[House Hearing, 118 Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]


                          H.R. 1121, ``PROTECTING AMERICAN 
                            ENERGY PRODUCTION ACT'';
           		    AND H.R. 5616, ``BRIDGE 
           		    PRODUCTION ACT OF 2023''

=======================================================================

                          LEGISLATIVE HEARING

                               BEFORE THE

                       SUBCOMMITTEE ON ENERGY AND
                           MINERAL RESOURCES

                                 OF THE

                     COMMITTEE ON NATURAL RESOURCES
                     U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

                    ONE HUNDRED EIGHTEENTH CONGRESS

                             FIRST SESSION

                               __________

                      Thursday, September 28, 2023

                               __________

                           Serial No. 118-64

                               __________

       Printed for the use of the Committee on Natural Resources
       
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        Available via the World Wide Web: http://www.govinfo.gov
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                               __________

                   U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE                    
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------     
 
                     COMMITTEE ON NATURAL RESOURCES

                     BRUCE WESTERMAN, AR, Chairman
                    DOUG LAMBORN, CO, Vice Chairman
                  RAUL M. GRIJALVA, AZ, Ranking Member

oug Lamborn, CO			Grace F. Napolitano, CA
Robert J. Wittman, VA			Gregorio Kilili Camacho Sablan, 	
Tom McClintock, CA			    CNMI
Paul Gosar, AZ				Jared Huffman, CA
Garret Graves, LA			Ruben Gallego, AZ
Aumua Amata C. Radewagen, AS		Joe Neguse, CO
Doug LaMalfa, CA			Mike Levin, CA
Daniel Webster, FL			Katie Porter, CA
Jenniffer Gonzalez-Colon, PR		Teresa Leger Fernandez, NM
Russ Fulcher, ID			Melanie A. Stansbury, NM
Pete Stauber, MN			Mary Sattler Peltola, AK
John R. Curtis, UT			Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, NY
Tom Tiffany, WI				Kevin Mullin, CA
Jerry Carl, AL				Val T. Hoyle, OR
Matt Rosendale, MT			Sydney Kamlager-Dove, CA
Lauren Boebert, CO			Seth Magaziner, RI
Cliff Bentz, OR				Nydia M. Velazquez, NY
Jen Kiggans, VA				Ed Case, HI
Jim Moylan, GU				Debbie Dingell, MI
Wesley P. Hunt, TX			Susie Lee, NV
Mike Collins, GA
Anna Paulina Luna, FL
John Duarte, CA
Harriet M. Hageman, WY

                    Vivian Moeglein, Staff Director
                      Tom Connally, Chief Counsel
                 Lora Snyder, Democratic Staff Director
                   http://naturalresources.house.gov
                                 ------                                

              SUBCOMMITTEE ON ENERGY AND MINERAL RESOURCES

                       PETE STAUBER, MN, Chairman
                     WESLEY P. HUNT, TX, Vice Chair
              ALEXANDRIA OCASIO-CORTEZ, NY, Ranking Member

Doug Lamborn, CO                     Jared Huffman, CA
Robert J. Wittman, VA                Kevin Mullin, CA
Paul Gosar, AZ                       Sydney Kamlager-Dove, CA
Garret Graves, LA                    Seth Magaziner, RI
Daniel Webster, FL                   Nydia M. Velazquez, NY
Russ Fulcher, ID                     Debbie Dingell, MI
John R. Curtis, UT                   Raul M. Grijalva, AZ
Tom Tiffany, WI                      Grace F. Napolitano, CA
Matt Rosendale, MT                   Susie Lee, NV
Lauren Boebert, CO                   Vacancy
Wesley P. Hunt, TX                   Vacancy
Mike Collins, GA
John Duarte, CA
Bruce Westerman, AR, ex officio

                              -----------
                              
                                CONTENTS

                              ----------                              
                                                                   Page

Hearing held on Thursday, September 28, 2023.....................     1

Statement of Members:

    Stauber, Hon. Pete, a Representative in Congress from the 
      State of Minnesota.........................................     1
    Kamlager-Dove, Hon. Sydney, a Representative in Congress from 
      the State of California....................................     3

    Duncan, Hon. Jeff, a Representative in Congress from the 
      State of South Carolina, prepared statement of.............    56

Statement of Witnesses:

    Tarpley, Tim, President, Energy Workforce & Technology 
      Council, Houston, Texas....................................     4
        Prepared statement of....................................     6
        Questions submitted for the record.......................    10
    Upton, Greg, Executive Director and Associate Professor of 
      Research at LSU Center for Energy Studies, Baton Rouge, 
      Louisiana..................................................    12
        Prepared statement of....................................    13

    Chiasson, Chett, Executive Director, Port Fourchon, Fourchon, 
      Louisiana..................................................    16
        Prepared statement of....................................    17

    Robinson, Breon, Organizer, Healthy Gulf, Lake Charles, 
      Louisiana..................................................    20
        Prepared statement of....................................    21

Additional Materials Submitted for the Record:

    Bureau of Land Management, Statement for the Record on H.R. 
      1121.......................................................    57

    Submissions for the Record by Representative Westerman

        American Petroleum Institute, Statement for the Record on 
          H.R. 5616..............................................    58

        Consumer Energy Alliance, ``BRIDGE Production Act Will 
          Help Lower Energy Costs and Tame Inflation'', September 
          20, 2023...............................................    58

    Submissions for the Record by Representative Stauber

        AP News article, ``In intimate moment, Biden vows to `end 
          fossil fuel' '', September 6, 2019.....................    55

        Gulf of Mexico Deepwater Frontier Exploration and 
          Production Timeline....................................    24

    Submissions for the Record by Representative Graves

        National Ocean Industries Association, Study--GHG 
          Emission Intensity of Crude Oil and Condensate 
          Production.............................................    53

    Submissions for the Record by Representative Kamlager-Dove

        New York Times article, `` `Monster Fracks' Are Getting 
          Far Bigger. And Far Thirstier.'', September 25, 2023...    30

        Texas Tribune article, ``Landowners fear injection of 
          fracking waste threatens West Texas aquifers'', March 
          10, 2023...............................................    35

        Oil Change International, ``Dirty Energy Dominance: 
          Dependent on Denial'', October 2017....................    47



 
 LEGISLATIVE HEARING ON H.R. 1121, TO PROHIBIT A MORATORIUM ON THE USE 
OF HYDRAULIC FRACTURING, ``PROTECTING AMERICAN ENERGY PRODUCTION ACT''; 
  AND H.R. 5616, TO REQUIRE THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR TO CONDUCT 
   CERTAIN OFFSHORE LEASE SALES, ``BRINGING RELIABLE INVESTMENT INTO 
 DOMESTIC GULF ENERGY PRODUCTION ACT OF 2023'' or ``BRIDGE PRODUCTION 
                             ACT OF 2023''

                              ----------                              


                      Thursday, September 28, 2023

                     U.S. House of Representatives

              Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources

                     Committee on Natural Resources

                             Washington, DC

                              ----------                              

    The Subcommittee met, pursuant to notice, at 2:16 p.m. in 
Room 1324, Longworth House Office Building, Hon. Pete Stauber 
[Chairman of the Subcommittee] presiding.
    Present: Representatives Stauber, Graves, Fulcher, Collins, 
Westerman; Huffman, Mullin, Kamlager-Dove, and Dingell.
    Also present: Representative Levin.

