211, 560.212, 560.213
and 560.214, respectively.
■ 13. Redesignate §§ 560.120, 560.121,
560.122, 560.123 and 560.124 as
§§ 560.220, 560.221, 560.222, 560.223
and 560.224, respectively.
■ 14. Redesignate § 560.130 as
§ 560.230.
■
Subpart A—General Provisions
■
15. Add § 560.100 as follows:
§ 560.100
Authority.
(a) The Outer Continental Shelf Lands
Act (OCSLA) (43 U.S.C. 1334) (‘‘Outer
Continental Shelf Lands Act
Amendments of 1978’’).
(b) The Federal Oil and Gas Royalty
Management Act, as amended
(FOGRMA) (30 U.S.C. 1711), including
the Federal Oil and Gas Royalty
Simplification and Fairness Act of 1996,
(30 U.S.C. 1701 note).
(c) The Independent Offices
Appropriations Act of 1952 (31 U.S.C.
9701).
(d) Public Law 89–554, 1966 (5 U.S.C.
301).
§ 560.1
[Redesignated as § 560.101]
16. Redesignate § 560.1 as § 560.101.
17. Redesignate § 560.2 as § 560.102,
and revise redesignated § 560.2 to read
as follows:
■
■
§ 560.102
part?
What definitions apply to this
(a) Terms used in this part have the
meaning given in the Act and as defined
in this part.
(b) The following definitions apply to
this part:
Area or region means the geographic
area or region over which the BOEM
authorized officer has jurisdiction,
unless the context in which those words
are used indicates that a different
meaning is intended.
BOEM means Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management.
Designated official means a
representative of DOI subject to the
direction and supervisory authority of
the Directors, BOEM, and the
appropriate Regional Manager of the
BOEM authorized and empowered to
supervise and direct all oil and gas
operations and to perform other duties
prescribed in this chapter.
Director means Director, BOEM, DOI.
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18175
DOI means the Department of the
Interior, including the Secretary of the
Interior, or his or her delegate.
Federal lease means an agreement
which, for consideration, including, but
not limited to, bonuses, rents or
royalties conferred, and covenants to be
observed, authorizes a person to explore
for, or develop, or produce (or to do any
or all of these) oil and gas, coal, oil
shale, tar sands, and geothermal
resources on lands or interests in lands
under Federal jurisdiction.
Gas or Natural Gas means a mixture
of hydrocarbons and varying quantities
of non-hydrocarbons that exist in the
gaseous phase.
Oil means a mixture of hydrocarbons
that exists in a liquid or gaseous phase
in an underground reservoir and which
remains or becomes liquid at
atmospheric pressure after passing
through surface separating facilities,
including condensate recovered by
means other than a manufacturing
process.
Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) means
all submerged lands lying seaward and
outside of the area of lands beneath
navigable waters as defined in the
Submerged Lands Act (43 U.S.C. 1301–
1315) and of which the subsoil and
seabed appertain to the United States
and are subject to its jurisdiction and
control.
OCSLA means the Outer Continental
Shelf Lands Act, as amended (Act of
August 7, 1953, Ch. 345, 67 Stat. 462,
43 U.S.C. 1331–1356a, as amended by
Pub. L. 95–372, 92 Stat. 629).
Person means a natural person, where
so designated, or an entity, such as a
partnership, association, State, political
subdivision of a State or territory, or a
private, public, or municipal
corporation.
We means the Bureau of Ocean
Energy Management (BOEM).
You means the lessee or operating
rights owner.
§ 560.3
[Redesignated as § 560.103]
18. Redesignate § 560.3 as § 560.103.
■ 19. Add a new subpart C to read as
follows:
■
Subpart C—Operating Allowances
§ 560.300
Operating allowances.
Notwithstanding any other provision
in the regulations in this part, BOEM
may issue a lease containing an
operating allowance when so specified
in the final notice of sale and the lease.
The allowance amount or formula will
be specified in the final notice of sale
and in the lease.
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 61 / Wednesday, March 30, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Subpart D—[Removed and Reserved]
20. Remove and reserve subpart D.
21. Add a new subpart E to read as
follows:
■
■
Subpart E—Electronic Filings
560.500 Electronic document and data
transmissions.
560.501 How long will the confidentiality
of electronic document and data
transmissions be maintained?
560.502 Are electronically filed document
transmissions legally binding?
Subpart E—Electronic Filings
§ 560.500 Electronic document and data
transmissions.
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
(a) BOEM may notify you that it will
allow or request you to submit the
following information electronically
through BOEM’s secure electronic filing
system, through an alternate secure
electronic filing system supported and
maintained by the Department, or
through some other electronic filing
system that BOEM has approved for this
purpose:
(1) Any document(s) or information
described in the Qualifications section
of part 556 of this chapter, as specified
in subpart E. Such information would
include, but not be limited to, the
official name of the qualifying person,
its legal and business address or
addresses, its legal form and status, and
the names and contact information of a
person or organization authorized to act
on the person’s behalf.
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(2) Any document(s) or information
required to obtain BOEM’s approval of
an assignment or sublease, including
any form or instrument that creates or
transfers ownership of a lease interest.
(3) Any document(s) or information
required to obtain BOEM’s approval of
your relinquishment of all, or any
aliquot part of your lease, as specified
in § 556.1101 of this chapter.
(4) Any document(s) creating,
transferring or assigning economic
interests, as specified in §§ 556.715 and
556.808 of this chapter.
(5) Any document(s) related to a
bond, U.S. Treasury note or other
security provided to BOEM, which is
required to guarantee your compliance
with terms and conditions of a lease.
(6) Any document(s) or information
necessary to bid for an OCS lease.
(7) Any forms, document(s) or
information necessary to determine
worst case oil-spill discharge volume(s),
or to provide evidence demonstrating
oil spill financial responsibility, or to
guarantee such financial responsibility
or to comply with any other
requirements of the Oil Spill Financial
Responsibility Program, as described in
part 553 of this chapter.
(b) BOEM reserves the right to require
the electronic filing of any document(s)
or information addressed in paragraph
(a)(5) of this section upon a 90-day
notice published in the Federal
Register; if BOEM mandates that you
transmit such document(s) or
PO 00000
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
information electronically, the Federal
Register notice will specify the filing
details necessary to comply with this
regulation.
(c) In the event BOEM sends
documents to you in a secure electronic
format, you may either return the
document(s) in an electronic format
utilizing the same secure transmission
mechanism or print the document(s)
and return them.
(d) BOEM may electronically
acknowledge, approve, sign, or execute
any document(s) referenced in this
section.
§ 560.501 How long will the confidentiality
of electronic document and data
transmissions be maintained?
The confidentiality of any
electronically submitted information
will be maintained for the same
proprietary term that would apply to the
corresponding non-electronic
confidential submission, pursuant to
§ 556.104(b) of this chapter.
§ 560.502 Are electronically filed
document transmissions legally binding?
Any document or information
referenced in § 560.500 which is
submitted to BOEM through a secure
electronic filing system that is approved
by BOEM will be legally binding,
without the need for a paper copy
thereof.
[FR Doc. 2016–06513 Filed 3–29–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–MR–P
E:\FR\FM\30MRR3.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 61 (Wednesday, March 30, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 18111-18176]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-06513]
[[Page 18111]]
Vol. 81
Wednesday,
No. 61
March 30, 2016
Part III
Book 2 of 2 Books
Pages 18111-18446
Department of the Interior
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
30 CFR Parts 550, 556, 559, et al.
Leasing of Sulfur or Oil and Gas in the Outer Continental Shelf; Final
Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 81 , No. 61 / Wednesday, March 30, 2016 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 18112]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
30 CFR Parts 550, 556, 559 and 560
RIN 1010-AD06
[Docket ID: MMS-2007-OMM-0069]
Leasing of Sulfur or Oil and Gas in the Outer Continental Shelf
AGENCY: Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM), Interior.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule updates and streamlines the existing Outer
Continental Shelf (OCS) leasing regulations and clarifies
implementation of the Federal Oil and Gas Royalty Simplification and
Fairness Act of 1996, which amended the Federal Oil and Gas Royalty
Management Act of 1982 (FOGRMA). The final rule reorganizes leasing
requirements to more effectively communicate the leasing process as it
has evolved over the years. The final rule makes changes to regulations
which relate to the oil, gas, and sulfur leasing requirements. The
final rule does not, however, include substantive changes to
regulations which relate to bonding, which will be the subject of a
separate new proposed rulemaking.
DATES: This final rule will become effective May 31, 2016.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Peter Meffert, Senior Regulatory
Specialist, Office of Policy, Regulations and Analysis, Bureau of Ocean
Energy Management, at regulation1@boem.gov, at 703-787-1610, or Jaron
Ming, Regional Supervisor, Office of Leasing and Plans, Gulf of Mexico
Region, Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, at jaron.ming@boem.gov, at
504-736-2761, or David Diamond, Chief, Leasing Division, Bureau of
Ocean Energy Management, at david.diamond@boem.gov, at (703) 787-1251.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
A. Background
1. Why We Need to Publish a Rule
2. What is covered by the rule?
B. Abbreviations of Terms and Acronyms
C. Final Rule as Adopted and Response to Comments
1. Availability of Public Comments
2. Effects of the Reorganization of MMS Into Three Distinct
Agencies
3. Definitions
4. Delayed Provisions
5. Other Editorial Improvements
II. Derivation Tables
A. Derivation Table for 30 CFR part 550 (``Oil and Gas and
Sulfur Operations in the Outer Continental Shelf'')
B. Derivation Table for 30 CFR part 556 (``Leasing of Sulfur or
Oil and Gas and Bonding Requirements in the Outer Continental
Shelf'')
C. Derivation Table for 30 CFR part 560 (``Outer Continental
Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing'')
III. Section-by-Section Analysis of the Final Rulemaking
A. Part 550--Oil and Gas and Sulfur Operations in the Outer
Continental Shelf
1. Subpart A--General Provisions
2. Subpart D--Leasing Maps and Diagrams
B. Part 556--Leasing of Sulfur or Oil and Gas and Bonding
Requirements in the Outer Continental Shelf
1. The Table of Contents for Part 556
2. Subpart A--General Provisions
3. Subpart B--Oil and Gas Five Year Leasing Program
4. Subpart C--Planning and Holding a Lease Sale
5. Subpart D--Qualifications
6. Subpart E--Issuance of a Lease
7. Subpart F--Lease Term and Obligations
8. Commentary on Subparts G & H--Transferring Interests in a
Lease
9. Subpart G--Transferring All or Part of a Record Title
Interest in a Lease
10. Subpart H--Transferring All or Part of the Operating Rights
in a Lease
11. Subpart I--Bonding or Other Financial Assurance
12. Subpart J--Bonus or Royalty Credits for Exchange of Certain
Leases
13. Subpart K--Ending a Lease
14. Subpart L--Leases Maintained Under Section 6 of OCSLA
15. Subpart M--Environmental Studies
C. Part 559--Mineral Leasing: Definitions
D. Part 560--Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing
1. Subpart A--General Provisions
2. Subpart B--Bidding Systems
3. Subpart C--Operating Allowances
4. Subpart D--Joint Bidding
5. Subpart E--Electronic Filings
IV. Table of Comments and Responses
A. General Comments
B. Section-Specific Comments
V. Legal and Regulatory Analyses
A. Statutes and Executive Orders
1. Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review (Executive Order
(E.O. 13563)
2. Regulatory Planning and Review (E.O. 12866)
3. Regulatory Flexibility Act
4. Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA)
5. Comments from Small Businesses
6. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
7. Takings Implication Assessment (E.O. 12630)
8. Federalism (E.O. 13132)
9. Civil Justice Reform (E.O. 12988)
10. Consultation with Indian Tribal Governments (E.O. 13175)
11. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
12. Other Changes in the Information Collection (IC) Between the
Proposed and Final Rules
13. Burden Breakdown Table
14. National Environmental Policy Act of 1969
15. Data Quality Act
16. Effects on the Energy Supply (E.O. 13211)
List of Subjects
I. Executive Summary
A. Background
On May 27, 2009, the Minerals Management Service (MMS) published a
proposed rule (Notice of Proposed Rulemaking or NPRM) in the Federal
Register entitled, ``Leasing of Sulphur or Oil and Gas and Bonding
Requirements in the Outer Continental Shelf'' (74 FR 25177, May 27,
2009). Since that time, the MMS was renamed the Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management, Regulation, and Enforcement (BOEMRE) and then was
reorganized and divided into three separate bureaus--the Bureau of
Ocean Energy Management (BOEM), the Bureau of Safety and Environmental
Enforcement (BSEE) and the Office of Natural Resources Revenue (ONRR).
The leasing program is under the authority of BOEM, whose regulations
reside in 30 CFR Chapter V.
1. Why We Need to Publish a Rule
This final rule reorganizes and reorders the parts of the BOEM
regulations concerning leasing, adds new sections to standardize or
clarify practices in all three BOEM OCS regional offices, and
eliminates redundant or otherwise unnecessary text. The final rule also
includes regulatory provisions which, during the division of BOEMRE,
were inadvertently assigned to an agency other than BOEM, but have
proven necessary for BOEM's use and are therefore added back into these
regulations. (In this Preamble, the BOEMRE regulations, as they existed
before BOEMRE was divided into BOEM, BSEE, and ONRR, are sometimes
referred to as the ``pre-split regulations.'')
Additionally, this final rule also updates and clarifies processes
required by legislation enacted since BOEM's regulations were last
amended, such as those required by the Federal Oil and Gas Royalty
Simplification and Fairness Act of 1996, which amended FOGRMA, or by
more recently promulgated regulations, such as the Department of the
Interior's (Department or DOI) non-procurement debarment rules. The
final rule also includes changes that will assist BOEM in meeting its
stewardship responsibilities and performing its role as a responsible
regulator.
2. What is covered by the rule?
This final rule revises sections of the regulations at 30 CFR parts
550, ``Oil and Gas and Sulfur Operations in the Outer Continental
Shelf,'' 556, ``Leasing
[[Page 18113]]
of Sulfur or Oil and Gas in the Outer Continental Shelf,'' 559,
``Mineral Leasing: Definitions,'' and 560, ``Outer Continental Shelf
Oil and Gas Leasing.''
The changes made in part 550, ``Oil and Gas and Sulfur Operations
in the Outer Continental Shelf'' and those made in part 560, ``Outer
Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing,'' relate primarily to
simplifying and clarifying the regulatory language, as well as creating
new, and re-establishing pre-split, regulations that had been
inadvertently deleted when the former BOEMRE was divided into three new
agencies. For example, in October 2010 (as part of the direct final
rule RIN 1010-AD70, Reorganization of Title 30, Code of Federal
Regulations (75 FR 61051, October 4, 2010)), during the first split of
the BOEMRE regulations, a regulation related to operating allowances
was inadvertently deleted from the BOEM regulations and included only
in the ONRR regulations. In order for ONRR's operating allowance
regulations to be effective, however, they must have counterpart
provisions in the BOEM regulations. The operating allowance regulation
is re-established in BOEM's regulations by this final rule.
Most of the final rule consists of revisions to part 556. Part 556
includes regulations pertaining to: (1) The oil and gas leasing
program; (2) preparing for a lease sale; (3) issuing, maintaining,
transferring, and terminating a lease; and (4) bonding requirements. As
explained in greater detail below, the final rule addresses the first
three components, but the fourth component, bonding, is not addressed
in this final rule, except to make minor editorial and conforming
changes. Bonding and financial assurance will be further addressed in
future rulemakings.
B. Abbreviations of Terms and Acronyms
The following are abbreviations of terms used in the preamble:
API American Petroleum Institute
ASTM American Society for Testing and Materials
BAST Best Available and Safest Technology
BOEM Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
BOEMRE Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation, and
Enforcement
BSEE Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CID Conservation Information Document
CPA Central Planning Area of the GOM
CZMA Coastal Zone Management Act
DOI Department of the Interior
DOCD Development Operations Coordination Document
DOO Designation of Operator
DPP Development and Production Plan
EIA Environmental Impact Analysis
EO Executive Order
EP Exploration Plan
EPA Eastern Planning Area of the GOM
EPAct Energy Policy Act of 2005
ESIGN Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act of
2000
FNOS Final Notice of Sale
FOGRMA Federal Oil and Gas Royalty Management Act of 1982
FOGRSFA Federal Oil and Gas Royalty Simplification and Fairness Act
of 1996
FR Federal Register
G&G Geological and Geophysical
GDIS Geophysical Data and Information Statement
GOM Gulf of Mexico
GOMESA Gulf of Mexico Energy Security Act of 2006
GPEA Government Paperwork Elimination Act of 1998
H2S Hydrogen sulfide
IC Information Collection
IOAA Independent Offices Appropriations Act of 1952
LLC Limited Liability Company
MBB Mapping and Boundary Branch
MMS Minerals Management Service
MSL Mean Sea Level
NAD North American Datum
NAICS North American Industry Classification System
NEPA National Environmental Policy Act of 1969
NGPA Natural Gas Processors Association
NOAA National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
NPR Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
NTL Notice to Lessees
OCS Outer Continental Shelf
OCSLA Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act
OMB Office of Management and Budget
ONRR Office of Natural Resources Revenue
OPD Official Protraction Diagram
PDP Proved Developed Producing (reserves)
PNOS Proposed Notice of Sale
PRA Paperwork Reduction Act
PSI Pounds Per Square inch
RFA Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980
ROW Right of Way
RSV Royalty Suspension Volume
RUE Right of Use and Easement
SBA Small Business Administration
SBREFA Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996
SEC Securities and Exchange Commission
SLA Submerged Lands Act of 1953
US United States
U.S.C. United States Code
USCG U.S. Coast Guard
USEPA U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
UTM Universal Transverse Mercator Coordinate System
WPA Western Planning Area of the GOM
C. Final Rule as Adopted and Response to Comments
On May 27, 2009, BOEM published a proposed rule entitled, ``Leasing
of Sulphur or Oil and Gas and Bonding Requirements in the Outer
Continental Shelf'' (74 FR 25177). In the six years since the proposed
regulation was published, several developments have brought about the
need for the final rule to appear different from the proposed
rulemaking. The organization of the final rule is structured
differently from that of the proposed rule to make the regulations
easier for the public to read and follow. The major reasons for the
other differences between the proposed rule and the final rule are
explained below:
1. Availability of Public Comments
BOEM received a total of eight comments from the American Petroleum
Institute (API), Shell Oil Company, Chevron Oil Company, Anglo Suisse,
Dynamic Offshore Resources, RLI Insurance Company, and two citizens,
who commented to show their support of OCS leasing and the oil and gas
program. Each comment was considered and some resulted in changes to
the proposed rule. BOEM's responses are addressed in this Preamble.
All comments can be viewed at www.BOEM.gov under the Regulations
section and at www.regulations.gov.
2. Effects of the Reorganization of MMS Into Three Distinct Agencies
Background
On May 19, 2010, the Secretary signed Secretarial Order 3299
directing the split of MMS into three new bureaus, BOEM, BSEE, and
ONRR. This split was accomplished in two phases. In 2010 MMS was split
into two agencies, ONRR and BOEMRE. In 2011 BOEMRE was itself split
into two agencies, BOEM and BSEE.
Prior to October 4, 2010, the regulations of BOEM, BSEE, and ONRR
were contained in one set of regulations (``pre-split'' regulations),
which were issued by the MMS. On October 4, 2010, MMS published a final
rule in the Federal Register (75 FR 61051), moving its regulations
related to its royalty and revenue functions from MMS to ONRR and
creating a new chapter XII. The name of the remaining organization was
changed from the MMS to BOEMRE. On October 18, 2011, DOI published a
final rule (76 FR 64432) splitting BOEMRE regulations into separate
BOEM and BSEE chapters. Pursuant to that split, BOEM is responsible for
the resource evaluation, planning, and leasing functions for offshore
oil and gas. BSEE is primarily responsible for the safety and
environmental enforcement of offshore oil and gas development
activities. BOEM's regulations were recodifed into 30 CFR Chapter V.
BSEE's regulations remained in 30 CFR Chapter II.
[[Page 18114]]
Assignment and Retention of Regulations
As time has passed, it has come to light that some regulations were
incorrectly assigned during the split. For example, some of the
regulatory provisions assigned to BSEE or ONRR have proven necessary
for BOEM. Regulatory provisions that fall into this category have been
included in the final rulemaking, as explained in this Preamble.
Because of the reorganization of the former MMS, some provisions of the
proposed rule are now outside the scope of BOEM's responsibilities and
are not included in this final rule.
In addition, there are some regulatory provisions that appear in
this final rulemaking that did not appear in the proposed rule. These
regulatory provisions are not ``substantively new,'' however. They
appeared in the former MMS regulations. The Final Rule also differs
from the Proposed Rule in that the Final Rule retains certain
provisions that the Proposed Rule suggested deleting. Instances of
retention of prior sections of the regulations are also discussed in
this Preamble.
Administrative Changes
There are some wholly administrative changes from the proposed rule
that appear in the final rule. These changes were also primarily
necessitated by the division of MMS into three separate agencies. For
example, the BOEM regulations are now found in a different chapter of
Title 30 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) than the chapter in
which the BOEMRE regulations were found. Before the BOEMRE regulations
were divided into two sets of independent agency regulations, they were
all contained in Chapter II of Title 30 of the CFR, within parts 203
through 291. This means that the first digit in the section number of
each individual provision was a ``2.'' After the division of the
regulations, all BSEE regulations remained in Chapter II, and thus
retained the first digit ``2.'' And, because the proposed rule was
published before the agency split, its provisions also begin with a
``2.'' After the division, however, the BOEM regulations were moved
into Chapter V. Thus, although the proposed rule provisions each began
with a ``2,'' all final BOEM rule provisions begin with a ``5.'' Also,
in the final rule, internal citations to section numbers were changed
to maintain correct and consistent cross-references, and sections were
re-numbered to maintain internal numerical order. Whenever appropriate,
references to ``MMS'' from the proposed rule have been changed to
``BOEM'' in the final rule. These administrative changes have no effect
on the substance of the regulations, and therefore do not require
notice and comment, but they do make the regulations clearer, more
consistent, and easier to use.
Removed Provisions
The proposed rule would have added a new ``expenses . . . with
supporting documentation'' reporting requirement to the then-BOEMRE,
now-BSEE regulatory sections 250.1717, 250.1729, and 250.1743. Section
250.1717 addresses the information that must be submitted after well
plugging and abandonment. Section 250.1729 addresses the information
that must be submitted after removal of a platform or other facility,
and section 250.1743 addresses the information that must be submitted
after site clearance. The proposed rule added new requirements
concerning the submittal of information on the costs of
decommissioning.
When BOEMRE was divided into two agencies, the operational aspects
of decommissioning were placed within BSEE's rather than BOEM's
purview. In the final rulemaking, therefore, BOEM decided to remove the
three provisions proposing revisions to sections 250.1717, 250.1729,
and 250.1743, as BSEE finalized the rule addressing the submittal of
information on the costs of decommissioning in their rule entitled
``Oil and Gas and Sulphur Operations in the Outer Continental Shelf;
Decommissioning Costs,'' RIN 1014-AA24, published in the Federal
Register on December 4, 2015.
The other proposed provision that was removed from the final rule
was proposed rule section 256.621, concerning the submission of reports
about lease term pipelines when requesting BOEM's approval of a lease
assignment. As with decommissioning, BSEE has been tasked with the
administration of the operational aspects of pipelines on the OCS;
therefore, the submission of reports on lease term pipelines is within
BSEE's jurisdiction. BSEE has proposed to address the submission of
reports concerning lease term pipelines in a rule entitled ``Pipelines
and Pipeline Right-of-Way Safety,'' RIN 1014-AA27.
3. Definitions
Several definitions have been added in the final rulemaking that
did not appear in the proposed rulemaking to clarify the meaning of
terms used in the regulations. In each case, the term either was
defined in the BOEMRE regulations or its definition is apparent from
the context of the prior regulatory language.
4. Delayed Provisions
The proposed rule included a subpart E, ``Financial Accountability
and Risk Management,'' which contained provisions addressing
requirements for general and additional bonding, surety, and third-
party indemnity. After the proposed rule was published, BOEM identified
possible conflicts between the proposed rule's use/definitions of
certain terms and their use/definitions within BOEM's oil spill
financial responsibility regulations (30 CFR part 553). Also, after
publication of the proposed rule, BOEM began a process of reassessing
its bonding and financial assurance policies, leading to a decision to
publish this final rule with the text of existing subpart I (Bonding),
with only limited conforming changes. This decision will enable BOEM
and the regulated public to continue to rely on the existing financial
assurance regulations until BOEM is ready to make necessary changes to
its policies and to propose and seek comment on separate new
regulations specific to bonding and financial assurance to implement
these new policies.
5. Other Editorial Improvements
A consistent change that was made in the final rule was to add,
where appropriate, the word ``final'' before the phrase ``notice of
sale.'' Another change is eliminating any references to ``Associate
Director,'' since there are no longer any Associate Directors in BOEM.
The word ``sulphur'' has been replaced with a more contemporary
spelling of ``sulfur.'' All cross-references and section numbers within
this final rule have been updated.
II. Derivation Tables
The following derivation tables describe the source(s) of the
regulations in the final rule relative to those in the prior
regulations and/or those in the proposed rule. These tables are
intended only to provide cross-references to the other materials. The
section-by-section analysis that follows these derivation tables
provides a detailed explanation of the changes made with this final
rule.
Most sections of the final rule reflect content from the proposed
rule, however, in some cases, the organization of the regulations and
the final section numbers have changed since the rule was proposed. The
derivation tables compare the location of the various rule sections in
the final rule to the prior section numbers in the prior regulations
that have been modified and the corresponding section numbers from the
proposed rule, if appropriate.
[[Page 18115]]
A. Derivation Table for 30 CFR part 550--Oil and Gas and Sulfur
Operations in the Outer Continental Shelf
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Prior regulation Corresponding
that the final section number
Final rule section rule would modify from the proposal
for replace (if any)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart A--General Provisions
PERFORMANCE STANDARDS:
550.120--This section None.............. This section was
provides that BOEM will in the
regulate activities under a regulations
lease, right-of-use and before the split
easement, or right-of-way, of MMS into three
to promote the orderly different
exploration, development, agencies and has
and production of mineral been reinserted
resources, while preventing for consistency.
waste, protecting the
environment and ensuring
cooperation with other
government agencies.
550.121--This section None.............. This section was
provides that BOEM may in the
require additional measures regulations
to ensure the use of Best before the split
Available and Safest of MMS into three
Technology (BAST) as different
identified by BSEE to avoid agencies and has
the failure of equipment been reinserted
that would have a for consistency.
significant effect on
health, safety, property or
the environment when
economically feasible.
INFORMATION AND REPORTING
REQUIREMENTS:
550.197(b)--This subsection 550.197(b)........ Section
provides that BOEM will 256.100(b).
generally release
geological data and
analyzed geological
information two years after
the required submittal date
for such information or 60
days after a lease sale.
550.197(c)--This subsection 550.197(c)........ Section
provides that BOEM will 256.100(b).
generally release
geological data and
analyzed geological
information to individuals
with a need to know that
agree to maintain the
confidentiality of the
relevant information.
550.197(d)--This section None.............. New provision
provides, in accordance required to
with section 26 of OCSLA, conform the
that no proprietary regulations to
information received by the Outer
BOEM will be transmitted to Continental Shelf
any affected State unless Lands Act (OCSLA)
the lessee, or the (43 U.S.C.
permittee and all persons 1352(c)).
to whom such permittee has
sold such information under
promise of confidentiality,
agree to such transmittal.
Subpart D--Leasing Maps and .................. New subpart.
Diagrams
550.400--This section 556.8............. Section
provides that any area of 256.202(a).
the OCS, which has been
appropriately platted, may
be leased for any mineral
not included in an existing
lease issued under the Act
or meeting the requirements
of subsection (a) of
section 6 of the Act.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Derivation Table for 30 CFR Part 556--Leasing of Sulfur or Oil and
Gas and Bonding Requirements in the Outer Continental Shelf
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Prior regulation Corresponding
that the final section number
Final rule section rule would modify from the proposal
or replace (if any)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart A--General Provisions
556.100--This section states 556.2............. None.
that management of Outer
Continental Shelf (OCS)
resources is to be
conducted in accordance
with the findings,
purposes, and policy
directions provided by the
Outer Continental Shelf
Lands Act.
556.101--This section sets 556.1............. Section 256.102.
forth the purpose of the
regulations in this part.
556.102--This section lists 556.4............. Undesignated
the statutory authorities authority
for this part. section.
556.103--This section lists 556.7............. None.
related regulations.
556.104--This section 556.0, 556.10..... Section 256.100.
provides the legal basis
for BOEM's collection of
information in connection
with the administration of
its OCS oil, gas and sulfur
leasing program and
describes how BOEM will
handle and maintain
proprietary information.
556.104(c)--This subsection 556.10(a)......... Section
describes BOEM's treatment 256.100(b).
of proprietary information
received in response to a
Call for Information and
Nominations.
556.105--This section 556.5, 556.40..... Section 256.103.
provides definitions for
key terms used throughout
this part of the
regulations.
556.106--This section 556.63............ Section 256.104.
identifies administrative
fees that BOEM requires for
various services.
[[Page 18116]]
556.107--This section sets 556.46, 556.54, None.
forth an alternative 556.95.
procedure, to avoid the use
of a corporate seal, for
those electronic document
submissions for which a
corporate seal is otherwise
required by these
regulations.
Subpart B--Oil and Gas Five-Year
Leasing Program
556.200--This section None.............. Section 256.200.
reiterates those key
provisions of OCSLA that
require the Secretary to
prepare an oil and gas
leasing program that
consists of a five-year
schedule of proposed lease
sales.
556.201--This section None.............. New provision
reiterates the OCSLA based on 43
requirement that BOEM U.S.C.
consider multiple uses of 1344(a)(2)(D).
the OCS in its development
of the Five-Year oil and
gas leasing program.
556.202--This section sets 556.16............ Section 256.202.
forth the steps BOEM takes
in initiating the Five-Year
program.
556.203--This section 556.17(a)......... Section 256.203.
provides that BOEM will
invite comments from
governors on a draft
proposed program at least
60-days before it publishes
a proposed Five-Year
program.
556.204--This section states 556.17(b)......... Section 256.204.
the procedures to be
followed to obtain inter-
governmental and citizens'
comments on the proposed
Five-Year program.
556.205--This section 556.17(c)......... Section 256.205.
provides that the Secretary
must provide a copy of the
proposed Five-Year Program,
or any significant revision
thereto, to Congress and
the President at least 60-
days before approving it.
Subpart C--Planning and Holding
a Lease Sale
556.300--This section 556.22............ None.
provides that BOEM will
prepare a report describing
the general geology and
potential mineral resources
of the area under
consideration for a sale.
556.301--This section 556.23............ Section 256.300.
outlines the process BOEM
uses to collect information
to inform its determination
as to which areas should be
made available for leasing.
556.302--This section 556.26, 556.10.... Section 256.301.
explains the process used
to arrive at the Area ID.
556.303--This section sets 556.10, 556.25.... Section 256.302.
forth the information that
BOEM will provide to a
State when an area proposed
for leasing lies within
three nautical miles of the
seaward boundary of that
State.
556.304--This section 556.29............ Section 256.303.
describes the process
utilized to prepare a
proposed notice of sale.
556.305--This section 556.29, 556.31.... Section 256.304.
outlines the process by
which BOEM coordinates with
affected States following
the proposed notice of sale.
556.306--This section 556.25(b)-(d)..... None. Added for
provides a process for consistency with
resolving issues or OCSLA section
disputes that may arise 8(g)(3), as
between a State and the amended in 1986
Federal government when a (43 U.S.C. 1337
hydrocarbon-bearing area (8)(g)(3)).
underlies both the Federal
OCS and State submerged
lands.
556.307--This section 556.31............ Section 256.305.
provides a description of
the process that BOEM will
use to evaluate comments
and recommendations of
governors and local
governments.
556.308--This section sets 556.28, 556.32.... Section 256.306.
forth BOEM's procedures for
conducting a lease sale.
556.309--This section sets 556.12............ Section 256.206.
forth BOEM's procedures for
conducting a Supplemental
Sale.
Subpart D--Qualifications
QUALIFICATONS:
556.400--This section 556.35............ Section 256.400.
provides that, in order to
bid on, own, hold, or
operate a lease on the OCS,
bidders, record title
holders, and operating
rights owners must first
obtain a qualification
number from BOEM.
556.401--This section 556.35, 556.46.... Section 256.400.
outlines BOEM's
requirements for a
prospective lessee to
become a qualified bidder.
556.402--This section 556.35............ Section 256.401.
describes the types of
evidence that BOEM will
require in order to qualify
a person to hold leases on
the OCS.
556.403--This section 556.35(c), Section 256.402.
describes the circumstances 556.46(h).
under which a person may be
excluded or disqualified
from holding a lease on the
OCS.
556.404--This section None.............. Section 256.403.
details how to comply with
the Department's non-
procurement debarment rules.
556.405--This section 585.109........... Section 256.404.
provides that lessees must
notify BOEM of any merger,
name change, or change of
business form as soon as
practicable, but in no case
later than one year after
the change or action.
[[Page 18117]]
Subpart E--Issuance of a Lease
HOW TO BID:
556.500--This section sets 556.46(a)-(b)..... Section 256.410.
forth the procedures for
submitting a bid at a lease
sale.
556.501--This section 551.11, 551.12, None.
explains what geological 580.51.
and geophysical information
must be submitted with a
bid at a lease sale.
RESTRICTIONS ON JOINT BIDDING:
556.511--This section 556.41............ Section 256.411.
prohibits joint bidding by
major oil and gas producers
under certain circumstances.
556.512--This section 556.44............ Section 256.402.
provides the circumstances
under which a bid for an
oil and gas lease will be
disqualified and/or
rejected.
556.513--This section 556.40............ Section 256.412.
explains the circumstances
under which a lessee must
prepare and send to BOEM a
statement describing its
oil and gas production and
what the statement is to
contain.
556.514--This section 556.40, 556.43.... Section 256.413.
details what production
must be counted when
determining whether a
company should be
considered a ``restricted
bidder''.
556.515--This section 556.41(d)......... Section 256.414.
provides the circumstances
under which a person may be
exempted from joint bidding
restrictions.
HOW DOES BOEM ACT ON BIDS:
556.516--This section 556.47............ Section 256.416.
outlines the procedures
BOEM will follow when
reviewing bids received for
leases on the OCS and when
handling tie bids.
556.517--This section 556.47(e)(1)-(e)(3 Section 256.417.
describes the ).
reconsideration procedures
that apply in the event
that BOEM rejects a high
bid.
AWARDING THE LEASE:
556.520--This section 556.47............ Section 256.420.
describes the steps
involved in the lease award
process.
556.521--This section 556.50............ Section 256.421.
explains when a lease
becomes effective.
556.522--This section 556.49............ Section
provides that the terms and 256.306(a)(2).
conditions of the lease
will be stated in the final
notice of sale, as well as
in the lease instrument
itself.
Subpart F--Lease Term and
Obligations
LENGTH OF LEASE:
556.600--This section sets 556.37(a)-(b)..... Section 256.600.
forth the primary term of
an oil and gas lease.
556.601--This section sets 556.37(a)-(b), Section 256.601.
forth the methods by which 556.70, 556.71,
a lessee many maintain its 556.72.
oil and gas lease beyond
the primary term.
556.602--This section sets 556.37(c)......... Section 256.602.
forth the primary term of a
sulfur lease.
556.603--This section sets 556.37(c)......... Section 256.603.
forth the methods by which
a lessee many maintain its
sulfur lease beyond the
primary term.
LEASE OBLIGATIONS:
556.604--This section 550.146, 556.62, Sections 256.605
outlines the rights and 556.64. and 256.612.
obligations of a record
title holder of an OCS
lease.
556.605--This section 550.146, 556.62, Sections 256.606
outlines the rights and 556.64. and 256.612.
obligations of an operating
rights owner of an OCS
lease.
HELIUM:
556.606--This section 556.11............ Section 256.630.
provides that BOEM reserves
the ownership of, and the
right to extract, helium
from all gas produced from
an OCS lease, and describes
what BOEM will do if it
requests you to deliver
helium from operations
associated with a lease.
Subpart G--Transferring All or
Part of the Record Title
Interest in a Lease
556.700--This section 556.62, 556.64.... Sections 256.610,
describes how a company may 256.611, and
apply for approval to 256.612.
assign its whole, or a
partial, record title
interest in its lease, or
in any aliquot(s) thereof,
or to sublease operating
rights.
556.701--This section 556.62(a), 556.65. Section 256.611.
describes the process for
obtaining BOEM approval of
an assignment of a record
title or operating rights
interest in an OCS lease.
556.702--This section 556.68............ Section
describes when an 256.613(a)(2).
assignment will result in a
segregated (i.e., new)
lease.
556.703--This section 556.68............ Section
addresses the effects of a 256.613(a)(2).
lease segregation.
556.704--This section sets 556.62, 556.64.... Section 256.611.
forth the circumstances
under which BOEM would
disapprove an assignment or
sublease.
556.705--This section 556.64(e)-(g)..... Section 256.614.
outlines the procedures to
follow to transfer an
interest in an OCS lease
from a deceased natural
person.
556.706--This section None.............. Section 256.615.
outlines the process for
transferring record title
interests in more than one
lease to different parties.
[[Page 18118]]
556.707--This section 556.67............ Section 256.615.
outlines the process for
transferring different
types of interests in a
lease to different parties.
556.708--This section 556.64(a)(8), Section 256.615.
outlines the process for 556.67.
transferring record title
interests in more than one
lease to the same party.
556.709--This section 556.64............ Section 256.616.
outlines the process for
transferring the record
title interest in one lease
to more than one party.
556.710 -This section sets 556.64............ Section 256.616.
forth the effect of an
assignment of record title
on an assignor's liability
under the lease.
556.711--This section 556.64............ Section 256.616.
provides that a record
title holder who subleases
operating rights remains
liable for later accruing
obligations of the lease,
but is only secondarily
liable for monetary
obligations accruing
thereafter.
556.712--This section 556.62(c)......... Section 256.617.
describes the effective
legal date of the transfer
of a record title interest
in a lease.
556.713--This section sets 556.62(e)......... Section 256.618.
forth the effect of an
assignment of record title
on an assignee's liability
under the lease.
556.714--This section 556.64(i)......... Section 256.619.
describes procedures to be
used in assignments between
those on the restricted
joint bidders list.
556.715--This section 556.64(a)(7)...... Section 256.620.
provides that a lessee may
create, transfer, or assign
an economic interest in a
lease without BOEM
approval, but that such
transferor must send BOEM a
copy of each instrument
creating or transferring
such a lease interest
within 90 days after the
last party executes the
transfer instrument.
556.716--This section 550.143........... Section 256.611.
provides the circumstances
under which the transfer of
a record title interest
triggers the need to file a
new designation of operator
form with BOEM.
Subpart H--Transferring All or
Part of the Operating Rights in
a Lease
556.800--This section 556.62, 556.64.... Section 256.612.
provides that an operating
rights owner may assign all
or part of its operating
rights interests, subject
to BOEM approval.
556.801--This section 550.143, 556.64... Section 256.613.
describes the process by
which an assignor of
operating rights must
obtain approval of such an
assignment.
556.802--This section sets 556.62............ Section 256.611.
forth the circumstances
under which BOEM may
disapprove an assignment of
operating rights.
556.803--This section 556.67............ Section 256.615.
addresses the assignment of
operating rights interests
in more than one lease to
different parties.
556.804--This section 556.64(a)(8)...... Section 256.615.
addresses the assignment of
operating rights interests
in one lease to more than
one party.
556.805--This section sets 556.62(d)......... Section 256.616.
forth the effect of an
assignment of operating
rights on an assignor's
liability under the lease.
556.806--This section 556.62(c)......... Section 256.617.
describes the effective
legal date of the transfer
of an operating rights
interest in a lease.
556.807--This section sets 556.62, 556.64.... Section 256.618.
forth the effect of an
assignment of operating
rights on an assignee's
liability under the lease.
556.808--This section 556.64(a)(7)...... Section 256.620.
provides that an operating
rights owner may create,
transfer, or assign
economic interests without
BOEM approval, but that for
record keeping purposes,
the operating rights owner
must send BOEM a copy of
each instrument creating or
transferring such interests
within 90 days after the
last party executes the
transfer instrument.
556.809..................... Reserved.......... None.
556.810--This section 550.143, 556.62... Section 256.611.
provides the circumstances
under which the transfer of
an operating rights
interest triggers the need
to file a new designation
of operator form with BOEM.
Subpart I--Bonding or Other
Financial Assurance
556.900--This section sets 556.52............ Sections 256.500,
forth general bonding/ 256.502, 256.510,
financial assurance and 256.521.
requirements for OCS leases.
556.901--This section sets 556.53............ Sections 256. 501
forth additional bonding/ and 256.510.
financial assurance
requirements for OCS leases.
556.902--This section sets 556.54............ Sections 256.502
forth the requirements and 256.503.
which a bond or other
security must meet.
556.903--This section sets 556.55............ Section 256.520.
forth what must be done if
a bond lapses.
556.904--This section sets 556.56............ Section 256.512.
forth the procedures for
establishing lease
abandonment accounts as a
method of financial
assurance.
556.905--This section sets 556.57............ Section 256.511.
forth the procedures for
using a third-party
guarantee as a method of
financial assurance.
556.906--This section sets 556.58............ Section 256.522
forth the procedures for and 256.523.
terminating the period of
liability of, and
cancelling, a bond.
[[Page 18119]]
556.907--This section sets 556.59............ Sections 256.524,
forth the procedures for 256.525, and
forfeiting a bond or other 256.526.
security.
Subpart J--Bonus or Royalty
Credits for Exchange of Certain
Leases
556.1000--This section sets 556.90-556.95..... Sections 256.900-
forth the deadline for 256.905.
applying for certain bonus
or royalty credits which
had been available under
the Gulf of Mexico Energy
Security Act of 2006
(GOMESA) (43 U.S.C. 1331
note).
Subpart K--Ending a Lease
556.1100--This section 556.37(b)-(c)..... Section 256.700.
provides the circumstances
under which a lease will
expire at the end of its
primary term.
556.1101--This section sets 556.76............ Section 256.701.
forth the procedures to
follow for relinquishment
of a lease.
556.1102--This section 556.77............ Section 256.702.
provides the circumstances
under which BOEM may cancel
or void a producing or a
non-producing OCS lease.
Subpart L--Leases Maintained
Under Section 6 of OCSLA
556.1200--This section 556.79............ None.
explains the relationship
between BOEM's regulations
and leases maintained under
section 6 of OCSLA.
556.1201--This section 556.80............ None.
states that the existence
of a lease for other
minerals under section 6 of
OCSLA in an area does not
preclude the issuance of
other leases in the same
area.
Subpart M--Environmental Studies
556.1300--This section 556.82............ None.
provides that BOEM will
conduct studies of any area
or region included in any
oil and gas lease sale, as
needed, to assess and
manage impacts on the
human, marine and coastal
environments which may be
affected by OCS oil and gas
or other mineral activities
in such area or region.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Derivation Table for 30 CFR Part 560--Outer Continental Shelf Oil and
Gas Leasing
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Prior regulation Corresponding
that the final section number
Final rule section rule would modify from the proposal
or replace (if any)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart A--General Provisions
560.100--This section Undesignated Undesignated
describes the authorities authority section. authority
applicable to this part. section.
560.101--This section 560.1............. None.
describes the purpose of
this part.
560.102--This section sets 559.001--559.002,5 None.
forth the definitions 60.2.
applicable to this part.
560.103--This section 560.3............. None.
describes BOEM's
information collection
authority.
Subpart B--Bidding Systems
GENERAL PROVISIONS:
560.200--This section 560.101........... None.
describes the purpose of
this subpart.
560.201--This section sets 560.102........... None.
forth the definitions
applicable to this subpart.
560.202--This section 560.110........... None.
describes the bidding
systems that BOEM may
utilize.