    Mr. Stauber. The Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral 
Resources will come to order.
    Without objection, the Chair is authorized to declare a 
recess of the Subcommittee at any time.
    Under Committee Rule 4(f), any oral opening statements at 
hearings are limited to the Chairman and the Ranking Minority 
Member.
    I now recognize myself for an opening statement.

    STATEMENT OF THE HON. PETE STAUBER, A REPRESENTATIVE IN 
              CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF MINNESOTA

    Mr. Stauber. Today, the Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral 
Resources will consider H.R. 1121, ``Protecting American Energy 
Production Act'', introduced by Representative Duncan of South 
Carolina; and H.R. 5616, ``BRIDGE Production Act'', introduced 
by Representative Garret Graves of Louisiana.
    I would like to thank each of our witnesses for traveling 
to Washington to be here today, and I also thank 
Representatives Graves and Duncan for introducing these 
important pieces of legislation.
    The recent surge in oil prices nearing the $100 a barrel 
mark, with projections of $150 per barrel in 2025, has raised 
concerns for hardworking Americans, along with our broader 
economy. This escalation in crude prices has had a ripple 
effect, from truckers charging more for cross-country hauls, to 
airlines increasing fares due to jet fuel costs, to 
manufacturers grappling with the rising cost of materials 
needed for critical medical supplies and essential ingredients 
needed for pharmaceuticals.
    A gallon of gasoline averaged $3.88 last week, marking a 25 
percent increase since the beginning of the year. In my home 
state of Minnesota, gas is nearing $4 per gallon. Mind you, 
gasoline was $1.87, on average, in the district I represent the 
week President Biden was sworn into office. Even so, 
congressional Democrats want to ban fracking, prohibit offshore 
development, and curtail feasible solutions to high fuel prices 
by crushing opportunities to increase supply.
    I have the honor of representing northeast Minnesota in 
Congress, home to the Iron Range and the largest copper nickel 
find in the world. I recognize the importance of developing the 
critical resources we are blessed with here in the United 
States. From the taconite and critical minerals in my district 
to the vast untapped potential of oil and gas reserves on the 
Outer Continental Shelf, we must ensure a future where we 
strike a balance between economic growth and responsible 
extraction.
    And here in the United States, we do so with the strictest 
safety, environmental, and labor standards. The Gulf of Mexico 
region on the OCS not only yields one of the lowest emission 
profiles per barrel of oil produced globally, but provides 15 
percent of U.S. oil production. The oil produced in the Gulf of 
Mexico is 46 percent cleaner than any production elsewhere in 
the world. However, the actions and delays by the Biden 
administration, including the attempted cancellation of 
multiple lease sales and the postponement of the 5-year 
offshore oil and gas leasing plan have put our nation's energy 
security and economic prosperity at risk.
    H.R. 5616, the BRIDGE Production Act, seeks to address 
these concerns by mandating four offshore oil and gas sales in 
the Gulf, two in 2024 and two in 2025.
    H.R. 1121 emphasizes the importance of states maintaining 
their role in regulating hydraulic fracturing on state and 
private lands, ensuring that any moratorium on hydraulic 
fracturing can only be declared with congressional 
authorization.
    The Gulf of Mexico Energy Security Act, GOMESA, has been 
instrumental in generating significant revenues for Gulf-
producing states. In Fiscal Year 2023 alone, over $353 million 
was disbursed to these states. These funds play a crucial role 
in supporting initiatives like hurricane preparedness, coastal 
restoration, and infrastructure improvements. However, the lack 
of a comprehensive 5-year leasing plan and the potential 
absence of lease sales in 2024 and 2025 threaten these revenues 
and, by extension, the well-being of Gulf Coast communities.
    As we mark the 70th anniversary of OCSLA and, next year, 
the 70th anniversary of leasing in the Gulf of Mexico, it is 
essential to reflect on the historical significance of oil and 
gas extraction in this region. The challenges faced in the 
1970s due to oil embargoes still resonate today, where oil 
output cuts by major producers like Saudi Arabia and Russia 
threaten a major market deficit.
    As we discuss these critical solutions to attacks on 
domestic energy production, I urge my colleagues to prioritize 
American jobs, American technology, economic growth, and energy 
security. Our nation's abundant natural resources await 
responsible development, and it is our duty to harness them for 
the betterment of our economy, our communities, and our allies.
    I now yield to my colleague, Ranking Member Kamlager-Dove, 
for her opening statement.
    Ranking Member, you are up for 5 minutes.

STATEMENT OF THE HON. SYDNEY KAMLAGER-DOVE, A REPRESENTATIVE IN 
             CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

    Ms. Kamlager-Dove. Thank you Chair Stauber, and thank you 
to our witnesses for traveling all the way to Washington, DC.
    Today, just 2 days ahead of a government shutdown with 
nobody but House Republicans to blame, we are here to discuss 
two bills: H.R. 5616 and H.R. 1121, both extreme and misguided 
giveaways to the fossil fuel industry. It is a telling 
reflection of my colleagues' priorities that they would rather 
debate the merits of Big Oil giveaways that will, without a 
doubt, harm our communities than address the critical need to 
fund essential government services.
    In less than 60 hours, funding for disaster response and 
recovery, nutrition assistance programs, and small business 
loans could all run out, along with many other programs our 
constituents rely on. And for my farmers, farmers will be 
devastated by the Republican shutdown. There will be no farm or 
acreage payments for you. There will be no subsidies for you. 
There will be no marketing loans for you. And as a result of 
these two bills we are hearing today, there will be no clean 
water for you.
    In the face of this imminent government shutdown, we are 
witnessing a stark illustration of their polluters over people 
agenda. Let's walk through just how extreme this legislation 
is.
    First, H.R. 5616, known as the BRIDGE Production Act, would 
force the government to offer almost all of the Gulf of Mexico 
to the oil and gas industry, not just once, but four times over 
the next 2 years. This bill would strip the American public's 
right to up-to-date environmental review and public input for 
these sales. It would stop the Bureau of Ocean Energy 
Management from choosing to balance development and 
environmental risks, considering the laws and goals of affected 
states, or even whether the oil and gas industry has expressed 
interest in drilling an area before offering those waters up 
for leasing.
    Even if there are valid lawsuits over these lease sales to 
protect public health, endangered species, fisheries, or other 
resources, this bill would prevent the courts from blocking the 
leases. This eliminates an essential mechanism for public 
protection and environmental enforcement. We have seen what 
happens when these protections are waived. The Deepwater 
Horizon disaster killed 11 workers and spilled over 3 million 
barrels of oil into the Gulf, poisoning marine life and clean-
up crews for years. The exploded well was given repeated 
categorical exemptions from National Environmental Protection 
Act reviews.
    Our Republican colleagues say it is worth the risk. And 
looking at the other bill on the agenda, a pattern is clear. 
H.R. 1121 would block the President from pausing or banning 
fracking on public lands. Fracking is another form of oil and 
gas extraction with very little oversight, even though it 
involves blasting open rocks deep underground with water 
containing hazardous materials. We still don't fully understand 
how this could affect drinking water, but loopholes in the Safe 
Drinking Water Act and Federal regulations leave fracking 
mostly unregulated.
    We know that new wells can consume millions of gallons of 
water, often taken from aquifers, and that energy giants are 
now drilling for oil and water. This is important to me, given 
the Inglewood oil fields are in my urban district, and fracking 
is still happening, endangering lives, small businesses, 
children, childcare centers. The list goes on and on.
    H.R. 1121 is another piece of the industry-first Republican 
agenda to take away tools to protect public health and combat 
the climate crisis. I will remind everyone that Big Oil does 
not need any favors right now.
    With that, I yield back.