560.203--This section 560.111........... None.
describes the terms and
conditions that would
apply, depending on the
bidding systems that BOEM
utilizes.
ELIGIBLE LEASES:
560.210--This section 560.112........... None.
describes how royalty
suspension volumes could
apply to a lease.
560.211--This section 560.113........... None.
describes when a lease may
qualify for royalty
suspensions.
560.212--This section 560.114........... None.
describes how BOEM would
assign royalty suspension
volumes for eligible leases.
560.213--This section 560.115........... None.
specifies how long royalty
suspension volumes may be
effective to eligible
leases.
560.214--This section 560.116........... None.
describes how a lessee
should measure the natural
gas production on an
eligible lease, subject to
the royalty suspension
volume.
ROYALTY SUSPENSION LEASES:
560.220--This section 560.120........... None.
describes how royalty
suspensions apply to leases
issued in a sale held after
November 2000.
560.221--This section 560.121........... None.
describes when a lease
issued in a sale held after
November 2000 is entitled
to a royalty suspension.
[[Page 18120]]
560.222--This section 560.122........... None.
describes how long a
royalty suspension volume
would be effective for a
lease issued in a sale held
after November 2000.
560.223--This section 560.123........... None.
describes how to measure
natural gas production for
a lease subject to royalty
suspension volumes issued
in a sale held after
November 2000.
560.224--This section 560.124........... None.
describes how a royalty
suspension would apply if
BOEM assigns a lease issued
in a sale held after
November 2000 to a field
that has a lease issued
before the enactment of the
OCS Deep Water Royalty
Relief Act. (43 U.S.C.
1337(3)).
BIDDING SYSTEM SELECTION
CRITERIA:
560.230--This section 560.130........... None.
describes what criteria
BOEM uses for selecting
bidding systems and bidding
system components.
Subpart C--Operating Allowances
560.300--This section 206.120........... This section was
explains that Operating originally part
Allowances can be specified of MMS
in an oil and gas leases. regulations at
section 206.120
and was
inadvertently
omitted from BOEM
regulations
during the split
of the MMS rules
into those of
three different
agencies. 75 FR
65051.
Subpart D--Joint Bidding
Reserved.................... 560.301--560.303.. The proposed rule
amended 30 CFR
part 260 by
removing subpart
D, which
consisted of
prior regulations
sections 560.301--
560.303.
Subpart E--Electronic Filings
560.500--This section None.............. This section is
describes BOEM's electronic derived in part
document and data from proposed
transmissions procedures. rule section
256.503(c).
560.501--This section None.............. None.
describes how BOEM will
maintain the
confidentiality of
electronic documents and
data.
560.502--This section None.............. None.
describes under what
circumstances electronic
document filings will be
considered legally binding.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Section-by-Section Analysis of the Final Rulemaking
A. Part 550--Oil and Gas and Sulfur Operations in the Outer Continental
Shelf
1. Subpart A--General Provisions
Section 550.120. What standards will BOEM use to regulate leases,
rights-of-use and easement, and rights-of-way? This section provides
that BOEM will regulate activities under a lease, right-of-use and
easement, or right-of-way, to promote the orderly exploration,
development, and production of mineral resources, while preventing
waste, protecting the environment and ensuring cooperation with other
government agencies. Final rule section 550.120 did not appear in the
proposed rule, but it was in the pre-split regulations, at 30 CFR
250.106. When BOEMRE was split into two agencies, this regulation was
assigned to BSEE, and it therefore still appears at 30 CFR 250.106. As
time has passed, however, BOEM has found itself hampered in properly
evaluating and approving certain types of plans (such as exploration
plans (EPs), development and production plans (DPPs), or development
operations coordination documents (DOCDs)) without this provision in
its regulations. This section has therefore been put into the final
rule with minor word changes.
Section 550.121. What must I do to protect health, safety,
property, and the environment? This section provides that, when
economically feasible, BOEM may require additional measures to ensure
the use of Best Available and Safest Technology (BAST) as identified by
BSEE, to avoid the failure of equipment that would have a significant
effect on safety, health, or the environment. Final rule section
550.121 did not appear in the proposed rule, but it was in the pre-
split regulations, at 30 CFR 250.107 and tracks section 21(b) of OCSLA.
When BOEMRE was split into two agencies, this regulation was assigned
to BSEE, and it therefore still appears at 30 CFR 250.107. As time has
passed, however, BOEM has found itself hampered in properly evaluating
and approving certain types of plans (e.g., EPs) without this provision
in the BOEM regulations. It has therefore been put into the final rule
with some changes necessary to conform the provision to the scope of
BOEM's enforcement authority.
Section 550.197(b)(5). Data and information to be made available to
the public or for limited inspection. This section provides that BOEM
will generally release geological data and analyzed geological
information two years after the required submittal date for such
information or 60 days after a lease sale. This final rule provision
did not appear in the proposed rule, but did appear in the pre-split
regulations at section 250.197(b)(5) (now BOEM regulation
550.197(b)(5)). However, the prior section, 550.197(b)(5), states
``[i]f the primary term specified in the lease is extended under the
heading of `Suspensions' under this subpart, the extension applies to
this provision.'' Since the agency split, the determination whether to
grant a suspension is made by BSEE. Because BOEM does not make these
determinations, ``suspensions'' are no longer addressed in this
subpart. Accordingly, the text in this final rulemaking changes the
statement to say: ``[i]f the primary term specified in the lease is
extended, the extension applies to this provision,'' removing the
[[Page 18121]]
reference to ``suspensions'' and to ``this subpart'' while retaining
the meaning of the earlier provision.
Section 550.197(c). Data and information to be made available to
the public or for limited inspection. This section provides that BOEM
may allow limited data and information inspection, but only by a person
with a direct interest in related BOEM decisions and issues in a
specific geographic area, and who agrees in writing to maintain the
confidentiality of geological and geophysical (G&G) data and
information submitted under this part. Similar to the last-discussed
provision, this section did not appear in the proposed rulemaking, but
it did appear in the pre-split regulations, at 250.197(c) (now BOEM
regulation 550.197(c)). The provision in the final rulemaking changes
``MMS'' to ``BOEM'' and deletes a reference to ``part 203,'' which no
longer exists in the regulations at Title 30. The pre-split regulation
listed several activities done by MMS. Only the part of that list that
is pertinent to BOEM is retained in this final rule section.
Section 550.197(d). Data and information to be made available to
the public or for limited inspection. This section provides, in
accordance with section 26 of OCSLA, that no proprietary information
received by BOEM will be transmitted to any affected State unless the
lessee, or the permittee and all persons to whom such permittee has
sold such information under promise of confidentiality, agree to such
transmittal. The final rule includes this provision, which did not
appear in the proposed rule, because section 26(c) of OCSLA requires a
regulation providing for maintenance of the confidentiality of
privileged or proprietary information received by BOEM. (43 U.S.C.
1352(c)).
2. Subpart D--Leasing Maps and Diagrams
This is a new subpart, which is being created as part of this rule.
Section 550.400. Leasing maps and diagrams. This section provides
that any area of the OCS, that has been appropriately platted, may be
leased for any mineral not included in an existing lease issued under
the Act or meeting the requirements of subsection (a) of section 6 of
the Act. This section was in the pre-split regulations at section 256.8
(now BOEM regulation 556.8), but was omitted in part from the proposed
rule. The Derivation Table in the Preamble to the proposed rule said
the language of 256.8 was ``simplified'' and placed in proposed rule
section 256.202. Proposed rule section 256.202, however, is not
sufficient to ensure that the substance of former 256.8 is retained in
the regulations. After reviewing these provisions, BOEM has determined
that the text of former section 256.8 (now 556.8) should be retained.
Hence, it has been included in this final rulemaking as section
550.400, which retains the text from prior section 556.8 without any
changes.
B. Part 556--Leasing of Sulfur or Oil and Gas and Bonding Requirements
in the Outer Continental Shelf
1. The Table of Contents for Part 556
The Table of Contents for part 556 in the final rulemaking reflects
a changed organization and structure from the proposed rule. After
publication of the proposed rule, and after BOEMRE was divided into two
agencies, BOEM analyzed the organization of part 556 and the way in
which information was presented within the sections in the part, and
decided to modify the organization of the part.
The first three subparts in the final rule (subpart A--General
Provisions, subpart B--Oil and Gas Five Year Leasing Program, and
subpart C--Planning and Holding a Lease Sale), contain the same
information as the first three subparts in the proposed rule; the
fourth subpart, Subpart D, however, includes more significant
organizational changes. In the proposed rule, Subpart D--Issuance of a
Lease, contained five subtitles within it: Qualifications, How to Bid,
Restrictions on Joint Bidding, How Does MMS Act on Bids?, and Awarding
the Lease. In the final rule, Subpart D includes only one subtitle:
Qualifications. BOEM made this change in order to separate out the
qualifications provisions and set them out in a clearer, more
sequential manner. Subpart E in the final rule picks up the other four
subtitles from the proposed rule's Subpart D.
In the proposed rule, Subpart E covered bonding and financial
assurance. These topics are found in Subpart I in the final rule, but
as previously noted, no substantive changes have been made to the
provisions in this subpart in the final rule. Instead of adopting the
proposed rule sections on these topics, BOEM will retain the prior
bonding and financial assurance provisions--which, with minor editorial
and conforming revisions, are found at final rule sections 556.900
through 556.907--until such time as a new rulemaking is proposed for
these topics.
In the proposed rule, Subpart F was entitled, ``Maintaining a
Lease,'' and it contained four subtitles: Initial Period of a Lease,
Lease Obligations, Transferring Interest in All or Part of a Lease, and
Helium. In the final rule, Subpart F contains three subtitles: Length
of Lease, Lease Obligations, and Helium. These subtitles cover the same
regulatory issues as Subpart F in the proposed rule, with the exception
of the proposed rule's subtitle concerning transfers of interest. In
the final rule, regulatory provisions concerning the transfer of a
record title interest and those provisions concerning transfers of an
operating rights interest have been split into two different Subparts--
Subpart G and Subpart H, respectively.
The final rule's Subpart H was ``Reserved'' in the proposed rule.
In the final rule, Subpart H includes provisions addressing the
transfer of operating rights interests. As noted above, final rule
Subpart I addresses BOEM's bonding and financial assurance
requirements, which are substantively unchanged from the prior BOEM
regulations. Provisions dealing with bonus or royalty credits in
exchange for certain leases, found in final rule Subpart J, were found
in proposed rule Subpart I. The final rule's Subpart K--Ending a Lease,
was the proposed rule's Subpart G.
Finally, final rule Subpart L--Leases Maintained under Section 6 of
OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1335), and Subpart M--Environmental Studies, did not
appear in the proposed rule. The Derivation Table in the Preamble to
the proposed rule proposed to eliminate both subparts as unnecessary,
but BOEM has re-thought this elimination, and has decided to retain
them. We do so because, in the case of Subpart L, there are extant
``Section 6 Leases,'' and with respect to Subpart M, OCSLA section 20
requires that the Secretary perform environmental studies. (43 U.S.C.
1346).
2. Subpart A--General Provisions
Section 556.100. Statement of Policy. This section states that
management of Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) resources is to be
conducted in accordance with the findings, purposes, and policy
directions provided by OCSLA. The corollary to final rule section
556.100 is prior BOEM regulation 556.2. Both sections set forth a
general policy statement. The proposed rule did not contain a section
setting forth a statement of policy. Although this section is new in
the final rule, it is explanatory in nature and does not impose any new
requirements on the public. Therefore, BOEM is including it in this
final rule without prior public notice and comment.
Section 556.101. Purpose. The proposed rule contained a statement
of
[[Page 18122]]
purpose at section 256.102, ``What does this part cover?'' In the final
rule, however, BOEM decided to retain the statement of purpose section
from the prior regulations, which was found at 556.1.
Section 556.102. Authority. In the final rule, BOEM decided to
include a regulatory section setting forth the authority(ies) for the
issuance of these regulations, which has been updated to reflect the
amendments made to FOGRMA by the Federal Oil and Gas Royalty
Simplification and Fairness Act of 1996, (30 U.S.C. 1701 note). The
proposed rule did not contain a regulatory section with a list of
authorities, but did contain such a list at the end of the proposed
rule's Table of Contents. The list needed to be updated since the
publication of the proposed rule.
Section 556.103. Cross references. The proposed rule did not
contain a section setting out cross-references. Current BOEM
regulations section 556.7 lists pertinent cross-references, and BOEM
decided to include a cross-reference section in the final rule. We did
so because cross-references enable the reading public to more quickly
find related regulations. Cross-references do not impose any new
substantive requirements that require prior public notice and comment.
Section 556.104. Information collection and proprietary
information. This section has two major provisions. The first provides
the legal basis for BOEM's collection of information in connection with
the administration of its OCS oil, gas and sulfur leasing program. The
second provision describes how BOEM will handle and maintain
proprietary information. Final rule section 556.104 contains the same
information as the corresponding proposed rule section, section
256.100. Subsection (b) of the proposed rule provision addressed
``proprietary information,'' but it was unclear whether the subsection
extended to all proprietary information, or only to such information
received in response to a Call for Information and Nominations
(``Call''). To rectify this situation, we drafted the final rule
provision to address proprietary information generally, (section
556.104(b)), and separately, proprietary information received in
response to a Call (section 556.104(c)).
Section 556.105. Definitions. This section provides definitions for
key terms used throughout this part of the regulations. As explained
further below, some of these definitions are retained from the
preexisting regulations; others are identical to definitions included
in the proposed rule; and finally, a few definitions are new to this
final rule, but they define terms already used in the regulations.
The terms and phrases listed in the next paragraph have been
retained from the regulations as they existed before BOEMRE was divided
into two agencies, and therefore, as the regulations were constituted
at the time of publication of the proposed rule.
The list of terms that have been retained from the pre-split
regulations is as follows: Aliquot or Aliquot Part, Authorized officer,
Average daily production, Barrel, Crude oil, Development block,
Economic interest, Initial period, Lease term pipeline, Lessee, Natural
gas, Operating rights, Operator, Outer Continental Shelf (OCS), Outer
Continental Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA), Owned, Planning area, Regional
Director, Regional Supervisor, Security, Single bid, Six-month bidding
period, and Statement of production.
In the following cases, we moved definitions of terms from a
substantive regulation to this definitions section, with no change to
the meaning expressed.
Aliquot part. The definition of the term ``aliquot part'' from
proposed rule section 256.611, which addresses transfers of lease
interests, was moved into this definitions section (556.105).
BOEM. The term ``BOEM'' was retained, from the prior regulations,
in final rule section 556.105.
Development block. The definition of the term ``development block''
was moved from section 556.12(c)(3) to this definitions section.
Economic interest. The definition of the term ``economic interest''
was moved from section 556.40 to this definitions section.
Western Planning Area. Pursuant to a commenter's recommendation, a
definition of ``Western Planning Area'' was added, in final rule
section 556.105.
The following terms were retained unchanged from the prior BOEM
regulations, or remain as described in the proposed rule: Act, Affected
State, Authorized Officer, Coastal Environment, Coastal Zone,
Coastline, Desoto Canyon OPD, Destin Dome OPD, Human Environment,
Marine Environment, Pensacola OPD. The term ``person'' was added to the
regulations, utilizing the definition from the proposed rule.
The following definitions have been added in final rule section
556.105 to define terms or concepts already used in the regulations,
the definitions of which were apparent from the context of the prior
regulatory language: BSEE, crude oil, designated operator, economic
interest, initial period, primary term, joint bid, lease, lease
interest, lessee, natural gas, natural gas liquids, operating rights,
operating rights owner, operating rights tract, operator, owned,
planning area, primary term, regional director, regional supervisor,
RUE, ROW, security, single bid, six month bid period, and statement of
production. A few of these terms were updated, as follows:
Designated operator. The requirement to designate an
operator is set out in prior BOEM regulations at section 550.143.
Consistent with the ``designated operator'' requirements in that
section, BOEM is including a definition of the term ``designated
operator'' in the definitions section of the final rule. Prior section
550.143(a) states that ``each lessee must submit a Designation of
Operator (DOO) form'' to designate an operator. As implemented, this
requirement applies to all record title owners and to those operating
rights owners that own operating rights in the aliquots/depths in which
the designated operator, to which the DOO form applies, will be
operating. This interpretation is reflected in the definition of
``[d]esignated operator'' in the final rule.
Lease interest. The term ``lease interest'' appears, as
``interests in . . . leases,'' in the first sentence of prior BOEM
regulations at section 556.62. The final rule definition lists
interests already recognized in the prior regulations.
Minerals. The term has been redefined to better correspond
to its meaning in OCSLA.
Natural gas liquids. The definition of ``Natural gas
liquids'' is taken from the prior term ``Liquefied petroleum
products.'' 42 U.S.C. 6213 restricts joint bidding on leases for those
producing more than an average worldwide daily production of 1.6
million barrels of crude oil and/or its equivalent in natural gas
liquids and natural gas during a 6-month period preceding a lease sale.
Previously, regulations implementing 42 U.S.C. 6213 referred to
``liquefied petroleum products'' rather than ``natural gas liquids,''
but then defined ``liquefied petroleum products'' as natural gas
liquids. We dropped references to ``liquefied petroleum products,'' but
there is no change in the concept; only the term has been changed.
Operating rights owner. The definition of the term
``Operating rights owner'' has been added into this definitions
section. It is based on the definition of ``Operating rights'' in prior
BOEM regulations at section 550.105.
[[Page 18123]]
Right-of-use and easement. The prior BOEM regulations, at
30 CFR 550.105, defined the terms ``Easement'' and ``Right-of-use''
separately. But the term that is actually used throughout the prior
regulations is ``right-of-use and easement.'' (See, e.g., 30 CFR
550.16--550.166). The term ``right-of-use and easement'' is also used
in the proposed rule (see, e.g., proposed rule sections 256.502(c),
256.410(a), and 256.511(a)). The term is defined in the final rule
because it appears in final rule section 556.104, concerning BOEM's
information collections and its handling of proprietary information.
Right-of-way. The definition of ``Right-of-way'' in the
final rule is based on the definition of ``Right-of-way pipelines'' in
the prior BOEM regulations at section 550.105, but the definition has
been updated to make clear that a right-of-way authorization is issued
by BSEE.
You. The term ``You'' was defined in proposed rule
provision 256.103 by providing a list of individuals to whom it would
apply. This list has been retained in the final rule, but an
introductory sentence has been added to the definition that defines the
word, rather than merely listing the individuals to whom the term
applies.
Section 556.106. Service fees. This section identifies various
administrative fees that BOEM requires for various services. The
language in the Service Fees section, 256.104(b), of the proposed
rulemaking, ``payment . . . must accompany . . . submission,''
engendered comments as to whether the proposed rule would have required
operators to send in checks with their submission(s). BOEM therefore
changed the language of this provision in the final rule to reflect
that evidence of payment of the required fee(s) via pay.gov must
accompany document submission(s) or must be sent to the office
identified by BOEM. The fees in this rule are being adjusted to reflect
the Implicit Price Deflator change of 3.31 percent (inflation from 2011
through 2013). The fees were last adjusted for inflation through
calendar year 2011 (78 FR 5836).
Section 556.107. Corporate Seal requirements. This section sets
forth an alternative procedure, to avoid the use of a corporate seal,
for those electronic document submissions for which a corporate seal is
otherwise required by these regulations. BOEM's rules require the use
of a corporate seal in several instances. The Federal Government is,
however, moving rapidly toward an all-electronic filing and records
retention system. Because of this, BOEM has added section 556.107 to
the final rule, which permits document submitters to electronically
file documents with BOEM using a secure electronic filing system
without the use of corporate seals. The filer may choose to file a
document electronically; electronic document submission is not required
by the final rule.
In order to maintain the legal validity of documents filed
electronically without corporate seals, BOEM is requiring that those
entities who choose to so file provide BOEM with a one-time filing of a
document containing the entity's corporate seal, signed by an
authorized party, and stating that the entity's filings made through a
secure electronic filing system will be legally binding.
Final rule section 556.107 also enables those who choose not to
file documents electronically to forego repeated use of the corporate
seal by filing a document similar to the document discussed in the last
paragraph, which states that future non-electronic filings will be
legally binding without the use of a corporate seal.
BOEM further recognizes that not all States issue corporate seals.
Therefore, final rule section 556.107 contains a paragraph (c), which
states that an entity from a non-corporate seal State may file a
document with BOEM stating that its state of incorporation does not use
corporate seals. This document must be signed by an authorized party
and must state that submissions made by this corporation will be
legally binding.
Final rule section 556.107 does not have a counterpart in the
proposed rule, but notice and comment on this provision is unnecessary
because the provision does not require that any member of the public do
anything differently than was already required by the prior
regulations. Section 556.107 will, however, reduce the burden on those
who choose to use the options it provides by streamlining the document
submission process for them. The provision is also in accord with the
Federal-Government-wide effort to digitize government services. See,
e.g., the Government Paperwork Elimination Act, Public Law 105-277, 112
Stat. 2681 (1998).
3. Subpart B--Oil and Gas Five Year Leasing Program
Sections under this subpart detail the steps BOEM takes to develop
the Five-Year Oil and Gas Leasing Program. The final rule provisions
set forth, sequentially, the stages in the development of the Five Year
program, and closely mirror those in the proposed rule.
Proposed rule section 256.206, ``Does MMS offer blocks in a sale
that is not on the 5-year program schedule?'' appeared under this
Subpart B in the proposed rule. In the final rule, this section was
moved to the next subpart, Subpart C--Planning and Holding a Lease
Sale, because the section is substantively concerned with holding a
certain type of lease sale, not with the development of the Five Year
program. BOEM believes this section is more appropriately placed within
Subpart C.
Section 556.200. What is the Five Year leasing program? This
section reiterates those key provisions of OCSLA that require the
Secretary to prepare an oil and gas leasing program that consists of a
five-year schedule of proposed lease sales. Final rule section
556.200(a) substantially repeats proposed rule section 256.200. BOEM
received two comments on proposed rule section 256.200 (section 556.200
in the final rule) that part of the section repeated language from
OCSLA, and was therefore ``inconsistent with the streamlining that MMS
has taken with the proposed regulations.'' BOEM considered these
comments, but decided to retain the statutory language as it is
important to explain the goals of the Five Year program. BOEM received
no other comments on this subpart.
Section 556.201. Does BOEM consider multiple uses of the OCS? Final
rule section 556.201 reiterates the OCSLA requirement that BOEM
consider multiple uses of the OCS in its development of the Five Year
oil and gas leasing program. This approach derives from a requirement
in Section 18 of OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1344(a)(2)(D)) that the leasing
program shall be prepared and maintained in a manner consistent with,
among other things, ``other uses of the sea and seabed, including
fisheries, navigation, existing or proposed sea lanes, potential sites
of deepwater ports, and other anticipated uses of the resources and
space of the outer Continental Shelf.'' Final rule section 556.201
emphasizes that BOEM gathers information about multiple uses of the OCS
to assist the Secretary in making decisions on the Five Year program,
pursuant to the provisions of 43 U.S.C. 1344. For this purpose, BOEM
invites and considers suggestions from States and local governments,
industry, and any other interested parties, primarily through public
notice and comment procedures. BOEM also invites and considers
suggestions from Federal agencies.
Section 256.201 from the proposed rule has been modified in the
final rule. As originally worded, proposed rule section 256.201 might
have been
[[Page 18124]]
considered confusing because it used the word ``consult'' in the
context of the Five Year Program. The term ``consult'' is a term of art
usually associated with consultation under the Endangered Species Act
(16 U.S.C. 1531-1544) and government-to-government consultation with
Indian tribes. The Endangered Species Act does not require consultation
during the preparation of the Five Year program. OCSLA requires that
BOEM invite and consider comments and suggestions from other agencies
and from States during its Five Year program preparation process, 43
U.S.C. 1344(c), and so the final rule addresses that in sections
556.201 through 556.203.
Section 556.202. How does BOEM start the Five Year preparation
process? This section sets forth the steps BOEM takes in initiating the
Five Year program. Final rule section 556.202 substantively repeats
proposed rule section 256.202, but the final rule changes the statement
in the proposed rule that ``[a]ny area properly included on the
official 5-year diagrams and maps may be offered for lease for any
mineral not already leased'' by substituting the explanation that any
``area not already leased for oil and gas may be offered for lease.''
The statement in the proposed rule was inaccurate because the Five Year
program applies only to the leasing of oil and gas.
Section 556.203. What does BOEM do before publishing a proposed
Five Year program? This section provides that BOEM will invite comments
from governors on a draft proposed program at least sixty days before
it publishes a proposed Five Year program. Final rule section 556.203
repeats proposed rule section 256.203, with some minor wording changes.
Section 556.204. How do governments and citizens comment on a
proposed Five Year program? This section states the procedures to be
followed to obtain inter-governmental and citizens' comments on the
proposed Five Year program. Final rule section 556.204 repeats proposed
rule section 256.204.
Section 556.205. What does BOEM do before approving a proposed
final Five Year program or a significant revision of a previously-
approved Five Year program? This section provides that the Secretary
must provide a copy of the proposed Five Year Program, or any
significant revision thereto, to Congress and the President at least
sixty days before approving it. Final rule section 556.205 is
substantively the same as proposed rule section 256.205.
4. Subpart C--Planning and Holding a Lease Sale
Sections in this subpart address the process leading up to a lease
sale, the conduct of a lease sale, and the circumstances under which a
lease sale that is not on the Five Year Program schedule may be held.
Subpart C in the final rule generally tracks Subpart C in the proposed
rule, with certain differences, described in the following paragraphs,
which discuss final rule sections 556.300 through 556.309.
Section 556.300. What reports may BOEM and other Federal agencies
prepare before a lease sale? This section provides that BOEM will
prepare a report describing the general geology and potential mineral
resources of the area under consideration. Although this final rule
section did not appear in the proposed rule, it did appear in the prior
BOEM regulations, at prior Subpart C--Reports from Federal Agencies,
which consists of one section, 556.22, ``General.'' The Preamble to the
proposed rule stated that the precursor to prior regulations section
556.22 (i.e., 256.22) was ``[e]liminated as repetitive with [OCSLA].''
BOEM has decided to retain the section in the final rule because the
regulated public will be looking to the regulations, and not to OCSLA,
for guidance on BOEM's processes and requirements. Final rule section
556.300 is substantively identical to the prior BOEM regulation 556.22.
Section 556.301. What is a Call for Information and Nominations?
The formal lease sale process usually begins with BOEM's publication of
a Call for Information and Nominations, sometimes referred to as the
``Call.'' The Call requests indications of interest from industry in
the leasing of specific blocks, and requests comments on other relevant
information that BOEM can use in developing a recommendation of leasing
areas for the Secretary. This section outlines the process BOEM uses to
collect information to inform its determination as to which areas
should be made available for leasing.
Final rule section 556.301 is substantively identical to proposed
rule section 256.300, except for the addition of an additional topic on
which the Call will request comments. The prior regulations, at section
556.23(b), state that the Call ``shall also request comments on areas
which should receive special concern and analysis.'' The proposed rule
did not include ``areas of special concern and analysis'' as one of the
topics on which the Call will request comments, but the Preamble to the
proposed rule shed no light on why this topic was omitted, stating only
that section 256.23 (now 556.23) was ``[r]eorganized.'' BOEM sees no
reason to omit ``areas of special concern and analysis'' from the list
of topics on which the Call will request comments, and so has retained
it in the list of such topics stated in final rule section 556.301.
Section 556.302. What does BOEM do with the information from the
Call? Using the information received in response to the Call and
further analysis of environmental issues, resource potential, stated
interest, potential use conflicts, and other relevant information, the
Director will develop a recommendation of the area to be included in a
lease sale. This recommendation is often termed the ``Area
Identification,'' or ``Area ID.'' This section explains the process
used to arrive at the Area ID.
BOEM received one comment on proposed rule section 256.301, on
which final rule section 556.302 is based. The comment noted that the
phrase ``as soon as possible,'' which appeared in the analogous prior
regulation (section 556.26(c)), had been deleted by the proposed rule,
resulting in the following statement in section 256.301(b) of the
proposed rule: ``[w]e inform the public of any additions or deletions
from the area proposed for leasing in the 5-year program that result
from the call process.'' The commenter requested that the phrase be
retained in the final rule because whether or not areas have been
deleted from a sale area is of great importance to potential bidders
that are preparing for lease sales. BOEM agrees with this comment and
has re-inserted this phrase in final rule section 556.302(c).
Section 256.301 of the proposed rule addressed the Area ID stage of
BOEM's lease sale preparation, but omitted several aspects that
appeared in the prior BOEM regulations at section 556.26. There is no
reason given in the proposed rule as to why certain aspects of this
stage of the lease sale process were left out, except the statement
that prior section 256.26 was ``[r]eorganized.'' Final rule section
556.302 contains the substance of proposed rule section 256.301, as
well as several paragraphs from the prior section 556.26. Specifically,
three aspects of prior section 556.26 were not in the proposed rule,
but have been retained in section 556.302 of the final rule. First,
subparagraph (a)(2) of final rule section 556.302 states that the
Director may, on his or her own motion, include in his or her
recommendation areas that were not indicated in response to a Call.
(See section
[[Page 18125]]
556.26(a)). Second, the last sentence of final rule section 556.302(b)
states that the Director may hold public hearings on the environmental
analysis done on the areas identified for leasing. (See section
556.26(b)). Third, subparagraph 556.302(e) of the final rule repeats
the last sentence in section 556.26(a), stating that, in the case of a
supplemental sale, the Director's recommendation will be replaced with
his findings made under this section.
Final rule section 556.302(d) states that the Director may, upon
request, provide relative indications of interest in areas received in
response to a Call. Paragraph (d) also addresses the potentially
confidential nature of such indications of interest and indicates that
BOEM will release this information in such a way so as not to
compromise the competitive interest of any of the respondents to the
Call. The language of this final rule paragraph was found in the prior
regulations at section 556.10(d). The substance of this final rule
paragraph 556.302(d) was found in the proposed rule at section
256.100(b)(1) and (2), but BOEM believes it is more appropriately
placed in this final rule section, which addresses the treatment of
information received in response to a Call.
Section 556.303. What does BOEM do if an area proposed for leasing
is within three nautical miles of the seaward boundary of a coastal
State? Final rule section 556.303 sets forth the information that BOEM
will provide to a State when an area proposed for leasing lies within
three nautical miles of the seaward boundary of that State. Section
556.303 is the same as proposed rule section 256.302, except that the
final rule corrects the language of the provision to be consistent with
OCSLA section 8(g) (43 U.S.C. 1337(g)) in its use of the term
``nautical miles'' instead of the proposed rule's ``geographical
miles.''
Section 556.304. How is a proposed notice of sale prepared? This
section describes the process utilized to prepare a proposed notice of
sale. Final rule section 556.304 retains all the substance of proposed
rule section 256.303, but for clarity divides the proposed rule
provision's one paragraph into multiple paragraphs. The final rule
provision also has a new title because the proposed rule provision's
text and its title--``What happens with an approved proposed notice of
sale?''--appears to have addressed an already-approved notice of sale
without explaining how the agency arrives at the approved notice. The
final rule provision helps clarify this by retaining some of the
paragraphs from the analogous section in the prior regulations, 556.29,
which were left out of proposed rule provision 256.303, but which help
to explain BOEM's procedures. The Preamble to the proposed rule stated
that proposed rule provision 256.303 represented a
``[s]implifi[cation]'' of section 256.29 (now 556.29), but some steps
were left out in the simplifying process, creating gaps in the
regulations. These gaps have been eliminated with the retention of
certain concepts from the prior regulations in final rule section
556.305.
Final rule section 556.305(a) states that the Director of BOEM may,
in consultation with other Federal agencies, develop lease stipulations
and conditions, which will appear or be referenced in the proposed
notice of sale. Both the prior regulation section 556.29 and proposed
rule section 256.303 contained similar language, but the proposed rule
provision went further and stated that the proposed notice of sale also
includes ``the Director's findings, and all comments and
recommendations received on the proposal.'' While reviewing the
proposed rule, BOEM realized that these last three items are not in the
proposed notice of sale, but accompany it when it is presented to the
Secretary for approval. This concept that certain items will accompany
the proposed notice of sale to the Secretary is correctly expressed in
prior section 556.29(b), therefore this language has been used in final
rule section 556.304(b).
BOEM received a comment requesting that the lease form be attached
to or referenced in the proposed notice of lease sale because ``the
terms of an oil and gas lease sale are integral to the lessee/lessor
relationship and lessees . . . should have the right to know the lease
terms in advance of submitting bids.'' BOEM agrees with this comment
insofar as potential bidders should be aware of the lease terms and
conditions, to the extent possible, in advance of the lease sale. To
that end, final rule provision 556.304(c) makes clear that the proposed
notice of sale references the lease form.
Section 556.305. How does BOEM coordinate and consult with States
regarding a proposed notice of sale? This section outlines the process
by which BOEM coordinates with affected States following the proposed
notice of sale. Final rule section 556.305 is substantively the same as
proposed rule section 256.304. One change was made to the language of
the section in the final rule as a result of a comment. The comment
requested that the section ``actually reference'' the Coastal Zone
Management Act (CZMA) (16 U.S.C. 1451-1466) ``so that if the CZMA is
modified or amended or repealed, [BOEM] can continue to follow the
process outlined in the act, rather than risking conflict or
inconsistency.'' BOEM agrees with this suggestion, and has included a
reference to the CZMA in final rule section 556.305(b).
Section 556.306. What if a potentially oil-or gas-bearing area
underlies both the OCS and lands subject to State jurisdiction? This
section provides a process for resolving issues or disputes that may
arise between a State and the Federal government when a hydrocarbon-
bearing area underlies both the Federal OCS and State submerged lands.
This final rule section did not appear in the proposed rule. The
substance of the final rule section is, however, found at prior BOEM
regulation section 556.25(b)-(d). The Preamble to the proposed rule
stated that this section of the prior regulations had been left out in
an attempt to simplify the regulations. Upon reconsideration, however,
BOEM believes that the proposed rule may have over-simplified the
regulations, resulting in a gap. The proposed rule, at section 256.302,
addressed potentially leasable areas ``within 3 miles of the seaward
boundary of a coastal State.'' The proposed rule did not, however,
address potentially leasable areas that underlie the Federal/State
boundary, resulting in potentially leasable resources on both sides of
this boundary. The two situations are treated differently in OCSLA, at
sections 8(g)(2) and 8(g)(3), respectively (43 U.S.C. 1337(g)(2) and
1337(g)(3)). Therefore, BOEM believes that they should be treated
separately in the regulations and BOEM has decided to retain the prior
regulations' provisions in the final rule, at section 556.306.
Section 556.307. What does BOEM do with comments and
recommendations received on the proposed notice of sale? Final rule
section 556.307 addresses BOEM's treatment of comments received on the
proposed notice of sale, particularly those received from governors and
local governments. This section provides a description of the process
that BOEM will use to evaluate recommendations of governors and local
governments. Section 556.307 is substantively the same as proposed rule
section 256.305, but the final rule section has been divided into
paragraphs for ease of reading and reference. The final rule section,
at paragraph (b), contains one sentence that does not appear in the
proposed rule, but did appear in the analogous prior section,
556.31(b). That sentence merely states that the determination of
[[Page 18126]]
the ``national interest'' as meant in this section, will be based on
the findings, purposes, and policies of OCSLA.
Section 556.308. How does BOEM conduct a lease sale? Final rule
section 556.308 explains that BOEM will publish a final notice of sale
at least 30 days before the scheduled date of a lease sale. This final
notice of sale will contain all the information needed to place a bid,
as well as the terms and conditions of the lease, including any
stipulations necessary to mitigate potential adverse impacts on the
environment.
Final rule section 556.308, paragraphs (a)-(c), are substantively
the same as proposed rule section 256.306. The final rule section
includes a new paragraph (d), which was added at the request of a
commenter. The commenter requested that ``the Notices of Lease Sale
should include the lease form that will be used to grant successful
bids.'' Therefore, final rule section 556.308 (d) states: ``[t]he final
notice of lease sale references, or provides a link to, the OCS lease
form which will be issued to successful bidders.''
Section 556.309. Does BOEM offer blocks in a sale that is not on
the Five Year program schedule (called a Supplemental Sale)? Under
certain circumstances, detailed in proposed rule section 256.206 and
final rule section 556.309, BOEM is authorized to offer blocks in an
otherwise unscheduled sale, referred to as a supplemental sale. The
proposed and final rule sections are the same.
5. Subpart D--Qualifications
Final rule Subpart D--Qualifications, was a sub-subpart in the
proposed rule, under proposed rule Subpart D--Issuance of a Lease. The
substance of the provisions in Subpart D of the final rule is the same
as that found in sections 256.400 through 256.404 of the proposed rule.
BOEM decided, however, that the provisions covering the qualifications
necessary to hold leases on the OCS were significant enough to merit a
separate subchapter in the final rule. BOEM believes it is logical to
place ``Qualifications'' into its own subpart and to remove it from
under the heading ``Issuance of a Lease,'' where it was found in the
proposed rule as one must qualify before a lease can be issued.
There are six sections within final rule Subpart D--Qualifications,
which generally correspond with the five sections under the subheading
``qualifications'' in the proposed rule. There are, however, a few
minor differences between the sections in the proposed rule and the
sections in the final rule, including the lack of a table in the final
rule to set out the type of evidence required by BOEM to demonstrate
proof of qualification to hold leases on the OCS. The proposed rule
laid out the evidence requirements in a table format, but on
reconsideration BOEM found this format too limiting, and opted to
remove the table and instead use regulatory text to set forth the
evidence requirements for qualification. The substance of the
regulations remains the same in the final rule.
Generally, there were some logical gaps in the scheme laid out by
the proposed rule sections regarding ``Qualification'' to hold leases
on the OCS, which BOEM has rectified in the final rule. For example,
BOEM has been issuing ``qualification numbers'' to qualified potential
lessees for many years, but the fact that such a number must be
obtained by a potential lessee as a first step in the leasing process
has not been clearly spelled out in the regulations. The lay-out of the
proposed rule sections on qualification appeared to assume that the
reader knew that he or she must obtain a qualification number from BOEM
in order to be ``qualified'' to hold leases on the OCS, without ever
saying how that number would be obtained.
The other minor differences between the proposed and final rule
provisions dealing with ``Qualifications'' are set forth, section-by-
section, below.
Section 556.400. When must I demonstrate that I am qualified to
hold a lease on the OCS? This section provides that, in order to bid
on, own, hold, or operate a lease on the OCS, bidders, record title
holders, and operating rights owners must first obtain a qualification
number from BOEM. The title of this section was reworded to more
clearly describe this purpose.
Final rule section 556.400 is an outgrowth of proposed rule section
256.401(a). Proposed rule section 256.401(a) stated that, a person, in
order to show that he or she was qualified to be a lessee, must
``provide [his] MMS qualification number.'' The proposed rule failed to
explain, however, that a potential lessee first had to obtain a
qualification number from BOEM. Final rule section 556.400 explains
that, ``in order to bid, own, hold, or operate a lease on the OCS,''
one must obtain a qualification number from BOEM. Final rule section
556.400 also makes clear that a bidder must be qualified in order to
bid on OCS leases, as was required by prior section 556.46.
Section 556.401. What do I need to show to become qualified to hold
a lease on the OCS and obtain a qualification number? This section
outlines BOEM's requirements for a prospective lessee to become a
qualified bidder. Final rule section 556.401 is essentially proposed
rule section 256.400, with a few minor additions, which flow from the
language of the proposed rule. Like the proposed rule provision, the
final rule provision lists those who may become qualified to hold
leases on the OCS, but better describes the entities previously
identified only as ``associations.'' Proposed rule section 256.400(c)
listed ``[a] private, public or municipal corporation organized under
the laws of any State of the U.S., the District of Columbia, or any
territory or insular possession subject to U.S. jurisdiction.'' A
Limited Liability Company (LLC) was not listed in proposed rule section
256.400(c), but LLC was listed in the table in proposed rule section
256.401 as one of the entities that may become qualified to hold leases
on the OCS. Therefore, the final rule provision adds to the list in
section 556.401 a ``Limited Liability Company or Limited Liability
Corporation organized under the laws of any State of the United States,
the District of Columbia, or any territory or insular possession
subject to United States jurisdiction.''
Proposed rule section 556.400(e) listed a ``State'' as one entity
potentially qualified to hold leases on the OCS. The final rule, at
section 556.401(a)(5), using language from proposed rule section
256.400(c), instead says: ``[a] State, the District of Columbia, or any
territory or insular possession subject to United States
jurisdiction.'' Similarly, proposed rule section 256.400(f) listed a
``political subdivision of States'' as also potentially qualified to
hold leases on the OCS. The final rule, at section 556.401(a)(6)
instead says: ``[a] political subdivision of a State, the District of
Columbia, or any territory or insular possession subject to United
States jurisdiction.''
Final rule section 556.401, at paragraph (a)(7) adds ``Trust'' to
the types of entities that are potentially qualified to hold leases on
the OCS. A trust is one of the entities listed in the table in proposed
rule section 256.401, but it is not among those potentially qualified
entities that were listed in proposed rule section 256.400. In order to
rectify this oversight, the final rule section adds ``Trust'' to the
list of those potentially qualified set forth in final rule section
556.401, and adds that any such Trust must also be ``organized under
the laws of any State of the United States, the District of Columbia,
or any territory or insular possession subject to United States
jurisdiction.''
Final rule section 556.401(c) affirmatively states that BOEM may
[[Page 18127]]
issue a qualification number to one who has provided acceptable
evidence of qualification. This is a clarification of proposed rule
section 256.401(a), which stated: ``[p]rovide your . . . qualification
number if you have qualified with us.'' The final rule merely
affirmatively states that BOEM will issue that number, if appropriate.
Section 556.402. How do I make the necessary showing to qualify and
obtain a qualification number? This section describes the types of
evidence that BOEM will require in order to qualify a person to hold
leases on the OCS. Section 556.402 replaces proposed rule section
256.401, including the table in the latter. There are certain minor
differences between the proposed and final rule sections, including the
following:
Both proposed rule section 256.401 and final rule section 556.402
list the evidence needed to show that one is qualified to hold leases
on the OCS. In the final rule, we added that such evidence must be
``acceptable to BOEM.'' This requirement was implicit in the proposed
rule. There would be no point in requiring evidence of qualification if
BOEM were obligated to accept evidence that is not sufficient as to
form or content to enable BOEM to be certain of the status of the
submitter. In order to be certain of this status, it is reasonable to
expect that only evidence ``acceptable to BOEM'' will be accepted.
Final rule section 556.402, subparagraph (c)(3), adds the
requirement that an entity seeking to qualify to hold leases on the OCS
provide BOEM with a list of persons authorized to bind the entity, and
that such list be kept current. This subparagraph reminds the entity
that it is up to the entity, (and therefore, not up to BOEM) to
determine who in its organization is authorized to bind it. BOEM
believes that the requirement to provide a list of persons authorized
to bind an organizational entity is a logical extension of the
requirement to provide the various documents listed in the proposed
rule table at proposed rule section 256.401. BOEM also believes that
providing and updating this list of persons, along with the other
evidence required by final rule section 556.402, is a simpler and more
manageable way to approach the question of who is authorized to bind a
specific entity than the prior regulations or the language used in the
proposed rule.
Final rule section 556.402 contains several paragraphs that did not
appear in the analogous section of the proposed rule (section 256.401).
Both proposed rule section 256.401 and final rule section 556.402
address traditional business entities, such as corporations and
partnerships. There are, however, other types of business organizations
that are eligible to qualify to hold leases on the OCS, but that would
not have been covered by the qualifications provision in the proposed
rule.
Paragraph (e) of final rule section 556.402 therefore addresses
business entities with non-traditional business forms. Some of these
non-traditional business forms do not have standard positions, such as
``president'' or ``secretary.'' Accordingly, paragraph (e) of final
rule section 556.402 does not name a particular position but states
that an individual from the highest level of management of an entity
with a non-traditional business form, who is authorized by the entity's
operating agreement or governance documents to submit evidence of
eligibility to hold OCS leases, must submit such evidence. Paragraph
(e) is a clarification of proposed rule sections 256.401(c)(4) and
256.401(d), both of which sought to ensure that BOEM does business with
the person within a qualified organization who has the authority to
bind that organization. Paragraph (e) is a general catch-all meant to
ensure that there are no gaps in BOEM's regulations when it comes to
the evidence necessary to demonstrate qualification to hold leases on
the OCS.
Final rule section 556.402(f) states the entity that obtains a
qualification number is responsible for ensuring that the number is
used only for the purposes that the entity's governance documents
allow. This was implicit in the proposed rule, but the new final
subsection makes it clear that it is not BOEM's responsibility to
ensure that entities are not going beyond their allowed powers in their
dealings on the OCS.
Lastly, final rule section 556.402(h) makes it clear that one may
not hold leases on the OCS until BOEM has issued a qualification
number. This concept was also implicit in the proposed rule and in
BOEM's prior regulations in the requirement to obtain the qualification
number.
Section 556.403. Under what circumstances may I be disqualified
from holding a lease on the OCS? This section describes the
circumstances under which a person may be excluded or disqualified from
holding a lease on the OCS. Final rule section 556.403 substantively
replicates proposed rule section 256.402, with some minor language
changes. The language at final rule section 556.403, paragraph (b),
tracks the language of OCSLA more closely than did the language of the
corresponding section in the proposed rule. This was done at the
request of a commenter and ensures that paragraph (b) (``You may not
hold an OCS lease if . . . The Secretary finds, after notice and
hearing, that you or your principals fail to meet due diligence
requirements or to exercise due diligence under section 8(d) of OCSLA .
. . on any OCS lease'') could not be interpreted to conflict with
section 8(d) of OCSLA (``No bid for a lease may be submitted if the
Secretary finds, after notice and hearing, that the bidder is not
meeting due diligence requirements on other leases.'' 43 U.S.C.
1337(d)).
Also, the language at final rule section 556.403, paragraph (c),
was revised to make it clear that either BOEM or BSEE could offer
notice and opportunity for a hearing to determine whether operating
performance is unacceptable, pursuant to either appropriate BOEM
regulations or appropriate BSEE regulations. This clarification is
necessary because of the division of BOEMRE into two agencies, and the
fact that both BOEM and BSEE have a role in determining whether
operating performance is unacceptable.
Section 556.404. What do the non-procurement debarment rules
require that I do? Final rule section 556.404 details how to comply
with the Department's non-procurement debarment rules, specifically
those that relate to entering covered transactions and notifying BOEM
if you know that you or your principals are excluded or disqualified,
or have been indicted or convicted of a crime .It is substantively the
same as proposed rule section 256.403, with minor conforming language
changes.
Section 556.405. When must I notify BOEM of mergers, name changes,
or changes of business form? This section provides that lessees must
notify BOEM of any merger, name change, or change of business form as
soon as practicable, but in no case later than one year after the
change or action. Final rule section 556.405 is the same as the
proposed rule section, 256.404, with one exception. The proposed
section stated ``[y]ou must immediately notify BOEM of a name change,''
but then allowed up to one year within which to do so. A commenter
pointed out the inconsistency between the word ``immediately'' and the
one-year period, and BOEM has therefore dropped the word
``immediately'' from final rule section 556.405 and replaced it with
``as soon as practicable.''
This same commenter opined that providing BOEM with name changes or
changes of business form would be too burdensome and that BOEM has
``multiple ways to learn of a merger or name change.'' BOEM does not
agree
[[Page 18128]]
with these opinions. BOEM has run into difficulties in the past brought
about by name changes and/or mergers about which BOEM had not been
timely informed. It is not practicable for BOEM to monitor filings of
name changes and merger information in each State. BOEM does not see
that it is a burden for entities doing business on the OCS to keep BOEM
apprised of changes of name or corporate form, such as may occur with a
merger.
6. Subpart E--Issuance of a Lease
Subpart E--Issuance of a Lease, is divided into four subdivisions
in the final rule: ``How to Bid,'' ``Restrictions on Joint Bidding,''
``How Does BOEM Act on Bids?'' and ``Awarding the Lease.'' The
regulations in the first subdivision delineate the process of
submitting a bid to BOEM and the information that must be submitted
with the bid. The next subdivision, ``Restrictions on Joint Bidding,''
explains the effect of being placed on BOEM's Restricted Joint Bidders
List and the reporting requirements for those placed on the List. ``How
Does BOEM Act on Bids?'' presents information as to BOEM's acceptance
or rejection of bids, the treatment of a tied bid, and the options
available to a high bidder whose bid was rejected. The last subdivision
of Subpart E, ``Awarding the Lease'' explains the procedures the bidder
must follow after BOEM accepts its bid.
Following is a section-by-section analysis of the sections within
Subpart E.
How To Bid
Section 556.500. Once qualified, how do I submit a bid? Final rule
section 556.500 states generally that each bidder must submit a
separate sealed bid for each tract or bidding unit, along with a bid
deposit. The final rule section specifies that information regarding
the timing of bid submission, and the amount and payment method of bid
deposits, will be set forth in the final notice of sale. Final rule
section 556.500 appeared at proposed rule section 256.410.
Paragraph (c) of final rule section 556.500 reaffirms the practice
from the prior regulations (section 556.46(b)) and the proposed rule
(section 256.410(b)) that the final notice of sale will specify the
amount of the bid deposit. Paragraph (c) adds, however, that if not so
specified, the ``default'' deposit amount will be twenty percent of the
bid, the deposit amount that has been required for many years. As
pointed out by a commenter, a bid deposit of twenty percent is the
``status quo.'' Another commenter noted that the bid deposit is
``typically set at one-fifth of the bonus bid amount.'' BOEM finds it
unnecessary to seek comments on this ``default'' language, which merely
reflects the ``status quo.''
Section 556.501. What information do I need to submit with my bid?
Final rule section 556.501 reiterates requirements, found in section
26(a)(1)(A) of OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1352(a)(1)(A)), to provide geological
and geophysical (G&G) data to BOEM upon request. Current BOEM
regulations in part 551 of Title 30 of the CFR, ``Geological and
Geophysical (G&G) Explorations of the Outer Continental Shelf,''
already address this requirement, as applied to G&G activities
permitted ``on unleased lands or on lands leased to a third party,'' 30
CFR 551.12(a). Therefore, current part 551 already applies to lands
being bid upon, but BOEM has included section 556.501 in this final
rule, because part 556 sets forth bidding and leasing procedures/
requirements, and the requirement to provide G&G information with a bid
logically falls within this comprehensive whole. Including final rule
section 556.501 ensures that bidders are aware that they may need to
submit requested G&G information at the time of bidding.
Restrictions on Joint Bidding
In the prior regulations, there are a series of definitions and
other provisions that apply only in the context of restricted joint
bidding, which were not in the proposed rule. Prior regulation section
556.40 lists 13 definitions, which help explicate the joint bidding
restrictions. The proposed rule Preamble stated that section 256.40
(now 556.40) was ``[e]liminated as redundant,'' but, upon reviewing the
proposed rule and the comments, BOEM decided that these definitions and
provisions are not ``redundant,'' but instructive and helpful to
explain the concepts underlying restrictions on joint bidding. The
definitions have been retained in the final rule, some in the final
rule definitions section, 556.106, and some in the provisions under
this subheading of ``Restrictions on Joint Bidding,'' made up of final
rule sections 556.511 to 556.515.
Further, there are several provisions previously found at 556.43(d)
and (e), which explain how to measure oil, natural gas liquids, and
natural gas, for purposes of determining whether a person's production
has exceeded 1.6 million barrels in the prior period, and thus whether
he or she will be on the Restricted Joint Bidders List (sometimes
referred to below as the ``List''). For example, prior section
556.43(d) stated that: ``[a]ll measurements of crude oil . . . under
this section shall be at 60 degrees Fahrenheit.'' These important
provisions were left out of the proposed rule with no explanation other
than that section 256.43 (previously 556.43) was ``simplified and
reorganized.'' BOEM has reconsidered this ``simplification and
reorganization'' and has determined that these measurement-describing
provisions should be retained. They appear in final rule section
556.513(d).
Section 556.511. Are there restrictions on bidding with others and
do those restrictions affect my ability to bid? This section prohibits
joint bidding by major oil and gas producers under certain
circumstances. Final rule section 556.511 is substantively the same as
proposed rule section 256.411, but the final rule section has one
additional paragraph. This additional paragraph, 556.611(d), makes
clear that a person on the Restricted Joint Bidders List may not enter
into a pre-bidding agreement for the conveyance of any lease interest
to another person on the List. The prohibition on pre-bid agreements
between persons on the List was addressed in prior section 556.44 (c),
but was not addressed in the proposed rule. BOEM has decided to retain
this provision because of its continued relevance and applicability.
Section 556.512. What bids may be disqualified? This section
provides the circumstances under which a bid for any oil and gas lease
will be disqualified and/or rejected. Final rule section 556.512 does
not have a counterpart in the proposed rule, but it was found in the
prior regulations at section 556.44. The Preamble to the proposed rule
stated that section 256.44 (now 556.44) was ``simplified,'' and the
reader was directed to proposed rule section 256.402 in its stead, but
this ``simplification'' would create a discrepancy. Current section
556.44 addresses disqualification of certain types of bids involving
persons on the List of Restricted Joint Bidders. Proposed rule section
256.402 has nothing to do with joint bidding, but sets forth three
discrete situations where any person may be disqualified from holding a
lease (exclusion due to the non-procurement debarment and suspension
system, failure to exercise due diligence, or unacceptable operating
performance). The substance of prior section 556.44 did not appear
anywhere in the proposed rule, but BOEM has decided that it is
necessary for a full understanding of the effects and ramifications of
being placed on the Restricted Joint Bidders List. Therefore, the text
of prior section 556.44 has been retained, verbatim, with only
necessary
[[Page 18129]]
conforming changes, in final rule section 556.512.
Section 556.513. When must I file a statement of production? This
section explains the circumstances under which a lessee must prepare
and send to BOEM a statement describing its oil and gas production and
what the statement is to contain. Final rule section 556.513 contains
the substance of proposed rule section 256.412, as well as three
subparagraphs previously found at prior section 556.40(l) and omitted
from the proposed rule. Proposed rule section 256.412 explained that a
person on the List of Restricted Joint Bidders would have to file a
statement of production when its production exceeded 1.6 million
barrels of oil, natural gas liquids, and natural gas during the prior
production period. The prior regulations had the same provision, but
the prior regulations, at section 556.40(l), also defined what
``Production'' meant with respect to each of these resources.
Appropriate portions of the 556.40(l) definitions have been retained in
final rule section 556.513 to make clear what is to be included in the
measurement of crude oil, natural gas liquids, and natural gas when
determining production chargeable to the prior production period.
Section 556.514. How do I determine my production for purposes of
the Restricted Joint Bidders List? This section details what production
must be counted when determining whether a company should be considered
a ``restricted bidder.'' Final rule section 556.514 replicates proposed
rule section 256.413, with some concepts included from prior sections
556.40 and 556.43. Section 556.43(d) states that ``[a]ll measurements
of crude oil and liquefied petroleum products [referred to as natural
gas liquids in the final rule] . . . shall be at 60 degrees
Fahrenheit.'' The proposed rule did not include the 60 degree
Fahrenheit measurement parameter, but BOEM has decided to retain it as
a necessary instruction for those persons who need to determine their
production for purposes of the Restricted Joint Bidders List. The
measurement parameter is in final rule section 556.514(a)(1).
Also in final rule section 556.514(a)(1) is a reference to the
equivalency factors set forth in 42 U.S.C. 6213(b)(2) and (3), which
state, respectively: ``[o]ne barrel of natural gas equivalent equals
5,626 cubic feet of natural gas measured at 14.73 pounds per square
inch [(PSI) relative to the mean sea level, or] (MSL) and 60 degrees
Fahrenheit'' and ``[o]ne barrel of natural gas liquids equivalent
equals 1.454 barrels of natural gas liquids at 60 degrees Fahrenheit.''
These two equivalencies were found in the prior regulations at section
556.43(e), but were omitted from the proposed rule. BOEM believes that
these equivalencies are also necessary instructions for persons
attempting to determine whether their production would place them on
the Restricted Joint Bidders List.
The final rule, at section 556.514(d), also retains the definition
of ``subsidiary'' found in prior section 556.43(a)(3), but not
contained in the proposed rule. Final rule section 556.514(f), which
further explains how measurements of resources must be made, was not in
the proposed rule, but was found at prior section 556.40(l)(1) and (2).
Final rule section 556.514(e) is a logical extension of the
interplay among prior section 556.40's definitions of ``economic
interest'' and ``owned'' and prior section 556.43(b). The definitions
in prior section 556.40 applied to joint bidding and restrictions
thereon. The definition of ``economic interest'' defines certain types
of passive interests, such as a royalty interest or a net profits
interest. The definition of ``owned'' in prior 556.40 included ``having
. . . an economic interest in'' the production of crude oil, natural
gas, or natural gas liquids. And 556.43(b) stated that a person is
chargeable, for purposes of joint bidding restrictions, with production
that it ``owns.'' Therefore, reading these provisions logically
together, a person's economic interest in production must be counted in
that production chargeable to him or her for purposes of determining
whether he or she is on the Restricted Joint Bidders List. This concept
from the prior regulations is retained in the final rule in section
556.514(e) and the text was not changed from how it was originally
proposed.
Section 556.515. May a person be exempted from joint bidding
restrictions? This section provides the circumstances under which a
person may be exempted from joint bidding restrictions. Final rule
section 556.515 is based on proposed rule section 256.414. Proposed
section 256.414, however, did not state the specific regulatory
sections from which exemption from the joint bidding restrictions or
reporting requirements may be granted. These specific designations were
found in the prior regulations, at section 556.41(d), and have been
retained in final rule section 556.515.
How Does BOEM Act on Bids?
Section 556.516. What does BOEM do with my bid? This section
outlines the procedures BOEM will follow when reviewing bids received
for leases on the OCS and when handling tie bids. Section 556.516 of
the final rule is based on proposed rule section 256.416. Proposed
section 256.416(b) stated that BOEM would accept or reject all bids
within 90 days, or a longer time if BOEM extended the 90-day period.
Section 556.516(b) of the final rule adds that BOEM will timely notify
bidders in writing of a decision to extend the 90-day period. Proposed
section 256.416(d) states that the Attorney General may review the
results of a sale before BOEM accepts any bid. This requirement is
repeated in final rule section 556.516(d), with additional language
explaining that the Attorney General must act within 30 days and may
consult with the Federal Trade Commission. Both of these strictures are
found in section 8(c)(1) of OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1344(c)(1)).
BOEM received the following comment: ``There is no policy reason
not to allow co-ownership by agreement of bidders with a tie bid, when
the tie bidders are on the restricted joint bidder list. Those parties
cannot have communicated or agreed with respect to the bid, but going
forward could agree to an assignment creating co-ownership after the
lease is awarded.'' Neither the prior regulations (see 30 CFR
556.47(c)), nor the proposed rule, (see section 256.416(c)), permit tie
high bidders who are both (or all) on the Restricted Joint Bidders List
to accept a lease jointly. BOEM considered the comment above but
concluded that there is no way to know whether tie bidders
``communicated or agreed with respect to the bid.'' Therefore, BOEM has
decided that the current policy is a sound one and will not be changed.
There is one significant difference between proposed rule section
256.416 and final rule section 556.516. Proposed rule section
256.416(c) addressed tie bids and stated that if there was no agreement
among the bidders as to who would receive the lease, BOEM would ``award
the lease to the high bidder selected by lot.'' The prior regulation,
at section 556.47(e)(2), did not allow a bid to be awarded by lot, but
stated that if an agreement from the tie bidders was not submitted to
BOEM within 15 days, ``all bids shall be rejected.''
BOEM has reconsidered the ``award by lot'' policy enunciated in the
proposed rule, and has decided not to adopt that policy. The policy is
inherently unfair to one of the bidders and is inconsistent with BOEM's
long-standing policy that if no bids are accepted, the lease will be
withheld by BOEM and offered in the next lease sale. This policy
affords BOEM the
[[Page 18130]]
opportunity to obtain a greater return, furthering OCSLA's goal that
BOEM obtain fair market value for OCS leases. See, section 18(a)(4) of
OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1344(a)(4)). BOEM will therefore retain the policy in
the existing regulation that all tie bids, for which a timely agreement
delineating who will receive the lease has not been submitted to BOEM,
will be deemed rejected. This policy is stated in final rule section
556.516(c)(3).
Section 556.517. What may I do if my high bid is rejected? This
section describes the reconsideration procedures that apply in the
event that a high bid is rejected by BOEM. Proposed rule section
256.417 would have allowed a bidder whose bid was rejected to request
reconsideration of that rejection within 15 days, and stated that the
bidder would receive a written response. The previous regulations at
section 556.47(e), and the proposed rule at section 256.410, stated
that the request for reconsideration is to be made to the Secretary.
The proposed rule section did not address whether such a request could
be appealed, but the previous regulations at 556.47 stated that
decisions on high bids are not subject to review by the Department's
Office of Hearings and Appeals.
BOEM received a comment on proposed section 256.417 that requested
more detail regarding reconsideration of rejection of a high bid,
specifically as to the review process for a reconsideration request. In
response to the comment, BOEM has added detail to the final rule
section to clarify the procedures to be followed by the bidder
requesting reconsideration, and those that will be followed by BOEM
when it receives such a request. Therefore, final rule section 556.517
states that the decision of the authorized officer on bids is the final
action of the Department, and that the request for reconsideration of
such a decision must be made to the Director, as the Secretary's
delegate, and must include evidence as to why the decision should be
reconsidered. The final rule section retains the section 556.47
statement that the decision on the reconsideration is not subject to
review by the Department's Office of Hearings and Appeals.
Awarding the Lease
Section 556.520. What happens if I am the successful high bidder
and BOEM accepts my bid? This section describes the steps involved in
the lease award process. BOEM received several comments on proposed
section 256.420, which appears at final rule section 556.520,
particularly on proposed section 256.420(c). That paragraph stated that
if a successful bidder did not return the executed lease in the
prescribed time or if it otherwise failed to comply with the
regulations, its deposit would be forfeited ``and [BOEM] may take
appropriate action to collect the full amount bid.'' Three commenters
pointed out that, traditionally, in the scenario posited above, the
bidder's deposit was forfeited, but BOEM had never attempted to collect
the full amount bid. One of these commenters stated that ``[p]ayment of
the one-fifth amount is sufficient penalty,'' and payment of amounts
beyond that ``is not warranted.'' Another of the commenters pointed out
that forfeiting the ``significant penalty'' of the one-fifth deposit
``allows lessees to make an informed decision on leasing if information
relating to the area becomes available after the bids are made.'' The
third commenter ``objected'' to the forfeiture of the full bid amount,
but also suggested some alternatives for BOEM's implementation of this
provision, such as offering the second-highest qualified bidder the
lease if the high bidder forfeits.
BOEM generally agrees with the comments. Accordingly, final rule
section 556.520 does not include the language that, in a forfeiture
situation, BOEM may take action to collect the full amount bid. Nor
will BOEM offer the lease to the second-highest bidder, as that could
violate BOEM's mandate to obtain fair market value for all leases.
Instead, BOEM will retain the current policy, now expressed in the
regulations at section 556.47(g), that in the case of forfeiture, the
forfeiting bidder will lose its deposit.
BOEM also received a comment on another aspect of proposed section
256.420(c). The comment noted that the proposed section states that a
high bidder must ``execute and return the lease within 11 business days
after receipt'' and contrasted that with the prior regulation, which
stated that ``the bidder shall, not later than the 11th business day
after receipt of the lease, execute the lease.'' See, section
556.47(f). The comment pointed out that while the current language does
not specify that the executed lease must be returned to BOEM by the
11th day, the proposed rule section does so specify. The comment asked
if this ``signif[ies] a change in how the process is administered?''
The rule does not signify a change in the interpretation of the
regulation or in the administration of the process. The prior
regulation was interpreted to mean that the lease must be executed and
returned by the 11th business day after it is received, and the
proposed and final rules continue this policy, but make the language
more precise.
Section 556.521. When is my lease effective? Final rule section
556.521 and proposed rule section 256.421 are the same. They both state
BOEM's long-standing policy that a lease is effective on the first day
of the month following the month in which BOEM executes the lease, but
that a lessee may request that its lease be made effective as of the
first day of the month in which BOEM executes it. The final rule also
adds a provision that, if BOEM agrees to make it effective as of the
earlier date, it will so indicate when it executes the lease.
Section 556.522. What are the terms and conditions of the lease and
when are they published? This section provides that the terms and
conditions of the lease will be stated in the final notice of sale, as
well as in the lease instrument itself. Final rule section 556.522 is
based on prior section 556.49. The prior section stated that oil and
gas and sulfur lease forms will be approved by the BOEM Director. The
prior section also mentioned forms for other minerals. The section was
not included in the proposed rule, the Preamble of which stated that
the ``[d]iscussion of form[s] for other minerals [was] eliminated as
redundant.'' However, the proposed rule eliminated all of prior section
556.49 and BOEM has decided to retain, in final rule section 556.522,
the statement as to forms for oil and gas and sulfur leases. Final rule
section 556.522 also echoes final rule section 556.308(a)(2), which
states that the terms and conditions of the lease will be found in the
final notice of sale.
7. Subpart F--Lease Term and Obligations
Length of Lease
Section 556.600. What is the primary term of my oil and gas lease?
Final rule section 556.600 (a) and (b) closely follows OCSLA and makes
clear that the initial period/primary term of a lease will be five
years, unless BOEM determines that a longer initial period/primary
term, up to 10 years, is necessary due to unusually deep water or
unusually adverse conditions. Proposed section 256.600 stated that an
initial period of an oil and gas lease ``may range from five to ten
years,'' but provided no clarification as to why there could be such a
range. Section 8(b) of OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1337(b)) states that the
initial period of a lease must be for five years, or for up to 10
years, if extension of the lease term is necessary due to unusually
deep water or other unusually adverse conditions.
[[Page 18131]]
Final rule section 556.600 (a) and (b) follows OCSLA's example,
with one slight difference. OCSLA most commonly refers to the initial
term of a lease as the ``initial period,'' but also refers to the
initial term as the ``primary term.'' See, e.g., section 8(a)(7)(C) of
OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1337(a)(7)(C)). BOEM uses the phrase ``primary term''
in the final rule.
Proposed rule section 256.600 used the term ``initial period'' to
refer to the originally granted length of a lease. The terms ``primary
term'' and ``initial period'' were used interchangeably throughout
BOEM's prior regulations to mean the same thing (for example, 556.37(a)
and (b) refer to ``initial period,'' while 556.68(b) and (c), and
556.70 refer to ``primary term'') and BOEM has elected to use the
phrase ``primary term'' rather than ``initial period'' in this final
rule in order to better reflect the lease term description that is most
commonly used in the U.S. oil and gas industry.
The final rule removes the provision found in BOEM's previous
regulations at section 556.37 and proposed rule section 256.600, which
stated that, for leases in water depths between 400 and 800 meters, the
primary term will be eight years, subject to administrative
cancellation if no exploratory well is begun during the first five
years after lease issuance. No further notice and comment are required
for this change, as BOEM notified the public of the change in 2009 and
provided an opportunity to comment, and all lease sales since 2009 have
been consistent with this new practice. Specifically, BOEM stopped
issuing leases with eight-year primary terms beginning with Central
Gulf of Mexico Lease Sale 213, held on March 17, 2010. On November 16,
2009, eight months after the publication of the proposed rule, the MMS
published the Proposed Notice of Sale for Lease Sale 213 (PNOS) (74 FR
58975). The PNOS notified the public that BOEM was considering dropping
the eight-year primary term, and replacing it with a five-year primary
term, which could be extended another three years if certain conditions
were met. The PNOS also detailed that this five-year primary term, with
a possible three-year extension, would apply in water depths between 0
and 800 meters, whereas a seven-year primary term, with a possible
three-year extension, would apply in water depths between 800 and 1600
meters. In more than 1600 meters of water, the PNOS stated that the
primary term would be 10 years.
The PNOS also stated that, if a five- or seven-year primary term
were not extended, the lease would expire, removing the need for
administrative cancellation. The MMS received comments on the change
from an eight-year primary term to a five- or seven-year primary term,
as well as on the change from cancellation to expiration. The MMS
carefully considered these comments and responded to them in the Final
Notice of Sale for Lease Sale 213 (FNOS). In the FNOS, the MMS stated
that it had decided to no longer offer leases with eight-year primary
terms and to proceed with offering leases in Sale 213 with five- and
seven-year primary terms, which would be subject to extension or
expiration.
BOEM has offered five- and/or seven-year primary terms in all eight
lease sales held since Sale 213 and intends to continue doing so. To
avoid any confusion about whether BOEM intends to revert to the pre-
2010 practice of issuing leases for eight year terms contingent on
drilling in the first five years, however, final rule section 556.600
tracks OCSLA closely in stating that the primary term of all leases
will be five years, unless BOEM specifies otherwise. Unlike the prior
regulations and the proposed rule, section 556.600 in the final rule
does not attempt to ``specify otherwise'' in the regulation itself.
Instead, it states, at subsection 556.600(c), that BOEM will specify
the primary term in the final notice of sale and in the lease
instrument, giving BOEM flexibility for the future.
The new language will not preclude BOEM from offering eight year
leases, nor does the existing regulation mandate eight year leases.
Thus, the rule does not change BOEM's current practice. Accordingly,
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(3)(B), BOEM, for good cause, finds that
notice and public comment are unnecessary. In any event, as noted
above, the public had an opportunity to express its views on the
underlying policy in response to the PNOS published in the Federal
Register in 2009.
Section 556.601. How may I maintain my oil and gas lease beyond the
primary term? This section lists the ways in which a lessee may
maintain its lease for a period of time after the end of the primary
term. Final rule section 556.601 is substantively the same as proposed
rule section 256.601, with some minor language changes for clarity.
Proposed rule section 256.601(a) included, among the ways of
maintaining a lease beyond its primary term, the granting of a
suspension, but final rule section 556.601(f) retains the more specific
language from prior sections 556.37(b) and 556.73 that maintenance of a
lease beyond the primary term will not result from a suspension imposed
due to gross negligence or willful violation of a lease provision or
regulation.
Section 556.602. What is the primary term of my sulfur lease? As
described in proposed rule section 256.602, final rule section 556.602
states that the primary term of a sulfur lease will be not more than 10
years, as mandated by section 8(j) of OCSLA. (43 U.S.C. 1337(j)).
Proposed section 256.602 stated that a sulfur lease is subject to
administrative cancellation if an exploratory well was not begun in the
first five years. BOEM is no longer following the practice of
cancelling leases in these circumstances, and this provision has been
dropped from the final rule. Instead, final rule 556.602 states that
the sulfur lease will expire at the end of the primary term if not
maintained in accordance with the regulations.
Section 556.603. How may I maintain my sulfur lease beyond the
primary term? This section lists the ways in which a lessee may
maintain its sulfur lease after the end of the primary term. Final rule
section 556.603 is substantively the same as proposed rule section
256.603, with some minor language changes for clarity. Proposed rule
section 256.603 included, among ways of maintaining a lease beyond its
primary term, the granting of a suspension, but final rule section
556.603 elaborates that such an extension cannot result from a
suspension imposed due to gross negligence or willful violation of a
lease provision or regulation, as was stated at prior section 556.73.
Lease Obligations
Section 556.604. What are my rights and obligations as a record
title owner? This section outlines the rights and obligations of a
record title holder of an OCS lease. Final rule section 556.604
includes, with different subsections and some additional language,
proposed rule sections 256.605 and 256.612. Proposed rule section
256.605 was entitled, ``What are my obligations as a record title
owner?'' and proposed rule section 256.612 was entitled, ``May I assign
operating rights?'' In the final rule, BOEM has combined these
sections, as they both address the rights and obligations of a record
title owner.
Proposed rule section 256.612 stated that a record title owner may
assign (sever) operating rights, and refers to these assignments as
``subleases,'' which they are. The term ``assignment of operating
rights'' has been used in the past, but is inaccurate when referring to
an initial severance of operating rights. Operating rights are a part
of the whole of a record title interest. When they are initially
severed, they are actually
[[Page 18132]]
carved out of the record title and subleased to another party, while
the record title owner retains the rest of the record title interest,
i.e., that part of the record title from which the operating rights
were severed. This is different from a true assignment of a record
title interest, wherein the assignor does not retain the corresponding
part of the record title interest. And it is also different from a true
assignment of an operating rights interest, which would occur when one
who owns operating rights transfers his operating rights interest to
another. Final rule section 556.604(b) retains the proposed rule's use
of the term ``sublease'' and specifically states that a record title
owner may sublease its operating rights to someone else, who is thereby
the sublessee, referred to in the regulations as the operating rights
owner.
Both proposed rule section 256.612 and final rule sections
556.604(b) and (c) explain that operating rights must be described by
officially designated aliquot parts, and that, within any aliquot part,
a record title owner may create a maximum of two subleases by depth.
The one, or two, subleases may include the entire depth of the lease,
but if they do not, any depth intervals not subleased are retained by
the lessee/sublessor. Final rule section 556.604(c) elaborates that if
two subleases are created by depth level, the two subleases must abut
each other, with no gap in between. The ``no gap'' concept did not
appear in the proposed rule, but it is, and has been, BOEM's long-
established policy, and imposes no new duty on lessees. Therefore
notice and comment is unnecessary.
Both proposed rule section 256.605(a) and final rule section
556.604(d) explain that a record title interest owner is jointly and
severally liable, with all other record title owners and all operating
rights owners, for all non-monetary obligations of a lease that accrue
while it holds record title. Final rule section 556.604(f) also
contains the concept that a record title owner who obtained its record
title through assignment is responsible for remedying all existing
environmental or operational problems on a lease, with subrogation
rights against prior lessees. This concept was found in both the prior
regulations and in the proposed rule in sections addressing transfers
of lease interests, (556.62(e) and 256.618, respectively), as it is in
the final rule (556.713 and 556.807), but it is also appropriately
included here, as the requirement that an assignee remedy all existing
environmental and operational lease problems is an ``obligation'' of
the assignee-record title owner.
Proposed rule section 256.605(b) and final rule section 556.604(f)
both also address the responsibility of record title owners for
monetary obligations, pursuant to the Federal Oil and Gas Royalty
Simplification and Fairness Act. Both sections make clear that, with
respect to operating rights retained by a record title owner, the
record title owner is primarily liable for monetary obligations, but
with respect to those operating rights that have been subleased to
others, the record title owner becomes secondarily liable, while the
sublessee/operating rights owner is primarily liable.
Section 556.605. What are my rights and obligations as an operating
rights owner? Proposed rule section 256.606 and final rule section
556.605 both address the rights and obligations of an operating rights
owner, as opposed to a record title owner.
Final rule section 556.605(d) was added as the result of two
comments on the proposed rule. The comments pointed out that the
proposed rule was inconsistent in that proposed section 256.605(a)
stated that operating rights owners were jointly and severally liable
with record title owners for all non-monetary obligations, but proposed
section 256.606(c) stated that operating rights owners were so liable
only with respect to that portion of the lease subject to their
operating rights. To make clear that the latter concept is correct,
BOEM added final rule section 556.605(d), which states: ``[a]n
operating rights owner is only liable for obligations arising from that
portion of the lease to which its operating rights appertain and that
accrue during the period in which the operating rights owner owned the
operating rights.''
Proposed rule sections 256.606(c) and (d) are essentially repeated
in final rule sections 556.605 (e) and (g). In both cases, the former
section states that an operating rights owner is jointly and severally
liable, with all other operating rights owners and record title owners,
for non-monetary obligations. Also in both cases, the latter section
states that an operating rights owner is liable for monetary
obligations in proportion to its share of operating rights. Final rule
section 556.605(g) goes on to point out that operating rights owners
are primarily liable for these monetary obligations, while (as stated
in final rule section 556.604(f) and pointed out above) record title
owners are secondarily liable.
Final rule section 556.605(f) also makes clear that operating
rights owners that obtained rights through assignment are responsible
for remedying all existing environmental or operational problems on a
lease, with subrogation rights against prior operating rights owners.
As mentioned above, this concept was found in both the prior BOEM
regulations and in the proposed rule in sections addressing transfers
of lease interests, (556.62(e) and 256.618, respectively), as well as
in other sections of the final rule (556.712 and 556.807), but it is
also appropriately included here, as the requirement that an assignee
remedy all existing environmental and operational lease problems is an
``obligation'' of an assignee of operating rights.
Helium
Section 556.606. What must a lessee do if BOEM elects to extract
helium from a lease? This section provides that BOEM reserves the
ownership of, and the right to extract, helium from all gas produced
from an OCS lease, and describes what BOEM will do if it requests you
to deliver helium from operations associated with a lease. Final rule
section 556.606 repeats proposed rule section 256.630. The final rule
makes no changes to the proposed rule, other than conforming changes,
such as changing ``MMS'' to ``BOEM.''
8. Commentary on Subparts G & H--Transferring Interests in a Lease
The proposed rule followed the general format of the prior
regulations in addressing together, in one regulatory subpart, both
transfers of record title interests and transfers of operating rights
interests. These two types of transfers are not the same, however, and
they may have different consequences. Addressing them in the same
regulatory sections has sometimes led to confusion and ambiguity.
Therefore, in the final rule, BOEM divided the provisions dealing with
assignment of different types of lease interests into two different
subparts. Subpart G includes those provisions detailing the effects of
an assignment of a record title interest, while subpart H includes
those provisions detailing the effects of a sublease or subsequent
assignment of an operating rights interest. None of the provisions in
these subparts contains anything substantively new relative to the
prior regulations, but the final rule more clearly separates out and
explains the effects of an assignment of each type of lease interest on
both the assignor and assignee. Subpart G consists of sections 556.700
through 556.716, and subpart H consists of sections 556.800 through
556.810. A section-by-section analysis of the sections in Subpart G is
presented below, followed by a section-by-section analysis of the
sections in Subpart H.
[[Page 18133]]
9. Subpart G--Transferring All or Part of a Record Title Interest in a
Lease
Section 556.700. May I assign or sublease all or any part of the
record title interest in my lease? This section describes how a company
may apply for approval to assign its whole or partial record title
interest in its lease, or in any aliquot(s) thereof or to sublease
operating rights. Proposed rule sections 256.610, 256.611, and 256.612
were collapsed and subsumed into final rule section 556.700, insofar as
they apply to transfers of record title interests. Proposed rule
section 256.610 stated that all transfers of lease interests require
BOEM approval. Proposed rule section 256.611 and proposed rule section
256.612 repeated this requirement, with respect to transfers of ``lease
interests,'' and operating rights, respectively. The requirement that
BOEM approve transfers of record title interests and severances of
operating rights interests appears in final rule sections 556.700(a),
(b), and (c). Proposed rule sections 256.611 and 256.612 also specified
that transfers must be properly described by aliquot parts and/or
depth. This requirement of proper description is retained in final rule
section 556.700(c).
Proposed rule section 256.611 referred to both ``subdivisions'' and
``aliquot parts'' when describing transfers of lease interests, but in
final rule section 556.700, we removed the reference to subdivisions,
retaining only the reference to aliquot parts, in order to reduce the
potential for confusion. We also removed the definition of ``aliquot
part'' from this section and moved it into the definitions section of
the rule, section 556.106.
The last sentence of proposed rule section 256.611, stating that
BOEM may disapprove a transfer when the assignor or assignee has
unsatisfied obligations under this chapter, has been moved to final
rule section 556.704, entitled, ``When would BOEM disapprove an
assignment or sublease of an interest in my lease?'' Placement in that
final rule section is more appropriate.
Section 556.701. How do I seek approval of an assignment of the
record title interest in my lease, or a severance of operating rights
from that record title interest? This section describes the process for
obtaining BOEM approval of an assignment of a record title or operating
rights interest in an OCS lease. Final rule section 556.701(a) was
found at proposed rule section 256.613(a). The proposed rule section,
at 256.613(a)(1), set out the official form numbers and names that one
would use to effectuate and request approval of a transfer of lease
interest. The final rule, however, merely states that the BOEM Regional
Director will provide the form to be used to request and record such a
transfer. BOEM made this change to retain flexibility as to form name
and number in case these identifiers change in the future.
Proposed rule section 256.613(b), which provided that BOEM must
consult with and consider the views of the Attorney General before
approving a transfer of a lease interest, appears at final rule section
556.701(b). Finally, final rule paragraph 556.701(b) retains from prior
section 556.65 the statement that the Secretary may act on a transfer
if the Attorney General does not respond to a consultation request
within 30 days of that request.
Section 556.702. When will my assignment result in a segregated
lease? Final rule section 556.702(a) and proposed rule section
256.613(a)(2) both make clear that a transfer of 100% of the record
title interest in one or more aliquots of a lease results in
segregating the lease into two leases, both of which are referred to as
``segregated leases'' and are subject to all the terms and conditions
of the original lease. (Although it would be uncommon, it is also
possible that a lease could be segregated into more than two leases.)
Final rule section 556.702 also contains a subsection that was not
found in the proposed rule and was not in the prior regulations--
556.702(b). This provision in the final rule clarifies the principles
governing lease segregation. It is an outgrowth and corollary of the
lease segregation concept expressed in proposed rule section
256.613(a)(2). Specifically, final rule section 556.702(b) sets forth
the direct corollary to section 556.702(a) by making clear that
transfer of anything less than 100% of the record title interest in a
certain aliquot does not create a new lease, but creates a joint
ownership situation between the assignee(s) and assignor(s) in the
portion of the lease in which part of the ownership was transferred.
The last sentence of final rule section 556.702(b) states that a
transfer of less than 100% of the record title to an aliquot(s) is
subject to BOEM approval. This sentence reiterates the principle that
all transfers of lease interests are subject to approval by BOEM,
pursuant to section 8(e) of OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1337(e)), the lease terms
(see section 20 of the current lease form, Form BOEM-2005), and prior
regulations. This sentence was added in the final rule to ensure that
there is no doubt as to whether a transfer that creates a joint
ownership in a portion of a lease would constitute a lease transfer
necessitating BOEM approval.
Section 556.703. What is the effect of the approval of the
assignment of 100 percent of the record title in a particular
aliquot(s) of my lease and of the resulting lease segregation? Final
rule section 556.703 addresses the effects of a lease segregation
(i.e., a transfer of 100% of a record title interest in a particular
aliquot of a lease, which creates a new lease to be in effect on the
segregated aliquot). It combines part of proposed rule section
256.613(a)(2) with retained parts of BOEM's prior regulations from
section 556.68. Proposed rule section 256.613(a)(2) stated that, in the
case of a lease segregation, the requirement to post the requisite
financial assurance applies to each new lease. This concept has been
carried through into final rule section 556.703(a).
An important clarification is made in final rule section
556.703(c). The proposed rule at section 256.613(a)(2) stated that upon
lease segregation, ``the newly segregated lease . . . is subject to all
the terms and conditions of your original lease.'' The ambiguity of
this language could give rise to an improper inference in certain
circumstances that the terms of the original lease pertaining to any
applicable royalty suspension volume (RSV) would apply in full and
equally to each of the segregated leases.
BOEM's prior regulations in section 556.68(a) were more specific
than those from the proposed rule's section 256.613(a)(2), but are
still ambiguous on this point. The prior regulation stated that
``[r]oyalty, minimum royalty and rental provisions of the original
lease shall apply separately to each segregated portion.'' The prior
regulation mentioned royalty provisions specifically, and stated that
such provisions will apply ``separately'' to each lease, but its
relationship to any unused RSV was not clear.
The ambiguity in the prior regulation may have led some to
incorrectly infer that when a lease is segregated, each new lease would
be allowed the entire amount of remaining available RSV that applied to
the original lease. Such an interpretation would not have been
justified. In the case of segregation of a deep water lease with an RSV
into two leases, for example, that interpretation would have the
substantive effect of doubling the remaining volume of royalty-free
production. That is not the intent of offering particular leases with
specified royalty suspension volumes under the authority of 43 U.S.C.
1337(a)(1)(H) or 1337(a)(3)(C) (the royalty relief provisions of the
OCSLA enacted in the Deep Water Royalty
[[Page 18134]]
Relief Act of 1995) or 42 U.S.C. 19504 or 19505 (the deep gas and deep
water royalty relief provisions in the Energy Policy Act of 2005). The
correct interpretation is that if an offshore lease is divided through
segregation, any remaining unused RSV must be shared by the segregated
leases in a manner not to exceed the total amount of the remaining
unused RSV.
Final rule section 556.703(c) clarifies that in a lease
segregation, each segregated lease is not individually entitled to the
whole remaining RSV allowed to the original lease. Each lease
segregation is unique and presents different circumstances that might
affect the allocation of RSV. Therefore, paragraph (c) makes clear that
BOEM will allocate the RSV among segregated leases on an equitable
basis, considering all of the circumstances. Circumstances that may
affect that allocation include the reasons for the segregation, whether
the lease is producing, the relative production of the leases after
segregation, future development plans, etc. The allocation of any
remaining RSV will be stated in BOEM's approval of the assignment and
segregation.
Final rule section 556.703(c) grows out of the proposed rule's
statement at section 256.613(a)(2) that a newly segregated lease ``is
subject to all the terms and conditions of [the] original lease.'' The
final rule section carries forward the concept that the newly
segregated lease is ``subject to'' any RSV provision that applied to
the original lease, but clarifies in what manner that RSV provision
will be applied to the two now-segregated leases. The language of final
rule section 556.703(c) also clarifies the prior regulation's statement
that royalty provisions apply ``separately'' to each lease. The final
rule's language continues to apply the RSV provision ``separately'' to
each segregated lease, but clarifies that ``separately'' does not mean
``equally.''
Final rule section 556.703(d) retains from prior section 556.68(b)
the principle that each segregated lease continues in effect for the
primary term specified in the original lease, unless maintained
thereafter pursuant to the regulations. Paragraph (d) makes express the
principle that with respect to continuation beyond the primary term,
each segregated lease stands on its own. To remain in force after the
primary term, each segregated lease must, on its own, meet the
requirements of section 556.601, regardless of whether other segregated
leases, which were part of the original lease, meet such requirements.
Production from one segregated lease will not keep any other lease that
was part of the original lease in effect beyond its primary term
(unless, of course, the leases are included within the same unit). BOEM
believes that the regulations are more clear with both principles
expressly stated in the final rule.
Section 556.704. When would BOEM disapprove an assignment or
sublease of an interest in my lease? Final rule section 556.704 sets
forth when a transfer of a lease interest may be void or disapproved by
BOEM. The final rule section combines parts of proposed rule section
256.611 and section 556.62 from BOEM's prior regulations. The last
sentence of proposed rule section 256.611 stated that an assignment
could be disapproved if the assignor or assignee had outstanding
obligations under this chapter of the regulations. This provision
appears at final rule section 556.704(a)(1). Prior section 556.62
voided assignments made pursuant to certain prelease agreements. This
provision is found at final rule section 556.704(b).
Final rule section 556.704 also contains two provisions, at
paragraphs (a)(2) and (a)(3), which make clear that BOEM may disapprove
an assignment that is incorrect as to form or that does not comport
with the regulations. Provision 556.704(a)(2) more clearly expresses
the intent of proposed rule section 256.613, which listed the names and
numbers of the forms that BOEM requires to be used to effectuate a
transfer of record title or operating rights interests. Pursuant to the
proposed rule, BOEM would accept only transfers submitted on these
forms. Implicit in the requirement to use these forms is the
requirement to complete them correctly. Transfers attempted to be
submitted on other forms, on incorrectly completed forms, or using
other documentation would not be accepted.
In order to allow more flexibility and avoid restricting BOEM to a
particular form name or number stated in the regulations, the final
rule states that the Regional Director will provide a form for use in
transfers of record title or operating rights. As in the proposed rule,
however, only the form provided by the Regional Director will be
accepted by BOEM, and only when completed correctly. Therefore, final
rule section 556.704(a)(2) makes clear that a transfer request
submitted to BOEM may be rejected if not ``acceptable as to form or
content.'' The latter provision, 556.704(a)(3), provides that an
attempted transfer that does not comport with the regulations or other
applicable law will be disapproved.