    Mr. Stauber. Thank you very much.
    Before we go to the witnesses, I ask unanimous consent that 
my friend and colleague, Mr. Levin from California, be waived 
on to the Committee.
    We will now move to introduce our witnesses. Each witness 
will have 5 minutes to make their opening statements.
    Please press the button down on your microphone so that it 
glows red, and then you can begin speaking.
    Our first witness is Mr. Tim Tarpley, who is the President 
of the Energy Workforce & Technology Council in Houston, Texas.
    Mr. Tarpley, you are now recognized for 5 minutes.

    STATEMENT OF TIM TARPLEY, PRESIDENT, ENERGY WORKFORCE & 
               TECHNOLOGY COUNCIL, HOUSTON, TEXAS

    Mr. Tarpley. Chairman Stauber, Ranking Member Kamlager-
Dove, and distinguished members of the Subcommittee, thank you 
for inviting me to testify here today. My name is Tim Tarpley, 
and I am President of the Energy Workforce & Technology 
Council, and I am here to testify in support of H.R. 5616 and 
H.R. 1121.
    The Energy Workforce & Technology Council is the national 
trade association for the energy technology and services 
sector, representing over 370 companies and employing more than 
650,000 energy workers, manufacturers, and innovators in the 
energy supply chain.
    The Russian invasion of Ukraine and the resulting 
disruption of the world energy supply have made it abundantly 
clear to the world the importance of energy security. Germany, 
for instance, made a political decision to rely on Russian gas 
to power much of their economy. With that source gone, the 
country has been forced to return about one-fifth of its energy 
supply to coal-fired power generation. We are fortunate here in 
the United States. We have the resources that we should never 
have to make that choice.
    The truth is the United States and the world will need a 
lot more oil and gas in the coming decades, even as new forms 
of energy come on-line. In fact, the U.S. Energy Information 
Administration predicts that worldwide demand for all forms of 
energy will increase by 50 percent by 2050. The use of 
hydraulic fracturing on land and access to oil and gas 
resources offshore are two ways that the United States can meet 
this demand.
    H.R. 5616 and H.R. 1121 guarantee this access, and ensure 
that the rights to domestic resources development are kept from 
being interrupted or administratively slowed.
    In 1953, Congress passed the Outer Continental Shelf Lands 
Act, which states that the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management 
must prepare and maintain forward-looking 5-year plans to 
schedule proposed oil and gas lease sales in the U.S. Outer 
Continental Shelf. Under the current administration, this has 
not occurred. In fact, the most recent 5-year plan expired on 
June 30, 2022. This delay is counter to the interests of the 
American people, as these resources provide significant 
economic benefits to our workforce and economy.
    In fact, in 2022, the Gulf of Mexico offshore oil and 
natural gas industry supported an estimated 372,000 jobs in the 
United States. And in 2022 alone, oil and gas activity in the 
Gulf of Mexico contributed approximately $30.8 billion to the 
U.S. GDP.
    Additionally, oil and gas produced in the Gulf is some of 
the cleanest produced anywhere. The U.S. Gulf of Mexico boasts 
approximately half the carbon intensity of other producing 
regions. A significant contributor to this is effective methane 
management. The Gulf is also subject to a strong regulatory 
oversight framework, and has adequate pipeline infrastructure 
to move product to market safely and efficiently.
    So, we must ask ourselves: Why do we continue to delay 
further production in an area that can provide U.S. energy 
security, support the U.S. economy and workers, and also 
provide energy cleaner than nearly anywhere else in the world?
    Fortunately, we have legislation in front of us today that 
will force the Administration to stop bureaucratic delay 
tactics and follow the law to hold lease sales and allow 
Americans access to the resources that they are legally 
entitled to access. H.R. 5616 mandates that the Secretary of 
the Interior hold no less than four offshore lease sales on 
specified dates that cannot be bureaucratically delayed.
    In regards to the second piece of legislation in front of 
us today, H.R. 1121, hydraulic fracturing is currently used on 
95 percent of new oil and gas wells. When paired with 
directional drilling, it is the safest and most effective way 
of accessing hydrocarbons in tight shale formations deep 
beneath the earth. This technology is responsible for the steep 
increase in natural gas production we have experienced in the 
United States over the last 25 years. A ban on hydraulic 
fracturing would put an end to the abundance of natural gas 
that has both improved the environment and aided our allies 
abroad.
    According to the EIA, the increased use of cleaner-burning 
natural gas and power generation is the chief reason U.S. 
carbon dioxide emissions are at a 25-year low. And the 
abundance of natural gas in the United States has opened the 
door to LNG exports, which have allowed us to support our 
European allies impacted by the war in Ukraine. H.R. 1121 is a 
simple, straightforward bill that prohibits the President from 
declaring a moratorium or ban on the use of hydraulic 
fracturing unless such a moratorium or ban is authorized by an 
Act of Congress.
    Both H.R. 1121 and H.R. 5616 are key pieces of legislation 
supporting American energy security. By providing the American 
people with clear and consistent guarantees that they will be 
able to access their resources in a timely and consistent 
manner, we will keep energy costs affordable, keep Americans 
employed, and support additional investment in our domestic 
resources.
    Thank you.

    [The prepared statement of Mr. Tarpley follows:]
   Prepared Statement of Tim Tarpley, President, Energy Workforce & 
                           Technology Council
                       on H.R. 1121 and H.R. 5616

    Chairman Stauber, Ranking Member Ocasio-Cortez, and distinguished 
members of the subcommittee, thank you for inviting me to testify here 
today. My name is Tim Tarpley. As President of Energy Workforce & 
Technology Council, I am here to testify in support of two important 
pieces of legislation. H.R. 5616 BRIDGE Production Act of 2023 
introduced by Rep. Graves that ensures regulatory roadblocks do not 
interfere with the American people's ability to access resources 
offshore and H.R. 1121, the Protecting American Energy Production Act 
introduced by Rep. Duncan, which would prohibit an administrative ban 
on hydraulic fracturing unless authorized by Congress.
    Energy Workforce & Technology Council is the national trade 
association for the energy technology and services sector, representing 
over 370 companies and employing more than 650,000 energy workers, 
manufacturers and innovators in the energy supply chain. Our workforce 
is in all 50 states, with representation in the vast majority of 
congressional districts across the country. Our membership ranges from 
large energy services companies with global operations all the way down 
to small family-owned well-servicing companies that operate locally 
within the U.S. Energy Workforce member companies provide the United 
States and the world with energy in the most environmentally safe, 
efficient, and responsible way possible, and our sector is leading the 
development of technology that will ensure our country maintains energy 
security that will power our economy and protect our way of life for 
generations to come.
    The Russian invasion of Ukraine and the resulting disruption of the 
world energy supply has made it abundantly clear to the world the 
importance of energy security. Maintaining energy security requires 
long-term investments and commitments to developing reliable energy 
sources like oil and gas. Not only is this commitment important to 
maintaining access to energy, but developing hydrocarbons in countries 
with high environmental standards, like the U.S., allows us to reduce 
global emissions without sacrificing reliability. Germany, for 
instance, made a political decision to rely on Russian gas to power 
much of their economy. With that source now gone, the country has been 
forced to return about one-fifth of its energy supply to coal-fired 
power generation.\1\ Returning to coal has drastically increased the 
cost of power across the country--significantly damaging their 
industrialized economy while simultaneously causing emissions to 
increase.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ (Roach, 2023)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    In contrast, the United States is blessed with tremendous sources 
of domestic energy that, if utilized, can protect us from suffering a 
similar energy-reliance disaster as experienced in Europe. In addition 
to renewable energy sources, the United States boasts multiple basins 
with significant oil and natural gas reserves. As long as we continue 
to allow Americans to access these resources, we will never face such a 
dilemma.

    Producing energy resources is a necessity. The truth is that the 
United States and the world will need a lot more oil and gas in the 
coming decades, even as new forms of energy come online. In fact, U.S. 
Energy Information Administration (EIA) predicts that the worldwide 
demand for all forms of energy will increase by 50% by 2050.\2\ The 
only way to meet this increase in demand without sacrificing the 
environmental progress made over the past 25 years is through a 
wholehearted commitment to developing the energy resources in the 
United States. H.R. 5616 and H.R. 1121 guarantee this access and ensure 
that the rights to domestic resource development are kept from being 
interrupted or administratively slowed down.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \2\ (U.S. Energy Information Administration, 2021)

   [GRAPHIC NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]
    

    .epsFigure 1. Global Primary Energy Consumption by Energy Source 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(U.S. Energy Information Administration, 2021)

H.R. 5616 BRIDGE ACT

    In 1953, Congress passed the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act 
(OCSLA), which states that Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM), 
within the Department of the Interior, must prepare and maintain 
forward-looking five-year plans to schedule proposed oil and gas lease 
sales on the U.S. Outer Continental Shelf.\3\ Unfortunately, under the 
current Administration, this has not occurred. In fact, the most recent 
five-year plan expired on June 30, 2022, over a year ago.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \3\ (Office of the Law Revision Counsel of the U.S. House of 
Representatives, n.d.)

    Delays in restarting the plan have ceased exploratory well 
drilling, reduced the industry spending levels, drastically decreased 
employment across the offshore energy sector, lessened gross domestic 
product (GDP) and government revenues and plummeted oil and natural gas 
production across the Gulf of Mexico. Further delays will harm the U.S. 
economy, U.S. employment and force the United States and our allies to 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
use oil and gas from less responsible and reliable sources.

Economy and Jobs

    In 2022, the Gulf of Mexico offshore oil and natural gas industry 
supported an estimated 372,000 jobs in the United States. According to 
an Energy & Industrial Advisory Partners and National Ocean Industries 
Association report, in 2022 alone, activity in the Gulf of Mexico 
contributed approximately $30.8 billion to the U.S. GDP.\4\ Looking 
ahead, the report indicates the industry is anticipated to maintain a 
consistent contribution, averaging about $31.4 billion of GDP per year 
over the forecast period from 2022 to 2040. Assuming no further delays, 
this revenue source is expected to average an annual projection of over 
$7.4 billion from 2022 to 2040.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \4\ (Energy & Industrial Advisory Partners, 2020)

    [GRAPHIC NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]
    

    .epsFigure 2. Key Findings: Consequences of a 5-year Leasing 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Program Delay (Energy & Industrial Advisory Partners, 2022)