Section 556.705. How do I transfer the interest of a deceased
natural person who was a lessee? This section outlines the procedures
to follow to transfer an interest in an OCS lease from a deceased
natural person. Final rule section 556.705 repeats proposed rule
section 256.614, with minor wording changes.
Section 556.706. What if I want to transfer record title interests
in more than one lease at the same time, but to different parties?
Final rule section 556.706 repeats proposed rule section 256.615 with
some minor language changes. Both the proposed and final rule sections
address a lessee or other interest holder who desires to transfer
interests it owns in different leases to different parties. Both
sections note that in this situation, each transfer requires its own
instrument, which must be originally executed and filed in duplicate
with BOEM.
Section 556.707. What if I want to transfer different types of
lease interests (not only record title interests) in the same lease to
different parties? This section outlines the process for transferring
different types of interests in a lease to different parties. Final
rule section 556.707 derives from proposed rule section 256.615. That
proposed rule section addressed the situation where interests in
different leases are being transferred to different parties. The
proposed rule said nothing, however, about the corollary situation:
Where the interest holder desires to transfer different types of lease
interests in the same lease to different parties. Final rule section
556.707 was added to cover this corollary situation. It states that
even if an interest holder is transferring interests in the same lease,
if they are different types of interests and being transferred to
different parties, each transfer requires its own separate instrument,
which must be duly executed and filed in duplicate with BOEM.
Section 556.708. What if I want to transfer my record title
interests in more than one lease to the same party? This final rule
section addresses lessees who desire to transfer interests in more than
one lease to the same party. Final rule section 556.708 derives from
the first sentence of proposed rule section 256.615. As noted by both
proposed rule section 256.615 and final rule section 556.708, a lessee
may not transfer record title interest in more than one lease using the
same instrument. If a lessee wishes to transfer record title interest
in more than one lease at the same time, the lessee must submit
separate, originally executed forms for each transfer. Final rule
section 556.708 also retains the statement from prior section
556.64(a)(8) that a separate fee applies to each individual transfer of
interest.
[[Page 18135]]
Section 556.709. What if I want to transfer my record title
interest in one lease to multiple parties? This section describes the
requirements associated with transferring the record title interest in
a lease to multiple parties. There is no analogous section in the
proposed rule to final rule section 556.709, but the final rule section
is a clarification of proposed rule section 256.615. That proposed rule
section addressed the situations where interests in different leases
are being transferred to different parties, or to the same party. The
proposed rule did not address, however, the corollary situation, where
the interest holder desires to transfer different portions of its
record title interest in the same lease to multiple parties. Final rule
section 556.709 was added to cover this corollary situation. It states
that if a record title owner is transferring its record title interests
in a single lease to multiple parties, it may use a single instrument.
This differs from the circumstance addressed in section 556.707 where
transfers of more than one type of interest in the single lease require
use of more than one instrument. Final rule section 556.709 also
retains the statement from prior section 556.64(a)(8) that where
multiple transfers of interest are accomplished, a separate fee applies
to each individual transfer of interest.
Section 556.710. What is the effect of an assignment of a lease on
an assignor's liability under the lease? Final rule section 556.710 was
found at proposed rule section 256.616. Both the proposed and final
rule sections state the long-established regulatory concept that after
an assignment an assignor remains liable for all monetary and non-
monetary obligations that accrued before approval of the assignment.
Proposed rule section 256.616 applied to assignments in general, but
final rule section 556.710 applies only to transfers of record title
interests, and an analogous final rule section, 556.805, applies only
to transfers of operating rights interests.
Section 556.711. What is the effect of a record title holder's
sublease of operating rights on the record title holder's liability?
This section provides that a record title holder who subleases
operating rights remains liable for later accruing obligations of the
lease, but is only secondarily liable for monetary obligations accruing
thereafter. Parts of proposed rule section 256.616 appear at final rule
section 556.711, specifically in 556.711(a) and (b). These two
paragraphs, along with final rule section 556.709, retain all of
proposed rule section 256.616 and make clear the extent of the
liability retained by a party who assigns its record title interest.
BOEM received a comment on proposed rule section 256.616 requesting
that the final sentence be deleted because it was ambiguous. BOEM
agrees with the comment and has deleted that sentence. The scenario it
addressed in the proposed rule has been addressed without ambiguity in
final rule section 556.711(a).
Final rule section 556.711(c) arises from FOGRMA, and states that a
sublessee of operating rights is primarily liable for monetary
obligations, but the record title holder, even after the sublease,
remains secondarily liable for monetary obligations.
Section 556.712. What is the effective date of a transfer? This
section describes the effective date of the transfer of a record title
interest in a lease. Final rule section 556.712 is a combination of
proposed rule section 256.617 and section 556.62(c) of BOEM's prior
regulations. In the proposed rule, section 256.617 stated that an
assignment is effective on the first day of the month following the
request to assign, not following the date that BOEM approved the
assignment. This left open the possibility, for example, that if you
made a request to assign in April, it would become effective on the
first of May, even if BOEM did not approve it until the fifteenth of
May or later. The final rule section clarifies that, unless requested
otherwise (see below), the effective date of a transfer of a lease
interest is the first day of the next month after BOEM approves the
transfer.
Final rule section 556.712, like proposed rule section 256.617,
allows the parties to a transfer to specify a date on which their
transfer will become effective. The proposed rule stated that BOEM
would record the assignment as effective as of the date specified by
the parties. The prior regulation, at section 556.62(c), did not
affirmatively state that BOEM would accept the date specified by the
parties. The prior regulation used the word ``request'' to refer to the
parties' choice of a different effective date, and stated that the
effective date would be specified in BOEM's approval. After further
consideration of this issue, BOEM has decided to retain the idea in the
prior regulation, and to clarify any ambiguity by stating that BOEM
must approve a request for a specified effective date for a transfer of
record title interest.
Both proposed rule section 256.617 and final rule section 556.712
also make clear that the transferor's obligations continue to accrue
until BOEM approves the transfer, no matter when the effective date is
specified to be. In other words, the proposed and final rules clarify
that if the parties to a transfer specify an effective date that falls
before BOEM's approval of the transfer, this date is ``effective''
between the parties, but it does not have any effect on the obligations
of the transferor to BOEM. The accrual of those obligations is ended
only by BOEM's approval of the transfer.
Section 556.713. What is the effect of an assignment of a lease on
an assignee's liability under the lease? With respect to an assignee of
a record title interest, final rule section 556.713 repeats proposed
rule section 256.618. Both sections recite the obligations of an
assignee, which include complying with the lease terms and regulations,
remedying existing environmental and operational problems, and
performing decommissioning.
Section 556.714. As a restricted joint bidder, may I transfer an
interest to another restricted joint bidder? Final rule section 556.714
requires a person on the Restricted Joint Bidders List, when
transferring less than 100% of its interest in a lease to another
person on the same list, to file with BOEM all agreements applicable to
the acquisition of the interest transferred. Final rule paragraph
556.714(a) retains the language to this effect found in prior section
556.64(i). This same requirement was also found in proposed rule
section 256.619, and it engendered a comment that objected to proposed
rule section 256.619 on several grounds. The comment stated that the
documents requested by proposed section 256.619 may be ``sensitive,''
i.e., confidential, and that the section is too broad and vague with an
``unascertainable'' intent. The comment also stated that because BOEM
approves assignments, BOEM will be aware of the chain of title through
which the assignor received its interest, rendering unnecessary the
filing of agreements relating to the assignor's acquisition of that
interest. The commenter suggested that BOEM ``should only be interested
in the timing and nature of the agreement whereby one restricted joint
bidder acquired from another restricted joint bidder.''
For the most part, BOEM disagrees with this comment. Proposed rule
section 256.619 did not introduce a new concept, but restated what was
originally in prior section 556.64(i). Nor does BOEM find the section
overly vague. The filing of the requested agreements or the provision
of the description of the transaction (see below) is necessary to allow
the Department of Justice to properly review the antitrust implications
of assignments between restricted joint
[[Page 18136]]
bidders, as is required for all assignments by section 8(e) of OCSLA
(43 U.S.C. 1337(e)). Also, the final rule section does, as one comment
noted, demonstrate BOEM's interest in ``the timing and nature of the
agreement whereby one restricted joint bidder acquired [a lease
interest] from another restricted joint bidder.'' The final rule, by
retaining the language from prior section 556.64(i), makes clear that
BOEM is seeking information about acquisitions only from a transferor
that was on the Restricted Joint Bidders List at the time of its
acquisition of the interest, and that is now transferring less than its
entire interest to an entity that was on the same list.
In response to the comment, however, BOEM has noted in section
556.714(d) that a person submitting the requested agreements may
request they be treated confidentially and BOEM will do so to the
extent authorized by its regulations and applicable Departmental
regulations. Further, as suggested by the commenter, section 556.714(a)
allows the assignor/submitter to choose whether to submit the requested
agreements or instead to provide BOEM with a description of the timing
and nature of the transfer agreement, together with a statement
certifying the truth of this description.
Section 556.715. Are there any interests I may transfer or record
without BOEM approval? This section provides that a lessee may create,
transfer, or assign an economic interest in a lease without BOEM
approval, but that such transferor must send BOEM a copy of each
instrument creating or transferring such a lease interest within 90
days after the last party executes the transfer instrument. Final rule
section 556.715 (along with final rule section 556.808) is the
successor to proposed rule section 256.620. Final rule section 556.715
and proposed section 256.620 are substantively similar, but the
language of the proposed section was changed somewhat in the final
rule. The proposed rule section stated that a lessee could create or
transfer ``carried working interests, overriding royalty interests, or
payments out of production'' without BOEM approval. In the final rule,
instead of listing these three types of interests, section 556.715(a)
states that a lessee may create, transfer, or assign ``economic
interests'' without BOEM approval. The term ``economic interest'' is
defined in final rule section 556.106 to encompass ``any right to, or
any right dependent upon, production of crude oil, natural gas, or
liquefied petroleum products,'' and includes, among others, the three
types of interests listed in the proposed section.
Final rule section 556.714 also makes clear that the 90-day
deadline set forth in prior section 556.64(a)(2) applies to filings
memorializing transfers of economic interests. Prior section
556.64(a)(2) did not explicitly state that the 90-day deadline applies
to such filings. The 90-day filing deadline appears in final rule
section 556.701 with respect to the filings of transfers of record
title interests and the severance of operating rights interests, and
the final rule makes clear that the deadline also applies to filings of
transfers of economic interests by so stating in final rule section
556.714.
BOEM received one comment on proposed section 256.620, which
expressed concerns about confidentiality of documents and asked whether
the section intended to require the submission of joint operating
agreements to BOEM. The comment notes this provision, i.e., section
256.620, and its requirements are ``not [] new,'' and that is correct--
this provision is currently found at section 556.64(a)(7). The final
rule section does not impose any new requirements and does not require
the filing of joint operating agreements as they do not necessarily
create economic interests, only rights to such interests. Once those
interests are created, however, documents respecting them must be filed
with BOEM. As to confidentiality, documents will be treated in
accordance with BOEM's regulation at section 556.104 and any applicable
Departmental regulations.
Section 556.716. What must I do with respect to the designation of
operator on a lease when a transfer of record title is submitted? This
section provides the circumstances under which the transfer of a record
title interest triggers the need to file a new designation of operator
form with BOEM. Final rule section 556.716 is based on several prior
and proposed rule sections. Proposed rule section 256.611 and prior
section 556.62 explained how a record title, or other lease interest,
may be transferred, but did not mention the need, which often arises
upon such a transfer, to file a new designation of operator form. Prior
regulation section 550.143 stated that, when there is a change of
designated operator, you must file a new designation of operator form
with BOEM. Prior section 550.143 was, however, in a part of the
regulations that does not address transfers of lease interests.
Because, as stated above, the need to file a new designation of
operator form often arises when lease interests are transferred, BOEM
added section 556.716 here in part 556, to augment section 550.143 and
ensure that parties to a transfer are aware of their duties with
respect to designation of an operator.
10. Subpart H--Transferring All or Part of the Operating Rights in a
Lease
Section 556.800. As an operating rights owner, may I assign all or
part of my operating rights interest? This section provides that an
operating rights owner may assign all or part of its operating rights
interests, subject to BOEM approval. Final rule section 556.800 repeats
proposed rule section 256.612 with minor language changes.
Section 556.801. How do I seek approval of an assignment of my
operating rights? This section describes the process by which an
assignor of operating rights must obtain approval of such an
assignment. Final rule section 556.801 is based on proposed rule
section 256.613. The proposed rule section applied to all transfers of
lease interests, but final rule section 556.801 applies only to
assignments of operating rights from one operating rights owner to
another, in accordance with the approach in the final rule to separate
regulatory sections concerning transfers of operating rights and those
concerning transfers of record title interests.
Both proposed rule section 256.613 and final rule section 556.801
require that BOEM approve transfers of operating rights. Documents
memorializing such transfers must be filed within 90 days of the
transfer. Both sections also note BOEM may consult with the Attorney
General. The final rule section states the Regional Director will
provide the form on which to record the transfer of operating rights,
instead of citing particular forms as was done in the proposed rule.
For the same reasons laid out above in the discussion of final rule
section 556.716, final rule section 556.801 reiterates the requirement
found at prior regulation section 550.143 that a new operating rights
owner must file a designation of operator form.
One paragraph of final rule section 556.801 did not appear in the
proposed rule: 556.801(c) states that if an operating rights owner
transfers an undivided interest in its operating rights, that transfer
creates a joint ownership of the operating rights in the transferor and
the transferee. This provision did not appear in the proposed rule, but
it is merely a description of the well-accepted legal consequences of
such a transfer. As with a record title interest, an operating rights
owner can transfer less than 100% of a certain part of its operating
[[Page 18137]]
rights interest, retaining some percentage of interest in that part.
This is referred to as the transfer of an ``undivided interest'' and
creates co-ownership.
Section 556.802. When would BOEM disapprove the assignment of all
or part of my operating rights interest? Final rule section 556.802
sets forth the circumstances under which BOEM would disapprove an
assignment of an operating rights interest. The final rule section is
based on proposed rule section 256.611. The last sentence of proposed
rule section 256.611 stated an assignment could be disapproved if the
assignor or assignee had outstanding obligations under this chapter of
the regulations. This provision appears at final rule section
556.802(a).
Final rule section 556.802 also contains two provisions, at
paragraphs (b) and (c), which make clear that BOEM may disapprove an
assignment of operating rights interests that is incorrect as to form
or does not comport with the regulations. The former provision,
556.802(b), derives from proposed rule section 256.613, which listed
the names and numbers of the forms that BOEM requires to be used to
effectuate a transfer of record title or operating rights interests.
Pursuant to the proposed rule, BOEM would accept only transfers
submitted on--and consistent with--these forms.
In order to allow more flexibility and avoid restricting BOEM to a
particular form name or number stated in the regulations, the final
rule states the Regional Director will provide a form for use in
transfers of record title or operating rights. As in the proposed rule,
only the form provided by the Regional Director will be accepted by
BOEM and only when completed correctly. Therefore, final rule section
556.802(b) makes clear that a transfer request submitted to BOEM may be
rejected if not ``acceptable as to form or content.'' The latter
provision, 556.802(c), provides that an attempted transfer that does
not comport with the regulations and/or applicable law will be
disapproved.
Section 556.803. What if I want to assign operating rights
interests in more than one lease at the same time, but to different
parties? This section addresses the assignment of operating rights
interests in more than one lease to different parties. Final rule
section 556.803 is based on proposed rule section 256.615. Both the
first sentence of the proposed rule section and the final rule section
address the situation where a lessee or other interest holder desires
to transfer interests it owns in different leases to different parties.
Final rule section 556.803, however, applies only to an operating
rights owner who desires to simultaneously assign its operating rights
in multiple leases. The limited application of final rule section
556.803 is in keeping with the final rule's separation of regulatory
sections concerning transfers of record title by record title holders
and those concerning transfers of operating rights by operating rights
owners.
Section 556.804. What if I want to assign my operating rights in a
lease to multiple parties? This section addresses the assignment of
operating rights interests in one lease to more than one party. There
was no analogous section in the proposed rule to final rule section
556.804, but the final rule section developed out of proposed rule
section 256.615. That proposed rule section, also discussed immediately
above, addressed the transfer of interests in different leases to
different parties, or to the same party. The proposed rule did not
address, however, the corollary situation, where the interest holder
desires to transfer different portions of its operating rights
interests in the same lease to multiple parties. Final rule section
556.804 was added to cover this corollary situation. It states that if
an operating rights owner is transferring its operating rights in a
single lease to multiple parties, it may use a single instrument. Final
rule section 556.804 also retains the statement from prior section
556.64(a)(8), which states that where multiple transfers of interest
are accomplished using one instrument, a separate fee applies to each
individual transfer of interest.
Section 556.805. What is the effect of an operating rights owner's
assignment of operating rights on the assignor's liability? This final
rule section states the long-established regulatory concept that after
an assignment, the assignor remains liable for all monetary and non-
monetary obligations that accrued before approval of the assignment.
Final rule section 556.805 was found at proposed rule section 256.616.
That proposed rule section applied to assignments in general, but final
rule section 556.805 applies only to assignments of operating rights
interests.
Section 556.806. What is the effective date of an assignment of
operating rights? This section describes the effective date of the
transfer of an operating rights interest in a lease. Final rule section
556.806 is a combination of proposed rule section 256.617 and prior
section 556.62(c). In the proposed rule, analogous provision 256.617
stated an assignment is effective on the first day of the month
following the request to assign, not following the date that BOEM
approved the assignment. As explained above, in the discussion of final
rule section 556.712, this left open the possibility that an assignment
could ostensibly become ``effective' before it was approved. Final rule
section 556.806 clarifies that (unless requested otherwise, see below)
the effective date of an assignment of an operating rights interest is
the first day of the month after the month in which BOEM approves the
transfer.
Final rule section 556.806, like proposed rule section 256.617,
allows the parties to a transfer to specify a date on which their
transfer will become effective. The proposed rule stated that BOEM
would record the assignment as effective as of the date specified by
the parties. The prior regulation, at section 556.62(c), did not
affirmatively state that BOEM would accept the date specified by the
parties. The prior regulation used the word ``request'' to refer to the
parties' choice of a different effective date, and stated that the
effective date would be specified in BOEM's approval. After further
consideration of this issue, BOEM has decided, in the final rule, to
retain the idea in the prior regulation, and to clarify any ambiguity
by stating that BOEM must approve a request for a specified effective
date for a transfer of an operating rights interest.
Both proposed rule section 256.617 and final rule section 556.806
also make clear that the transferor's obligations do not end until BOEM
approves the transfer, no matter when the effective date is specified
to be. In other words, the proposed and final rules clarify that if the
parties to a transfer specify an effective date that falls before
BOEM's approval of the transfer, this date is ``effective'' between the
parties, but it does not have any effect on the obligations of the
transferor to BOEM. The accrual of those obligations is ended only by
BOEM's approval of the transfer.
Section 556.807. What is the effect of an assignment of operating
rights on an assignee's liability? This section recites the obligations
of an assignee, which include complying with the lease terms and
regulations, remedying existing environmental and operational problems
on the leasehold, and performing decommissioning obligations. Final
rule section 556.807 repeats proposed rule section 256.618, but only
with respect to an assignee of an operating rights interest. Proposed
rule section 256.618 addressed both assignees of record title interests
and operating rights interests, but consistent with the final rule's
separate treatment
[[Page 18138]]
of these two types of interests, this final rule section addresses only
the effect of an assignment of operating rights on an assignee's
liability.
Section 556.808. As an operating rights owner, are there any
interests I may assign without BOEM approval? This section provides
that an operating rights owner may create, transfer, or assign economic
interests without BOEM approval, but that for record keeping purposes,
the operating rights owner must send BOEM a copy of each instrument
creating or transferring such interests within 90 days after the last
party executes the transfer instrument. Final rule section 556.808
(along with final rule section 556.715) is the successor to proposed
rule section 256.620. Final rule section 556.808 is substantively
similar to proposed section 256.620, but the final rule section applies
to operating rights owners and contains somewhat different language
from the proposed section. The proposed rule section stated that you
could create or transfer ``carried working interests, overriding
royalty interests, or payments out of production'' without BOEM
approval. In the final rule, instead of listing these three types of
interests, section 556.808(a) states that you may create, transfer, or
assign ``economic interests'' without BOEM approval. The term
``economic interest'' is defined in final rule section 556.106 to
encompass ``any right to, or any right dependent upon, production of
crude oil, natural gas, or natural gas liquids,'' and includes, among
others, the three types of interests listed in the proposed section.
Final rule section 556.808 also makes clear that the 90-day
deadline set forth in prior regulation section 556.64(a)(2) also
applies to filings memorializing transfers of economic interests. Prior
section 556.64(a)(2) did not explicitly state that the 90-day deadline
applies to such filings. The 90-day filing deadline appears in final
rule section 556.801 with respect to the filings of assignments of
operating rights interests, and the final rule makes clear that the
deadline also applies to filings of transfers of economic interests by
so stating in final rule section 556.808.
BOEM received one comment on proposed section 256.620, which
expressed concerns about confidentiality of documents and asked whether
the section intended to require the submission of joint operating
agreements to BOEM. The comment notes that this provision, i.e.,
256.620, and its requirements are ``not [ ] new'' and that is correct--
this provision is currently found at 556.64(a)(7). The final rule
section does not impose any new requirements and does not require the
filing of joint operating agreements as they do not necessarily create
economic interests, only rights to such interests. Once those interests
are created, however, documents respecting them must be filed with
BOEM. As to confidentiality, documents will be treated in accordance
with final rule section 556.104 and any applicable Departmental
regulations.
Section 556.810. What must I do with respect to the designation of
operator on a lease when a transfer of operating rights ownership is
submitted? This section provides the circumstances under which the
transfer of an operating rights interest triggers the need to file a
new designation of operator form with BOEM. Final rule section 556.810
is a clarification and extension of several prior and proposed rule
sections. Proposed rule section 256.611 and section 556.62 from BOEM's
previous regulations explained how a record title or operating rights
interest may be transferred, but did not mention the need, which often
arises upon such a transfer, to file a new designation of operator
form. Current section 550.143 states that, when there is a change of
designated operator, you must file a new designation of operator form
with BOEM. Current section 550.143 is, however, in a part of the
regulations that does not address transfers of lease interests. Because
the need to file a new designation of operator form often arises when
lease interests are transferred, such as operating rights interests,
BOEM added section 556.810 here in part 556 to augment prior BOEM
regulation section 550.143, and to ensure that parties to an operating
rights transfer are aware of their duties with respect to designation
of an operator.
11. Subpart I--Bonding or Other Financial Assurance
Part 560, section 560.500(b) in the final rule, addresses the
electronic filing of documents concerning bonding or other financial
assurance. The substance of final rule section 560.500(b) was in
proposed rule section 256.503(c), which established the circumstances
under which BOEM may require, rather than request, electronic document
submission. The proposed and final rule sections provide that BOEM
reserves the right to mandate the submission of financial assurance
information electronically after publishing a 90 day-notice to that
effect in the Federal Register. Submission of financial assurance data
electronically would contribute significantly to streamlining the
bonding process and facilitate a more efficient transfer of data and
information between BOEM and the regulated community. BOEM received no
comments on proposed rule section 256.503(c). Accordingly, although no
other substantive changes related to bonding are made in the final
rule, this provision was retained from the proposed rule at section
560.500(b).
Other than the electronic filing change that appears in final rule
section 560.500(b) and minor administrative changes made to subpart I,
as noted below, the regulatory sections in the subpart remain the same
as in the prior regulations, where they are located at 30 CFR subpart
I, consisting of prior sections 556.52 through 556.59.
Sections 556.900-556.907. These sections establish bonding
requirements for the lessee of an OCS oil and gas or sulfur lease. BOEM
is not making any substantive changes to Subpart I--Bonding or Other
Financial Assurance--relative to the prior regulations. The only
changes made to this subpart in the final rule are administrative or
conforming changes necessary to avoid inconsistency with the rest of
BOEM's regulations. These changes are: (1) Editorial improvement; (2)
correction of the inadvertent deletion of cross-references to former
MMS regulations now administered by BSEE and ONRR; (3) changes in the
section numbers and conforming changes needed in the text due to the
section number changes; (4) changing references to ``Associate
Director'' to ``Director,'' as there are no ``Associate Directors''
within BOEM; and (5) consistently referring to decommissioning
obligations as ``decommissioning obligations,'' rather than by listing
some or all of the constituent parts of decommissioning.
12. Subpart J--Bonus or Royalty Credits for Exchange of Certain Leases
Section 556.1000. Leases formerly eligible for a bonus or royalty
credit. This section provides that bonus or royalty credits issued by
BOEM pursuant to the Gulf of Mexico Energy Security Act of 2006
(GOMESA) (43 U.S.C. 1331 note) are no longer available. The deadline
for applying for such a bonus or royalty credit was October 14, 2010;
therefore, lessees may no longer apply for such credits. The proposed
rule contained several sections addressing these credits because it was
published in May 2009, before the October 2010 deadline. The final rule
has only one section addressing these credits--section 556.1000.
Although the GOMESA lease exchange/credit program is no longer
active, section 556.1000 has been included in the final rule because
[[Page 18139]]
GOMESA did not specify a deadline to apply for lease credits. The
October 14, 2010, deadline was set by BOEM in its regulations, and must
be retained to forestall future requests for lease credits under
GOMESA.
13. Subpart K--Ending a Lease
Section 556.1100. How does a lease expire? This section provides
the circumstances under which a lease will expire at the end of its
primary term. Final section 556.1100 is substantively the same as
proposed rule section 256.700, with minor wording changes. The final
rule section is also divided into two paragraphs, one addressing oil
and gas leases, and one addressing sulfur leases.
BOEM received one comment noting that proposed section 256.700
listed the ways to maintain a lease beyond the primary term, but failed
to list production from unitized leases as one of those ways. The
comment suggested that BOEM add in section 256.700 a reference to
production from unitized leases as one of the ways to maintain a lease.
Final rule section 556.1100 refers back to final rule section 556.601
for the ways in which to maintain a lease beyond the primary term,
which includes, at 556.601(e), production from unitized leases.
Section 556.1101. May I relinquish my lease or an aliquot part
thereof? Final rule section 556.1101 repeats the substance of proposed
rule section 256.701. Both sections name the form that must be filed in
triplicate by all lessees to effect a lease relinquishment and both
note that the relinquishment is effective on the date of filing. Both
sections also make clear that a relinquishment does not relieve the
relinquisher(s) of any accrued obligations, but to express this concept
the final rule section has retained the language in prior section
556.76, rather than using the proposed language.
Prior section 556.76 also stated that no filing fee is required for
a relinquishment. The proposed rule, however, said nothing on this
subject. It did not contain the statement in the prior regulations that
no filing fee is required, but neither did it say that a filing fee was
required for a relinquishment. The final rule retains the ``no filing
fee'' statement from prior regulations at section 556.76.
Section 556.1102. Under what circumstances will BOEM cancel my
lease? This section provides the circumstances under which BOEM may
cancel a producing or a non-producing OCS lease. Final rule section
556.1102 contains the substance of proposed rule section 256.702, with
some minor wording changes for clarity. Both sections state that
failure to comply with a provision of a lease or of the regulations may
result in lease cancellation, but the final rule section also makes
clear that failure to provide requested financial assurance may result
in lease cancellation or assessment of civil penalties. (See final rule
section 556.1102(f).) Final rule section 556.1102(f) is a clarification
of proposed rule subsections 256.702(b) and (c). Both these subsections
state that failure to comply with any provision of the regulations may
result in lease cancellation, and this includes failure to comply with
those regulations requiring the maintenance of financial assurance.
Proposed rule section 256.702 generally referred to section 5(a) of
OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1334(a)), whereas final rule section 556.1102 was
written to more closely follow sections 5(a)(2)(A) and (B) of OCSLA (43
U.S.C. 1334(a)(2)(A) and 1334(a)(2)(B)). Both the final and proposed
rule sections repeat section 5(a)'s directive that a lease may be
cancelled any time BOEM finds that continued activity will probably
cause harm or damage to inter alia, life or property, that such threat
of harm or damage will not disappear or acceptably decrease in a
reasonable time, and that the advantages of lease cancellation outweigh
the advantages of continuing the lease. But final rule section 556.1102
paragraphs (d) and (e) also include section 5(a)'s requirements that
cancellation pursuant to the terms above must be subsequent to a
hearing and may not occur unless and until operations under the lease
have been suspended or prohibited by the Department continuously for a
period of five years.
14. Subpart L--Leases Maintained Under Section 6 of OCSLA
Subpart L consists of two final rule sections, 556.1200 and
556.1201, which have been retained from prior sections 556.79 and
556.80, respectively. These two sections were not in the proposed rule.
The Preamble to the proposed rule stated that prior section 256.79 (now
556.79) was ``[e]liminated as unnecessary repetition'' of OCSLA section
6(b) (43 U.S.C. 1335(b)) and prior section 256.80 (now 556.80) was
``covered in 30 CFR part 281'' (now part 581).
BOEM has reconsidered its decision to eliminate subpart L from its
regulations, and, for the reasons outlined below, has decided to retain
it in this final rule.
Section 556.1200. Effect of regulations on lease. Final rule
section 556.1200 makes clear the relationship between BOEM's
regulations and the lease provisions of those leases maintained under
section 6 of OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1335). Section 6 of OCSLA applies to a
specific group of leases--State-issued OCS leases issued before
December 21, 1948.
BOEM has retained this provision, derived from prior section
556.79, even though it includes some repetition of Section 6 of OCSLA.
Retaining this in final rule section 556.112 is helpful to BOEM's
stakeholders because it clarifies the interplay between BOEM's
regulations and Section 6 leases.
Section 556.1201. Section 6(a) leases and leases other than those
for oil, gas, or sulfur. BOEM has determined that the proposed rule was
incorrect in asserting that prior part 556, subpart L, which consisted
of prior sections 556.79 and 556.80, was an unnecessary duplication of
provisions in another part of the regulations. BOEM has therefore
decided to retain, in final rule section 556.1201, the substance of
prior section 556.80. Final rule section 556.1201 states that the
existence of a Section 6 oil and gas lease does not preclude the
issuance, in the same area, of other types of leases under OCSLA. BOEM
has determined that this section should be retained to clarify the
circumstances surrounding Section 6 leases.
15. Subpart M--Environmental Studies
Section 556.1300. Environmental studies. Subpart M--Environmental
Studies consists of section 556.1300 in the final rule and provides
that BOEM will conduct studies of any area or region included in any
oil and gas lease sale as needed to assess and manage impacts on the
human, marine and coastal environments, which may be affected by OCS
oil and gas or other mineral activities in such area or region. Subpart
M in the previous regulations consisted of section 556.82. The proposed
rule deleted subpart M as an ``unnecessary recitation of internal
procedures,'' but section 20(c) of OCSLA specifically states that the
``Secretary shall, by regulation, establish procedures for carrying out
his duties [to conduct environmental studies] under this section.'' (43
U.S.C. 1346(c)). BOEM has determined to retain subpart M to comply with
section 20 of OCSLA and to set forth in the regulations, procedures for
the conduct of environmental studies with minor revisions to clarify
text.
C. Part 559--Mineral Leasing: Definitions
Prior part 559 was moved into final rule part 560, as explained
below, in the discussion of final rule part 560.
[[Page 18140]]
D. Part 560--Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing
The final rule updates the authority citation for part 560 and
amends the Table of Contents for part 560 by removing prior subpart D,
reserving the subpart, and adding new subparts C and E.
Also, in this final rule, BOEM has moved the definitions from prior
part 559 into final rule part 560 and deleted part 559. Prior part 559
consisted of only two sections. The first section, 559.001, stated that
``[t]he purpose of this part 559 is to define various terms appearing
in part 560.'' The second section, 559.002, listed these definitions.
This relocation did not appear in the proposed rule, but it is merely
an administrative change, which streamlines the regulations and does
not trigger the need for notice and comment.
The wording of the definition of ``person'' in part 560 has been
made consistent with that in part 556, but no change is being made to
the other definitions except their re-location within the regulations.
1. Subpart A--General Provisions
Section 560.100. Authority. This section provides a listing of the
statutes that provide the legal basis for the regulations promulgated
under this part. The authority provisions of part 560 have been revised
in this new section, and the titles of the public laws corresponding to
the relevant statutes have been added. FOGRMA (30 U.S.C. 1701-1759) has
been updated to include the amendments made to it by the Federal Oil
and Gas Royalty Simplification and Fairness Act of 1996, (FOGRSFA, 30
U.S.C. 1701 note).
Section 560.101. What is the purpose of this part? This final rule
section retains the language of section 560.1 in the prior regulations,
with no changes, but redesignated.
Section 560.102. What definitions apply to this part? This section
consolidates and updates the definitions previously located in part 559
with the definitions previously located in section 560.2.
Section 560.103. What is BOEM's authority to collect information?
This section provides that BOEM may not conduct or sponsor a collection
of information unless the information collection displays a currently
valid OMB control number, and specifies the circumstances under which
comments regarding any aspect of the collection of information under
this part may be submitted to BOEM. This section is unchanged from
section 560.3 but has been redesignated.
2. Subpart B--Bidding Systems
Sections 560.200-560.230. These provisions establish the bidding
systems that BOEM may use to offer and sell Federal leases for the
exploration, development, and production of oil and gas resources
located on the OCS. No changes were made to this subpart, except that
all section numbers have been changed to conform to the numbering
convention used throughout the final rule.
3. Subpart C--Operating Allowances
Section 560.300. Operating allowances. The final rule includes a
new subpart C, which consists of one section--556.300--that
reestablishes a provision concerning operating allowances in the BOEM
regulations. Operating allowance provisions were originally added into
MMS (later BOEMRE) regulations by RIN 1010-AB93, 61 FR 3800, Bidding
Systems for Leases in the Outer Continental Shelf. When the MMS was
reorganized into ONRR, BOEM, and BSEE, the operating allowance sections
of the regulations were moved from the BOEMRE regulations to the ONRR
regulations, but the corresponding sections were not included in the
BOEM regulations. Under the current organizational structure of the
Department, ONRR will collect royalty as calculated using the operating
allowance, but BOEM must first issue leases that contain the operating
allowance. In order to effectuate the ONRR regulations related to
operating allowances, therefore, counterpart provisions must also be
re-established within the BOEM regulations.
Subpart C re-establishes the operating allowance provisions in
BOEM's regulations. It does not make any change to the regulatory
provisions with respect to what sort of operating allowance would be
available or when one might be granted.
4. Subpart D--Joint Bidding
Both the proposed and final rules amend part 560 by removing
subpart D, which concerned joint bidding. All the provisions in the
prior subpart D have been moved to part 556 in the final rule (see
sections 556.511-556.515, and 556.106, definitions of ``average daily
production,'' ``barrel,'' ``crude oil,'' ``economic interest,'' ``joint
bid,'' ``natural gas,'' ``natural gas liquids,'' ``owned,'' ``single
bid,'' ``six-month bidding period,'' and ``statement of production'').
The regulation sections that were in part 560, subpart D, more
appropriately belong in part 556, subpart E, under the subheading,
``Restrictions on Joint Bidding,'' because subpart E contains the full
panoply of regulations relating to the restrictions on joint bidding.
There is no clear rationale supporting retention of these sections in
part 560 as well, and including these provisions twice in the
regulations may cause confusion. Therefore, part 560, subpart D is
being removed.
5. Subpart E--Electronic Filings
In part 560, the final rule includes a new subpart E, ``Electronic
Filings,'' which provides that BOEM may notify lessees and other
parties that it will allow or request the submission of information
electronically through BOEM's secure electronic filing system, through
an alternate secure electronic filing system supported and maintained
by the Department, or through some other electronic filing system that
BOEM has approved for this purpose. This subpart did not appear in the
proposed rule, nor did it appear in the prior regulations, but notice
and an opportunity to comment on these new provisions are unnecessary
because the subpart does not impose any requirements. Rather, it
provides that anyone submitting documents to BOEM may do so
electronically. The electronic-submittal option will likely reduce the
burden on those making the submissions. Moreover, the option furthers
the Federal government's move toward all-electronic document
production, submission, and filing, a goal evidenced by the Government
Paperwork Elimination Act (GPEA), Public Law 105-277, 112 Stat. 2681
(1998), and the U.S. Office of Management and Budget's guidance for
implementing that Act (Memorandum 00-10 OMB Procedures and Guidance on
Implementing the Government Implementation of the Government Paperwork
Elimination Act, April 25, 2000). Because subpart E imposes no
requirements on the public, it constitutes a procedural rule that does
not require notice and comment.
Subpart E consists of three sections, which are individually
addressed below.
Section 560.500. Electronic documents and data transmission. Final
rule section 560.500 lists the types of information that may be filed
electronically. The section also makes clear that if BOEM sends a
document in an electronic format, return of the document using the same
format or in print is acceptable (560.500(c)), and that BOEM may
electronically approve or execute documents referenced in this section
(560.500(d)).
Final rule section 560.500(b) repeats proposed rule section
256.503(c), which
[[Page 18141]]
established the circumstances under which BOEM may require, rather than
request, electronic document submission. The proposed and final rule
sections provide that BOEM reserves the right to mandate the submission
of financial assurance information electronically after publishing a 90
day-notice to that effect in the Federal Register. Submission of
financial assurance data electronically would contribute significantly
to streamlining the bonding process and facilitate a more efficient
transfer of data and information between BOEM and the regulated
community. BOEM received no comments on proposed rule section
256.503(c). Accordingly, although most other changes related to bonding
were removed from the final rule, this provision was retained at
section 560.500(b).
Section 560.501. How long will the confidentiality of electronic
document and data transmissions be maintained? Final rule section
560.501 states that electronically-submitted confidential information
will be maintained as confidential for the same amount of time that
corresponding non-electronic information would be so maintained.
Section 560.502. Are electronically filed document transmissions
legally binding? Final rule section 560.502 has been included to ensure
that electronic submission will not be a bar to legal viability.
Pursuant to section 560.502, documents that are properly submitted
through an approved electronic format will be considered legally
binding (assuming they are properly prepared, executed, or whatever
else may be necessary in each individual case), without the need to
also submit a paper copy of such document. In other words, if all else
has been done properly with regard to a document submission, the fact
that it has been submitted electronically will not bar it from being
legally binding.
Final rule section 560.502 was not in the proposed rule and is
being included in the final rule without a period of notice and
comment. The Government Paperwork Elimination Act, found within the
Omnibus Consolidated and Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act of
1999 (Public Law 105-277, 112 Stat. 2681 (1999)), at sections 1701 et
seq., authorizes agencies to consider properly submitted electronic
submissions as legally binding. The Government Paperwork Elimination
Act, at section 1707, specifically addresses the question of whether,
and how, electronically filed documents are legally binding. It states:
``Electronic records submitted or maintained in accordance with
procedures developed under this title, or electronic signatures or
other forms of electronic authentication used in accordance with such
procedures, shall not be denied legal effect, validity, or
enforceability because such records are in electronic form.'' Pub. L.
105-277, 112 Stat. 2681-751 (1999).
Further, section 7001(a) of the Electronic Signatures in Global and
National Commerce Act (ESIGN) (15 U.S.C. 7001-7031) states:
``Notwithstanding any statute, regulation, or other rule of law (other
than this subchapter and subchapter II of this chapter), with respect
to any transaction in or affecting interstate or foreign commerce--(1)
a signature, contract, or other record relating to such transaction may
not be denied legal effect, validity, or enforceability solely because
it is in electronic form; and (2) a contract relating to such
transaction may not be denied legal effect, validity, or enforceability
solely because an electronic signature or electronic record was used in
its formation.''
Final rule section 560.502 is administrative and serves to reduce
the burden on those submitting filings to BOEM, but more importantly it
is necessary to effectuate BOEM's electronic filing system and to
ensure electronic submissions are considered legally valid documents.
IV. Table of Comments and Responses
We do not provide responses to comments on subpart I because no
substantive changes were made to that subpart as part of this final
rule.
A. General Comment
Comment: In an effort to streamline the regulations, the proposed
rule eliminated several sections that repeat provisions of OCSLA. But
in other instances, the proposed rule added language that is found in
relevant statutes. BOEM should carefully review the proposed rule and
eliminate instances in which the substance of statutes is simply
repeated. Specifically, BOEM should consider proposed sections 556.101,
556.200 (second sentence), 556.304(b), 556.402(b) in this regard.
Response: We kept added statutory language when it was considered
necessary for clarity.
B. Section-Specific Comments
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed rule section (30
CFR) Comments received BOEM Response
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The American
Petroleum Institute
(API) submitted
comments on many
sections of the
proposed rule,
which are discussed
throughout the
following Table.
256.101..................... Section 256.101 BOEM agrees with the
references 18 comment and has
U.S.C. 1001, which removed the
is unnecessary and provision
potentially creates referencing 18
confusion. In the U.S.C. 1001 from
event 18 U.S.C. the final rule.
1001 were revised,
amended or
repealed, MMS would
need to do the same
here. It's
redundant and
unnecessary.
256.103..................... The definition for We revised the
``authorized definition for
officer'' should be ``Secretary'' to
retained in include both the
proposed section terms ``official''
256.103, as it is and ``designated
still used in the employee'' who are
regulations. The ``authorized to act
proposal includes on behalf of the
definitions for the Secretary.'' We
``Central Planning have added the
Area'' and the definition for the
``Eastern Planning ``Western Planning
Area,'' but not for Area.''
the ``Western
Planning Area.''
For completeness,
MMS should consider
including a
definition for the
``Western Planning
Area.''
256.200..................... Section 256.200--The The second sentence
second sentence is short and
appears to be explicit and
repeated from OCSLA therefore has been
and its repetition retained.
is not necessary.
See, 43 U.S.C.
1344(a)(3).
Repeating language
from the statute is
inconsistent with
the streamlining
approach that MMS
has taken with the
proposed
regulations.
[[Page 18142]]
256.301..................... Section 256.301 We have not deleted
eliminates the this provision. See
requirement that final rule section
MMS inform the 556.302(c), which
public as soon as states: ``BOEM will
possible, when seek to inform the
areas are deleted public, as soon as
from leasing. This possible, of
requirement should changes from the
be retained. It area(s) proposed
should be for leasing that
recognized that occur after the
deleting areas from Call process.''
leasing is of great
importance to
lessees who are
spending resources
in preparing for
lease sales, and
this information
should be published
as soon as
possible.
256.304(b).................. Section 256.304(b)-- We cite the CZMA at
The Coastal Zone section 556.305(b),
Management Act where we refer to
(CZMA) (16 U.S.C. the consistency
1451 et seq.) sets determination.
out the process for
consistency
determinations by
the affected
States. While MMS
may be merely
setting out the
process it uses in
order to ensure
consistency with
the States, the
regulation should
actually reference
the CZMA so that if
the CZMA is
modified or amended
or repealed, MMS
can continue to
follow the process
outlined in that
act, rather than
risking conflict or
inconsistency.
256.303..................... Shell Exploration We agree with this
and Production suggestion and have
Company (Shell) incorporated this
Comments. requirement into
Section 256.303--The sections 556.304(c)
terms of an oil and and 556.308.
gas lease are The final notice of
integral to the sale will replicate
lessee/lessor the terms and
relationship and conditions in the
lessees who are lease form. The
bidding millions of following is a
dollars on leases sample statement
should have the from a recent
right to know the notice of sale:
lease terms in ``BOEM will use the
advance of recently revised
submitting bids. Form BOEM-2005
Accordingly, Shell (October 2011) to
requests that the convey leases; it
form of lease on can be viewed at:
which successful https://www.boem.gov/
lease bids will be About-BOEM/
granted be attached Procurement-
to or referenced in Business-
the notice of lease Opportunities/BOEM-
sale.. OCS-Operation-Forms/
BOEM-OCS-Operation-
Forms.aspx.