U.S. Gulf of Mexico Energy is Cleaner Than Other Options
    According to the 2022 NOIA report, the increase in U.S. Gulf of 
Mexico production, if it were to offset foreign crude or condensate, 
would significantly reduce carbon intensity. This reduction would 
amount to a remarkable 46% decrease in the international average carbon 
intensity for the displaced oil. This is equivalent to removing 11.3 
CO2e kg/bbl from the current global average of 24.4 CO2e kg/bbl.\5\ The 
U.S. Gulf of Mexico stands out as a region with some of the lowest 
carbon barrels of oil, particularly when compared to other oil-
producing regions. A significant contributor to this is effective 
methane management. U.S. offshore operations in the Gulf of Mexico 
maintain stringent controls on methane emissions, resulting in notably 
lower emissions than those observed in other producing regions. The 
Gulf is also subject to a strong regulatory oversight framework and has 
adequate pipeline infrastructure to move product to market safely and 
efficiently.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \5\ (Energy & Industrial Advisory Partners, 2022)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    In fact, the U.S. Gulf of Mexico boasts approximately half the 
carbon intensity of other producing regions.\6\ What's more, this 
environmental performance continues to improve. From 2011 to 2017, 
according to the BOEM, carbon emissions from U.S. Gulf operations 
decreased by approximately 60%, even as oil production increased by 
over 35%.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \6\ (Energy & Industrial Advisory Partners, 2022)
    \7\ (Energy & Industrial Advisory Partners, 2022)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    So, we must ask ourselves why do we continue to delay further 
production in an area that can provide U.S. energy security, support 
the U.S. economy and workers and provide energy cleaner than anywhere 
else in the world? Fortunately, we have legislation in front of us 
today that will force the Administration to stop bureaucratic delay 
tactics and follow the intent of OCSLA to hold lease sales and allow 
Americans access to the resources they are legally entitled to access. 
H.R. 5616 BRIDGE Production Act 2023 mandates that the Secretary of 
Interior hold no less than four offshore lease sales on specified dates 
that cannot be bureaucratically delayed. This mandate should not be 
necessary, as we should already have a 5-year lease plan according to 
existing law, but unfortunately, we do not. This mandate will bring 
regulatory certainty for the energy workforce that relies on the 
offshore for their livelihood and will allow for long-term investments 
necessary to continue to develop our offshore resources.
Hydraulic Fracturing
    Hydraulic fracturing, or fracking for short, originated in the 
1940s and is currently used on 95% of new oil and gas wells today.\8\ 
There is a reason this process is utilized so widely in oil and gas 
production. When paired with directional drilling, it is the safest and 
most effective way of accessing hydrocarbons in tight shale formations 
deep beneath the earth.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \8\ (U.S. Energy Information Administration, 2016)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    This technology is responsible for the steep increase in natural 
gas production we've experienced in the U.S. over the last 25 years. A 
ban on hydraulic fracturing would put an end to the abundance of 
natural gas that has both improved the environment and aided our 
allies.
    According to the EIA, the increased use of cleaner-burning natural 
gas in power generation is the chief reason U.S. carbon dioxide 
emissions are at 25-year lows. And the abundance of natural gas in the 
U.S. has opened the door for LNG exports, which have allowed us to 
support our European allies impacted by the war in Ukraine.
    Unfortunately, the debate over hydraulic fracturing has become 
politically weaponized, with four states prohibiting fracturing within 
their borders and President Biden making several statements before 
taking office that suggested he would consider banning hydraulic 
fracturing. Fortunately, the Administration has not taken that 
catastrophic action, but continued statements from Administration 
officials against fracking make it clear they have not given up on that 
campaign promise, and our workforce remains concerned they could in the 
future.
    H.R. 1121 is a simple, straightforward bill that prohibits the 
President from declaring a moratorium or ban on the use of hydraulic 
fracturing unless such a moratorium or ban is authorized by an Act of 
Congress. The bill ensures Americans will continue to have full access 
to their resources on both public and private lands through hydraulic 
fracturing. Let us be clear about what is at stake here. With 95% of 
new onshore wells in the United States requiring hydraulic fracturing, 
a moratorium or ban would shut down new production in the United 
States. That means dramatically higher gas prices, no new investment, 
job losses and loss of United States energy security and the 
environmental gains the U.S. has made.
Conclusion

    Both H.R. 1121 and H.R. 5616 are key pieces of legislation 
supporting American energy security. By providing the American people 
with clear and consistent guarantees that they will be able to access 
their resources in a timely and consistent manner, we will keep energy 
costs affordable, keep Americans employed and support investment in our 
domestic resources. This consistency will ensure the energy security of 
not only the United States but our friends and allies abroad. America 
should never find itself in a situation where our economy, or our 
politics for that matter, are held hostage by a foreign nation. We have 
been blessed with adequate resources to avoid that fate, and these two 
pieces of legislation before us here today help protect that blessing. 
I urge your support of these two critical pieces of legislation to 
protect American energy security.
References

Energy & Industrial Advisory Partners. (2020). The Economic Impacts of 
the Gulf of Mexico Oil and Natural Gas Industry. Washington D.C.: 
National Oceanic Industries Association.

Energy & Industrial Advisory Partners. (2022). The Economic Impacts of 
a 5-Year Leasing Program Delay for the Gulf of Mexico Oil and Natural 
Gas Industry. Washington D.C.: National Ocean Industries Association.

Office of the Law Revision Counsel of the U.S. House of 
Representatives. (n.d.). Title 43. Retrieved from United States Code: 
https://uscode.house.gov/view.xhtml?path=/prelim@title43/
chapter29&edition=prelim

Roach, S. (2023, January 9). Why is Germany turning back to coal for 
energy? Channel Four Television Corporation. Retrieved from https://
www.channel4.com/news/why-is-germany-turning-back-to-coal-for-
energy#::text=Around%20one%20 
fifth%20of%20electricity,climate%2Ddamaging%20source%20of%20energy.

U.S. Energy Information Administration. (2016, March 15). Hydraulic 
fracturing accounts for about half of current U.S. crude oil 
production. Retrieved from Today In Energy: https://www.eia.gov/
todayinenergy/detail.php?id=25372

U.S. Energy Information Administration. (2020). Annual Energy Outlook 
2020 with projections to 2050. Washington D.C.: Office of Energy 
Analysis. Retrieved from https://www.eia.gov/aeo

U.S. Energy Information Administration. (2021, October 7). EIA projects 
nearly 50% increase in world energy use by 2050, led by growth in 
renewables. Retrieved from Today In Energy: https://www.eia.gov/
todayinenergy/detail.php?id=49876#

U.S. Energy Information Administration. (2021, October 2). Press Room. 
Retrieved from https://www.eia.gov/pressroom/releases/
press487.php#::text=EIA%20projects% 20increases%20in% 
20global,50%25%20between%202020%20and%202050.

U.S. Energy Information Administration. (2022, December 14). U.S. 
Energy-Related Carbon Dioxide Emissions, 2021. Retrieved from https://
www.eia.gov/environment/emissions/carbon/

                                 ______
                                 

   Questions Submitted for the Record to Mr. Tim Tarpley, President, 
                 Energy Workforce & Technology Council
             Questions Submitted by Representative Stauber
    Question 1. The BRIDGE Production Act requires the Bureau of Ocean 
Energy Management (BOEM) to utilize the 2017-2022 Record of Decision 
for the sales required in the bill, will BOEM still be required to 
conduct site-specific National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) reviews, 
including Environmental Assessments (EAs) or Environmental Impact 
Statements (EISs), to assess the unique environmental conditions and 
potential impacts of individual lease sales?

    Answer. Once a Programmatic EIS (PEIS) and ROD for a proposed 
program are completed, site-specific NEPA reviews are conducted for 
individual lease sales or other actions. This review can take the form 
of a new EIS, a Supplemental EIS, or an Environmental Assessment (EA) 
depending on the potential impacts of the specific action. The site-
specific review will consider the unique environmental conditions and 
potential impacts of the specific lease sale or action, so there could 
not be leasing without additional EA, potentially EIS, or utilization 
of CX (which doesn't exist for site specific, so no option there).

    Question 2. Can you elaborate on how the site-specific NEPA reviews 
will ensure that environmental safeguards are in place for each 
individual lease sale, even after the application of the 2017-2022 ROD?

    Answer. There are 5 major steps for the leasing process:

   1.   BOEM issues a Call for Information and Nominations [(30 Code of 
            Federal Regulations [CFR] 556.301)]--(Call) in the Federal 
            Register on an area proposed for leasing. Potential bidders 
            are invited to submit nominations or indications of 
            interest in specific OCS blocks within the Call Area. The 
            Call also solicits comments about geological conditions; 
            archaeological sites; potential multiple uses of the area 
            including navigation, recreation, and fisheries; 
            socioeconomic, biological, and other environmental 
            information; and asks the public for information on areas 
            of special concern that should be analyzed.

   2.   Area Identification (30 CFR 556.302)--Area Identification (Area 
            ID) is the second major step in BOEM's oil and gas lease 
            sale process. During Area ID, BOEM uses information and 
            comments received in response to a Call, and in 
            consultation with appropriate Federal agencies, develops a 
            recommendation to the Secretary for the area(s) to be 
            subject to further leasing consideration and environmental 
            analyses. The Area ID decision is announced in the Federal 
            Register.

   3.   Review under NEPA--BOEM performs a NEPA review for each lease 
            sale. This typically includes an EIS that considers the 
            impacts associated with oil and gas activities for a given 
            region or program area. The NEPA for subsequent lease sales 
            in the same region or program area may rely on that EIS as 
            appropriate, after BOEM confirms through a DNA or EA that 
            EIS supplementation is not required.

   4.   Government-to-Government Consultations--Under Executive Order 
            (E.O.) 13175 and the Department of the Interior Policy on 
            Consultation with Indian Tribes, BOEM is obligated to 
            engage in government-to-government consultations with 
            Tribes on any Departmental action with Tribal implications. 
            This includes federally recognized Tribes with current and 
            historic interests in coastal areas of Alaska, the Pacific, 
            the GOM, and the Atlantic. In Alaska, BOEM additionally 
            consults with Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA) 
            Corporations. These consultations are conducted on 
            additional approvals (e.g., plans and permits) as 
            appropriate throughout the life of an OCS oil and gas 
            lease.

   5.   Environmental Consultations--Consultations under various 
            environmental statutes occur, such as the Endangered 
            Species Act (ESA) of 1973 (16 U.S.C. Sec. Sec. 1531 et 
            seq.) and Section 305(b) of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery 
            Conservation and Management Act (16 U.S.C. Sec. Sec. 1801 
            et seq.). Pursuant to these environmental statutes, BOEM is 
            required to consult with agencies such as the U.S. Fish and 
            Wildlife Service (USFWS) 12 Solicitor's M Opinion 36954, 
            Whether the Department May Issue a Call for Information & 
            Nominations for Outer Continental Shelf Lease Sale 91, 93 
            I.D. 125 (1986). USDOI 2024-2029 National OCS Oil and Gas 
            Leasing Proposed Final Program BOEM OCS Oil & Gas Leasing 
            Program Development Process 1-22 September 2023 and 
            National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS). BOEM also 
            consults, as appropriate, under Section 106 of the National 
            Historic Preservation Act (54 U.S.C. Sec. 306108).

   6.   Proposed Notice of Sale (NOS) (30 CFR 556.304)--The proposed 
            NOS describes the timing, size, and location of a proposed 
            oil and gas lease sale. It also provides potential bidders 
            with information on proposed economic terms and conditions 
            and any proposed mitigation measures (i.e., lease 
            stipulations), which are typically designed to reduce 
            potential conflicts with other ocean uses and to protect 
            the environment. BOEM publishes a notice of availability of 
            the proposed NOS in the Federal Register.

   7.   Coordination with Governors of Affected States (30 CFR 556.304-
            307)--Section 19 of the OCS Lands Act (43 U.S.C. Sec. 1345) 
            requires BOEM to solicit input on the size, timing, and 
            location of lease sales from governors of affected states. 
            BOEM sends the proposed NOS to governors of affected states 
            requesting their recommendations on the proposed size, 
            timing, and location of the lease sale. The governors have 
            60 days to submit their recommendations to BOEM. Prior to 
            holding the lease sale, BOEM sends each governor written 
            reasons for USDOI's determination to accept or reject that 
            governor's recommendation.

   8.   Consistency Determination (30 CFR 556.305(b))--All Federal 
            activities affecting the coastal zone, including OCS oil 
            and gas lease sales, must be consistent to the maximum 
            extent practicable with the enforceable policies of an 
            affected state's coastal zone management (CZM) program (see 
            16 U.S.C. Sec. 1456(c)(1) and (2)). BOEM provides coastal 
            states with a consistency determination on whether the 
            proposed lease sale is consistent, to the maximum extent 
            practicable, with the enforceable policies of federally 
            approved state Coastal Management Plans. That is not done, 
            however, for Alaska lease sales since the State of Alaska 
            no longer has a federally approved Coastal Management Plan. 
            For more information on BOEM's CZM work, see https://
            link.edgepilot.com/s/75ed2c3d/r_tC9ED_9Eqts_k0zdsj-
            A?u=https://www.boem.gov/CoastalZone-Management-Act/).

   9.   Issuance of a ROD (EIS-level), Finding of No New Significant 
            Impact (FONSI; EAlevel) or DNA--Upon completion of the NEPA 
            review for each individual lease sale, a determination is 
            made as to the significance, or lack thereof, of potential 
            environmental impacts. Depending on the type of NEPA review 
            undertaken for a lease sale, the NEPA review process is 
            completed through the issuance of a ROD, a FONSI, or a DNA.

  10.   Final NOS (30 CFR 556.308(a))--BOEM will publish a final NOS at 
            least 30 days before a lease sale is held. The final NOS 
            includes information on how to submit bids; the date, time, 
            and location of the bid opening and reading; the OCS blocks 
            being offered; and terms and conditions of the lease sale, 
            including lease stipulations.

  11.   Holding the Lease Sale (30 CFR 556.516)--BOEM opens the sealed 
            bids at the place, date, and hour specified in the final 
            NOS for the sole purpose of publicly announcing and 
            recording the bids. BOEM does not accept or reject any bids 
            at that time. USDOI 2024-2029 National OCS Oil and Gas 
            Leasing Proposed Final Program BOEM OCS Oil & Gas Leasing 
            Program Development Process 1-23 September 2023

  12.   Lease Issuance (30 CFR 556.520-522)--Before a lease can be 
            issued, high bids are subject to evaluation regarding the 
            receipt of fair market value (FMV) and analysis confirming 
            that the award of any tract to the highest bidders in the 
            lease sale would not create or maintain a situation 
            inconsistent with anti-trust laws. BOEM will issue a lease 
            following completion of its FMV analysis and the anti-trust 
            review conducted by the Department of Justice in 
            consultation with the Trade Commission.

                                 ______
                                 

    Mr. Stauber. Thank you very much. Our next witness is Dr. 
Greg Upton, who is the Executive Director and Associate 
Professor of Research at LSU Center for Energy Studies in Baton 
Rouge, Louisiana.
    Dr. Upton, you are now recognized for 5 minutes.