The lease form will
be amended with the
specific terms,
conditions and
stipulations
applicable to the
individual lease.''
256.402(b).................. Section 256.402(b) We agree with this
should clarify that comment and changed
this section does the language, which
not impact the is now found at
statutory final rule section
requirements under 556.403(b), to more
OCSLA that provide closely track the
for a finding by language of section
the Secretary that 8(d) of OCSLA (43
the bidder is not U.S.C. 1337(d)).
meeting due
diligence
requirements and
that provide for
notice and hearing.
Section 256.402(c) Section 8(a)(1) of
should cite to the OCSLA (43 U.S.C.
statutory 1337(a)(1)) states:
provisions ``The Secretary is
authorizing the authorized to grant
prohibition based to the highest
upon unacceptable responsible
operating qualified bidder or
performance. bidders by
competitive
bidding, under
regulations
promulgated in
advance, any oil
and gas lease on
submerged lands of
the outer
Continental Shelf .
. .'' The Secretary
has determined
through promulgated
regulations that
acceptable
operating
performance under
30 CFR parts 250
and 550 on any
other OCS lease is
necessary to be
considered a
``responsible''
bidder. This
provision is not
new. The prior
regulations, at 30
CFR 556.35(c),
provided that,
``BOEM may
disqualify you from
acquiring any new
lease holdings or
lease assignments
if your operating
performance is
unacceptable
according to 30 CFR
550.135.'' We
disagree that the
citation to the
statutory
provisions codified
from section
8(a)(1) of the
OCSLA is necessary
as the regulation
is clear and the
concept is
longstanding in the
prior regulations.
256.404..................... Section 256.404-- We disagree with
This new provision this comment, but
will create in final rule
unnecessary section 556.405, we
additional replaced
administrative ``immediately''
burdens. MMS has with ``as soon as
multiple ways to practicable.'' The
learn of a merger new provision is
or name change, needed to address
including, without the problems that
limitation, the the Bureau has had
filing of merger in the past with
and name change name changes and/or
documents with the mergers about which
Secretary of State BOEM is not
in most States and informed in a
the submission of timely fashion. It
new designation of is not practical
operator and other for BOEM to monitor
MMS forms. This all filings with
additional all Secretaries of
obligation need not State in the United
be imposed on States.
lessees. In
addition, MMS
should delete
``immediately'' as
it is inconsistent
with the one year
limit. The API
suggested using
``as soon as
practicable,'' but
not
``immediately.''
[[Page 18143]]
256.416(b).................. Section 256.416(b)-- We disagree with the
There is no policy recommended policy
reason not to allow change proffered in
co-ownership by this comment. The
agreement of presumption that an
bidders with a tie agreement (whether
bid, when the tie written or oral,
bidders are on the formal or informal)
restricted joint could not have been
bidders list. Those made prior to, or
parties cannot have simultaneously
communicated or with, the
agreed with respect submission of bids
to the bid, but by two or more
going forward could bidders on the
agree to an restricted joint
assignment creating bidders list is
co-ownership after flawed. Collusive
the lease is bidding practices
awarded. are a possibility
that is addressed
explicitly in
existing
regulation, for
example, section
556.44 specifically
disqualifies bids
where collusive
bidding is evident.
We clarified the
language of
paragraph (c) of
final rule section
556.516 to address
the treatment of
tie high bids
submitted by two
bidders on the
Restricted Joint
Bidders List.
Paragraph (c)
states that only
those tied bidders,
``not otherwise
prohibited from
bidding together''
may accept a lease
jointly. Because
two bidders on the
restricted joint
bidders list would
``otherwise [be]
prohibited from
bidding together,''
this provision
retains the current
policy of not
allowing tied
restricted joint
bidders to accept a
lease jointly. The
use of the plural
lessee(s) at
section
556.516(c)(2)
implies that there
could be more than
two tied bidders
and that they could
agree to allow more
than one of the
tied bidders to
become lessees. We
deleted the words
``or they may
decide'' as the
language did not
clearly state how
to notify us of
their decision.
256.417..................... Section 256.417--The A procedure to
protest procedure request
has been eliminated reconsideration of
entirely. MMS a rejected bid has
should specify or been retained in
refer to an appeal the rule, but the
process: to whom difference in the
appeals are made, proposed and prior
how long the agency regulations is that
has to make a ``Secretary'' has
decision, who will been replaced by
make the decision, ``BOEM Director.''
and to whom that
decision will be
appealed.
256.420..................... Section 256.420--MMS BOEM agrees with
should retain the this comment and
status quo that the has decided to
failure to pay the limit the penalty
remaining 4/5ths for failure to pay
lease bonus results the remainder to
in a forfeiture of the amount of the
the 1/5th payment. bid deposit. Prior
Payment of the 1/ section 556.47(f)
5th amount is stated that ``If a
sufficient penalty bid is accepted,
and MMS may still such notice shall
offer and lease the transmit three
tract at the next copies of the lease
lease sale. Payment to the successful
of amounts beyond bidder.'' As
the 1/5th is not provided in the
warranted. As a prior 30 CFR
result, MMS should 1218.155, the
strike the words bidder shall, not
``and MMS may take later than the 11th
appropriate action business day after
to collect the full receipt of the
amount bid.'' In lease, execute the
addition, the lease, pay the
existing rule, Sec. first-year's
256.47(g), states rental, and unless
that the successful deferred, pay the
bidder has 11 balance of the
business days to bonus bid.'' 30 CFR
execute the lease 1218.155(c) made it
and otherwise clear that the
comply with the payment must be ``
applicable . . . received by
regulations. This the Federal Reserve
proposed rule Bank of New York no
required that a later than noon,
lessee ``execute eastern standard
and return'' a time, on the 11th
lease within 11- business day after
business days after receipt of the
receipt (emphasis lease forms by the
added.) Can MMS successful
confirm whether the bidder.'' The new
addition of the regulation makes it
words ``and clear that the
return'' signify a leases must be
change in how the signed and returned
process is to BOEM within 11-
administered? If business days after
this does the receipt. This
constitute a has always been the
change, then can rule and is not a
MMS explain the change of BOEM
rationale behind processes.
this change?
As discussed above, Prior BOEM
API objects to regulation section
forfeiture of the 556.47(g) said that
full bid amount, if a bidder fails
because forfeiture to execute the
of the 1/5th lease as required
payment is by the regulations,
sufficient. BOEM will collect
However, in the or retain only the
event that this deposit. The final
option is retained, rulemaking, at
MMS should consider section 556.520(c),
providing some says the same.
flexibility within Granting the second
this provision in highest bidder the
the event that the opportunity to
full bid amount is receive the lease
collected. The in the event that
bidder should not the high bidder
suffer forfeiture forfeits the lease
of the lease if the under this
full bid amount has provision may not
been paid. MMS result in BOEM
should also receiving fair
consider giving the market value for
second highest the lease (see
qualified bidder section 18(A)(4) of
the opportunity to OCSLA) and is
receive the lease contrary to the
in the event that present BOEM policy
the high bidder of offering all
forfeits the lease blocks that are not
under these awarded in a
provisions. particular lease
sale in the next
lease sale for that
planning area.
256.420(c).................. Chevron comments: Same response as
Chevron does not above.
view section
256.420(c) as a
clarification but a
significant change..
Delete the phrase
from section
256.420(c) ``and
MMS may take
appropriate action
to collect the full
amount bid, if so
provided for in the
notice of sale.''.
[[Page 18144]]
Shell comment: Same response as
MMS should above.
reconsider allowing
MMS to collect the
full amount bid in
the event a
successful bidder
does not pay the
remaining 4/5th of
the bid. Currently,
lessees are
permitted to suffer
the significant
penalty of
forfeiting the 1/
5th advance payment
and this process
allows lessees to
make an informed
decision on leasing
if information
relating to the
area becomes
available after the
bids are made..
256.605(a) and 256.606(c)... API Comment: We separated into
Section 256.605(a) two sections those
is inconsistent provisions that
with proposed concern the rights
section 256.606(c). and obligations of
In the former, record title owners
operating rights (section 556.604)
and record title and those that
owners are jointly concern the rights
and severally and obligations of
liable for all non- operating rights
monetary owners (section
obligations, but in 556.605).
the latter,
operating rights
owners are only
responsible for
liabilities insofar
as their interest
in the lease..
256.616..................... Section 256.616--The We renumbered this
last sentence is item 556.710 and
ambiguous. The clarified it as
liabilities for an follows:
assignor are ``Until there is a
covered in section BOEM-approved
256.605. The last assignment of
sentence should be interest, you, as
deleted. the assignor,
remain liable for
the performance of
all lease
obligations that
accrued while you
held record title
interest, until all
such obligations
are fulfilled.''
Shell Comment: See above.
MMS should remove
the last sentence
of Proposed Section
256.616, which is
ambiguous and which
concept is
addressed in
Section 256.605.
Also, proposed
Section 256.605(a)
is inconsistent
with Section
256.606(c)..
256.619..................... API Comment: We disagree with the
Section 256.619--The comment. The
new rule poses the requirement to
question, ``As a provide the
restricted bidder, agreements between
may I assign two parties on the
interest to another restricted joint
restricted joint bidders list is not
bidder?'' The new new, but simply
rule answers in the represents a
affirmative but restatement of the
also states that prior 30 CFR
``you must submit 556.64(i), which
to MMS a copy of required that ``the
any agreements assignor or
relating to the transferor shall
acquisition of the file a copy, prior
lease or to approval of the
interest,'' API is assignment, of all
concerned about the agreements
submission of applicable to the
commercial acquisition of that
agreements under lease or a
this provision. The fractional
types of agreements interest.'' The
requested are agreements are
potentially highly necessary for the
sensitive. MMS Department of
should only be Justice to properly
interested in the review the
timing and nature antitrust
of the agreement implications of
whereby one these types of
restricted joint assignments. The
bidder acquired new provision, now
from another at final rule
restricted joint section 556.714,
bidder. Agreements adds the option of
whereby a both parties
restricted joint providing BOEM with
bidder acquired the ``a description of
interest assigned the timing and
are irrelevant nature of the
(unless they came agreement(s) by
from another which the assignor
restricted joint or transferor
bidder). Further, acquired the
because assignments interest it now
are approved, MMS wishes to
will already know transfer.'' Thus,
the chain of title the company on the
by which the restricted joint
assigning party bidders list has a
received the choice of
interest. Further, submitting what has
this provision is previously been
so broad as to be required under
unascertainable as prior section 30
to the intent, CFR 556.64(i), or
raising further may submit a
questions about description of the
implementation and timing and nature
what documents are of the agreement,
sufficient to meet subject to the
the requirement.. applicability of 18
U.S.C. 1001. The
implementation of
this provision will
not raise any
questions as to
which documents are
needed as that
portion of the
provision at issue
is not a new
requirement of the
regulations.
256.620(a).................. Section 256.620(a)-- This language is
This is not a new essentially
provision, but API identical to the
questions the language of the
effectiveness or prior section
the need for filing 556.64(a)(7), but
with MMS it is found at
contractually section 556.715 in
created interests the final rule.
that typically are BOEM is not
not placed on changing any legal
record in any other requirement except
public record. that we may require
Theoretically, any filing of these
time a co-owner interests
stands out or goes electronically.
``non-consent'' Joint Operating
under a joint Agreements are not
operating required to be
agreement; it filed with BOEM as
assigns its they do not
interests in the necessarily create
well until payout. economic interests,
Does MMS intend only rights to such
those joint interests. However,
operating once those
agreements to be interests are
filed? We also have created,
concerns about instruments
confidentiality of creating these
agreements; interests must be
therefore, this filed with BOEM,
rule should only just as instruments
apply to recorded creating these
documents. interests were
required to be
filed under prior
section
556.64(a)(8).
256.700..................... Section 256.700-- We added the
This provision reference at final
should reference rule section
section 256.601(d), 556.601(e) to
relating to the clarify the effect
effect of of production from
production from a BSEE approved
unitized leases, as unit on individual
an additional lease terms.
circumstance that
maintains a lease.
[[Page 18145]]
N/A......................... Anglo Suisse We have noted the
Offshore Partners comment. BOEM
comment: disagrees and has
NTL (Notice to decided not to make
Lessees) No. 2008- any changes at this
N07 grossly time to the NTL.
overestimates the There is nothing in
amount of the rule that
supplemental prevents BOEM from
bonding required.. taking SEC reserve
NTL No. 2008-N07 reports into
also requires MMS account, but BOEM
staff to is not obligated to
recalculate a use those numbers
lessee's PDP if it believes that
reserve values they are inaccurate
rather than using or insufficiently
third party substantiated.
Securities and
Exchange Commission
(SEC) reserve
reports..
N/A......................... Additional Issues: These issues are
Waiver beyond the scope of
criteria on the final rule and
supplemental bonds. may be addressed in
Amount of future rulemaking.
bond vs. net worth.
Credit for
net worth in
calculating bonding
amounts.
New surety
rules for issuance
of bonds.
Should MMS attempt
to value a company,
rather than rely on
the SEC to do so?.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
V. Legal and Regulatory Analyses
A. Statutes and Executive Orders
1. Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review (Executive Order (E.O.
13563)
E.O. 13563, Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review (January 18,
2011), together with follow-up memoranda EO Guidance Memorandum, M-11-
10 (February 2, 2011) and Retrospective Analysis Guidance Memorandum,
M-11-19 (April 25, 2011), require that the regulatory system protect
public health, welfare, safety, and the environment while promoting
economic growth, innovation, competitiveness, and job creation. The
regulatory system must be based on the best available science, while
allowing public participation and an open exchange of ideas, thus
promoting predictability and reducing uncertainty. The regulatory
system must identify and use the best, most innovative and least
burdensome tools for achieving regulatory ends and it must take into
account benefits and costs, both quantitative and qualitative. It must
ensure that regulations are accessible, consistent, written in plain
language, and easy to understand. It must also measure, and seek to
improve, the actual results of regulatory requirements.
E.O. 13563 supplements and reaffirms the principles, structures,
and definitions governing contemporary regulatory review that were
established in E.O. 12866 of September 30, 1993. As stated in that
E.O., and to the extent permitted by law, each agency must, among other
things: (1) Propose or adopt a regulation only upon a reasoned
determination that its benefits justify its costs (recognizing that
some benefits and costs are difficult to quantify); (2) tailor its
regulations to impose the least burden on society, consistent with
obtaining regulatory objectives, taking into account, among other
things, and to the extent practicable, the costs of cumulative
regulations; (3) select, in choosing among alternative regulatory
approaches, those approaches that maximize net benefits (including
potential economic, environmental, public health and safety, and other
advantages, distributive impacts, and equity); (4) to the extent
feasible, specify performance objectives, rather than specifying the
behavior or manner of compliance that regulated entities must adopt;
and (5) identify and assess available alternatives to direct
regulation, including providing information upon which the public can
base choices, or providing economic incentives to encourage the desired
behavior, such as user fees or marketable permits.
2. Regulatory Planning and Review (E.O. 12866)
This final rule is not a significant rule, as determined by the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB), and is not subject to review
under E.O. 12866, Regulatory Planning and Review (September 30, 1993).
This rule primarily updates existing regulations that govern the
Federal leasing process for offshore sulfur and oil and gas subject to
the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States. The rule is rewritten
in simple, clear language, and reorganized to reflect the steps in the
leasing process as they have evolved over time. Minor changes will make
certain practices uniform among the OCS regional offices.
(1) This final rule does not have an annual effect of $100 million
or more on the economy. It will not adversely affect in a material way
the economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public
health or safety, or State, local, or tribal governments or
communities. The rule rewrites 30 CFR part 556 in plain language, as
well as portions of 30 CFR parts 550 and 560, and contains similar
reporting and recordkeeping requirements and attendant costs as the
prior regulations. A cost-benefit analysis was not performed because
this is a rule of administrative procedure for which such an analysis
is not required. However, an overall economic analysis was performed
pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
(2) This rule does not create a serious inconsistency or otherwise
interfere with an action taken or planned by another agency.
(3) This rule does not alter the budgetary effects of entitlements,
grants, user fees, or loan programs or the rights or obligations of
their recipients. Nominal user fees imposed by the rule are not
material in size or nature. The final rule includes a new fee for
recording certain secondary lease interests, $29, and continues
existing fees for submitting non-required documents, $29, and
requesting approval of the assignment or transfer of certain lease
interests, $198.
(4) This rule does not raise novel legal or policy issues arising
out of legal mandates, the President's priorities, or the principles
set forth in E.O. 12866. The final rule supersedes the existing
regulations.
3. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Department certifies that this final rule does not have a
significant economic effect on a substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-612).
The changes in this final rule affect lessees and potential
lessees, of which there are approximately 130 different companies.
These companies are generally classified under the North American
Industry Classification System (NAICS) Code 211111, which includes
companies that extract crude petroleum and natural gas. For this NAICS
code classification, a small
[[Page 18146]]
company is one with fewer than 500 employees. BOEM estimates that of
the 130 lessees and operators that explore for and produce oil and gas
on the OCS, approximately 90 are small businesses (70 percent).
The costs associated with the information collection (IC)
activities related to this rulemaking should not have any significant
economic effect on small businesses. This rule contains most of the
same burden hour requirements and non-hour cost burdens as were in
effect with BOEM's prior regulations. The changes in reporting
requirements that are implemented with this rule do not significantly
increase the IC burden on respondents--large or small. BOEM estimates
an annual cumulative increase of 2,441 hours in the paperwork burden
for all lessees over that imposed by the prior regulations. There is
also a new $29 non-hour cost burden for recording certain secondary
lease interests resulting in an annual increase of $20,300 ($29 x an
estimated 700 filings). A regulatory flexibility analysis is not
required. Accordingly, a small entity compliance guide is also not
required.
4. Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA)
This final rule is not a major rule under 5 U.S.C. 801-808), the
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act. This rule:
(a) Will not have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million
or more;
(b) Will not cause a major increase in costs or prices for
consumers, individual industries, Federal, State, or local government
agencies, or geographic regions; and
(c) Will not have significant adverse effects on competition,
employment, investment, productivity, innovation, or the ability of
United States-based enterprises to compete with foreign-based
enterprises.
5. Comments From Small Businesses
The Small Business and Agriculture Regulatory Enforcement Ombudsman
and 10 Regional Fairness Boards were established to receive comments
from small businesses about Federal agency enforcement actions. The
Ombudsman will annually evaluate the enforcement activities and rate
each agency's responsiveness to small business. If you wish to comment
on the actions of BOEM, call 1-888-734-3247. You may comment to the
Small Business Administration (SBA) without fear of retaliation.
Allegations of discrimination/retaliation filed with the Small Business
Administration will be investigated for appropriate action.
6. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
This final rule does not impose an unfunded mandate on State,
local, or tribal governments or the private sector of more than $100
million per year. The final rule does not have a significant or unique
effect on State, local, or tribal governments or the private sector. A
statement containing the information required by the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act (2 U.S.C. 1531-1538) is not required.
7. Takings Implication Assessment (E.O. 12630)
Under the criteria in E.O. 12630, Governmental Action and
Interference with Constitutionally-Protected Property Rights (March 15,
1988), this final rule does not have significant takings implications.
The rule is not a governmental action capable of interference with
constitutionally-protected property rights. A takings implication
assessment is not required.
8. Federalism (E.O. 13132)
Under the criteria in E.O. 13132, Federalism (August 4, 1999), this
final rule does not have sufficient federalism implications to require
a Federalism Assessment. This final rule does not substantially and
directly affect the relationship between the Federal and State
governments. To the extent that State and local governments play a role
in OCS activities, this rule does not affect that role.
9. Civil Justice Reform (E.O. 12988)
This rule complies with the requirements of E.O. 12988, Civil
Justice Reform (February 7, 1996). Specifically, this rule:
(a) Meets the criteria of section 3(a) requiring that all
regulations be reviewed to eliminate errors and ambiguity and be
written to minimize litigation; and
(b) Meets the criteria of section 3(b)(2) requiring that all
regulations be written in clear language and contain clear legal
standards.
10. Consultation With Indian Tribal Governments (E.O. 13175)
Under the criteria in E.O. 13175, Consultation and Coordination
with Indian Tribal Governments (November 9, 2000), we have evaluated
this final rule and determined it has no substantial effect on
Federally-recognized Indian tribes.
11. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This rule contains new IC requirements; therefore, a submission to
OMB under the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-
3521) was required. The OMB has approved the IC for the final
rulemaking and assigned OMB Control Number 1010-0006 for a total of
19,454 burden hours and $766,053 non-hour cost burdens.
The title of the IC is ``Leasing of Sulfur or Oil and Gas in the
Outer Continental Shelf (30 CFR part 550, part 556, and part 560)''.
Respondents are Federal sulfur or oil and gas lessees and/or operators.
Some responses to this IC are required to obtain or retain a benefit,
and some are mandatory. The frequency of response varies but is
primarily on occasion. The IC does not include questions of a sensitive
nature. BOEM will protect proprietary information according to section
26 of OCSLA; the Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552), its
implementing regulations at 43 CFR part 2; and the regulations at 30
CFR 556.104(b) and 550.197, addressing proprietary data and data and
information to be made available to the public or for limited
inspection.
This rulemaking is a partial rewrite of 30 CFR part 556, Leasing of
Sulfur or Oil and Gas and Bonding Requirements in the Outer Continental
Shelf and of 30 CFR part 560, OCS Oil and Gas Leasing. It also refers
to, but does not change current requirements and burdens already
approved by OMB under 30 CFR part 550, subpart A (1010-0114). BOEM uses
the information collected in the rulemaking to help determine specific
areas of leasing interest, to determine if applicants are qualified to
hold leases in the OCS, to identify parties ineligible to bid jointly,
and to track owners of, and operators on, leaseholds.
In response to the proposed rule (74 FR 25177, May 27, 2009), BOEM
received comments from the American Petroleum Institute, Shell
Exploration and Production Company, Chevron North America Exploration
and Production, Anglo Suisse Offshore Partners, LLC. (and Anglo Suisse
Texas Offshore Partners, LLC.), Dynamic Offshore Resources, RLI
Insurance Company, and two private citizens. Comments that addressed
aspects of the information collection for this rulemaking are
summarized below. All comments are addressed in detail in the preamble
of this final rule.
Commenting on proposed rule section 256.404, one company indicated
that it is burdensome to submit merger or name change information and
that BOEM can obtain the information from the Secretary of State in
most States. In the final rule, BOEM is retaining the requirement to
submit such information in order to address the problems that the
Bureau has had in the past with name/
[[Page 18147]]
merger changes of which BOEM was not timely informed. It is not
practical for BOEM to monitor all filings with the Secretaries of State
in each State. In final rule section 556.405, however, BOEM replaced
the immediate filing with a requirement that the filing be accomplished
as soon as practicable. No change in the burden resulted.
Concerning proposed rule sections 256.619 and 256.620, one company
questioned submitting commercial agreements relating to certain
transfers between restricted joint bidders because of the information's
sensitivity. In final rule section 556.714, BOEM provided an option for
the submission of a description of the timing and nature of the
agreement(s) by which the assignor or transferor acquired the interest
it now wishes to transfer. No change in the hour burden resulted.
However, partially in response to the comment, BOEM added a general
provision to the part (section 556.104(b)) to protect proprietary
information (+ 125 hours).
In addition, between the proposed and final rules, several actions
occurred that affected the information collection.
The MMS was reorganized, per Secretarial Orders 3302 and
3299, resulting in a realignment of the regulations, with the leasing
regulations going to BOEM, under 30 CFR chapter 5 (e.g., 30 CFR part
256 is now 30 CFR part 556).
The IC burden for 30 CFR part 550, subpart J, bonding
requirements for pipelines and pipeline rights-of-way, was consolidated
into the collection being revised for this rulemaking for 30 CFR part
556 (1010-0006) due to the regulations realignment. The consolidation
was approved by OMB on 11/14/2011.
The proposed rule included a total rewrite of 30 CFR part
556; however, the final rule does not make substantive revisions to the
regulations for general and supplemental bonding in prior part 556
(subpart I). After the proposed rule was published, questions arose
about possible inconsistencies between the revised bonding regulations
and p regulations for oil-spill financial responsibility under 30 CFR
part 553. Also, since the publication of the proposed rule, BOEM has
decided to engage in an overhaul of its financial assurance processes,
and subpart I will be revised in a separate rulemaking. Therefore, the
regulations and the associated IC burden for 30 CFR part 550, subpart
I, will remain in effect, but the sections in subpart I have been
renumbered to fit within the numbering scheme of this rule (e.g., prior
section 556.52 is now section 556.900).
In the final rule, BOEM rearranged discussions to make the
regulations easier to read and follow. Thus, all rule sections and
citations have been renumbered from the proposed rule, as explained in
the preamble of the final rule.
The information collection for prior 30 CFR part 556
regulations (1010-0006) was renewed by OMB, thereby updating burden
hours based on public outreach. BOEM has therefore used those updated
estimates where relevant instead of those used in the proposed
rulemaking.
12. Other Changes in the Information Collection (IC) Between the
Proposed and Final Rules
The proposed rule included regulatory text concerning the
reporting of decommissioning costs in 30 CFR part 250, subpart Q, and
text concerning reports on lease-term pipelines in section 256.621. Due
to the realignment of regulations and bureau responsibilities, BOEM
removed these requirements from the final rule as they were addressed
in the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE)
regulations (-820 hours for removing Subpart Q and -1,500 hours for
removing section 256.621 in the final rule).
The final rule also removed the provisions under proposed
rule sections 256.902(a) and 256.905 for requesting/transferring a
bonus or royalty credit, because the program has officially ended (-2
hours from current collection).
BOEM also divided the IC requirements for commenting on
the 5-Year Program and responding to Calls for Information, etc.
(sections 556.201-204 and sections 556.301-302) into general (not
considered IC per the PRA) and specific, in accordance with the
currently approved collection for part 556 (+ 596 hours). Where
applicable, all estimates were updated according to the recent Office
of Management and Budget (OMB) approved renewal of the 30 CFR part 556
information collection.
BOEM also included a burden that was overlooked in the
proposed rule (section 256.100, now section 556.302(d)) for requesting
a summary of interest on Calls for Information (+ 5 hours).
The proposed rule (section 256.620) introduced a new cost
recovery fee ($27) for filing required documents for record purposes.
In the final rule (section 556.715(a)), the fee has been increased to
$29 in accordance with changes BOEM made, due to inflation, to other
such fees on January 28, 2013 (78 FR 5837).
To make the regulations easier to follow, in the final
rule BOEM split the discussion (requirements and associated fee) of
assignment/transfer of record title and that of operating rights
interests (30 CFR part 256, subpart G, in the proposed rule) into two
subparts (30 CFR part 556, subparts G and H). With this reorganization,
BOEM discovered that it had not properly counted the number of
submissions for transfers of operating rights; therefore, in the final
rule, BOEM is reporting an adjustment increase for such transfers of
record title/operating rights (+ 421 hours; + $83,358 non-hour costs).
In addition, to streamline activities, reduce the burden in the
future, and assist respondents, the final rule includes:
A clarification of the proposed rule (section 256.611) and
BOEM's prior regulations (section 556.62), which both explained how a
record title, or other lease interest may be transferred, but did not
mention the need to file a new Designation of Operator form (BOEM-1123,
30 CFR part 550, subpart A), which often arises when a lease interest
is transferred. This clarification in part 556 (sections 701(c);
715(b); 801(b); 810(b)) will result in a one-time increase in the
number of submissions after the rule becomes effective (+ 80 hours);
otherwise the requirement is covered under OMB Control No. 1010-0114.
A clarification that geophysical statements and maps are
included with bid submissions (sections 556.500-501). This requirement
and its hour burden have always been part of the bid process but not
specifically stated (no change in hour burden).
A provision (section 556.107) to allow a company's one-
time submission of documentation, with a corporate seal, to establish
the legal status of future submissions without such seals, where such
seals would otherwise be required (+ 67 hours as a one-time burden but
expected to reduce the net burden for companies in the future).
An expansion of a provision from the proposed rule
(section 256.503(c)) to allow implementation of electronic submission
systems (e.g., for bonding information) (sections 556.107; 560.500) (+
800 hours as a one-time increase to allow companies to adjust their
processes; however, we expect this provision to reduce the hour burden
of each affected requirement in the future).
The following table shows the breakdown of the hour and non-hour
cost burdens for this final rulemaking.
13. Burden Breakdown Table
[Italics show expansion of existing requirements; bold indicates
new
[[Page 18148]]
requirements; regular font shows current requirements. Where
applicable, updated estimates from the existing collection are being
used instead of those in the proposed rulemaking.]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-hour cost burdens
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
30 CFR part 556 and NTLs Reporting requirement * Average number of annual
Hour burden responses Annual burden hours
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart A
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
104(b) New....................... Submit confidentiality 0.25......................... 500.......................... 125
agreement.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
106.............................. Cost recovery/service Cost recovery/service fees and associated documentation are 0
fees; confirmation covered under individual requirements throughout the part.
receipt.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
107 New.......................... Submit required Burden covered in Sec. 560.500. 0
documentation
electronically through
BOEM-approved system;
comply with filing
specifications, as
directed by notice in
the Federal Register in
accordance with Sec.
560.500.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
107 New.......................... File seals, documents, 10 min....................... 400.......................... 67
statements, signatures,
etc., to establish legal
status of all future
submissions (paper and/
or electronic).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subtotal..................... ......................... ............................. 900.......................... 192
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart B
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
201-204.......................... Submit nominations, Not considered IC as defined in 5 CFR 1320.3(h)(4). 0
suggestions, and general
comments in response to
Request for Information/
Comments, proposed 5-
year leasing program,
etc., including
information from States/
local governments,
Federal agencies,
industry, and others.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
201-204.......................... Submit nominations & 4............................ 69........................... 276
specific information
requested in response to
Request for Information/
Comments, proposed 5-
year leasing program,
etc., including from
States/local
governments, Federal
agencies, industry, and
others.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subtotal..................... ......................... ............................. 69........................... 276
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart C
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
301; 302......................... Submit response & 4............................ 20 responses/sale x 2 sales/ 320
specific information call x 2 calls/year = 80.
requested in Requests
for Industry Interest
and Calls for
Information and
Nominations, etc., on
areas proposed for
leasing; including
information from States/
local governments.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
302(d) New....................... Request summary of 1............................ 5............................ 5
interest (nonproprietary
information) for Calls
for Information/Requests
for Interest, etc.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
305; 306......................... States or local 4............................ 25........................... 100
governments submit
comments,
recommendations, and
other responses on size,
timing, or location of
proposed lease sale.
Request extension; enter
agreement.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subtotal..................... ......................... ............................. 110.......................... 425
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart D
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
400-402; 405..................... Establish file for 2............................ 107.......................... 214
qualification; submit
evidence/certification
for lessee/bidder
qualifications. Provide
updates; obtain BOEM
approval & qualification
number.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
403(c)........................... Request hearing on Requirement not considered IC under 5 CFR 1320.3(h)(9). 0
disqualification.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 18149]]
403; 404 New..................... Notify BOEM if you or 1.5.......................... 50........................... 75
your principals are
excluded, disqualified,
or convicted of a crime--
Federal non-procurement
debarment and suspension
requirements; request
exception; enter
transaction.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
405.............................. Notify BOEM of all Requirement not considered IC under 5 CFR 1320.3(h)(1). 0
mergers, name changes,
or changes of business.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subtotal..................... ......................... ............................. 157.......................... 289
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart E
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
500; 501......................... Submit bids, deposits, 5............................ 2,000........................ 10,000
and required
information, including
GDIS & maps; in manner
specified. Make data
available to BOEM.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
500(e); 517...................... Request reconsideration Requirement not considered IC under 5 CFR 1320.3(h)(9). 0
of bid decision.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
501(e) New....................... Apply for reimbursement.. Burden covered in 1010-0048, 30 CFR part 551. 0
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
511(b); 517...................... Submit appeal due to Requirement not considered IC under 5 CFR 1320.3(h)(9). 0
restricted joint bidders
list; appeal bid
decision.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
513; 514......................... File statement and 2............................ 100.......................... 200
detailed report of
production. Make
documents available to
BOEM.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
515.............................. Request exemption from Requirement not considered IC under 5 CFR 1320.3(h)(9). 0
bidding restrictions;
submit appropriate
information.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
516.............................. Notify BOEM of tie bid 3.5.......................... 2............................ 7
decision; file agreement
on determination of
lessee.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
520; 521; 600(c)................. Execute lease (includes 1............................ 852.......................... 852
submission of evidence
of authorized agent/
completion and request
effective date of
lease); submit required
data and rental.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
520(b) New....................... Provide acceptable bond 0.25......................... 1............................ 1
for payment of a
deferred bonus. (We do
not expect this to
occur, hence minimum
burden).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subtotal..................... ......................... ............................. 2,955........................ 11,060
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subparts F, G, H
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart F, G, H.................. References to requests of approval for various operations or submit plans or 0
applications. Burden included with other approved collections for BOEM 30 CFR part 550
(Subpart A 1010-0114; Subpart B 1010-0151) and for BSEE 30 CFR part 250 (Subpart A
1014-0022; Subpart D 1014-0018).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
701(c); 716(b); 801(b); 810(b) Submit new designation of 0.5.......................... 160.......................... 80
New. operator (BOEM-1123).
One-time increase to
existing requirements
and burdens already
covered in 1010-0114.
Extra burden will be
deleted in next renewal.
No fee.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
700-715.......................... File application and 1............................ 1,414........................ 1,414
required information for
assignment/transfer of
record title/lease
interest (form BOEM-
0150; form is 30 min.)
(includes sell,
sublease, sever,
exchange, transfer);
request effective date/
confidentiality; provide
notifications.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$198 fee x 1,414 forms = $279,972
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 18150]]
800-810.......................... File application and 1............................ 421.......................... 421
required information for
assignment/transfer of
operating rights
interest (form BOEM-
0151; form is 30 min.)
(includes sell,
sublease, sever,
exchange, transfer);
request effective date;
provide notifications.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$198 fee x 421 forms = $83,358
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
715(a); 808(a)................... File required instruments 1............................ 2,369........................ 2,369
creating or transferring
working interests, etc.,
for record purposes.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
New Fee.......................... $29 fee x 2,369 filings = $68,701
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
715(b); 808(b)................... Submit ``non-required'' Accepted as a service........ 11,518....................... 0
documents, for record
purposes that
respondents want BOEM to
file with the lease
document.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(Accepted on behalf of $29 fee x 11,518 filings = $334,022
lessees as a service;
BOEM does not require or
need them.).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subtotal..................... ......................... ............................. 15,882....................... 4,284
------------------------------------------------------------
$766,053
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart I
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
900(a)-(e); 901; 902; 903(a)..... Submit OCS Mineral 0.33......................... 135.......................... 45
Lessee's and Operator's
Bond (Form BOEM-2028);
execute bond.
900(c), (d), (f), (g); 901(c), Demonstrate financial 3.5.......................... 166.......................... 581
(d), (f); 902(e). worth/ability to carry
out present and future
financial obligations,
request approval of
another form of
security, or request
reduction in amount of
supplemental bond
required on BOEM-
approved forms. Monitor
and submit required
information.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
900(e); 901; 902; 903(a)......... Submit OCS Mineral 0.25......................... 141.......................... 35
Lessee's and Operator's
Supplemental Plugging &
Abandonment Bond (Form
BOEM-2028A); execute
bond.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
900(f), (g)...................... Submit authority for 2............................ 12........................... 24
Regional Director to
sell Treasury or
alternate type of
securities.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
901.............................. Submit EP, DPP, and DOCDs IC burden covered in 1010-0151, 30 CFR part 550, subpart B. 0
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
901(f)........................... Submit oral/written Requirement not considered IC under 5 CFR 1320.3(h)(9). 0
comment on adjusted bond
amount and information.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
903(b)........................... Notify BOEM of any lapse 1............................ 4............................ 4
in previous bond/action
filed alleging lessee,
surety, or guarantor is
insolvent or bankrupt.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
904.............................. Provide plan/instructions 12........................... 2............................ 24
to fund lease-specific
abandonment account and
related information;
request approval to
withdraw funds.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
905.............................. Provide third-party 19........................... 46........................... 874
guarantee, indemnity
agreement, financial and
required information,
related notices,
reports, and annual
update; notify BOEM if
guarantor becomes
unqualified.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
905(d)(3); 906................... Provide notice of and 0.5.......................... 378.......................... 189
request approval to
terminate period of
liability, cancel bond,
or other security;
provide required
information.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
907(c)(2)........................ Provide information to 16........................... 5............................ 80
demonstrate lease will
be brought into
compliance.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subtotal..................... ......................... ............................. 889.......................... 1,856
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 18151]]
Subpart K
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1101............................. Request relinquishment 1............................ 247.......................... 247
(form BOEM-0152) of
lease; submit required
information.
1102............................. Request additional time 1............................ 1............................ 1
to bring lease into
compliance.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1102(c).......................... Comment on cancellation.. Requirement not considered IC under 5 CFR 1320.3(h)(9). 0
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subtotal..................... ......................... ............................. 248.......................... 248
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
30 CFR Part 556 Total........ ......................... ............................. 21,210....................... 18,630
------------------------------------------------------------
$766,053 Non-Hour Cost Burdens
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
30 CFR Part 550 Subpart J Reporting requirement * Hour burden Average number of Annual burden hours
annual responses.............
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
550.1011(a)...................... Provide surety bond (form GOM 0.25..................... 52........................... 13
BOEM-2030) and required
information.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pacific 3.5.................. 3............................ 11
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
30 CFR Part 550, Subpart J, ......................... ............................. 55........................... 24
Total.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
30 CFR Part 560 Reporting requirement * Hour burden Average number of Annual burden hours
annual responses.............
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
560.224(a)....................... Request BOEM to Requirement not considered IC under 5 CFR 1320.3(h)(9). 0
reconsider field
assignment of a lease.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
560.500 New...................... Submit required 1............................ 800.......................... 800
documentation
electronically through
BOEM-approved system;
comply with filing
specifications, as
directed by notice in
the Federal Register
(e.g., bonding info.).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
30 CFR Part 560 Total........ ......................... ............................. 800.......................... 800
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Reporting For ......................... ............................. 22,065....................... 19,454
Collection.
------------------------------------------------------------
$766,053 Non-Hour Cost Burdens
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* In the future, BOEM may require electronic filing of certain submissions.
An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and you are not required to
respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a currently
valid OMB control number. The public may comment, at any time, on the
accuracy of the IC burden estimate in this rule and may submit any
comments to the Information Collection Clearance Officer, Office of
Policy, Regulations, and Analysis; Bureau of Ocean Energy Management;
U.S. Department of the Interior; VAM-BOEM DIR; 45600 Woodland Rd,
Sterling, Virginia 20166.
14. National Environmental Policy Act of 1969
This rule does not constitute a major Federal action significantly
affecting the quality of the human environment. BOEM has considered the
rule under the criteria of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
(42 U.S.C. 4321-4370h) and 516 Departmental Manual 15. This rule meets
the criteria set forth in 43 CFR 46.210(5) for a Departmental
``categorical exclusion'' in that this final rule is ``. . . of an
administrative, financial, legal, technical, or procedural nature or
whose environmental effects are too broad, speculative, or conjectural
to lend themselves to meaningful analysis. . . .'' This rule also meets
the criteria set forth in 516 Departmental Manual 15.4(C)(1) for a BOEM
``categorical exclusion'' in that its impacts are limited to
administrative, economic or technological effects. Further, BOEM has
analyzed this rule to determine if it meets any of the extraordinary
circumstances that require an environmental assessment or an
environmental impact statement as set forth in 43 CFR 46.215 and has
concluded that it does not.
15. Data Quality Act
In developing this rule, we did not conduct or use a study,
experiment, or survey requiring peer review under the Data Quality Act
(44 U.S.C. 3516-3521), Public Law 106-554, app. C section 515, 114
Stat. 2763, 2763A-153-154).
16. Effects on the Energy Supply (E.O. 13211)
This rule is not a significant energy action under the definition
in E.O. 13211, Actions Concerning Regulations
[[Page 18152]]
That Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use (May 18,
2001). A statement of energy effects is not required.
List of Subjects
30 CFR Part 550
Administrative practice and procedure, Continental shelf,
Environmental impact statements, Environmental protection, Federal
lands, Government contracts, Investigations, Mineral resources, Oil and
gas exploration, Outer continental shelf, Penalties, Pipelines,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Rights-of-way, Sulfur.
30 CFR Part 556
Administrative practice and procedure, Continental shelf,
Environmental protection, Federal lands, Government contracts,
Intergovernmental relations, Oil and gas exploration, Outer continental
shelf, Mineral resources, Rights-of-way, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
30 CFR Part 559
Continental shelf, Federal lands, Federal lease, Gas, Government
contracts, Mineral resources, Mineral royalties, Oil and gas
exploration, Outer continental shelf, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
30 CFR Part 560
Continental shelf, Federal lands, Government contracts, Mineral
resources, Mineral royalties, Oil and gas exploration, Outer
continental shelf, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: March 10, 2016.
Amanda C. Leiter,
Acting Assistant Secretary--Land and Minerals Management.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management, (BOEM) amends 30 CFR parts 550, 556, 559 and 560 as
follows:
PART 550--OIL AND GAS AND SULFUR OPERATIONS IN THE OUTER
CONTINENTAL SHELF
0
1. Revise the authority citation for 30 CFR part 550 to read as
follows:
Authority: 31 U.S.C. 9701, 43 U.S.C. 1334.
Subpart A--General Provisions
0
2. Add Sec. 550.120 to read as follows:
Sec. 550.120 What standards will BOEM use to regulate leases, rights-
of-use and easement, and rights-of-way?
BOEM will regulate all activities under a lease, a right-of-use and
easement, or a right-of-way to:
(a) Promote the orderly exploration, development, and production of
mineral resources;
(b) Prevent injury or loss of life;
(c) Prevent damage to or waste of any natural resource, property,
or the environment; and
(d) Ensure cooperation and consultation with affected States, local
governments, other interested parties, and relevant Federal agencies.
0
3. Add Sec. 550.121 to read as follows:
Sec. 550.121 What must I do to protect health, safety, property, and
the environment?
The Director may require additional measures to ensure the use of
Best Available and Safest Technology (BAST) as identified by BSEE:
(a) To avoid the failure of equipment that would have a significant
effect on safety, health, or the environment;
(b) If it is economically feasible; and
(c) If the incremental benefits justify the incremental costs.
Sec. Sec. 550.145 and 550.146 [Redesignated as Sec. Sec. 550.146
and 550.147]
0
4. Redesignate Sec. Sec. 550.145 and 550.146 as Sec. Sec. 550.146 and
550.147, respectively.
0
5. Amend Sec. 550.197 as follows:
0
a. Revise the first sentence of the introductory text.
0
b. Revise paragraph (b)(5).
0
c. Revise paragraph (c).
0
d. Add paragraph (d).
The revisions and addition read as follows:
Sec. 550.197 Data and information to be made available to the public
or for limited inspection.
BOEM will protect data and information that you submit under this
chapter, as described in this section. * * *
* * * * *
(b) * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
If BOEM will release At this time Special provisions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(5) Your lease is still in effect and Geological data, Two years after the These release times
within the primary term specified in analyzed geological required submittal apply only if the
the lease. information. date or 60 days after provisions in this
a lease sale if any table governing high-
portion of an offered resolution systems and
lease is within 50 the provisions in Sec.
miles of a well, 552.7 do not apply.
whichever is later. If the primary term
specified in the lease
is extended, this
provision applies to
the extension.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
(c) BOEM may allow limited data and information inspection, but
only by a person with a direct interest in related BOEM decisions and
issues in a specific geographic area, and who agrees in writing to
maintain the confidentiality of geological and geophysical (G&G) data
and information submitted under this part that BOEM uses to:
(1) Promote operational safety;
(2) Protect the environment; or
(3) Make field determinations.
(d) No proprietary information received by BOEM under 43 U.S.C.
1352 will be transmitted to any affected State unless the lessee, or
the permittee and all persons to whom such permittee has sold such
information under promise of confidentiality, agree to such
transmittal.
0
6. Add subpart D to part 550 to read as follows:
Subpart D--Leasing Maps and Diagrams
Sec. 550.400 Leasing maps and diagrams.
(a) Any area of the OCS, which has been appropriately platted as
provided in paragraph (b) of this section, may be leased for any
mineral not included in an existing lease issued under the Act or
meeting the requirements of subsection (a) of section 6 of the Act.
Before any lease is offered or issued an area may be:
(1) Withdrawn from disposition pursuant to section 12(a) of the
Act; or
(2) Designated as an area or part of an area restricted from
operation under section 12(d) of the Act.
(b) BOEM will prepare leasing maps and official protraction
diagrams of areas of the OCS. The areas included in each mineral lease
will be in accordance with the appropriate leasing map or official
protraction diagram.
0
7. Revise part 556 to read as follows:
[[Page 18153]]
PART 556--LEASING OF SULFUR OR OIL AND GAS AND BONDING REQUIREMENTS
IN THE OUTER CONTINENTAL SHELF
Subpart A-General Provisions
Sec.
556.100 Statement of policy.
556.101 Purpose.
556.102 Authority.
556.103 Cross references.
556.104 Information collection and proprietary information.
556.105 Acronyms and definitions.
556.106 Service fees.
556.107 Corporate seal requirements.
Subpart B-Oil and Gas Five Year Leasing Program
556.200 What is the Five Year leasing program?
556.201 Does BOEM consider multiple uses of the OCS?
556.202 How does BOEM start the Five Year program preparation
process?
556.203 What does BOEM do before publishing a proposed Five Year
program?
556.204 How do Governments and citizens comment on a proposed Five
Year program?
556.205 What does BOEM do before approving a proposed final Five
Year program or a significant revision of a previously-approved Five
Year program?
Subpart C--Planning and Holding a Lease Sale
556.300 What reports may BOEM and other Federal agencies prepare
before a lease sale?
556.301 What is a Call for Information and Nominations?
556.302 What does BOEM do with the information from the Call?
556.303 What does BOEM do if an area proposed for leasing is within
three nautical miles of the seaward boundary of a coastal State?
556.304 How is a proposed notice of sale prepared?
556.305 How does BOEM coordinate and consult with States regarding a
proposed notice of sale?
556.306 What if a potentially oil or gas bearing area underlies both
the OCS and lands subject to State jurisdiction?
556.307 What does BOEM do with comments and recommendations received
on the proposed notice of sale?
556.308 How does BOEM conduct a lease sale?
556.309 Does BOEM offer blocks in a sale that is not on the Five
Year program schedule (called a Supplemental Sale)?
Subpart D--Qualifications
556.400 When must I demonstrate that I am qualified to hold a lease
on the OCS?
556.401 What do I need to show to become qualified to hold a lease
on the OCS and obtain a qualification number?
556.402 How do I make the necessary showing to qualify and obtain a
qualification number?
556.403 Under what circumstances may I be disqualified from holding
a lease on the OCS?
556.404 What do the non-procurement debarment rules require that I
do?
556.405 When must I notify BOEM of mergers, name changes, or changes
of business form?
Subpart E--Issuance of a Lease
How To Bid
556.500 Once qualified, how do I submit a bid?
556.501 What information do I need to submit with my bid?
Restrictions on Joint Bidding
556.511 Are there restrictions on bidding with others and do those
restrictions affect my ability to bid?
556.512 What bids may be disqualified?
556.513 When must I file a statement of production?
556.514 How do I determine my production for purposes of the
restricted joint bidders list?
556.515 May a person be exempted from joint bidding restrictions?
How does BOEM act on bids?
556.516 What does BOEM do with my bid?
556.517 What may I do if my bid is rejected?
Awarding the Lease
556.520 What happens if I am the successful high bidder and BOEM
accepts my bid?
556.521 When is my lease effective?
556.522 What are the terms and conditions of the lease and when are
they published?
Subpart F--Lease Terms and Obligations
Length of Lease
556.600 What is the primary term of my oil and gas lease?
556.601 How may I maintain my oil and gas lease beyond the primary
term?
556.602 What is the primary term of my sulfur lease?
556.603 How may I maintain my sulfur lease beyond the primary term?
Lease Obligations
56.604 What are my rights and obligations as a record title owner?
556.605 What are my rights and obligations as an operating rights
owner?
Helium
556.606 What must a lessee do if BOEM elects to extract helium from
a lease?
Subpart G--Transferring All or Part of the Record Title Interest in a
Lease
556.700 May I assign or sublease all or any part of the record title
interest in my lease?
556.701 How do I seek approval of an assignment of the record title
interest in my lease, or a severance of operating rights from that
record title interest?
556.702 When will my assignment result in a segregated lease?
556.703 What is the effect of the approval of the assignment of 100
percent of the record title in a particular aliquot(s) of my lease
and the resulting lease segregation?
556.704 When would BOEM disapprove an assignment or sublease of an
interest in my lease?
556.705 How do I transfer the interest of a deceased natural person
who was a lessee?
556.706 What if I want to transfer record title interests in more
than one lease at the same time, but to different parties?
556.707 What if I want to transfer different types of lease
interests (not only record title interests) in the same lease to
different parties?
556.708 What if I want to transfer my record title interests in more
than one lease to the same party?
556.709 What if I want to transfer my record title interest in one
lease to multiple parties?
556.710 What is the effect of an assignment of a lease on an
assignor's liability under the lease?
556.711 What is the effect of a record title holder's sublease of
operating rights on the record title holder's liability?
556.712 What is the effective date of a transfer?
556.713 What is the effect of an assignment of a lease on an
assignee's liability under the lease?
556.714 As a restricted joint bidder, may I transfer an interest to
another restricted joint bidder?
556.715 Are there any interests I may transfer or record without
BOEM approval?
556.716 What must I do with respect to the designation of operator
on a lease when a transfer of record title is submitted?
Subpart H--Transferring Operating Rights in All or Part of a Lease
556.800 As an operating rights owner, may I assign all or part of my
operating rights interest?
556.801 How do I seek approval of an assignment of my operating
rights?
556.802 When would BOEM disapprove the assignment of all or part of
my operating rights interest?
556.803 What if I want to assign operating rights interests in more
than one lease at the same time, but to different parties?
556.804 What if I want to assign my operating rights interest in a
lease to multiple parties?
556.805 What is the effect of an operating rights owner's assignment
of operating rights on the assignor's liability?
556.806 What is the effective date of an assignment of operating
rights?
556.807 What is the effect of an assignment of operating rights on
an assignee's liability?
556.808 As an operating rights owner, are there any interests I may
assign without BOEM approval?
556.809 [Reserved]
556.810 What must I do with respect to the designation of operator
on a lease when a transfer of operating rights ownership is
submitted?
[[Page 18154]]
Subpart I--Bonding or Other Financial Assurance
556.900 Bond requirements for an oil and gas or sulfur lease.
556.901 Additional bonds.
556.902 General requirements for bonds.
556.903 Lapse of bond.
556.904 Lease-specific abandonment accounts.
556.905 Using a third-party guarantee instead of a bond.
556.906 Termination of the period of liability and cancellation of a
bond.
556.907 Forfeiture of bonds and/or other securities.
Subpart J--Bonus or Royalty Credits for Exchange of Certain Leases
556.1000 Leases formerly eligible for a bonus or royalty credit.
Subpart K--Ending a Lease
556.1100 How does a lease expire?
556.1101 May I relinquish my lease or an aliquot part thereof?
556.1102 Under what circumstances will BOEM cancel my lease?
Subpart L--Leases Maintained Under Section 6 of OCSLA
556.1200 Effect of regulations on lease.
556.1201 Section 6(a) leases and leases other than those for oil,
gas, or sulfur.
Subpart M--Environmental Studies
556.1300 Environmental studies.
Authority: 30 U.S.C. 1701 note, 30 U.S.C. 1711, 31 U.S.C. 9701,
42 U.S.C. 6213, 43 U.S.C. 1331 note, 43 U.S.C. 1334, 43 U.SC. 1801-
1802.
Subpart A--General Provisions
Sec. 556.100 Statement of policy.
The management of Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) resources is to be
conducted in accordance with the findings, purposes, and policy
directions provided by the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act Amendments
of 1978 (OCSLA or the Act) (43 U.S.C. 1332, 1801, 1802), and other
executive, legislative, judicial and departmental guidance. The
Secretary of the Interior (the Secretary) will consider available
environmental information in making decisions affecting OCS resources.
Sec. 556.101 Purpose.
The purpose of the regulations in this part is to establish the
procedures under which the Secretary will exercise the authority to
administer a leasing program for oil and gas, and sulfur. The
regulations pertaining to the procedures under which the Secretary will
exercise the authority to administer a program to grant rights-of-use
and easements are found in part 550 of this chapter.
Sec. 556.102 Authority.
(a) The Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA) (43 U.S.C. 1334)
authorizes the Secretary of the Interior to issue, on a competitive
basis, leases for oil and gas, and sulfur, in submerged lands of the
OCS. The Act authorizes the Secretary to grant rights-of-way and
easements through the submerged lands of the OCS.
(b) The Federal Oil and Gas Royalty Management Act of 1982 (FOGRMA)
(30 U.S.C. 1711) governs oil and gas royalty management and requires
the development of enforcement practices to ensure the prompt and
proper collection of oil and gas revenues owed to the U.S.
(c) The Independent Offices Appropriations Act of 1952 (IOAA) (31
U.S.C. 9701) authorizes fees and charges for Federal government
services.
(d) The Energy Policy and Conservation Act of 1975 (42 U.S.C. 6213)
prohibits joint bidding by major oil and gas producers.
(e) The Gulf of Mexico Energy Security Act of 2006 (GOMESA) (Pub.
L. 109-432, 43 U.S.C. 1331 note):
(1) Shares leasing revenues with Gulf producing states and the Land
& Water Conservation Fund for coastal restoration projects; and
(2) Allows companies to exchange certain existing leases in
moratorium areas for bonus and royalty credits to be used on other Gulf
of Mexico leases.
Sec. 556.103 Cross references.
The following includes some of the major regulations relevant to
offshore oil and gas development:
(a) For other applicable Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM)
oil and gas regulations, see 30 CFR parts 550 through 560.
(b) For Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE)
regulations governing exploration, development and production, and oil
spill response, see 30 CFR chapter II.
(c) For Office of Natural Resources Revenue (ONRR) regulations
related to rentals, royalties, and fees, see 30 CFR chapter XII.
(d) For BOEM regulations governing the appeal of an order or
decision issued under the regulations in this part, see 30 CFR part
590.
(e) For regulations on the National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA), see 40 CFR 1500-1508 and 43 CFR part 46.
(f) For ocean dumping sites, see the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (USEPA) listing--40 CFR part 228.
(g) For air quality, see USEPA regulations at 40 CFR part 55 and
BOEM regulations at 30 CFR part 550 subparts B and C.
(h) For related National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA) programs, see:
(1) Marine Sanctuary regulations, 15 CFR part 922;
(2) Fishermen's Contingency Fund, 50 CFR part 296;
(3) Coastal Zone Management Act (CZMA), 15 CFR part 930;
(4) Essential Fish Habitat, 50 CFR 600.90.
(i) For U.S. Coast Guard (USCG) regulations on the oil spill
liability of vessels and operators, see 33 CFR parts 132, 135, and 136.
(j) For USCG regulations on port access routes, see 33 CFR part
164.
(k) For Department of Transportation regulations on offshore
pipeline facilities, see 49 CFR part 195.
(1) For Department of Defense regulations on military activities on
offshore areas, see 32 CFR part 252.
Sec. 556.104 Information collection and proprietary information.
(a) Information collection. (1) The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) approved the collection of information under 44 U.S.C. 3501-
3521), and assigned OMB Control Number 1010-0006. The title of this
collection of information is ``Leasing of Sulfur or Oil and Gas in the
Outer Continental Shelf (30 CFR part 550, part 556, and part 560).''
(2) BOEM collects this information to determine if an applicant
seeking to obtain a lease or right-of-use and easement (RUE) on the OCS
is qualified to hold such a lease or RUE and to determine whether any
such applicant can meet the monetary and non-monetary requirements
associated with a lease or RUE. Responses to this information
collection are either required to obtain or retain a benefit or are
mandatory under OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1331-1356a). BOEM will protect
proprietary information collected according to section 26 of OCSLA (43
U.S.C. 1352), and this section.
(3) The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3521)
requires us to inform the public that an agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and that no one is required to respond to, a collection of
information unless it displays a current and valid OMB control number.
(4) Send comments regarding any aspect of the collection of
information under this part, including suggestions for reducing the
burden, to the Information Collection Clearance Officer, Bureau of
Ocean Energy Management, by mail at 45600 Woodland Road, Sterling, VA
20166 or by email to regulation1@boem.gov, or by phone at (703) 787-
1025.
(b) Proprietary information. (1) Any proprietary information
maintained by BOEM will be subject to the requirements of 43 CFR part
2.
[[Page 18155]]
(2) No proprietary information received by BOEM under 43 U.S.C.
1352(c) will be transmitted to any affected State unless the lessee, to
whom such information applies, or the permittee and all persons, to
whom such permittee has sold such information under promise of
confidentiality, agree to such transmittal.
(c) Proprietary information in response to a Call for Information
and Nominations (Call).
(1) A specific indication of interest in an area received in
response to a Call issued by the Secretary is proprietary information.
(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (c)(1) of this section, BOEM may
provide a summary of indications of interest in areas received in
response to a Call for a proposed sale.
Sec. 556.105 Acronyms and definitions.
(a) Acronyms and terms used in this part have the following
meanings:
ASTM American Society for Testing and Materials
BAST Best Available and Safest Technology
BOEM Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
BSEE Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CPA Central Planning Area of the GOM
CZMA Coastal Zone Management Act
DOI Department of the Interior
DOCD Development Operations Coordination Document
DOO Designation of Operator
DPP Development and Production Plan
EIA Environmental Impact Analysis
EP Exploration Plan
EPA Eastern Planning Area of the GOM
EPAct Energy Policy Act of 2005
FNOS Final Notice of Sale
FOGRMA Federal Oil and Gas Royalty Management Act of 1982
G&G Geological and Geophysical
GDIS Geophysical Data and Information Statement
GOM Gulf of Mexico
GOMESA Gulf of Mexico Energy Security Act of 2006
IOAA Independent Offices Appropriations Act of 1952
LLC Limited Liability Company
MBB Mapping and Boundary Branch
NAD North American Datum
NEPA National Environmental Policy Act of 1969
NGPA Natural Gas Processors Association
NOAA National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
NTL Notice to Lessees
OCS Outer Continental Shelf
OCSLA Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act
OMB Office of Management and Budget
ONRR Office of Natural Resources Revenue
OPD Official Protraction Diagram
PNOS Proposed Notice of Sale
PRA Paperwork Reduction Act
ROW Right of way
RSV Royalty Suspension Volume
RUE Right of Use and Easement
SLA Submerged Lands Act of 1953
U.S. United States
U.S.C. United States Code
USCG U.S. Coast Guard
USEPA U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
UTM Universal Transverse Mercator coordinate system
WPA Western Planning Area of the GOM
(b) As used in this part, each of the terms and phrases listed
below has the meaning given in the Act or as defined in this section.
Act means the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, as amended (OCSLA)
(43 U.S.C. 1331-1356a).
Affected State means, with respect to any program, plan, lease
sale, or other activity proposed, conducted, or approved pursuant to
the provisions of OCSLA, any State:
(i) The laws of which are declared, pursuant to section 4(a)(2) of
OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1333(a)(2)), to be the law of the United States for
the portion of the OCS on which such activity is, or is proposed to be,
conducted;
(ii) Which is, or is proposed to be, directly connected by
transportation facilities to any artificial island or structure
referred to in section 4(a)(1) of OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1333(a)(1));
(iii) Which is receiving, or in accordance with the proposed
activity will receive, oil for processing, refining, or transshipment
that was extracted from the OCS and transported directly to that State
by means of one or more vessels or by a combination of means, including
a vessel;
(iv) Which is designated by the Secretary as a State in which there
is a substantial probability of significant impact on or damage to the
coastal, marine, or human environment; or a State in which there will
be significant changes in the social, governmental, or economic
infrastructure resulting from the exploration, development, and
production of oil and gas anywhere on the OCS; or
(v) In which the Secretary finds that because of such activity,
there is, or will be, a significant risk of serious damage, due to
factors such as prevailing winds and currents, to the marine or coastal
environment in the event of any oil spill, blowout, or release of oil
or gas from one or more vessels, pipelines, or other transshipment
facilities.
Aliquot or Aliquot part means an officially designated subdivision
of a lease's area, which can be a half of a lease (\1/2\), a quarter of
a lease (\1/4\), a quarter of a quarter of a lease (\1/4\ \1/4\), or a
quarter of a quarter of a quarter of a lease (\1/4\ \1/4\ \1/4\).
Authorized officer means any person authorized by law or by
delegation of authority to or within BOEM to perform the duties
described in this part.
Average daily production means the total of all production in an
applicable production period that is chargeable under Sec. 556.514
divided by the exact number of calendar days in the applicable
production period.
Barrel means 42 U.S. gallons. All measurements of crude oil and
natural gas liquids under this section must be at 60[emsp14][deg]F.
(i) For purposes of computing production and reporting of natural
gas, 5,626 cubic feet of natural gas at 14.73 pounds per square inch
equals one barrel.
(ii) For purposes of computing production and reporting of natural
gas liquids, 1.454 barrels of natural gas liquids at 60[emsp14][deg]F
equals one barrel of crude oil.
Bidding unit means one or more OCS blocks, or any portion thereof,
that may be bid upon as a single administrative unit and will become a
single lease. The term `tract,'' as defined in this section, may be
used interchangeably with the term ``bidding unit.''
BOEM means Bureau of Ocean Energy Management of the U.S. Department
of the Interior.
Bonus or royalty credit means a legal instrument or other written
documentation approved by BOEM, or an entry in an account managed by
the Secretary, that a bidder or lessee may use in lieu of any other
monetary payment for a bonus or a royalty due on oil or gas production
from certain leases, as specified in, and permitted by, the Gulf of
Mexico Energy Security Act of 2006, Pub. L. 109-432 (Div. C, Title 1),
120 Stat. 3000 (2006), codified at 43 U.S.C. 1331, note.
BSEE means Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement of the
U.S. Department of the Interior.
Central Planning Area (CPA) means that portion of the Gulf of
Mexico that lies southerly of Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama.
Precise boundary information is available from the BOEM Leasing
Division, Mapping and Boundary Branch (MBB).
Coastal environment means the physical, atmospheric, and biological
components, conditions, and factors that interactively determine the
productivity, state, condition, and quality of the terrestrial
ecosystem from the shoreline inland to the boundaries of the coastal
zone.
Coastal zone means the coastal waters (including the lands therein
and thereunder) and the adjacent shorelands (including the water
therein and
[[Page 18156]]
thereunder), strongly influenced by each other and in proximity to the
shorelines of one or more of the several coastal States, and includes
islands, transition and intertidal areas, salt marshes, wetlands, and
beaches, whose zone extends seaward to the outer limit of the United
States territorial sea and extends inland from the shore lines to the
extent necessary to control shorelands, the uses of which have a direct
and significant impact on the coastal waters, and the inland boundaries
of which may be identified by the several coastal States, under section
305(b)(1) of the Coastal Zone Management Act (CZMA) of 1972, 16 U.S.C.
1454(b)(1).
Coastline means the line of mean ordinary low water along that
portion of the coast in direct contact with the open sea and the line
marking the seaward limit of inland waters.
Crude oil means a mixture of liquid hydrocarbons, including
condensate that exists in natural underground reservoirs and remains
liquid at atmospheric pressure after passing through surface separating
facilities, but does not include liquid hydrocarbons produced from tar
sand, gilsonite, oil shale, or coal.
Designated operator means a person authorized to act on your behalf
and fulfill your obligations under the Act, the lease, and the
regulations, who has been designated as an operator by all record title
holders and all operating rights owners that own an operating rights
interest in the aliquot/depths in which the designated operator, to
which the Designation of Operator form applies, will be operating, and
who has been approved by BOEM to act as designated operator.
Desoto Canyon OPD means the Official Protraction Diagram (OPD)
designated as Desoto Canyon that has a western edge located at the
universal transverse mercator (UTM) X coordinate 1,346,400 in the North
American Datum of 1927 (NAD27).
Destin Dome OPD means the Official Protraction Diagram (OPD)
designated as Destin Dome that has a western edge located at the
Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) X coordinate 1,393,920 in the
NAD27.
Development block means a block, including a block susceptible to
drainage, which is located on the same general geologic structure as an
existing lease having a well with indicated hydrocarbons; a reservoir
may or may not be interpreted to extend on to the block.
Director means the Director of the BOEM of the U.S. Department of
the Interior, or an official authorized to act on the Director's
behalf.
Eastern Planning Area (EPA) means that portion of the Gulf of
Mexico that lies southerly and westerly of Florida. Precise boundary
information is available from the BOEM Leasing Division, Mapping and
Boundary Branch.
Economic interest means any right to, or any right dependent upon,
production of crude oil, natural gas, or natural gas liquids and
includes, but is not limited to: a royalty interest; an overriding
royalty interest, whether payable in cash or kind; a working interest
that does not include a record title interest or an operating rights
interest; a carried working interest; a net profits interest; or a
production payment.
Human environment means the physical, social, and economic
components, conditions, and factors that interactively determine the
state, condition, and quality of living conditions, employment, and
health of those affected, directly or indirectly, by activities
occurring on the OCS.
Initial period or primary term means the initial period referred to
in 43 U.S.C. 1337(b)(2).
Joint bid means a bid submitted by two or more persons for an oil
and gas lease under section 8(a) of the Act.
Lease means an agreement that is issued under section 8 or
maintained under section 6 of the Act and that authorizes exploration
for, and development and production of, minerals on the OCS. The term
also means the area covered by that agreement, whichever the context
requires.
Lease interest means one or more of the following ownership
interests in an OCS oil and gas or sulfur lease: a record title
interest, an operating rights interest, or an economic interest.
Lessee means a person who has entered into a lease with the United
States to explore for, develop, and produce the leased minerals and is
therefore a record title owner of the lease, or the BOEM-approved
assignee-owner of a record title interest. The term lessee also
includes the BOEM-approved sublessee- or assignee-owner of an operating
rights interest in a lease.
Marine environment means the physical, atmospheric, and biological
components, conditions, and factors that interactively determine the
productivity, state, conditions, and quality of the marine ecosystem,
including the waters of the high seas, the contiguous zone,
transitional and intertidal areas, salt marshes, and wetlands within
the coastal zone and on the OCS.
Mineral means oil, gas, and sulfur; it also includes sand, gravel,
and salt used to facilitate the development and production of oil, gas,
and sulfur.
Natural gas means a mixture of hydrocarbons and varying quantities
of non-hydrocarbons that exist in the gaseous phase.
Natural gas liquids means liquefied petroleum products produced
from reservoir gas and liquefied at surface separators, field
facilities, or gas processing plants worldwide, including any of the
following:
(i) Condensate--natural gas liquids recovered from gas well gas
(associated and non-associated) in separators or field facilities; or
(ii) Gas plant products--natural gas liquids recovered from natural
gas in gas processing plants and from field facilities. Gas plant
products include the following, as classified according to the
standards of the Natural Gas Processors Association (NGPA) or the
American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM):
(A) Ethane--C2H6
(B) Propane--C3H8
(C) Butane--C4H10, including all products
covered by NGPA specifications for commercial butane, including
isobutane, normal butane, and other butanes--all butanes not included
as isobutane or normal butane;
(D) Butane-Propane Mixtures--All products covered by NGPA
specifications for butane-propane mixtures;
(E) Natural Gasoline--A mixture of hydrocarbons extracted from
natural gas, that meets vapor pressure, end point, and other
specifications for natural gasoline set by NGPA;
(F) Plant Condensate--A natural gas plant product recovered and
separated as a liquid at gas inlet separators or scrubbers in
processing plants or field facilities; and
(G) Other Natural Gas plant products meeting refined product
standards (i.e., gasoline, kerosene, distillate, etc.).
Operating rights means an interest created by sublease out of the
record title interest in an oil and gas lease, authorizing the owner to
explore for, develop, and/or produce the oil and gas contained within a
specified area and depth of the lease (i.e., operating rights tract).
Operating rights owner means the holder of operating rights.
Operating rights tract means the area within the lease from which
the operating rights have been severed on an aliquot basis from the
record title interest, defined by a beginning and ending depth.
[[Page 18157]]
Operator means the person designated as having control or
management of operations on the leased area or a portion thereof. An
operator may be a lessee, the operating rights owner, or a designated
agent of the lessee or the operating rights owner.
Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) means all submerged lands lying
seaward and outside of the area of lands beneath navigable waters as
defined in the Submerged Lands Act (43 U.S.C. 1301-1315) and of which
the subsoil and seabed appertain to the United States and are subject
to its jurisdiction and control.
Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA) means the Outer
Continental Shelf Lands Act (43 U.S.C. 1331-1356a), as amended.
Owned, as used in the context of restricted joint bidding or a
statement of production, means:
(i) With respect to crude oil--having either an economic interest
in or a power of disposition over the production of crude oil;
(ii) With respect to natural gas--having either an economic
interest in or a power of disposition over the production of natural
gas; and
(iii) With respect to natural gas liquids--having either an
economic interest in or a power of disposition over any natural gas
liquids at the time of completion of the liquefaction process.
Pensacola OPD means the Official Protraction Diagram (OPD)
designated as Pensacola that has a western edge located at the UTM X
coordinate 1,393,920 in the NAD27.
Person means a natural person, where so designated, or an entity,
such as a partnership, association, State, political subdivision of a
State or territory, or a private, public, or municipal corporation.
Planning area means a large portion of the OCS, consisting of
contiguous OCS blocks, defined for administrative planning purposes.
Primary term or initial period means the initial period referred to
in 43 U.S.C. 1337(b)(2).
Regional Director means the BOEM officer with responsibility and
authority for a Region within BOEM.
Regional Supervisor means the BOEM officer with responsibility and
authority for leasing or other designated program functions within a
BOEM Region.
Right-of-Use and Easement (RUE) means a right to use a portion of
the seabed at an OCS site other than on a lease you own, for the
construction and/or use of artificial islands, facilities,
installations, and other devices, established to support the
exploration, development or production of oil and gas, mineral, or
energy resources from an OCS or State submerged lands lease.
Right-of-Way (ROW) means an authorization issued by BSEE under the
authority of section 5(e) of the OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1334(e)) for the use
of submerged lands of the Outer Continental Shelf for pipeline
purposes.
Secretary means the Secretary of the Interior or an official or a
designated employee authorized to act on the Secretary's behalf.
Security or securities means any note, stock, treasury stock, bond,
debenture, evidence of indebtedness, certificate of interest or
participation in any profit-sharing agreement; collateral-trust
certificate; pre-organization certificate or subscription; transferable
share; investment contract; voting-trust certificate; certificate of
deposit for a security; fractional undivided interest in oil, gas, or
other mineral rights; or, in general, any interest or instrument
commonly known as a ``security'' or any certificate of interest or
participation in, temporary or interim certificate for, receipt for,
guarantee of, or warrant or right to subscribe to or purchase any of
the foregoing.
Single bid means a bid submitted by one person for an oil and gas
lease under section 8(a) of the Act.
Six-month bidding period means the 6-month period of time:
(i) From May 1 through October 31; or
(ii) from November 1 through April 30.
Statement of production means, in the context of joint restricted
bidders, the following production during the applicable prior
production period:
(i) The average daily production in barrels of crude oil, natural
gas, and natural gas liquids which it owned worldwide;
(ii) The average daily production in barrels of crude oil, natural
gas, and natural gas liquids owned worldwide by every subsidiary of the
reporting person;
(iii) The average daily production in barrels of crude oil, natural
gas, and natural gas liquids owned worldwide by any person or persons
of which the reporting person is a subsidiary; and
(iv) The average daily production in barrels of crude oil, natural
gas, and natural gas liquids owned worldwide by any subsidiary, other
than the reporting person, of any person or persons of which the
reporting person is a subsidiary.
Tract means one or more OCS blocks, or any leasable portion
thereof, that will be part of a single oil and gas lease. The term
tract may be used interchangeably with the term ``bidding unit.''
We, us, and our mean BOEM or the Department of the Interior,
depending on the context in which the word is used.
Western Planning Area (WPA) means that portion of the Gulf of
Mexico that lies south and east of Texas. Precise boundary information
is available from the Leasing Division, Mapping and Boundary Branch.
You means any party that has, or may have, legal obligations to the
Federal government with respect to any operations on the OCS in which
it is or may become involved. Depending on the context of the
regulation, the term ``you'' may include a lessee (record title owner),
an operating rights owner, a designated operator or agent of the
lessee, a predecessor lessee, a holder of a State or Federal RUE, or a
pipeline ROW holder.
Sec. 556.106 Service fees.
(a) The table in this paragraph shows the fees you must pay to BOEM
for the services listed. BOEM will adjust the fees periodically
according to the Implicit Price Deflator for Gross Domestic Product and
publish a document showing the adjustment in the Federal Register. If a
significant adjustment is needed to arrive at a new fee for any reason
other than inflation, then a proposed rule containing the new fees will
be published in the Federal Register for comment.
Service Fee Table
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Service--processing of the
following: Fee amount 30 CFR Citation
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Assignment of record title $198 Sec. 556.701(a)
interest in Federal oil and gas
lease(s) for BOEM approval.......
(2) Sublease or Assignment of 198 Sec. 556.801(a)
operating rights interest in
Federal oil and gas lease(s) for
BOEM approval....................
(3) Required document filing for 29 Sec. 556.715(a)
record purpose, but not for BOEM Sec. 556.808(a)
approval.........................
[[Page 18158]]
(4) Non-required document filing 29 Sec. 556.715(b)
for record purposes.............. Sec. 556.808(b)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Evidence of payment via pay.gov of the fees listed in paragraph
(a) of this section must accompany the submission of a document for
approval or filing, or be sent to an office identified by the Regional
Director.
(c) Once a fee is paid, it is nonrefundable, even if your service
request is withdrawn.
(d) If your request is returned to you as incomplete, you are not
required to submit a new fee with the amended submission.
(e) The pay.gov Web site is accessible at https://www.pay.gov/paygov/ or through the BOEM Web site at https://www.boem.gov/Fees-for-Services.
(f) The fees listed in the table above apply equally to any
document or information submitted electronically pursuant to part 560,
subpart E, of this chapter.
Sec. 556.107 Corporate seal requirements.
(a) If you electronically submit to BOEM any document or
information referenced in Sec. 560.500 of this chapter, any
requirement to use a corporate seal under this chapter will be
satisfied, and you will not need to affix your corporate seal to such
document or information, if:
(1) You properly file with BOEM a paper, with a corporate seal and
the signature of the authorized person(s), stating that electronic
submissions made by you will be legally binding, as set forth in Sec.
560.502 of this chapter; and
(2) You make electronic submissions to BOEM through a secure
electronic filing system that conforms to the requirements of Sec.
560.500; or,
(b) You may file with BOEM a non-electronic document, containing a
corporate seal and the signature of an authorized person(s), attesting
that future documents and information filed by you by electronic or
non-electronic means will be legally binding without an affixed
corporate seal. If you file such a non-electronic attestation document
with BOEM, any requirement for use of a corporate seal under the
regulations of this chapter will be satisfied, and you will not need to
affix your corporate seal to submissions where they would have been
otherwise required.
(c) If the State or territory in which you are incorporated does
not issue or require corporate seals, the document referred to in
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section need not contain a corporate
seal, but must still contain the signature of the authorized person(s),
a statement that the State in which you are incorporated does not issue
or require corporate seals, and a statement that submissions made by
you will be legally binding.
(d) Any document, or information submitted without corporate seal
must still contain the signature of an individual qualified to sign who
has the requisite authority to act on your behalf.
(e) Any document or information submitted pursuant to this section
is submitted subject to the penalties of 18 U.S.C. 1001, as amended by
the False Statements Accountability Act of 1996.
Subpart B--Oil and Gas Five Year Leasing Program
Sec. 556.200 What is the Five Year leasing program?
Section 18(a) of OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1344(a)), requires the Secretary
to prepare an oil and gas leasing program that consists of a five-year
schedule of proposed lease sales to best meet national energy needs,
showing the size, timing, and location of leasing activity as precisely
as possible. BOEM prepares the five year schedule of proposed lease
sales consistent with the principles set out in section 18(a)(1) and
(2)(A)-(H) of OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1344(a)(1) and (2)(A)-(H)) to obtain a
proper balance among the potential for environmental damage, the
potential for the discovery of oil and gas, and the potential for
adverse impact on the coastal zone, as required by OCSLA section
18(a)(3) (43 U.S.C. 1344(a)(3)).
Sec. 556.201 Does BOEM consider multiple uses of the OCS?
BOEM gathers information about multiple uses of the OCS in order to
assist the Secretary in making decisions on the 5-year program pursuant
to provisions of 43 U.S.C. 1344. For this purpose, BOEM invites and
considers suggestions from States and local governments, industry, and
any other interested parties, primarily through public notice and
comment procedures. BOEM also invites and considers suggestions from
Federal agencies.
Sec. 556.202 How does BOEM start the Five Year program preparation
process?
To begin preparation of the Five Year program, BOEM invites and
considers nominations for any areas to be included or excluded from
leasing, by doing the following:
(a) BOEM prepares and makes public official protraction diagrams
and leasing maps of OCS areas. In any area properly included in the
official Five Year diagrams and maps, any area not already leased for
oil and gas may be offered for lease.
(b) BOEM invites and considers suggestions and relevant information
from governors of States, local governments, industry, Federal
agencies, and other interested parties, through a publication of a
request for information in the Federal Register. Any local government
must first submit its comments on the request for information to its
State governor before sending the comments to BOEM.
(c) BOEM sends a letter to the governor of each affected State
asking the governor to identify specific laws, goals, and policies that
should be considered. Each State governor, as well as the Department of
Commerce, is requested to identify the relationship between any oil and
gas activity and the State under sections 305 and 306 of the CZMA, 16
U.S.C. 1454 and 1455.
(d) BOEM asks the Department of Energy for information on regional
and national energy markets and transportation networks.
Sec. 556.203 What does BOEM do before publishing a proposed Five Year
program?
After considering the comments and information described in Sec.
556.202, BOEM will prepare a draft proposed Five Year program.
(a) At least 60 days before publication of a proposed program, BOEM
will send a letter, together with the draft proposed program, to the
governor of each affected State, inviting the governor to comment on
the draft proposed program.
(b) A governor, whether for purposes of preparing that State's
comments or otherwise, may solicit comments from local governments that
he determines may be affected by an oil and gas leasing program.
(c) If a governor's comments on the draft proposed program are
received by
[[Page 18159]]
BOEM at least 15 days before submission of the proposed program to
Congress and its publication for comment in the Federal Register, BOEM
will reply to the governor in writing.
Sec. 556.204 How do governments and citizens comment on a proposed
Five Year program?
BOEM publishes the proposed program in the Federal Register for
comment by the public. At the same time, BOEM sends the proposed
program to the governors of the affected States and to Congress and the
Attorney General of the United States for review and comment.
(a) Governors are responsible for providing a copy of the proposed
program to affected local governments in their States. Local
governments may comment directly to BOEM, but must also send their
comments to the governor of their State.
(b) All comments from any party are due within 90 days after
publication of the request for comments in the Federal Register.
Sec. 556.205 What does BOEM do before approving a proposed final Five
Year program or a significant revision of a previously-approved Five
Year program?
At least 60 days before the Secretary may approve a proposed final
Five Year program or a significant revision to a previously approved
final Five Year program, BOEM will submit a proposed final program or
proposed significant revision to the President and Congress. BOEM will
also submit comments received and indicate the reasons why BOEM did or
did not accept any specific recommendation of the Attorney General of
the United States, the governor of a State, or the executive of a local
government.
Subpart C--Planning and Holding a Lease Sale
Sec. 556.300 What reports may BOEM and other Federal agencies prepare
before a lease sale?
For an oil and gas lease sale in a Five Year program, and as the
need arises for other mineral leasing pursuant to part 581 of this
chapter, BOEM will prepare a report describing the general geology and
potential mineral resources of the area under consideration. The
Director may request other interested Federal agencies to prepare
reports describing, to the extent known, any other valuable resources
contained within the general area and the potential effect of mineral
operations upon the resources or upon the total environment or other
uses of the area.
Sec. 556.301 What is a Call for Information and Nominations?
BOEM issues a Call for Information and Nominations (``Call'') on an
area proposed for leasing in the Five Year program through publication
in the Federal Register and other publications. A Call may include more
than one proposed sale. Comments are requested from industry and the
public on:
(a) Industry interest in the area proposed for leasing, including
nominations or indications of interest in specific blocks within the
area;
(b) Geological conditions, including bottom hazards;
(c) Archaeological sites on the seabed or near shore;
(d) Potential multiple uses of the proposed leasing area, including
navigation, recreation, and fisheries;
(e) Areas that should receive special concern and analysis; and
(f) Other socioeconomic, biological, and environmental information.
Sec. 556.302 What does BOEM do with the information from the Call?
(a) Based upon information and nominations received in response to
the Call, and in consultation with appropriate Federal agencies, the
Director will develop a recommendation of areas proposed for leasing
for the Secretary for further consideration for leasing and/or
environmental analysis.
(1) In developing the recommendation, the Director will consider
available information concerning the environment, conflicts with other
uses, resource potential, industry interest, and other relevant
information, including comments received from State and local
governments and other interested parties in response to the Call.
(2) The Director, on his/her own motion, may include in the
recommendation areas in which interest has not been indicated in
response to a Call. In making a recommendation, the Director will
consider all available environmental information.
(3) Upon approval by the Secretary, the Director will announce the
area identified in the Federal Register.
(b) BOEM will evaluate the area(s) identified for further
consideration for the potential effects of leasing on the human,
marine, and coastal environments, and may develop measures to mitigate
adverse impacts, including lease stipulations, for the options to be
analyzed. The Director may hold public hearings on the environmental
analysis after an appropriate notice.
(c) BOEM will seek to inform the public, as soon as possible, of
changes from the area(s) proposed for leasing that occur after the Call
process.
(d) Upon request, the Director will provide relative indications of
interest in areas, as well as any comments filed in response to a Call
for a proposed sale. However, no information transmitted will identify
any particular area with the name of any particular party so as not to
compromise the competitive position of any participants in the process
of indicating interest.
(e) For supplemental sales provided for by Sec. 556.308, the
Director's recommendation will be replaced by a statement describing
the results of the Director's consideration of the factors specified
above in this section.
Sec. 556.303 What does BOEM do if an area proposed for leasing is
within three nautical miles of the seaward boundary of a coastal State?
For an area proposed for leasing that is within three nautical
miles of the seaward boundary of a coastal State, as governed by
section 8(g)(1) of OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1337(g)(1)):
(a) BOEM provides the governor of the coastal State, subject to the
confidentiality requirements in this chapter:
(1) A schedule for leasing; and
(2) An estimate of the potential oil and gas resources.
(b) At the request of the governor of a coastal State, BOEM will
provide to that governor, subject to the confidentiality requirements
in this chapter:
(1) Information concerning geographical, geological, and ecological
characteristics; and
(2) An identification of any field, geological structure, or trap,
or portion thereof, that lies within three nautical miles of the
State's boundary.
Sec. 556.304 How is a proposed notice of sale prepared?
(a) The Director will, in consultation with appropriate Federal
agencies, develop measures, including lease stipulations and
conditions, to mitigate adverse impacts on the environment, which will
be contained, or referenced, in the proposed notice of sale.
(b) A proposed notice of sale will be submitted to the Secretary
for approval. All comments and recommendations received and the
Director's findings or actions thereon, will also be forwarded to the
Secretary.
(c) Upon approval by the Secretary, BOEM will send a proposed
notice of sale to the governors of affected States and publish the
notice of its availability in the Federal Register. The proposed notice
of sale references or provides a
[[Page 18160]]
link to the lease form, and contains a description of the area proposed
for leasing, the proposed lease terms and conditions of sale, and
proposed stipulations to mitigate potential adverse impacts on the
environment.
Sec. 556.305 How does BOEM coordinate and consult with States
regarding a proposed notice of sale?
(a) Within 60 days after receiving the proposed notice of sale,
governors of affected States may submit comments and recommendations to
BOEM regarding the size, timing, and location of the proposed sale.
Local governments may comment to BOEM directly, but must also send
their comments to the governor of their State.
(b) BOEM will provide a consistency determination under the Coastal
Zone Management Act (CZMA) (16 U.S.C. 1456) to each State with an
approved coastal zone management program that will determine whether
the proposed sale is consistent, to the maximum extent practicable,
with the enforceable policies of the State's approved coastal zone
management program.
Sec. 556.306 What if a potentially oil- or gas-bearing area underlies
both the OCS and lands subject to State jurisdiction?
(a) Whenever the Director or the governor of a coastal State
determines that a common potentially hydrocarbon-bearing area may
underlie the Federal OCS and State submerged lands, the Director or the
governor will notify the other party in writing of the determination.
(b) Thereafter the Director will provide to the governor of the
coastal State, subject to the confidentiality requirements in this
chapter:
(1) An identification of the areas proposed for leasing and a
schedule for, leasing; and
(2) An estimate of the oil and gas resources.
(c) At the request of the governor of the coastal State, the
Director will provide to such governor, subject to the confidentiality
requirements in this chapter:
(1) All geographical, geological, and ecological characteristics of
the areas proposed for leasing; and
(2) An identification of any field, geological structure, or trap
that lies within 3 miles of the State's seaward boundary.
(d) If BOEM intends to lease such blocks or tracts, the Director
and the governor of the coastal State may enter into an agreement for
the equitable disposition of the revenues from production of any common
potentially hydrocarbon-bearing area, pursuant to OCSLA section 8(g)(3)
(43 U.S.C. 1337(g)(3)). Any revenues received by the United States
under such an agreement are subject to the requirements of OSCLA
section 8(g)(2) (43 U.S.C. 1337(g)(2)).
(e) If the Director and the governor do not enter into an agreement
under paragraph (d) of this section within 90 days, BOEM may
nevertheless proceed with the leasing of the tracts, in which case all
revenues will be deposited in a separate account in the Treasury of the
United States, pending disposition of 27% (twenty-seven percent) of the
revenues to the relevant coastal state(s), pursuant to the requirements
of OCSLA section 8(g)(2). (43 U.S.C. 1337(g)(2)).
Sec. 556.307 What does BOEM do with comments and recommendations
received on the proposed notice of sale?
(a) BOEM will consider all comments and recommendations received in
response to the proposed notice of sale.
(b) If the Secretary determines, after providing opportunity for
consultation, that a governor's comments, and those of any affected
local government, provide a reasonable balance between the national
interest and the well-being of the citizens of the State, the Secretary
will accept the recommendations of a State and/or local government(s).
Any such determination of the national interest will be based on the
findings, purposes and policies of the Act set forth in 43 U.S.C. 1332
and 43 U.S.C. 1801.
(c) BOEM will send to each governor written reasons for its
determination to accept or reject each governor's recommendation, and/
or to implement any alternative means to provide for a reasonable
balance between the national interest and the interests of the citizens
of the State.
Sec. 556.308 How does BOEM conduct a lease sale?
(a) BOEM publishes a final notice of sale in the Federal Register
and in other publications, as appropriate, at least 30 days before the
date of the sale. The final notice:
(1) States the place, time, and method for filing bids and the
place, date, and hour for opening bids; and
(2) Contains or references a description of the areas offered for
lease, the lease terms and conditions of sale, and stipulations to
mitigate potential adverse impacts on the environment.
(b) Oil and gas tracts are offered for lease by competitive sealed
bid in accordance with the terms and conditions in the final notice of
sale and applicable laws and regulations.