   STATEMENT OF GREG UPTON, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR AND ASSOCIATE 
 PROFESSOR OF RESEARCH AT LSU CENTER FOR ENERGY STUDIES, BATON 
                        ROUGE, LOUISIANA

    Dr. Upton. Good afternoon, Chairman Stauber and Committee. 
Thank you for having me today.
    In my testimony, I would like to provide some perspective 
into Louisiana's road to decarbonization, how a historically 
hydrocarbon-based economy is evolving, and how Federal policies 
to restrict supply of those hydrocarbons might impact that 
strategy. But first, a few stylized facts.
    One, U.S. energy demand has been relatively flat over the 
past decade, and this trend is expected to continue. On one 
hand, economic growth increases energy demand. On the other, 
efficiency reduces energy demand. In net, in the United States, 
these two effects are approximately in balance. For example, 
U.S. gasoline and electricity demand are within 2 percent of 
levels observed 10 years ago today.
    Second, U.S. oil production has increased by 83 percent, 
natural gas production by 47 percent, and renewable energy 
production by 51 percent over the same 10 years. So, domestic 
energy demand has been relatively flat, while energy supply has 
increased.
    One might ask, where have these products gone? The answer 
lies in Stylized Fact 3: the United States is an exporter of 
hydrocarbon-based products. These products are not only fuels, 
but also include chemical products such as fertilizers and 
polymers.
    In 2022, the United States exported $341 billion in oil and 
gas, refined products, and chemicals, with 58 percent of these 
products coming from the Gulf Coast region. Excluding 
chemicals, 88 percent of oil, gas, and refined products came 
from the Gulf Coast. Facilitating and expanding exports has 
attracted billions of dollars of capital from all over the 
world. It has affected jobs in our region.
    Today, interestingly, customers around the world are asking 
companies: (1) to credibly document life cycle emissions, and 
(2) reduce those emissions. Investors, again, from all over the 
world, are increasingly considering the carbon intensity when 
deciding where to deploy this capital. So, to attract capital 
and sustain demand, hydrocarbon-based manufacturers are 
balancing two objectives.
    First, companies must remain cost competitive. If they 
invest too heavily in reducing emissions, their products could 
become too expensive for the global market.
    But second, companies also seek competitive emissions 
profiles. If the manufacturing sector ignores this call to 
decarbonize and exclusively focuses on cost, the sector might 
also find itself at a competitive disadvantage.
    How is this relevant to the two bills being discussed 
today, one bill on the continuation of offshore leasing, the 
second on hydraulic fracturing? The answer lies in the 
strategies to decarbonize.
    Over the next decade, fossil fuels will continue to play an 
important role in our energy mix. They currently make up over 
80 percent of global energy consumption, and energy consumption 
globally is expected to grow. Companies are investing in carbon 
capture utilization and storage, hydrogen and ammonia 
production, electrification of industrial processes alongside 
emissions reductions on the grid, utilizing bio-based 
feedstocks, as well as investments in the production of lower-
emission sources of fossil-based hydrocarbons. Companies are 
also paying increasing attention to leaks and fugitive 
emissions.
    Most of these pathways, and thus prior-mentioned 
investments, require the availability of fossil fuels. The U.S. 
Energy Information Administration's most recent annual energy 
outlook's base case scenario is that U.S. fossil fuel 
production continues to increase, while energy-related carbon 
dioxide emissions are reduced.
    In my opinion, policies aimed at reducing fossil fuel 
supply within the United States put this decarbonization 
strategy at risk, as investments in decarbonizing this 
industrial supply chain are likely to slow if firms anticipate 
reduced access to these feedstocks.
    While reducing domestic supply can reduce global 
consumption through the channel of increased prices for 
consumers, some of this supply decrease will be offset by oil 
and gas production elsewhere, whether domestically or 
internationally. Economic theory predicts that it is the 
interaction between emissions intensity of different supply 
sources and consumption reductions that determine the net 
impact of supply restrictive policies on emissions.
    That is a mouthful. To put more simply, the net effect of a 
supply-reducing policy on emissions is ambiguous. But economic 
theory unambiguously predicts increased prices for consumers.
    While supply-reducing policies might seem like the logical 
way to rapidly reduce emissions, in my opinion this is not an 
efficient strategy for achieving politically and economically 
sustainable emissions reductions over the coming decade.
    Thank you for your time.

    [The prepared statement of Dr. Upton follows:]
 Prepared Statement of Gregory B. Upton, Jr, Ph.D., Interim Executive 
   Director & Associate Research Professor Center for Energy Studies,
                       Louisiana State University
                       on H.R. 5616 and H.R. 1121

    Good afternoon. My name is Greg Upton. I'm the Interim Executive 
Director \1\ of the Louisiana State University Center for Energy 
Studies.\2\ Thanks for having me.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ And Associate Research Professor.
    \2\ The Louisiana State University Center for Energy Studies (CES) 
was created by the Louisiana Legislature in 1982. CES is mandated to 
provide energy information and analysis that responds to the needs of 
the legislature, public agencies, business and civic groups, as well as 
the general public.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    In my testimony today, I'd like to provide some perspective into 
Louisiana's road to decarbonization,\3\ how a historically hydrocarbon 
intensive economy is evolving, and then how federal policies to 
restrict the supply of fossil-based hydrocarbons, if pursued, might 
impact this strategy.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \3\ For more on Louisiana's specific decarbonization strategy, see 
the Louisiana Climate Action Plan. Climate initiatives Task for 
Recommendations to the Governor. February 2022.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    But first, a few stylized facts:

    One: U.S. energy demand has been relatively flat over the past 
decade, and this trend is expected to continue.\4\ On one hand, 
economic growth increases energy demand. On the other, efficiency 
reduces energy demand. In net, in the U.S. these two effects are 
approximately in balance. For example, U.S. gasoline and electricity 
demand are within two percent of levels observed ten years ago.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \4\ U.S. Energy Information Administration. Annual Energy Outlook 
2023. Table 1. Total Energy Supply, Disposition, and Price summary. 
Total consumption (in quads) in 2032 is anticipated to be within 1 
percent of 2022 total consumption (in quads).
    \5\ U.S. Energy Information Administration. Weekly U.S. Product 
Supplied of Finished Motor Gasoline Thousands Barrels Per day. 
Comparison of average weekly value in 2022 (most recent year of data) 
to 2012. 2022 value is 0.62 percent higher than 2012. U.S. Energy 
Information Administration. Form EIA-861, ``Annual Electric Power 
Industry Report.'', Form EIA-861-S, ``Annual Electric Power Industry 
Report (Short Form)'' and Form EIA-923, ``Power Plant Operations 
Report.'' Table 2.2. Sales and Direct Use of Electricity to Ultimate 
Customers by Sector, by Provider, 2011 through 2021 (Megawatt hours). 
2021 total end use (most recent year of data) is 1.6 percent higher 
than 2011 value.