(c) Unless BOEM finds that a larger area is necessary for
reasonable economic production, no individual tract for oil and gas
leasing will exceed 5,760 acres in area. If BOEM finds that an area
larger than 5,760 acres is necessary in any particular area, the size
of any such tract will be specified in the final notice of sale.
(d) The final notice of sale references, or provides a link to, the
OCS lease form which will be issued to successful bidders.
Sec. 556.309 Does BOEM offer blocks in a sale that is not on the Five
Year program schedule (called a Supplemental Sale)?
(a) Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section, BOEM may
offer a block within a planning area included in the Five Year program
in an otherwise unscheduled sale, if the block:
(1) Received a bid that was rejected in an earlier sale;
(2) Had a high bid that was forfeited in a scheduled sale; or
(3) Is a development block subject to drainage.
(b) For an unscheduled sale, BOEM may disclose the classification
of the block as a development block.
(c) Blocks in the Central or Western Gulf of Mexico Planning Areas
cannot be offered in a sale that is not on the schedule.
Subpart D--Qualifications
Sec. 556.400 When must I demonstrate that I am qualified to hold a
lease on the OCS?
In order to bid on, own, hold, or operate a lease on the OCS,
bidders, record title holders, and operating rights owners must first
obtain a qualification number from BOEM.
Sec. 556.401 What do I need to show to become qualified to hold a
lease on the OCS and obtain a qualification number?
(a) You may become qualified to hold a lease on the OCS and obtain
a qualification number in accordance with Sec. 556.402, if you submit
evidence demonstrating that you are:
(1) A natural person who is a citizen or national of the United
States;
(2) A natural person who is an alien lawfully admitted for
permanent residence in the United States, as defined in 8 U.S.C.
1101(a)(20);
(3) A private, public, or municipal corporation or Limited
Liability Company or Limited Liability Corporation (either/both
sometimes herein referred to as ``LLC'') organized under the laws of
any State of the United States, the District of Columbia, or any
territory or insular possession subject to United States jurisdiction;
(4) An association of such citizens, nationals, resident aliens, or
corporations;
[[Page 18161]]
(5) A State, the District of Columbia, or any territory or insular
possession subject to United States jurisdiction;
(6) A political subdivision of a State, the District of Columbia,
or any territory or insular possession subject to United States
jurisdiction; or
(7) A Trust organized under the laws of any State of the United
States, the District of Columbia, or any territory or insular
possession subject to United States jurisdiction;
(b) Statements and evidence submitted to demonstrate qualification
under paragraphs (a)(1) through (6) of this section are subject to the
penalties of 18 U.S.C. 1001.
(b) BOEM may issue you a qualification number after you have
provided evidence acceptable to BOEM.
Sec. 556.402 How do I make the necessary showing to qualify and
obtain a qualification number?
(a) If BOEM has already issued you a qualification number, you may
present that number to BOEM. If not, in order to become qualified, you
must provide the information in paragraph (b) or (c) of this section
before BOEM will issue you a BOEM qualification number.
(b) A natural person must be a citizen or national of the United
States, or a resident alien, to qualify. A United States citizen or
national must submit written evidence acceptable to BOEM attesting to
United States citizenship or national status. A resident alien must
submit an original or a photocopy of the United States Citizenship and
Immigration Services form evidencing legal status as a resident alien.
(c) A person who is not a natural person must submit evidence
(refer to paragraph (d) of this section) acceptable to BOEM that:
(1) It is authorized to conduct business under the laws of a State,
the District of Columbia, or any territory or insular possession
subject to United States jurisdiction under which it is organized;
(2) Under the operating rules of its business, it is authorized to
hold OCS leases; and
(3) Includes an up-to-date list of persons, and their titles, who
are authorized to bind the corporation, association or other entity
when conducting business on the OCS. It is up to you, in accordance
with your organizational structure or rules, to identify the
individual, or group of individuals, who has actual authority to bind
your organization, and the title(s) they will use when they sign
documents to bind the organization. You must maintain and regularly
update the information as to who has the authority to bind the
organization whenever that information changes.
(d) Acceptable evidence under paragraph (c) of this section
includes, but is not limited to:
(1) For a corporation,
(i) A statement by the Secretary of the corporation, over corporate
seal, certifying that the corporation is authorized to hold OCS leases;
and
(ii) Evidence of authority of holders of positions entitled to bind
the corporation, certified by Secretary of the corporation, over
corporate seal, such as:
(A) Certified copy of resolution of the board of directors with
titles of officers authorized to bind corporation;
(B) Certified copy of resolutions granting corporate officer
authority to issue a power of attorney; or
(C) Certified copy of power of attorney or certified copy of
resolution granting power of attorney.
(2) For a Limited or General Partnership,
(i) A statement by an authorized party certifying that the
partnership is authorized to hold OCS leases;
(ii) A copy of your signed partnership formation documents,
including a partnership agreement;
(iii) A statement from each partner indicating, as appropriate,
U.S. citizenship or incorporation or organization under the laws of a
State, the District of Columbia, or any territory or insular possession
subject to U.S. jurisdiction; and
(iv) Documentation evidencing the existence of the partnership and
that it was properly created, either from the Secretary of State of the
State in which the partnership is registered or by an equivalent State
or governmental office.
(3) For a Limited Liability Company or Limited Liability
Corporation,
(i) A certificate of formation of the LLC;
(ii) A statement by an individual authorized to bind the LLC, as
listed under (c)(4) above, certifying that the LLC is authorized to
hold OCS leases;
(iii) A statement from each member indicating, as appropriate, U.S.
citizenship, or incorporation or organization under the laws of a
State, the District of Columbia, or any territory or insular possession
subject to U.S. jurisdiction; and
(iv) Evidence of authority of holders of positions entitled to bind
the LLC, certified by an individual authorized to bind the LLC.
(4) For a Trust,
(i) A copy of the trust agreement or document establishing the
trust and all amendments, properly certified by the trustee; and
(ii) A statement indicating the law under which the trust is
established and that the trust is authorized to hold OCS leases.
(e) In the event that a person may be eligible to hold OCS leases,
but that type of person is not listed in paragraphs (c) or (d) of this
section, evidence of such eligibility will be submitted and certified
by the highest level of management of the person authorized to do so
pursuant to its operating agreement or governance documents.
(f) Any person who obtains a qualification number from BOEM is
responsible to ensure that it is not using the qualification number
approved by BOEM for any purpose that its operating rules do not allow.
(g) Any evidence submitted in response to paragraphs (c), (d), or
(e) of this section is submitted subject to 18 U.S.C. 1001.
(h) A person may not hold leases on the OCS until the evidence
requested in this section has been accepted and approved by BOEM and
BOEM has issued a qualification number to that person.
(i) If use of a corporate seal is required by this section, you may
meet the requirement as specified in Sec. 556.107.
Sec. 556.403 Under what circumstances may I be disqualified from
holding a lease on the OCS?
You may not hold an OCS lease if:
(a) You or your principals are excluded or disqualified from
participating in a transaction covered by Federal non-procurement
debarment and suspension (2 CFR parts 180 and 1400), unless the
Department explicitly approves an exception for a transaction pursuant
to the regulations in those parts;
(b) The Secretary finds, after notice and hearing, that you or your
principals (including in the meaning of ``you,'' for purposes of this
subparagraph, a bidder or prospective bidder) fail to meet due
diligence requirements or to exercise due diligence under section 8(d)
of OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1337(d)) on any OCS lease; or
(c) BOEM disqualifies you from holding a lease on the OCS based on
your unacceptable operating performance. BOEM will give you adequate
notice and opportunity for a hearing before imposing a
disqualification, unless BSEE has already provided such notice and
opportunity for a hearing.
Sec. 556.404 What do the non-procurement debarment rules require that
I do?
You must comply with the Department's non-procurement
[[Page 18162]]
debarment regulations at 2 CFR parts 180 and 1400.
(a) You must notify BOEM if you know that you or your principals
are excluded, disqualified, have been convicted or are indicted of a
crime as described in 2 CFR part 180, subpart C. You must make this
notification before you sign a lease, sublease, or an assignment of
record title interest or operating rights interest, or become a lease
or unit operator. This paragraph does not apply if you have previously
provided a statement disclosing this information, and you have received
an exception from the Department, as described in 2 CFR 180.135 and 2
CFR 1400.137.
(b) If you wish to enter into a covered transaction with another
person at a lower tier, as described in 2 CFR 180.200, you must first:
(1) Verify that the person is not excluded or disqualified under 2
CFR part 180; and
(2) Require the person to:
(i) Comply with 2 CFR part 180, subpart C; and
(ii) Include the obligation to comply with 2 CFR part 180, subpart
C in its contracts and other transactions.
(c) After you enter into a covered transaction, you must
immediately notify BOEM in writing if you learn that:
(1) You failed to disclose pertinent information earlier; or
(2) Due to changed circumstances, you or your principals now meet
any of the criteria in 2 CFR 180.800.
Sec. 556.405 When must I notify BOEM of mergers, name changes, or
changes of business form?
You must notify BOEM of any merger, name change, or change of
business form as soon as practicable, but in no case later than one
year after the earlier of the effective date or the date of filing the
change or action with the Secretary of State or other authorized
official in the State of original registry.
Subpart E--Issuance of a Lease
How To Bid
Sec. 556.500 Once qualified, how do I submit a bid?
(a) You must submit a separate sealed bid for each tract or bidding
unit to the address provided and by the time specified in the final
notice of sale. You may not bid on less than an entire tract or bidding
unit.
(b) BOEM requires a deposit for each bid. The final notice of sale
will specify the amount and method of payment.
(c) Unless otherwise specified in the final notice of sale, the bid
deposit amount will be 20 percent of the amount of the bid for any
given tract or bidding unit.
(d) You may not submit a bid on an OCS tract if, after notice and
hearing under section 8(d) of OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1337(d)), the Secretary
finds that you are not meeting the diligence requirements on any OCS
lease.
(e) If the authorized officer within BOEM rejects your high bid,
the decision is final for the Department, subject only to
reconsideration upon your written request as set out in Sec. 556.517.
Sec. 556.501 What information do I need to submit with my bid?
In accordance with OCSLA section 18(a)(4) (43 U.S.C. 1344(a)(4)),
BOEM must evaluate every bid to ensure that the federal government
receives fair market value for every lease. Section 26(a)(1)(A) of
OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1352(a)(1)(A)) provides that, in accordance with
regulations prescribed by the Secretary, any lessee or permittee
conducting any exploration for, or development or production of, oil or
gas must provide the Secretary access to all data and information
(including processed, analyzed, and interpreted information) obtained
from that activity and must provide copies of that data and information
as the Secretary may request.
(a) As part of the lease sale process, every bidder submitting a
bid on a tract, or participating as a joint bidder in such a bid, may
at the time of bid be required to submit various information, including
a Geophysical Data and Information Statement (GDIS) corresponding to
that tract, as well as the bidder's exclusive/proprietary geophysical
data in order for BOEM to properly evaluate the bid. If a GDIS
required, each GDIS must include, as required by Sec. 551.12(b) and
(c) of this chapter:
(1) A list of geophysical surveys or other information used as part
of the decision to bid or participate in a bid on the block.
(2) An accurate and complete record of each geophysical survey
conducted, including digital navigational data and final location maps.
The bidder and any joint bidder must include a map for each survey
identified in the GDIS that illustrates the actual areal extent of the
proprietary geophysical data.
(b) If a bidder is required to submit a GDIS, the GDIS must be
submitted even if the bidder did not rely on proprietary geophysical
data and information in deciding to bid or participate as a joint
bidder in the bid for any particular block, and must include entries
for all such blocks.
(c) The bidder must submit each GDIS in a separate and sealed
envelope, or in an electronically readable spreadsheet format, with
proprietary seismic data maps also available in an electronic format.
Each bidder must submit the GDIS even if its joint bidder or bidders on
a specific block also have submitted a GDIS.
(d) If BOEM requires additional information related to bidding, it
will describe the additional information requirements in the final
notice of sale.
(e) BOEM will reimburse bidders for the costs of complying with the
requirements of this section, in accordance with Sec. 550.196 (on
lease) and/or Sec. 551.13 (off lease) of this chapter.
(f) Bids that are not made in compliance with this section will be
considered incomplete and invalid.
Restrictions on Joint Bidding
Sec. 556.511 Are there restrictions on bidding with others and do
those restrictions affect my ability to bid?
The Energy Policy and Conservation Act of 1975, 42 U.S.C. 6213,
prohibits joint bidding by major oil and gas producers under certain
circumstances. BOEM implements 42 U.S.C. 6213 as follows:
(a) BOEM publishes twice yearly in the Federal Register a
restricted joint bidders list. A person appearing on this list is
limited in its ability to submit a joint bid. The list:
(1) Consists of the persons chargeable with an average worldwide
daily production in excess of 1.6 million barrels of crude oil and/or
its equivalent in natural gas liquids and natural gas for the prior
production period; and
(2) Is based upon the statement of production that filed as
required by Sec. 556.513.
(b) If BOEM places you on the restricted joint bidders list, BOEM
will send you a copy of the order placing you on the list. You may
appeal this order to the Interior Board of Land Appeals under 30 CFR
part 590, subpart A.
(c) If you are listed in the Federal Register in any group of
restricted bidders, you may not bid:
(1) Jointly with another person in any other group of restricted
bidders for the applicable 6-month bidding period; or
(2) Separately during the 6-month bidding period if you have an
agreement with another restricted bidder that will result in joint
ownership in an OCS lease.
(d) If you are listed in the Federal Register in any group of
restricted
[[Page 18163]]
bidders, you may not make any pre-bidding agreement for the conveyance
of any potential lease interest, whether by assignment, sale, transfer,
or other means, to any person on the list of restricted joint bidders.
(e) Even if you are not listed in the Federal Register in any group
of restricted bidders, you are prohibited from making any pre-bidding
agreement for the assignment, sale, transfer, or other conveyance of
any potential lease interest to two or more persons in different groups
on the list of restricted joint bidders.
(f) As a bidder, you are prohibited from unlawful combination with,
or intimidation of, bidders under 18 U.S.C. 1860.
Sec. 556.512 What bids may be disqualified?
The following bids for any oil and gas lease will be disqualified
and rejected in their entirety:
(a) A joint bid submitted by two or more persons who are on the
effective List of Restricted Joint Bidders; or
(b) A joint bid submitted by two or more persons when:
(1) One or more of those persons is chargeable for the prior
production period with an average daily production in excess of 1.6
million barrels of crude oil, natural gas and natural gas liquids and
has not filed a Statement of Production, as required by Sec. 556.513
of this part for the applicable 6-month bidding period, or
(2) Any of those persons have failed or refused to file a detailed
report of production when required to do so under Sec. 556.513, or
(c) A single or joint bid submitted pursuant to an agreement
(whether written or oral, formal or informal, entered into or arranged
prior to or simultaneously with the submission of such single or joint
bid, or prior to or simultaneously with the award of the bid upon the
tract) that provides:
(1) For the assignment, transfer, sale, or other conveyance of less
than a 100 percent interest in the entire tract on which the bid is
submitted, by a person or persons on the List of Restricted Joint
Bidders, effective on the date of submission of the bid, to another
person or persons on the same List of Restricted Joint Bidders; or
(2) For the assignment, sale, transfer or other conveyance of less
than a 100 percent interest in any fractional interest in the entire
tract (which fractional interest was originally acquired by the person
making the assignment, sale, transfer or other conveyance, under the
provisions of the act) by a person or persons on the List of Restricted
Joint Bidders, effective on the date of submission of the bid, to
another person or persons on the same List of Restricted Joint Bidders;
or
(3) For the assignment, sale, transfer, or other conveyance of any
interest in a tract by a person or persons not on the List of
Restricted Joint Bidders, effective on the date of submission of the
bid, to two or more persons on the same List of Restricted Joint
Bidders; or
(4) For any of the types of conveyances described in paragraphs
(c)(1), (2), or (3) of this section where any party to the conveyance
is chargeable for the prior production period with an average daily
production in excess of 1.6 million barrels of crude oil, natural gas
and natural gas liquids and has not filed a Statement of Production
pursuant to Sec. 556.513 for the applicable six-month bidding period.
Assignments expressly required by law, regulation, lease or lease
stipulation will not disqualify an otherwise qualified bid; or
(d) A bid submitted by or in conjunction with a person who has
filed a false, fraudulent or otherwise intentionally false or
misleading detailed Report of Production.
Sec. 556.513 When must I file a statement of production?
(a) You must file a statement of production if your average
worldwide daily production exceeded 1.6 million barrels for the prior
production period, as determined using the method set forth in Sec.
556.514. Your statement of production must specify that you were
chargeable with an average daily production in excess of 1.6 million
barrels for the prior production period.
(b) The prior production periods are as follows:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The prior production period
For the bidding period of is the preceding
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) May through October................... July through December.
(2) November through April................ January through June.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(c) You must file the statement of production by the following
deadlines:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
You must file the statement
For the bidding period of by
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) May through October................... March 17.
(2) November through April................ September 17.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(d) If you are required to file a statement of production, BOEM may
require you to submit a detailed report of production.
(1) The detailed report of production must list crude oil, natural
gas liquids, and natural gas produced worldwide from reservoirs during
the prior production period, and therefore chargeable to the prior
production period.
(i) The amount of crude oil chargeable to the prior production
period will be established by measurement of volumes delivered at the
point of custody transfer (e.g., from storage tanks to pipelines,
trucks, tankers, or other media for transport to refineries or
terminals), with adjustments for net differences between opening and
closing inventories, and basic sediment and water.
(ii) The amount of natural gas liquids chargeable to the prior
production period must include gas liquefied at surface separators,
field facilities, or gas processing plants.
(iii) The amount of natural gas chargeable to the prior production
period must include adjustments, where applicable, to reflect the
volume of gas returned to natural reservoirs, and the reduction of
volume resulting from the removal of natural gas liquids and non-
hydrocarbon gases.
(2) You must submit the detailed report of production within 30
days after receiving BOEM's request.
(3) BOEM may inspect and copy any document, record of production,
analysis, and other material to verify the accuracy of any earlier
statement of production.
(e) If you submit a statement of production that misrepresents your
chargeable production, the Department may cancel any lease awarded in
reliance upon the statement.
Sec. 556.514 How do I determine my production for purposes of the
restricted joint bidders list?
(a) To determine the amount of production chargeable to you, add
together:
(1) Your average daily production in barrels of crude oil, natural
gas liquids, and natural gas worldwide, all measured at 60 [deg]F,
using the equivalency or conversion factors for natural gas liquids and
natural gas set out in 42 U.S.C. 6213(b)(2) and (3); and
(2) Your proportionate share of the average daily production owned
by any person that has an interest in you and/or in which you have an
interest.
(b) For the purpose of paragraph (a)(1) of this section, your
production includes 100 percent of production owned by:
(1) You;
(2) Every subsidiary of yours;
(3) Every person of which you are a subsidiary; and
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(4) Every subsidiary of any person of which you are a subsidiary.
(c) For purposes of paragraph (a)(2) of this section, interest
means at least a five percent ownership or control of you or the
reporting person and includes any interest:
(1) From ownership of securities or other evidence of ownership;
or,
(2) By participation in any contract, agreement, or understanding
regarding control of the person or their production of crude oil,
natural gas liquids, or natural gas.
(d) For purposes of this section, subsidiary means a person, 50
percent or more of whose stock or other interest having power to vote
for the election of a controlling body, such as directors or trustees,
is directly or indirectly owned or controlled by another person.
(e) For purposes of this section, production chargeable to you
includes, but is not limited to, production obtained as a result of a
production payment or a working, net profit, royalty, overriding
royalty, or carried interest.
(f) For purposes of this section, production must be measured with
appropriate adjustments for:
(1) Basic sediment and water;
(2) Removal of natural gas liquids and non-hydrocarbon gases; and
(3) Volume of gas returned to natural reservoirs.
Sec. 556.515 May a person be exempted from joint bidding
restrictions?
BOEM may exempt you from some or all of the reporting requirements
listed in Sec. 556.513, and/or some or all of the joint bidding
restrictions listed in Sec. Sec. 556.511 and/or 556.512(a), (b), and/
or (c), if, after opportunity for a hearing, BOEM determines that the
extremely high costs in an area will preclude exploration and
development without an exemption.
How Does BOEM Act on Bids?
Sec. 556.516 What does BOEM do with my bid?
(a) BOEM opens the sealed bids at the place, date, and hour
specified in the final notice of sale for the sole purpose of publicly
announcing and recording the bids. BOEM does not accept or reject any
bids at that time.
(b) BOEM reserves the right to reject any and all bids received,
regardless of the amount offered. BOEM accepts or rejects all bids
within 90 days of opening. BOEM reserves the right to extend that time
if necessary, and in that event, BOEM will notify bidder(s) in writing
prior to the expiration of the initial 90-day period, or of any
extension. Any bid not accepted within the prescribed 90-day period, or
any extension thereof, will be deemed rejected. If your bid is
rejected, BOEM will refund any money deposited with your bid, plus any
interest accrued.
(c) If the highest bids are a tie, BOEM will notify the bidders who
submitted the tie bids. Within 15 days after notification, those
bidders, if qualified, and not otherwise prohibited from bidding
together, may:
(1) Agree to accept the lease jointly. The bidders must notify BOEM
of their decision and submit a copy of their agreement to accept the
lease jointly.
(2) Agree between/among themselves which bidder will accept the
lease. The bidders must notify BOEM of their decision.
(d) If no agreement is submitted pursuant to paragraph (c) of this
section, BOEM will reject all the tie bids.
(e) The Attorney General, in consultation with the Federal Trade
Commission, has 30 days to review the results of the lease sale before
BOEM may accept the bid(s) and issue the lease(s).
Sec. 556.517 What may I do if my high bid is rejected?
(a) The decision of the authorized officer on bids is the final
action of the Department, subject only to reconsideration of the
rejection of the high bid by the Director, in accordance with paragraph
(b) of this section.
(b) Within 15 days of bid rejection, you may file a written request
for reconsideration with the Director, with a copy to the authorized
officer. Such request must provide evidence as to why the Director
should reconsider your bid. You will receive a written response either
affirming or reversing the rejection of your bid.
(c) The Director's decision on the request for reconsideration is
not subject to appeal to the Interior Board of Land Appeals in the
Department's Office of Hearings and Appeals.
Awarding the Lease
Sec. 556.520 What happens if I am the successful high bidder and BOEM
accepts my bid?
(a) If BOEM accepts your bid, BOEM will provide you with the
appropriate number of copies of the lease for you to execute and return
to BOEM. Within 11 business days after you receive the lease copies,
you must:
(1) Execute all copies of the lease;
(2) Pay the first year's rental;
(3) Pay the balance of the bonus bid, unless deferred under
paragraph (b) below;
(4) Comply with subpart I of this part; and,
(5) Return all copies of the executed lease, including any required
bond or other form of security approved by the Regional Director, to
BOEM.
(b) If provided for in the final notice of sale, BOEM may defer any
part of the bonus and bid payment for up to five years after the sale
according to a schedule included in the final notice of sale. You must
provide a bond acceptable to BOEM to guarantee payment of a deferred
bonus bid.
(c) If you do not make the required payments and execute and return
all copies of the lease and any required bond within 11 business days
after receipt, or if you otherwise fail to comply with applicable
regulations, your deposit will be forfeited. However, BOEM will return
any deposit with interest if the tract is withdrawn from leasing before
you execute the lease.
(d) If you use an agent to execute the lease, you must include
evidence with the executed copies of the lease that a person who is on
the list of persons referenced in Sec. 556.402(c)(3) authorized the
agent to act for you.
(e) After you comply with all requirements in this section, and
after BOEM has executed the lease, BOEM will send you a fully executed
lease.
Sec. 556.521 When is my lease effective?
Your lease is effective on the first day of the month following the
date that BOEM executes the lease. You may request in writing, before
BOEM executes the lease, that your lease be effective as of the first
day of the month in which BOEM executes the lease. If BOEM agrees to
make the lease effective as of the earlier date, BOEM will so indicate
when it executes the lease.
Sec. 556.522 What are the terms and conditions of the lease and when
are they published?
The terms and conditions of the lease will be stated in the final
notice of sale and contained in the lease instrument itself. Oil and
gas leases and leases for sulfur will be issued on forms approved by
the Director.
Subpart F--Lease Term and Obligations
Length of Lease
Sec. 556.600 What is the primary term of my oil and gas lease?
(a) The primary term of an oil and gas lease will be five years,
unless BOEM determines that:
(1) The lease is located in unusually deep water or involves other
unusually adverse conditions; and,
(2) A lease term longer than five years is necessary to explore and
develop the lease.
[[Page 18165]]
(b) If BOEM determines that the criteria in paragraphs (a)(1) and
(2) of this section are met, it may specify a longer primary term, not
to exceed 10 years.
(c) BOEM will specify the primary term in the final notice of sale
and in the lease instrument.
(d) The lease will expire at the end of the primary term, unless
maintained beyond that term in accordance with the provisions of Sec.
556.601.
Sec. 556.601 How may I maintain my oil and gas lease beyond the
primary term?
You may maintain your oil and gas lease beyond the expiration of
the primary term as long as:
(a) You are producing oil or gas in paying quantities;
(b) You are conducting approved drilling or well reworking
operations with the objective of establishing production in paying
quantities, in accordance with 30 CFR 250.180;
(c) You are producing from, or drilling or reworking, an approved
well adjacent to or adjoining your lease that extends directionally
into your lease in accordance with 30 CFR 256.71;
(d) You make compensatory payments on your lease in accordance with
30 CFR 256.72;
(e) Your lease is included in a BSEE-approved unit, in accordance
with 30 CFR part 250, subpart M; or
(f) Your lease is subject to a suspension of production or a
suspension of operations, in accordance with 30 CFR 250.168 through
250.180, for reasons other than gross negligence or a willful violation
of a provision of your lease or any governing regulations.
Sec. 556.602 What is the primary term of my sulfur lease?
(a) Your sulfur lease will have a primary term of not more than 10
years, as specified in the lease.
(b) BOEM will announce the primary term prior to the lease sale.
(c) The lease will expire at the end of the primary term unless
maintained beyond that term in accordance with the provisions of Sec.
556.603.
Sec. 556.603 How may I maintain my sulfur lease beyond the primary
term?
You may maintain your sulfur lease after the primary term as long
as you are producing sulfur in paying quantities, conducting drilling,
well reworking or plant construction, or other operations for the
production of sulfur or you are granted a suspension by BSEE; or your
lease is subject to a suspension directed by BSEE for reasons other
than gross negligence or a willful violation of a provision of your
lease or governing regulations.
Lease Obligations
Sec. 556.604 What are my rights and obligations as a record title
owner?
(a) As a record title owner, you are responsible for all
administrative and operating performance on the lease, including paying
any rent and royalty due.
(b)(1) A record title owner owns operating rights to the lease,
unless and until he or she severs the operating rights by subleasing
them to someone else.
(2) A sublease of operating rights from record title may be for a
whole or undivided fractional interest in the entire lease or a
described aliquot portion of the lease and/or a depth interval. The
sublease creates an operating rights interest in the sublessee, herein
referred to as the operating rights owner.
(c) Within any given aliquot, the record title owner may sublease
operating rights for up to a maximum of two depth divisions, which may
result in a maximum of three different depth intervals. But, if the
one, or two, depth divisions to which operating rights are subleased do
not include the entire depth of the lease, whatever depth division(s)
has not been subleased, remains part of the lessee/sublessor's record
title interest. The depth intervals for which operating rights are
subleased must be defined by a beginning and ending depth and the
ending of one depth level must abut the beginning of the next depth
level, with no gap in between.
(d) Every current and prior record title owner is jointly and
severally liable, along with all other record title owners and all
prior and current operating rights owners, for compliance with all non-
monetary terms and conditions of the lease and all regulations issued
under OCSLA, as well as for fulfilling all non-monetary obligations,
including decommissioning obligations, which accrue while it holds
record title interest.
(e) Record title owners that acquired their record title interests
through assignment from a prior record title owner are also responsible
for remedying all existing environmental or operational problems on any
lease in which they own record title interests, with subrogation rights
against prior lessees.
(f) For monetary obligations, your obligation depends on the source
of the monetary obligation and whether you have retained or severed
your operating rights.
(1) With respect to those operating rights that you have retained,
you are primarily liable under 30 U.S.C. 1712(a) for your pro-rata
share of all other monetary obligations pertaining to that portion of
the lease subject to the operating rights you have retained, based on
your share of operating rights in that portion of the lease.
(2) With respect to all monetary obligations arising from or in
connection with those operating rights that have been severed from your
record title interest, your obligation is secondary to that of the
sublessee(s) or later assignee(s) of the operating rights that were
severed from your record title interest, as prescribed in 30 U.S.C.
1712(a).
Sec. 556.605 What are my rights and obligations as an operating
rights owner?
(a) As an operating rights owner, you have the right to enter the
leased area to explore for, develop, and produce oil and gas resources,
except helium gas, contained within the aliquot(s) and depths within
which you own operating rights, according to the lease terms,
applicable regulations, and BOEM's approval of the sublease or
subsequent assignment of the operating rights.
(b) Unless otherwise prohibited, you have the right to authorize
another party to conduct operations on the part of the lease to which
your operating rights appertain.
(c) An owner of operating rights who is designating a new
designated operator must file a designation of operator under Sec.
550.143 of this chapter.
(d) An operating rights owner is only liable for obligations
arising from that portion of the lease to which its operating rights
appertain and that accrue during the period in which the operating
rights owner owned the operating rights.
(e) You are jointly and severally liable with other operating
rights owners and the record title owners for all non-monetary lease
obligations pertaining to that portion of the lease subject to your
operating rights, which accrued during the time you held your operating
rights interest.
(f) An operating rights owner that acquires its operating rights
interests through assignment from a prior operating rights owner is
also responsible, with subrogation rights against prior operating
rights owners, for remedying existing environmental or operational
problems, to the extent that such problems arise from that portion of
the lease to which its operating rights appertain, on any lease in
which it owns operating rights.
(g) You are primarily liable for monetary obligations pertaining to
that portion of the lease subject to your
[[Page 18166]]
operating rights, and the record title owners are secondarily liable.
If there is more than one operating rights owner in a lease, each
operating rights owner is primarily liable for its pro-rata share of
the monetary obligations that pertain to the portion of the lease that
is subject to its operating rights.
Helium
Sec. 556.606 What must a lessee do if BOEM elects to extract helium
from a lease?
(a) BOEM reserves the ownership of, and the right to extract,
helium from all gas produced from your OCS lease. Under section 12(f)
of OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1341(f)), upon our request, you must deliver all or
a specified portion of the gas containing helium to BOEM at a point on
the leased area or at an onshore processing facility that BOEM
designates.
(b) BOEM will determine reasonable compensation and pay you for any
loss caused by the extraction of helium, except for the value of the
helium itself. BOEM may erect, maintain, and operate on your lease any
reduction work and other equipment necessary for helium extraction. Our
extraction of helium will be conducted in a manner to not cause
substantial delays in the delivery of gas to your purchaser.
Subpart G--Transferring All or Part of the Record Title Interest in
a Lease
Sec. 556.700 May I assign or sublease all or any part of the record
title interest in my lease?
(a) With BOEM approval, you may assign your whole, or a partial
record title interest in your entire lease, or in any aliquot(s)
thereof.
(b) With BOEM approval, you may sever all, or a portion of, your
operating rights.
(c) You must request approval of each assignment of a record title
interest and each sublease of an operating rights interest. Each
instrument that transfers a record title interest must describe, by
aliquot parts, the interest you propose to transfer. Each instrument
that severs an operating rights interest must describe, by officially
designated aliquot parts and depth levels, the interest proposed to be
transferred.
Sec. 556.701 How do I seek approval of an assignment of the record
title interest in my lease, or a severance of operating rights from
that record title interest?
(a) The Regional Director will provide the form to record an
assignment of record title interest in a Federal OCS oil and gas or
sulfur lease, or a severance of operating rights from that record title
interest. You must submit to BOEM two originals of each instrument that
transfers ownership of record title within 90 days after the last party
executes the transfer instrument. You must pay the service fee listed
in Sec. 556.106 with your request and your submission must include
evidence of payment via pay.gov.
(b) Before BOEM approves an assignment or transfer, it must consult
with, and consider the views of, the Attorney General. The Secretary
may act on an assignment or transfer if the Attorney General has not
responded to a request for consultation within 30 days of said request.
(c) A new record title owner or sublessee must file a designation
of operator, in accordance with Sec. 550.143 of this chapter, along
with the request for the approval of the assignment.
Sec. 556.702 When will my assignment result in a segregated lease?
(a) When there is an assignment by all record title owners of 100
percent of the record title to one or more aliquots in a lease, the
assigned and retained portions become segregated into separate and
distinct leases. In such case, both the new lease and the remaining
portion of the original lease are referred to as ``segregated leases''
and the assignee(s) becomes the record title owner(s) of the new lease,
which is subject to all the terms and conditions of the original lease.
(b) If a record title holder transfers an undivided interest, i.e.,
less than 100 percent of the record title interest in any given
aliquot(s), that transfer will not segregate the portions of the
aliquots, or the whole aliquots, in which part of the record title was
transferred, into separate leases from the portion(s) in which no
interest was transferred. Instead, that transfer will create a joint
ownership between the assignee(s) and assignor(s) in the portions of
the lease in which part of the record title interest was transferred.
Any transfer of an undivided interest is subject to approval by BOEM.
Sec. 556.703 What is the effect of the approval of the assignment of
100 percent of the record title in a particular aliquot(s) of my lease
and of the resulting lease segregation?
(a) The bonding/financial assurance requirements of subpart I of
this part apply separately to each segregated lease.
(b) The royalty, minimum royalty, and rental provisions of the
original lease will apply separately to each segregated lease.
(c) BOEM will allocate among the segregated leases, on a basis that
is equitable under the circumstances, any remaining unused royalty
suspension volume or other form of royalty suspension or royalty relief
that had been granted to the original lease, not to exceed in aggregate
the total remaining amount.
(d) Each segregated lease will continue in full force and effect
for the primary term of the original lease and so long thereafter as
each segregated lease meets the requirements outlined in Sec. 556.601.
A segregated lease that does not meet the requirements of Sec. 556.601
does not continue in force even if another segregated lease, which was
part of the original lease, continues to meet those requirements.
Sec. 556.704 When would BOEM disapprove an assignment or sublease of
an interest in my lease?
(a) BOEM may disapprove an assignment or sublease of all or part of
your lease interest(s):
(1) When the transferor or transferee has unsatisfied obligations
under this chapter or 30 CFR chapters II or XII;
(2) When a transferor attempts a transfer that is not acceptable as
to form or content (e.g., not on standard form, containing incorrect
legal description, not executed by a person authorized to bind the
corporation, transferee does not meet the requirements of Sec.
556.401, etc.); or,
(3) When the transfer does not conform to these regulations, or any
other applicable laws or regulations (e.g., departmental debarment
rules).
(b) A transfer will be void if it is made pursuant to any prelease
agreement that would cause a bid to be disqualified, such as those
described in Sec. 556.511(c), (d), or (e).
Sec. 556.705 How do I transfer the interest of a deceased natural
person who was a lessee?
(a) An heir or devisee must submit evidence by means of a certified
copy of an appropriate court order or decree that the person is
deceased; or, if no court action is necessary, a certified copy of the
will and death certificate or notarized affidavits of two disinterested
parties with knowledge of the facts.
(b) The heir or devisee, if the lawful successor in interest, must
submit evidence that he/she is the person named in the will or evidence
from an appropriate judgment of a court or decree that he/she is the
lawful successor in interest, along with the required evidence of his/
her qualifications to hold a lease under subpart D of this part.
(c) If the heir or devisee does not qualify to hold a lease under
subpart D of this part, he/she will be recognized as the successor in
interest, but he/she
[[Page 18167]]
must divest him/herself of this interest in the lease, to a person
qualified to be a hold a lease, within two years.
Sec. 556.706 What if I want to transfer record title interests in
more than one lease at the same time, but to different parties?
You may not transfer interests in more than one lease to different
parties using the same instrument. If you want to transfer the interest
in more than one lease at the same time, you must submit duplicate,
originally executed forms for each transfer. The forms used for each
transfer must be accompanied by a cover letter executed by one of the
parties to the transfer (or an authorized agent thereof) and evidence
of payment via pay.gov.
Sec. 556.707 What if I want to transfer different types of lease
interests (not only record title interests) in the same lease to
different parties?
You may not transfer different types of lease interests in a lease
to different parties using the same instrument. You must submit
duplicate, originally executed forms for each transfer, to a different
party, of a different type of lease interest. The form used to transfer
each type of lease interest must be accompanied by a cover letter
executed by one of the parties to the transfer (or an authorized agent
thereof) and evidence of payment via pay.gov.
Sec. 556.708 What if I want to transfer my record title interests in
more than one lease to the same party?
You may not transfer your record title interests in more than one
lease to the same party using the same instrument. If you want to
transfer record title interests in more than one lease at the same
time, you must submit separate, originally executed forms for each
transfer. The forms used for each transfer must be accompanied by a
cover letter executed by one of the parties to the transfer (or an
authorized agent thereof), and evidence of payment via pay.gov. A
separate fee applies to each individual transfer of interest.
Sec. 556.709 What if I want to transfer my record title interest in
one lease to multiple parties?
You may transfer your record title interest in one lease to
multiple parties using the same instrument. That instrument must be
submitted in duplicate originals, accompanied by a cover letter
executed by one of the parties to the transfer (or an authorized agent
thereof). In such a multiple transfer of interests using a single
instrument, a separate fee applies to each individual transfer of
interest, and evidence of payment via pay.gov must accompany the
instrument.
Sec. 556.710 What is the effect of an assignment of a lease on an
assignor's liability under the lease?
If you assign your record title interest, as an assignor you remain
liable for all obligations, monetary and non-monetary, that accrued in
connection with your lease during the period in which you owned the
record title interest, up to the date BOEM approves your assignment.
BOEM's approval of the assignment does not relieve you of these accrued
obligations. Even after assignment, BOEM or BSEE may require you to
bring the lease into compliance if your assignee or any subsequent
assignee fails to perform any obligation under the lease, to the extent
the obligation accrued before approval of your assignment. Until there
is a BOEM-approved assignment of interest, you, as the assignor, remain
liable for the performance of all lease obligations that accrued while
you held record title interest, until all such obligations are
fulfilled.
Sec. 556.711 What is the effect of a record title holder's sublease
of operating rights on the record title holder's liability?
(a) A record title holder who subleases operating rights remains
liable for all obligations of the lease, including those obligations
accruing after BOEM's approval of the sublease, subject to Sec.
556.604(e) and (f).
(b) Neither the sublease of operating rights, nor subsequent
assignment of those rights by the original sublessee, nor by any
subsequent assignee of the operating rights, alters in any manner the
liability of the record title holder for nonmonetary obligations.
(c) Upon approval of the sublease of the operating rights, the
sublessee and subsequent assignees of the operating rights become
primarily liable for monetary obligations, but the record title holder
remains secondarily liable for them, as prescribed in 30 U.S.C. 1712(a)
and Sec. 556.604(f)(2).
Sec. 556.712 What is the effective date of a transfer?
Any transfer is effective at 12:01 a.m. on the first day of the
month following the date on which BOEM approves your request, unless
you request an earlier effective date and BOEM approves that earlier
date, but such earlier effective date, if prior to the date of BOEM's
approval, does not relieve you of obligations accrued between that
earlier effective date and the date of approval.
Sec. 556.713 What is the effect of an assignment of a lease on an
assignee's liability under the lease?
As assignee, you and any subsequent assignees are liable for all
obligations that accrue after the effective date of your assignment. As
assignee, you must comply with all the terms and conditions of the
lease and regulations issued under OCSLA, and in addition, you must
remedy all existing environmental and operational problems on the
lease, properly abandon all wells, and reclaim the site, as required
under 30 CFR part 250.
Sec. 556.714 As a restricted joint bidder, may I transfer an interest
to another restricted joint bidder?
(a) Where the proposed assignment or transfer is by a person who,
at the time of acquisition of an interest in the lease, was on the List
of Restricted Joint Bidders, and that assignment or transfer is of less
than the entire interest held by the assignor or transferor and to a
person or persons on the same List of Restricted Joint Bidders, the
assignor or transferor must file, prior to the approval of the
assignment, a copy of all agreements applicable to the acquisition of
that lease or fractional interest, or a description of the timing and
nature of the agreement(s) by which the assignor or transferor acquired
the interest it now wishes to transfer.
(b) Such description of the timing and nature of the transfer
agreement must be submitted together with a certified statement that
attests to the truth and accuracy of any information reported
concerning that agreement, subject to the penalties of 18 U.S.C. 1001.
(c) If you wish to transfer less than your entire interest to
another restricted joint bidder, BOEM may request the opinion of the
Attorney General before acting on your request.
(d) You may request that any submission to BOEM made pursuant to
this part be treated confidentially. Please note such a request on your
submission. BOEM will treat this request for confidentiality in
accordance with the regulations at Sec. 556.104 and the regulations at
43 CFR part 2.
Sec. 556.715 Are there any interests I may transfer or record without
BOEM approval?
(a) You may create, transfer, or assign economic interests without
BOEM approval. However, for record purposes, you must send BOEM a copy
of each instrument creating or transferring such interests within 90
days after the last party executes the transfer instrument. For each
lease affected, you must pay the service fee listed in Sec. 556.106
with your documents submitted for record
[[Page 18168]]
purposes and your submission must include evidence of payment via
pay.gov.
(b) For recordkeeping purposes, you may also submit other legal
documents to BOEM for transactions that do not require BOEM approval.
If you submit such documents for record purposes not required by this
part, you must pay the service fee listed in Sec. 556.106 with your
document submissions for each lease affected. Your submission must
include evidence of payment via pay.gov.
Sec. 556.716 What must I do with respect to the designation of
operator on a lease when a transfer of record title is submitted?
(a) If a transfer of ownership of the record title interest only
changes the percentage ownership of the record title, no new parties or
new aliquots are involved in the transaction, and no change of
designated operator is made, you will not need to submit a new
designation of operator form.
(b) In all cases other than that in paragraph (a) of this section,
you must submit new designation of operator forms in accordance with
Sec. 550.143 of this chapter. In the event that you are transferring
multiple record title interests, you must comply with this requirement
for each interest that does not fall within paragraph (a) of this
section.
Subpart H--Transferring All or Part of the Operating Rights in a
Lease
Sec. 556.800 As an operating rights owner, may I assign all or part
of my operating rights interest?
An operating rights owner may assign all or part of its operating
rights interests, subject to BOEM approval. Each instrument that
transfers an interest must describe, by officially designated aliquot
parts and depth levels, the interest proposed to be transferred.
Sec. 556.801 How do I seek approval of an assignment of my operating
rights?
(a) The Regional Director will provide the form to document the
assignment of an operating rights interest. You must request approval
of each assignment of operating rights and submit to BOEM two originals
of each instrument that transfers ownership of operating rights within
90 days after the last party executes the transfer instrument. You must
pay the service fee listed in Sec. 556.106 with your request and your
submission must include evidence of payment via pay.gov.
(b) A new operating rights owner must file a designation of
operator, in accordance with Sec. 550.143, along with the request for
the approval of the assignment.
(c) If an operating rights owner assigns an undivided ownership
interest in its operating rights, that assignment creates a joint
ownership in the operating rights.
(d) Before BOEM approves a sublease or re-assignment of operating
rights, BOEM may consult with and consider the views of the Attorney
General.
Sec. 556.802 When would BOEM disapprove the assignment of all or part
of my operating rights interest?
BOEM may disapprove an assignment of all or part of your operating
rights interest:
(a) When the transferor or transferee has outstanding or
unsatisfied obligations under this chapter or 30 CFR chapter II or XII;
(b) When a transferor attempts a transfer that is not acceptable as
to form or content (e.g., not on standard form, containing incorrect
legal description, not executed in accordance with corporate
governance, transferee does not meet the requirements of Sec. 556.401,
etc.); or
(c) When the transfer does not conform to these regulations, or any
other applicable laws or regulations (e.g., departmental debarment
rules).
Sec. 556.803 What if I want to assign operating rights interests in
more than one lease at the same time, but to different parties?
You may not assign operating rights interests in more than one
lease to different parties using the same instrument. If you want to
transfer operating rights interests in more than one lease at the same
time, you must submit two originally executed forms for each transfer.
Each request for a transfer of operating rights interest must be
accompanied by a cover letter executed by one of the parties to the
transfer (or an authorized agent thereof) and evidence of payment via
pay.gov.
Sec. 556.804 What if I want to assign my operating rights interest in
a lease to multiple parties?
You may assign your operating rights interest in one lease to
multiple parties using the same instrument. That instrument must be
submitted in duplicate originals, accompanied by a cover letter
executed by one of the parties to the transfer (or an authorized agent
thereof). In such a multiple transfer of interests using a single
instrument, a separate fee applies to each individual transfer of
interest and evidence of payment via pay.gov must accompany the
instrument.
Sec. 556.805 What is the effect of an operating rights owner's
assignment of operating rights on the assignor's liability?
An operating rights owner (who does not hold record title) who
assigns the operating rights remains liable for all obligations of the
lease that accrued during the period in which the assignor owned the
operating rights, up to the effective date of the assignment, including
decommissioning obligations that accrued during that period. BOEM's
approval of the assignment does not alter that liability. Even after
assignment, BOEM or BSEE may require the assignor to bring the lease
into compliance if the assignee or any subsequent assignee fails to
perform any obligation under the lease, to the extent the obligation
accrued before approval of the assignment.
Sec. 556.806 What is the effective date of an assignment of operating
rights?
An assignment is effective at 12:01 a.m. on the first day of the
month following the date on which BOEM approves your request, unless
you request an earlier effective date and BOEM approves that earlier
date. Such an earlier effective date, if prior to the date of BOEM's
approval, does not relieve you of obligations accrued between that
earlier effective date and the date of approval.
Sec. 556.807 What is the effect of an assignment of operating rights
on an assignee's liability?
As assignee, you and any subsequent assignees are liable for all
obligations that accrue after the effective date of your assignment. As
assignee, you must comply with all the terms and conditions of the
lease and regulations issued under OCSLA. In addition, you must remedy
all existing environmental and operational problems on the lease,
properly abandon all wells, and reclaim the site, as required under 30
CFR part 250.
Sec. 556.808 As an operating rights owner, are there any interests I
may assign without BOEM approval?
(a) You may create, transfer, or assign economic interests without
BOEM approval. However, for record purposes, you must send BOEM a copy
of each instrument creating or transferring such interests within 90
days after the last party executes the transfer instrument. For each
lease affected, you must pay the service fee listed in Sec. 556.106
with your documents submitted for record purposes, and your submission
must include evidence of payment via pay.gov.
(b) For record keeping purposes, you may also submit other legal
documents
[[Page 18169]]
to BOEM for transactions that do not require BOEM approval. If you
submit such documents for record purposes that are not required by
these regulations, for each lease affected, you must pay the service
fee listed in Sec. 556.106 with your document submissions, and your
submission must include evidence of payment via pay.gov.
Sec. 556.809 [Reserved]
Sec. 556.810 What must I do with respect to the designation of
operator on a lease when a transfer of operating rights ownership is
submitted?
(a) If a transfer of ownership of operating rights only changes the
percentage ownership; no new parties, new aliquots, or new depths are
involved in the transaction; and no change of designated operator is
made, you will not need to submit a new designation of operator form.
(b) In all cases other than that in paragraph (a) of this section,
you must submit new designation of operator forms, in accordance with
Sec. 550.143 of this chapter. In the event that you are transferring
multiple operating rights interests, you must comply with this
requirement for each interest that does not fall within paragraph (a)
of this section.
Subpart I--Bonding or Other Financial Assurance
Sec. 556.900 Bond requirements for an oil and gas or sulfur lease.
This section establishes bond requirements for the lessee of an OCS
oil and gas or sulfur lease.
(a) Before BOEM will issue a new lease or approve the assignment of
an existing lease to you as lessee, you or another record title owner
for the lease must:
(1) Maintain with the Regional Director a $50,000 lease bond that
guarantees compliance with all the terms and conditions of the lease;
or
(2) Maintain a $300,000 area-wide bond that guarantees compliance
with all the terms and conditions of all your oil and gas and sulfur
leases in the area where the lease is located; or
(3) Maintain a lease or area-wide bond in the amount required in
Sec. 556.901(a) or (b).
(b) For the purpose of this section, there are three areas. The
three areas are:
(1) The Gulf of Mexico and the area offshore the Atlantic Coast;
(2) The area offshore the Pacific Coast States of California,
Oregon, Washington, and Hawaii; and
(3) The area offshore the Coast of Alaska.
(c) The requirement to maintain a lease bond (or substitute
security instrument) under paragraph (a)(1) of this section and Sec.
556.901(a) and (b) may be satisfied if your operator or an operating
rights owner provides a lease bond in the required amount that
guarantees compliance with all the terms and conditions of the lease.
Your operator or an operating rights owner may use an areawide bond
under this paragraph to satisfy your bond obligation.
(d) If a surety makes payment to the United States under a bond or
alternative form of security maintained under this section, the
surety's remaining liability under the bond or alternative form of
security is reduced by the amount of that payment. See paragraph (e) of
this section for the requirement to replace the reduced bond coverage.
(e) If the value of your surety bond or alternative security is
reduced because of a default or for any other reason, you must provide
additional bond coverage sufficient to meet the security required under
this subpart within 6 months, or such shorter period of time as the
Regional Director may direct.
(f) You may pledge United States Department of the Treasury
(Treasury) securities instead of a bond. The Treasury securities you
pledge must be negotiable for an amount of cash equal to the value of
the bond they replace.
(1) If you pledge Treasury securities under this paragraph (f), you
must monitor their value. If their market value falls below the level
of bond coverage required under this subpart, you must pledge
additional Treasury securities to raise the value of the securities
pledged to the required amount.
(2) If you pledge Treasury securities, you must include authority
for the Regional Director to sell them and use the proceeds in the
event that the Regional Director determines that you fail to satisfy
any lease obligation.
(g) You may pledge alternative types of security instruments
instead of providing a bond if the Regional Director determines that
the alternative security protects the interests of the United States to
the same extent as the required bond.
(1) If you pledge an alternative type of security under this
paragraph, you must monitor the security's value. If its market value
falls below the level of bond coverage required under this subpart, you
must pledge additional securities to raise the value of the securities
pledged to the required amount.
(2) If you pledge an alternative type of security, you must include
authority for the Regional Director to sell the security and use the
proceeds when the Regional Director determines that you failed to
satisfy any lease obligation.
(h) If you fail to replace a deficient bond or to provide
additional bond coverage upon demand, the Regional Director may:
(1) Assess penalties under part 550, subpart N of this chapter;
(2) Suspend production and other operations on your leases in
accordance with 30 CFR 250.173; and
(3) Initiate action to cancel your lease.
Sec. 556.901 Additional bonds.
(a) This paragraph explains what bonds you must provide before
lease exploration activities commence.
(1)(i) You must furnish the Regional Director a $200,000 bond that
guarantees compliance with all the terms and conditions of the lease by
the earliest of:
(A) The date you submit a proposed exploration plan (EP) for
approval; or
(B) The date you submit a request for approval of the assignment of
a lease on which an EP has been approved.
(ii) The Regional Director may authorize you to submit the $200,000
lease exploration bond after you submit an EP, but before approval of
drilling activities under the EP.
(iii) You may satisfy the bond requirement of this paragraph (a) by
providing a new bond or by increasing the amount of your existing bond.
(2) A $200,000 lease exploration bond pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
of this section need not be submitted and maintained if the lessee
either:
(i) Furnishes and maintains an areawide bond in the sum of $1
million issued by a qualified surety and conditioned on compliance with
all the terms and conditions of oil and gas and sulfur leases held by
the lessee on the OCS for the area in which the lease is situated; or
(ii) Furnishes and maintains a bond pursuant to paragraph (b)(2) of
this section.
(b) This paragraph explains what bonds you (the lessee) must
provide before lease development and production activities commence.
(1)(i) You must furnish the Regional Director a $500,000 bond that
guarantees compliance with all the terms and conditions of the lease by
the earliest of:
(A) The date you submit a proposed development and production plan
(DPP) or development operations coordination document (DOCD) for
approval; or
(B) The date you submit a request for approval of the assignment of
a lease on
[[Page 18170]]
which a DPP or DOCD has been approved.
(ii) The Regional Director may authorize you to submit the $500,000
lease development bond after you submit a DPP or DOCD, but before he/
she approves the installation of a platform or the commencement of
drilling activities under the DPP or DOCD.
(iii) You may satisfy the bond requirement of this paragraph by
providing a new bond or by increasing the amount of your existing bond.
(2) You need not submit and maintain a $500,000 lease development
bond pursuant to paragraph (b)(1) of this section if you furnish and
maintain an areawide bond in the sum of $3 million issued by a
qualified surety and conditioned on compliance with all the terms and
conditions of oil and gas and sulfur leases you hold on the OCS for the
area in which the lease is located.
(c) If you can demonstrate to the satisfaction of the authorized
officer that you can satisfy your decommissioning obligations for less
than the amount of lease bond coverage required under paragraph (b)(1)
of this section, the authorized officer may accept a lease surety bond
in an amount less than the prescribed amount, but not less than the
amount of the cost for decommissioning.
(d) The Regional Director may determine that additional security
(i.e., security above the amounts prescribed in Sec. 556.900(a) and
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section) is necessary to ensure
compliance with the obligations under your lease, the regulations in
this chapter, and the regulations in 30 CFR chapters II and XII.
(1) The Regional Director's determination will be based on his/her
evaluation of your ability to carry out present and future financial
obligations demonstrated by:
(i) Financial capacity substantially in excess of existing and
anticipated lease and other obligations, as evidenced by audited
financial statements (including auditor's certificate, balance sheet,
and profit and loss sheet);
(ii) Projected financial strength significantly in excess of
existing and future lease obligations based on the estimated value of
your existing OCS lease production and proven reserves for future
production;
(iii) Business stability based on five years of continuous
operation and production of oil and gas or sulfur in the OCS or in the
onshore oil and gas industry;
(iv) Reliability in meeting obligations based on:
(A) Credit rating; or
(B) Trade references, including names and addresses of other
lessees, drilling contractors, and suppliers with whom you have dealt;
and
(v) Record of compliance with laws, regulations, and lease terms.
(2) You may satisfy the Regional Director's demand for additional
security by increasing the amount of your existing bond or by providing
additional bond or bonds.
(e) The Regional Director will determine the amount of additional
bond required to guarantee compliance. The Regional Director will
consider potential underpayment of royalty and cumulative
decommissioning obligations.
(f) If your cumulative potential obligations and liabilities either
increase or decrease, the Regional Director may adjust the amount of
additional bond required.
(1) If the Regional Director proposes an adjustment, the Regional
Director will:
(i) Notify you and the surety of any proposed adjustment to the
amount of bond required; and
(ii) Give you an opportunity to submit written or oral comment on
the adjustment.
(2) If you request a reduction of the amount of additional bond
required, you must submit evidence to the Regional Director
demonstrating that the projected amount of royalties due the Government
and the estimated costs of decommissioning are less than the required
bond amount. If the Regional Director finds that the evidence you
submit is convincing, the Regional Director may reduce the amount of
additional bond required.
Sec. 556.902 General requirements for bonds.
(a) Any bond or other security that you, as lessee, operating
rights owner or operator, provide under this part must:
(1) Be payable upon demand to the Regional Director;
(2) Guarantee compliance with all of your obligations under the
lease, regulations in this chapter, and regulations under 30 CFR
chapters II and XII; and
(3) Guarantee compliance with the obligations of all lessees,
operating rights owners and operators on the lease.
(b) All bonds and pledges you furnish under this part must be on a
form or in a form approved by the Director. Surety bonds must be issued
by a surety that the Treasury certifies as an acceptable surety on
Federal bonds and that is listed in the current Treasury Circular No.
570. You may obtain a copy of the current Treasury Circular No. 570
from the Surety Bond Branch, Financial Management Service, Department
of the Treasury, East-West Highway, Hyattsville, MD 20782.
(c) You and a qualified surety must execute your bond. When either
party is a corporation, an authorized official for the party must sign
the bond and attest to it by an imprint of the corporate seal.
(d) Bonds must be non-cancellable, except as provided in Sec.
556.906 of this part. Bonds must continue in full force and effect even
though an event occurs that could diminish, terminate, or cancel a
surety obligation under State surety law.
(e) Lease bonds must be:
(1) A surety bond;
(2) Treasury securities as provided in Sec. 556.900(f);
(3) Another form of security approved by the Regional Director; or
(4) A combination of these security methods.
(f) You may submit a bond to the Regional Director executed on a
form approved under paragraph (b) of this section that you have
reproduced or generated by use of a computer. If you do, and if the
document omits terms or conditions contained on the form approved by
the Director, the bond you submit will be deemed to contain the omitted
terms and conditions.
Sec. 556.903 Lapse of bond.
(a) If your surety becomes bankrupt, insolvent, or has its charter
or license suspended or revoked, any bond coverage from that surety
terminates immediately. In that event, you must promptly provide a new
bond in the amount required under Sec. Sec. 556.900 and 556.901 to the
Regional Director and advise the Regional Director of the lapse in your
previous bond.
(b) You must notify the Regional Director of any action filed
alleging that you, your surety, or your guarantor are insolvent or
bankrupt. You must notify the Regional Director within 72 hours of
learning of such an action. All bonds must require the surety to
provide this information to you and directly to BOEM.
Sec. 556.904 Lease-specific abandonment accounts.
(a) The Regional Director may authorize you to establish a lease-
specific abandonment account in a federally insured institution in lieu
of the bond required under Sec. 556.901(d). The account must provide
that, except as provided in paragraph (a)(3) of this section, funds may
not be withdrawn without the written approval of the Regional Director.
(1) Funds in a lease-specific abandonment account must be payable
[[Page 18171]]
upon demand to BOEM and pledged to meet your decommissioning
obligations.
(2) You must fully fund the lease-specific abandonment account to
cover all decommissioning costs as estimated by BOEM within the
timeframe the Regional Director prescribes.
(3) You must provide binding instructions under which the
institution managing the account is to purchase Treasury securities
pledged to BOEM under paragraph (d) of this section.
(b) Any interest paid on funds in a lease-specific abandonment
account will be treated as other funds in the account unless the
Regional Director authorizes in writing the payment of interest to the
party who deposits the funds.
(c) The Regional Director may allow you to pledge Treasury
securities that are made payable upon demand to the Regional Director
to satisfy your obligation to make payments into a lease-specific
abandonment account.
(d) Before the amount of funds in a lease-specific abandonment
account equals the maximum insurable amount as determined by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or the Federal Savings and Loan
Insurance Corporation, the institution managing the account must use
the funds in the account to purchase Treasury securities pledged to
BOEM under paragraph (c) of this section. The institution managing the
lease specific-abandonment account will join with the Regional Director
to establish a Federal Reserve Circular 154 account to hold these
Treasury securities, unless the Regional Director authorizes the
managing institution to retain the pledged Treasury securities in a
separate trust account. You may obtain a copy of the current Treasury
Circular No. 154 from the Surety Bond Branch, Financial Management
Service, Department of the Treasury, East-West Highway, Hyattsville, MD
20782.
(e) The Regional Director may require you to create an overriding
royalty or production payment obligation for the benefit of a lease-
specific account pledged for the decommissioning of a lease. The
required obligation may be associated with oil and gas or sulfur
production from a lease other than the lease bonded through the lease-
specific abandonment account.
Sec. 556.905 Using a third-party guarantee instead of a bond.
(a) When the Regional Director may accept a third-party guarantee.
The Regional Director may accept a third-party guarantee instead of an
additional bond under Sec. 556.901(d) if:
(1) The guarantee meets the criteria in paragraph (c) of this
section;
(2) The guarantee includes the terms specified in paragraph (d) of
this section;
(3) The guarantor's total outstanding and proposed guarantees do
not exceed 25 percent of its unencumbered net worth in the United
States; and
(4) The guarantor submits an indemnity agreement meeting the
criteria in paragraph (e) of this section.
(b) What to do if your guarantor becomes unqualified. If, during
the life of your third-party guarantee, your guarantor no longer meets
the criteria of paragraphs (a)(3) and (c)(3) of this section, you must:
(1) Notify the Regional Director immediately; and
(2) Cease production until you comply with the bond coverage
requirements of this subpart.
(c) Criteria for acceptable guarantees. If you propose to furnish a
third party's guarantee, that guarantee must ensure compliance with all
lessees' lease obligations, the obligations of all operating rights
owners, and the obligations of all operators on the lease. The Regional
Director will base acceptance of your third-party guarantee on the
following criteria:
(1) The period of time that your third-party guarantor (guarantor)
has been in continuous operation as a business entity where:
(i) Continuous operation is the time that your guarantor conducts
business immediately before you post the guarantee; and
(ii) Continuous operation excludes periods of interruption in
operations that are beyond your guarantor's control and that do not
affect your guarantor's likelihood of remaining in business during
exploration, development, production, and decommissioning.
(2) Financial information available in the public record or
submitted by your guarantor, on your guarantor's own initiative, in
sufficient detail to show to the Regional Director's satisfaction that
your guarantor is qualified based on:
(i) Your guarantor's current rating for its most recent bond
issuance by either Moody's Investor Service or Standard and Poor's
Corporation;
(ii) Your guarantor's net worth, taking into account liabilities
under its guarantee of compliance with all the terms and conditions of
your lease, the regulations in this chapter and 30 CFR chapters II and
XII, and your guarantor's other guarantees;
(iii) Your guarantor's ratio of current assets to current
liabilities, taking into account liabilities under its guarantee of
compliance with all the terms and conditions of your lease, the
regulations in this chapter and 30 CFR chapters II and XII, and your
guarantor's other guarantees; and
(iv) Your guarantor's unencumbered fixed assets in the United
States.
(3) When the information required by paragraph (c) of this section
is not publicly available, your guarantor may submit the information in
the following table. Your guarantor must update the information
annually within 90 days of the end of the fiscal year or by the date
prescribed by the Regional Director.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The guarantor should submit That
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(i) Financial statements for the most Include a report by an
recently completed fiscal year, independent certified public
accountant containing the
accountant's audit opinion or
review opinion of the
statements. The report must be
prepared in conformance with
generally accepted accounting
principles and contain no
adverse opinion.
(ii) Financial statements for Your guarantor's financial
completed quarters in the current officer certifies to be correct.
fiscal year, and
(iii) Additional information as Your guarantor's financial
requested by the Regional Director. officer certifies to be correct.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(d) Provisions required in all third-party guarantees. Your third-
party guarantee must contain each of the following provisions.
(1) If you, your operator, or an operating rights owner fails to
comply with any lease term or regulation, your guarantor must either:
(i) Take corrective action; or,
(ii) Be liable under the indemnity agreement to provide, within 7
calendar days, sufficient funds for the Regional Director to complete
corrective action.
(2) If your guarantor complies with paragraph (d)(1) of this
section, this compliance will not reduce its liability.
[[Page 18172]]
(3) If your guarantor wishes to terminate the period of liability
under its guarantee, it must:
(i) Notify you and the Regional Director at least 90 days before
the proposed termination date;
(ii) Obtain the Regional Director's approval for the termination of
the period of liability for all or a specified portion of your
guarantor's guarantee; and
(iii) Remain liable for all work and workmanship performed during
the period that your guarantor's guarantee is in effect.
(4) You must provide a suitable replacement security instrument
before the termination of the period of liability under your third-
party guarantee.
(e) Required criteria for indemnity agreements. If the Regional
Director approves your third-party guarantee, the guarantor must submit
an indemnity agreement.
(1) The indemnity agreement must be executed by your guarantor and
all persons and parties bound by the agreement.
(2) The indemnity agreement must bind each person and party
executing the agreement jointly and severally.
(3) When a person or party bound by the indemnity agreement is a
corporate entity, two corporate officers who are authorized to bind the
corporation must sign the indemnity agreement.
(4) Your guarantor and the other corporate entities bound by the
indemnity agreement must provide the Regional Director copies of:
(i) The authorization of the signatory corporate officials to bind
their respective corporations;
(ii) An affidavit certifying that the agreement is valid under all
applicable laws; and
(iii) Each corporation's corporate authorization to execute the
indemnity agreement.
(5) If your third-party guarantor or another party bound by the
indemnity agreement is a partnership, joint venture, or syndicate, the
indemnity agreement must:
(i) Bind each partner or party who has a beneficial interest in
your guarantor; and
(ii) Provide that, upon demand by the Regional Director under your
third-party guarantee, each partner is jointly and severally liable for
compliance with all terms and conditions of your lease.
(6) When forfeiture is called for under Sec. 556.907, the
indemnity agreement must provide that your guarantor will either:
(i) Bring your lease into compliance; or
(ii) Provide, within 7 calendar days, sufficient funds to permit
the Regional Director to complete corrective action.
(7) The indemnity agreement must contain a confession of judgment.
It must provide that, if the Regional Director determines that you,
your operator, or an operating rights owner is in default of the lease,
the guarantor:
(i) Will not challenge the determination; and
(ii) Will remedy the default.
(8) Each indemnity agreement is deemed to contain all terms and
conditions contained in this paragraph (e), even if the guarantor has
omitted them.
Sec. 556.906 Termination of the period of liability and cancellation
of a bond.
This section defines the terms and conditions under which BOEM will
terminate the period of liability of a bond or cancel a bond.
Terminating the period of liability of a bond ends the period during
which obligations continue to accrue, but does not relieve the surety
of the responsibility for obligations that accrued during the period of
liability. Canceling a bond relieves the surety of all liability. The
liabilities that accrue during a period of liability include
obligations that started to accrue prior to the beginning of the period
of liability and had not been met, and obligations that begin accruing
during the period of liability.
(a) When you or the surety under your bond requests termination:
(1) The Regional Director will terminate the period of liability
under your bond within 90 days after BOEM receives the request; and
(2) If you intend to continue operations, or have not met all
decommissioning obligations, you must provide a replacement bond of an
equivalent amount.
(b) If you provide a replacement bond, the Regional Director will
cancel your previous bond and the surety that provided your previous
bond will not retain any liability, provided that:
(1) The new bond is equal to or greater than the bond that was
terminated, or you provide an alternative form of security, and the
Regional Director determines that the alternative form of security
provides a level of security equal to or greater than that provided for
by the bond that was terminated;
(2) For a base bond submitted under Sec. 556.900(a) or under Sec.
556.901(a) or (b), the surety issuing the new bond agrees to assume all
outstanding liabilities that accrued during the period of liability
that was terminated; and
(3) For additional bonds submitted under Sec. 556.901(d), the
surety issuing the new additional bond agrees to assume that portion of
the outstanding liabilities that accrued during the period of liability
that was terminated and that the Regional Director determines may
exceed the coverage of the base bond, and of which the Regional
Director notifies the provider of the bond.
(c) This paragraph applies if the period of liability is terminated
for a bond, but the bond is not replaced by a bond of an equivalent
amount. The surety that provided your terminated bond will continue to
be responsible for accrued obligations:
(1) Until the obligations are satisfied; and
(2) For additional periods of time in accordance with paragraph (d)
of this section.
(d) When your lease expires or is terminated, the surety that
issued a bond will continue to be responsible, and the Regional
Director will retain other forms of security as shown in the following
table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The period of
For the following type of bond liability will Your bond will be
end cancelled
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Base bonds submitted under When the Regional Seven years after the
Sec. 556.900(a), Sec. Director termination of the
556.901(a), or (b). determines that lease, 6 years after
you have met all completion of all
of your bonded obligations,
obligations or at the conclusion
under the lease, of any appeals or
litigation related
to your bonded
obligation,
whichever is the
latest. The Regional
Director will reduce
the amount of your
bond or return a
portion of your
security if the
Regional Director
determines that you
need less than the
full amount of the
base bond to meet
any possible future
problems.
[[Page 18173]]
(2) Additional bonds submitted When the Regional When you meet your
under Sec. 556.901(d). Director bonded obligations,
determines that unless the Regional
you have met all Director: (i)
your obligations Determines that the
covered by the future potential
additional bond, liability resulting
from any undetected
problem is greater
than the amount of
the base bond; and
(ii) Notifies the
provider of the bond
that the Regional
Director will wait 7
years before
cancelling all or a
part of the bond (or
longer period as
necessary to
complete any appeals
or judicial
litigation related
to your bonding
obligation).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(e) For all bonds, the Regional Director may reinstate your bond as
if no cancellation or release had occurred if:
(1) A person makes a payment under the lease and the payment is
rescinded or must be repaid by the recipient because the person making
the payment is insolvent, bankrupt, subject to reorganization, or
placed in receivership; or
(2) The responsible party represents to BOEM that it has discharged
its obligations under the lease, and the representation was materially
false when the bond was canceled or released.
Sec. 556.907 Forfeiture of bonds and/or other securities.
This section explains how a bond or other security may be
forfeited.
(a) The Regional Director will call for forfeiture of all or part
of the bond, other form of security, or guarantee you provide under
this part if:
(1) You (the party who provided the bond) refuse, or the Regional
Director determines that you are unable to comply with any term or
condition of your lease; or
(2) You default on one of the conditions under which the Regional
Director accepts your bond, third-party guarantee, and/or other form of
security.
(b) The Regional Director may pursue forfeiture of your bond
without first making demands for performance against any lessee,
operating rights owner, or other person authorized to perform lease
obligations.
(c) The Regional Director will:
(1) Notify you, the surety on your bond or other form of security,
and any third-party guarantor of a determination to call for forfeiture
of the bond, security, or guarantee under this section.
(i) This notice will be in writing, and will provide the reason for
the forfeiture and the amount to be forfeited.
(ii) The Regional Director must base the amount he/she determines
is forfeited upon his/her estimate of the total cost of corrective
action to bring your lease into compliance.
(2) Advise you, your third-party guarantor, and any surety that
you, your guarantor, and any surety may avoid forfeiture if, within
five working days:
(i) You agree to, and demonstrate that you will bring your lease
into compliance within the timeframe that the Regional Director
prescribes;
(ii) Your third-party guarantor agrees to and demonstrates that it
will complete the corrective action to bring your lease into compliance
within the timeframe that the Regional Director prescribes; or
(iii) Your surety agrees to and demonstrates that it will bring
your lease into compliance within the timeframe that the Regional
Director prescribes, even if the cost of compliance exceeds the face
amount of the bond or other surety instrument.
(d) If the Regional Director finds you are in default, he/she may
cause the forfeiture of any bonds and other security deposited as your
guarantee of compliance with the terms and conditions of your lease and
the regulations in this chapter and 30 CFR chapters II and XII.
(e) If the Regional Director determines that your bond and/or other
security is forfeited, the Regional Director will:
(1) Collect the forfeited amount; and
(2) Use the funds collected to bring your leases into compliance
and to correct any default.
(f) If the amount the Regional Director collects under your bond
and other security is insufficient to pay the full cost of corrective
actions he/she may:
(1) Take or direct action to obtain full compliance with your lease
and the regulations in this chapter; and
(2) Recover from you, any co-lessee, operating rights owner, and/or
any third-party guarantor responsible under this subpart all costs in
excess of the amount he/she collects under your forfeited bond and
other security.
(g) The amount that the Regional Director collects under your
forfeited bond and other security may exceed the costs of taking the
corrective actions required to obtain full compliance with the terms
and conditions of your lease and the regulations in this chapter and 30
CFR chapters II and XII. In this case, the Regional Director will
return the excess funds to the party from whom they were collected.
Subpart J--Bonus or Royalty Credits for Exchange of Certain Leases
Sec. 556.1000 Leases formerly eligible for a bonus or royalty credit.
Bonus or royalty credits were available to lessees with leases:
(a) In effect on December 20, 2006, and located in:
(1) The Eastern Planning Area and within 125 miles of the coastline
of the State of Florida; or,
(2) The Central Planning Area and within the Desoto Canyon OPD, the
Destin Dome OPD, or the Pensacola OPD and within 100 miles of the
coastline of the State of Florida.
(b) The deadline for applying for such a bonus or royalty credit
was October 14, 2010; therefore, lessees may no longer apply for such
credits.
Subpart K--Ending a Lease
Sec. 556.1100 How does a lease expire?
(a) Your oil and gas lease will automatically expire at the end of
its primary term unless you have taken action, as set forth in Sec.
556.601, to maintain the lease beyond the primary term.
(b) Your sulfur lease will automatically expire at the end of its
primary term unless you have taken action, as set forth in Sec.
556.603, to maintain the lease beyond the primary term.
Sec. 556.1101 May I relinquish my lease or an aliquot part thereof?
(a) A record title owner may relinquish a lease or an aliquot part
of a lease if all record title owners of a lease or any aliquot part(s)
of the lease file three original copies of a request to relinquish with
BOEM on Form BOEM-0152, entitled, ``Relinquishment of Federal Oil and
Gas Lease.'' No filing fee is required.
(b) A relinquishment will be subject to the continued obligation of
the record title owner and the surety to make all payments due,
including any accrued rentals, royalties and deferred bonuses, and to
abandon all wells and condition or remove all platforms and other
facilities on the land to be relinquished to the satisfaction of the
Director.
[[Page 18174]]
(c) The effective date of the relinquishment is the date on which
the relinquishment is filed with the proper BOEM regional office.
Sec. 556.1102 Under what circumstances will BOEM cancel my lease?
(a) BOEM may cancel your non-producing lease if you fail to comply
with any provision of OCSLA, the lease, or applicable regulations if
the failure continues for 30 days after mailing of notice to your post
office address of record by registered mail and you have not requested
and been granted any additional time within which to correct the
failure. Such cancellation is subject to judicial review under section
23 of OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1349).
(b) Your producing lease may be cancelled if you fail to comply
with any provision of OCSLA, the lease, or applicable regulations. The
Secretary will cancel a producing lease after the judicial proceedings
required under section 5(d) of OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1334(d)).
(c) BOEM may cancel your lease if it determines that the lease was
obtained by fraud or misrepresentation. You will have notice and an
opportunity to be heard before BOEM cancels your lease.
(d) BOEM may cancel your lease at any time if it determines, after
a hearing, that continued activity will probably cause serious harm or
damage to life (including fish and other aquatic life), property, any
mineral, national security or defense, or the marine, coastal, or human
environment; that the threat of harm or damage will not disappear or
decrease to an acceptable level within a reasonable period of time; and
the advantages of cancellation outweigh the advantages of continuing
the lease.
(e) BOEM may cancel your lease at any time after operations under
the lease have been suspended or temporarily prohibited by the
Department continuously for a period of five years pursuant to
paragraph (d) of this section, absent your request for a shorter
period.
(f) If, upon demand, you fail to provide a bond, or alternative
type of security instrument acceptable to BOEM, the Regional Director
may assess penalties or cancel your lease in accordance with part 550,
subpart N of this chapter;
(g) Title 30, part 550, subpart A of the CFR provides the
procedures for lease cancellation and compensation, if applicable.
Subpart L--Leases Maintained Under Section 6 of OCSLA
Sec. 556.1200 Effect of regulations on lease.
(a) All regulations in this part, insofar as they are applicable,
will supersede the provisions of any lease that is maintained under
section 6(a) of the Act. However, the provisions of a lease relating to
area, minerals, rentals, royalties (subject to sections 6(a)(8) and (9)
of the Act), and term (subject to section 6(a)(10) of the Act and, as
to sulfur, subject to section 6(b)(2) of the Act) will continue in
effect, and, in the event of any conflict or inconsistency, will take
precedence over these regulations.
(b) A lease maintained under section 6(a) of the Act is also
subject to all operating and conservation regulations applicable to the
OCS. In addition, the regulations relating to geophysical and
geological exploratory operations and to pipeline ROW(s) are
applicable, to the extent that those regulations are not contrary to or
inconsistent with the lease provisions relating to area, minerals,
rentals, royalties and term. The lessee must comply with any provision
of the lease as validated, the subject matter of which is not covered
in the regulations in this part.
Sec. 556.1201 Section 6(a) leases and leases other than those for
oil, gas, or sulfur.
The existence of an oil and gas lease maintained under section 6(a)
of the Act precludes only the issuance in the same area of an oil and
gas lease under OCSLA, but does not preclude the issuance of other
types of leases under OCSLA. However, no other lease may authorize or
permit the lessee thereunder unreasonably to interfere with or endanger
operations under the existing lease. The United States will not grant
any sulfur leases on any area that is included in a lease covering
sulfur under section 6(b) of the Act.
Subpart M--Environmental Studies
Sec. 556.1300 Environmental studies.
(a) The Director will conduct a study or studies of any area or
region included in any oil and gas lease sale or other lease in order
to establish information needed for assessment and management of
impacts on the human, marine and coastal environments which may be
affected by OCS oil and gas or other mineral activities in such area or
region. The purposes of such studies will include, to the extent
practicable, analyses of the impacts of pollutants introduced into the
environments and impacts of offshore activities on the seabed and
affected coastal areas.
(b) Studies will be planned and carried out in cooperation with the
affected States and interested parties and, to the extent possible,
will not duplicate studies done under other laws. Where appropriate,
the Director will, to the maximum extent practicable, coordinate with
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in executing
its environmental studies responsibilities. The Director may also make
agreements for the coordination with, or the use of the services or
resources of, any other Federal, State or local government agency in
the conduct of such studies.
(c) Any study of an area or region required by paragraph (a) of
this section for a lease sale will be commenced not later than six
months prior to holding a lease sale for that area. The Director may
use information collected in any prior study. The Director may initiate
studies for an area or region not identified in the leasing program.
(d) After the leasing and developing of any area or region, the
Director will conduct such studies as are deemed necessary to establish
additional information and will monitor the human, marine and coastal
environments of such area or region in a manner designed to provide
information, which can be compared with the results of studies
conducted prior to OCS oil and gas development. This will be done to
identify any significant changes in the quality and productivity of
such environments, to establish trends in the area studies, and to
design experiments identifying the causes of such changes. Findings
from such studies will be used to recommend modifications in practices
that are employed to mitigate the effects of OCS activities and to
enhance the data/information base for predicting impacts which might
result from a single lease sale or cumulative OCS activities.
(e) Information available or collected by the studies program will,
to the extent practicable, be provided in a form and in a timeframe
that can be used in the decision-making process associated with a
specific leasing action or with longer term OCS minerals management
responsibilities.
PART 559--[REMOVED]
0
8. Under the authority of section 5(a) of OCSLA (43 U.S.C. 1334(a)),
remove part 559.
PART 560--OUTER CONTINENTAL SHELF OIL AND GAS LEASING
0
9. The authority citation for part 560 continues to read as follows:
[[Page 18175]]
Authority: Section 104, Public Law 97-451, 96 Stat. 2451 (30
U.S.C. 1714), Public Law 109-432, Div C, Title I, 120 Stat. 3000; 30
U.S.C. 1751; 31 U.S.C. 9701; 43 U.S.C. 1334; 33 U.S.C. 2704, 2716;
E.O. 12777, as amended; 43 U.S.C. 1331 et seq., 43 U.S.C. 1337.
0
10. Revise the Table of Contents for 30 CFR part 560 to read as
follows:
Subpart A--General Provisions
560.100 Authority
560.100 What is the purpose of this part?
560.102 What definitions apply to this part?
560.103 What is BOEM's authority to collect information?
Subpart B--Bidding Systems
General Provisions
560.200 What is the purpose of this subpart?
560.201 What definitions apply to this subpart?
560.202 What bidding systems may BOEM use?
560.203 What conditions apply to the bidding systems that BOEM uses?
Eligible Leases
560.210 How do royalty suspension volumes apply to eligible leases?
560.211 When does an eligible lease qualify for a royalty suspension
volume?
560.212 How does BOEM assign and monitor royalty suspension volumes
for eligible leases?
560.213 How long will a royalty suspension volume for an eligible
lease be effective?
550.214 How do I measure natural gas production on my eligible
lease?
Royalty Suspensions (RS) Leases
560.220 How does royalty suspension apply to leases issued in a sale
held after November 2000?
560.221 When does a lease issued in a sale held after November 2000
get a royalty suspension?
560.222 How long will a royalty suspension volume be effective for a
lease issued in a sale held after November 2000?
560.223 How do I measure natural gas production for a lease issued
in a sale held after November 2000?
560.224 How will royalty suspension apply if BOEM assigns a lease
issued in a sale held after November 2000 to a field that has a pre-
Act lease?
Bidding System Selection Criteria
560.230 What criteria does BOEM use for selecting bidding systems
and bidding system components?
Subpart C--Operating Allowances
560.300 Operating allowances.
Subpart D--[Reserved]
Subpart E--Electronic Filings
560.500 Electronic document and data transmissions.
560.501 How long will the confidentiality of electronic document and
data transmissions be maintained?
560.502 Are electronically filed document transmissions legally
binding?
Subpart B--Bidding Systems
0
11. Redesignate Sec. Sec. 560.101, 560.102, 560.110 and 560.111 as
Sec. Sec. 560.200, 560.201, 560.202 and 560.203, respectively.
0
12. Redesignate Sec. Sec. 560.112, 560.113, 560.114, 560.115 and
560.116 as Sec. Sec. 560.210, 560.211, 560.212, 560.213 and 560.214,
respectively.
0
13. Redesignate Sec. Sec. 560.120, 560.121, 560.122, 560.123 and
560.124 as Sec. Sec. 560.220, 560.221, 560.222, 560.223 and 560.224,
respectively.
0
14. Redesignate Sec. 560.130 as Sec. 560.230.
Subpart A--General Provisions
0
15. Add Sec. 560.100 as follows:
Sec. 560.100 Authority.
(a) The Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA) (43 U.S.C. 1334)
(``Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act Amendments of 1978'').
(b) The Federal Oil and Gas Royalty Management Act, as amended
(FOGRMA) (30 U.S.C. 1711), including the Federal Oil and Gas Royalty
Simplification and Fairness Act of 1996, (30 U.S.C. 1701 note).
(c) The Independent Offices Appropriations Act of 1952 (31 U.S.C.
9701).
(d) Public Law 89-554, 1966 (5 U.S.C. 301).
Sec. 560.1 [Redesignated as Sec. 560.101]
0
16. Redesignate Sec. 560.1 as Sec. 560.101.
0
17. Redesignate Sec. 560.2 as Sec. 560.102, and revise redesignated
Sec. 560.2 to read as follows:
Sec. 560.102 What definitions apply to this part?
(a) Terms used in this part have the meaning given in the Act and
as defined in this part.
(b) The following definitions apply to this part:
Area or region means the geographic area or region over which the
BOEM authorized officer has jurisdiction, unless the context in which
those words are used indicates that a different meaning is intended.
BOEM means Bureau of Ocean Energy Management.
Designated official means a representative of DOI subject to the
direction and supervisory authority of the Directors, BOEM, and the
appropriate Regional Manager of the BOEM authorized and empowered to
supervise and direct all oil and gas operations and to perform other
duties prescribed in this chapter.
Director means Director, BOEM, DOI.
DOI means the Department of the Interior, including the Secretary
of the Interior, or his or her delegate.
Federal lease means an agreement which, for consideration,
including, but not limited to, bonuses, rents or royalties conferred,
and covenants to be observed, authorizes a person to explore for, or
develop, or produce (or to do any or all of these) oil and gas, coal,
oil shale, tar sands, and geothermal resources on lands or interests in
lands under Federal jurisdiction.
Gas or Natural Gas means a mixture of hydrocarbons and varying
quantities of non-hydrocarbons that exist in the gaseous phase.
Oil means a mixture of hydrocarbons that exists in a liquid or
gaseous phase in an underground reservoir and which remains or becomes
liquid at atmospheric pressure after passing through surface separating
facilities, including condensate recovered by means other than a
manufacturing process.
Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) means all submerged lands lying
seaward and outside of the area of lands beneath navigable waters as
defined in the Submerged Lands Act (43 U.S.C. 1301-1315) and of which
the subsoil and seabed appertain to the United States and are subject
to its jurisdiction and control.
OCSLA means the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, as amended (Act
of August 7, 1953, Ch. 345, 67 Stat. 462, 43 U.S.C. 1331-1356a, as
amended by Pub. L. 95-372, 92 Stat. 629).
Person means a natural person, where so designated, or an entity,
such as a partnership, association, State, political subdivision of a
State or territory, or a private, public, or municipal corporation.
We means the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM).
You means the lessee or operating rights owner.
Sec. 560.3 [Redesignated as Sec. 560.103]
0
18. Redesignate Sec. 560.3 as Sec. 560.103.
0
19. Add a new subpart C to read as follows:
Subpart C--Operating Allowances
Sec. 560.300 Operating allowances.
Notwithstanding any other provision in the regulations in this
part, BOEM may issue a lease containing an operating allowance when so
specified in the final notice of sale and the lease. The allowance
amount or formula will be specified in the final notice of sale and in
the lease.
[[Page 18176]]
Subpart D--[Removed and Reserved]
0
20. Remove and reserve subpart D.
0
21. Add a new subpart E to read as follows:
Subpart E--Electronic Filings
560.500 Electronic document and data transmissions.
560.501 How long will the confidentiality of electronic document and
data transmissions be maintained?
560.502 Are electronically filed document transmissions legally
binding?
Subpart E--Electronic Filings
Sec. 560.500 Electronic document and data transmissions.
(a) BOEM may notify you that it will allow or request you to submit
the following information electronically through BOEM's secure
electronic filing system, through an alternate secure electronic filing
system supported and maintained by the Department, or through some
other electronic filing system that BOEM has approved for this purpose:
(1) Any document(s) or information described in the Qualifications
section of part 556 of this chapter, as specified in subpart E. Such
information would include, but not be limited to, the official name of
the qualifying person, its legal and business address or addresses, its
legal form and status, and the names and contact information of a
person or organization authorized to act on the person's behalf.
(2) Any document(s) or information required to obtain BOEM's
approval of an assignment or sublease, including any form or instrument
that creates or transfers ownership of a lease interest.
(3) Any document(s) or information required to obtain BOEM's
approval of your relinquishment of all, or any aliquot part of your
lease, as specified in Sec. 556.1101 of this chapter.
(4) Any document(s) creating, transferring or assigning economic
interests, as specified in Sec. Sec. 556.715 and 556.808 of this
chapter.
(5) Any document(s) related to a bond, U.S. Treasury note or other
security provided to BOEM, which is required to guarantee your
compliance with terms and conditions of a lease.
(6) Any document(s) or information necessary to bid for an OCS
lease.
(7) Any forms, document(s) or information necessary to determine
worst case oil-spill discharge volume(s), or to provide evidence
demonstrating oil spill financial responsibility, or to guarantee such
financial responsibility or to comply with any other requirements of
the Oil Spill Financial Responsibility Program, as described in part
553 of this chapter.
(b) BOEM reserves the right to require the electronic filing of any
document(s) or information addressed in paragraph (a)(5) of this
section upon a 90-day notice published in the Federal Register; if BOEM
mandates that you transmit such document(s) or information
electronically, the Federal Register notice will specify the filing
details necessary to comply with this regulation.
(c) In the event BOEM sends documents to you in a secure electronic
format, you may either return the document(s) in an electronic format
utilizing the same secure transmission mechanism or print the
document(s) and return them.
(d) BOEM may electronically acknowledge, approve, sign, or execute
any document(s) referenced in this section.
Sec. 560.501 How long will the confidentiality of electronic document
and data transmissions be maintained?
The confidentiality of any electronically submitted information
will be maintained for the same proprietary term that would apply to
the corresponding non-electronic confidential submission, pursuant to
Sec. 556.104(b) of this chapter.
Sec. 560.502 Are electronically filed document transmissions legally
binding?
Any document or information referenced in Sec. 560.500 which is
submitted to BOEM through a secure electronic filing system that is
approved by BOEM will be legally binding, without the need for a paper
copy thereof.
[FR Doc. 2016-06513 Filed 3-29-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-MR-P