    Second: But U.S. oil production has increased by 83 percent,\6\ 
natural gas production by 47 percent,\7\ and renewable energy 
production by 51 percent \8\ over the same ten years.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \6\ U.S. Energy Information Administration. U.S. Field Production 
of Crude Oil (Thousand Barrels per Day). Sourcekey: MCRFPUS2. 
Comparison of 2022 and 2002.
    \7\ U.S. Energy Information Administration. U.S. Natural Gas Gross 
Withdrawals (MMcf). Sourcekey: N9010US2. Comparison of 2022 and 2002.
    \8\ U.S. Energy Information Administration. U.S. energy facts 
explained. U.S. Primary energy production by major sources, 1950-2022. 
Renewables accounted for 8.9 quadrillion British Thermal Units in 2012 
and 13.4 quadrillion British Thermal Units in 2022, an increase of 50.6 
percent.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    So, domestic energy demand has been relatively flat, while energy 
supply has increased. One might ask, where have these products gone?
    The answer lies in Stylized Fact 3: The U.S. is an exporter of 
hydrocarbon-based products. These products are not only fuels; but also 
include chemical products, such as fertilizers and polymers. In 2022, 
the U.S. exported $341 billion \9\ in oil, gas, refined products, and 
chemicals, with 58 percent of these products coming from the Gulf Coast 
region.\10\ Excluding chemicals, 88 percent of oil, gas and refined 
products exports came from the Gulf Coast. Facilitating and expanding 
exports has attracted billions of dollars of capital from all over the 
world.\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \9\ U.S. Census Bureau. USA Tarde Online, State Export Data (Origin 
of Movement) by NAICS. Includes: NAICS 211--Oil and Gas; 324--Petroleum 
& Coal Products; 325--Chemicals.
    \10\ Gulf Coast includes Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, and 
Texas.
    \11\ LSU Center for Energy Studies. 2023 Gulf Coast Energy Outlook. 
This annual outlook identified approximately $180 billion in 
investments since 2011, with an addition $175 billion in current 
announcements in our region.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    So where does decarbonization fit into this?

    The 2016 Paris Agreement includes more than 190 countries, 
accounting for over 98 percent of global emissions. Today, customers 
around the world are asking companies to (1) credibly document life 
cycle emissions and (2) reduce emissions. Investors, again from all 
over the world, are increasingly considering the carbon intensity when 
deciding where to build capital.
    To attract capital and sustain demand, hydrocarbon-based 
manufacturers are balancing two objectives: First, companies must 
remain cost competitive. If they invest too heavily in reducing 
emissions, their products could become too expensive for the global 
market. But second, companies also seek competitive emissions profiles. 
If the manufacturing sector ignores this call to decarbonize, and 
exclusively focuses on cost, the sector might also find itself at a 
competitive disadvantage.
    How is this relevant to the two bills being discussed today, one 
bill on the continuation of offshore leasing; \12\ the other on 
hydraulic fracturing? \13\ Both bills are in response to potential 
federal policies to restrict domestic oil and gas supply.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \12\ H.R. 5616 (Rep. Graves), ``BRIDGE Production Act of 2023.''
    \13\ H.R. 1121 (Rep. Duncan), ``Protecting American Energy 
Production Act.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    The answer lies in the strategies to decarbonize. Over the next 
decade, fossil fuels will continue to play an important role in our 
energy mix.\14\ They currently make up over 80 percent of global energy 
consumption,\15\ and energy consumption globally is expected to grow.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \14\ U.S. Energy Information Administration. Annual Energy Outlook. 
Table 1. Total Energy Supply Disposition and Price Summary. In 2022, 
EIA estimates that fossil fuels, including petroleum and other liquids, 
natural gas, and coal made up 80 percent of the total quads of energy. 
By 2050, EIA estimates that fossil fuels will make up 66 percent. Over 
that time period, petroleum and other liquids consumption will reduce 
by 2 percent and natural gas consumption will reduce by 6 percent. Coal 
is anticipated to see the largest reduction in consumption; 66 percent 
reduction between 2022 and 2050. Note this footnote is referencing 
consumption, not production.
    \15\ U.S. Energy Information Administration. International. Primary 
Energy. World. Comparing coal, natural gas, and petroleum to total 
consumption. Quad btus.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Companies are investing in carbon capture, utilization and storage, 
hydrogen and ammonia production, electrification of industrial 
processes alongside emissions reductions on the grid, utilizing bio-
based feedstocks, as well as investments in the production of lower 
emissions sources of fossil-based hydrocarbons. Companies are also 
paying increasing attention to leaks and fugitive emissions.\16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \16\ For a recent review of upstream flaring and methane emissions 
see: The Economics of Natural Gas Flaring in US Shale: An Agenda for 
Research and Policy. Agerton, Gilbert & Upton. Review of Environmental 
Economics and Policy, volume 17, number 2, summer 2023.

    Most of these pathways, and thus prior-mentioned investments, 
require the availability of fossil fuels. The U.S. Energy Information 
Administration's most recent Annual Energy Outlook's base case scenario 
is that U.S. fossil fuel production continues to increase,\17\ while 
energy-related carbon dioxide emissions are reduced.\18\ In my opinion, 
policies aimed at reducing fossil fuel supply in the U.S. put this 
decarbonization strategy at risk, as investments in decarbonizing this 
industrial supply chain are likely to slow if firms anticipate reduced 
access to feedstocks. While reducing domestic supply can reduce global 
consumption, through the channel of increased prices for consumers, 
some of this supply decrease will be offset by oil and gas production 
elsewhere, whether domestically or internationally. Economic theory 
predicts that it is the interaction between emissions intensity of 
different supply sources and consumption reductions induced by 
increased prices that determine the net impact of supply restrictive 
policies on emissions.\19\ That's a mouthful. So, put more simply, the 
net effect of supply-reducing policies on emissions is ambiguous, but 
economic theory unambiguously predicts increased prices for consumers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \17\ U.S. Energy Information Administration. Annual Energy Outlook 
2023. Table 1. Total Energy Supply Disposition and Price Summary. U.S. 
oil production base case scenario grows by 11 percent between 2022 and 
2050. U.S. dry natural gas production base case scenario increases by 
15 percent over this same time period.
    \18\ U.S. Energy Information Administration. Annual Energy Outlook 
2023. AEO2023 Narrative. Figure 1.
    \19\ Considers an upward sloping supply curve and downward sloping 
demand curve on P, Q axes (with P on the vertical axis and Q on the 
horizontal axis). Basic economic theory predicts that a policy to shift 
supply ``left'' will increase the equilibrium price (P*) and decrease 
the equilibrium quantity (Q*). But the reduced quantity in equilibrium 
is less than the specific supply that is restricted from the market, as 
production will increase elsewhere in response to the price increase. 
This is what simplistic economic theory would predict. The specific 
magnitude of the effect is an empirical question and could be different 
in the short-term and long-term and different based on what specific 
supply restricting policies are considered.

    While supply restricting policies might seem like the logical way 
to rapidly reduce emissions, in my opinion this is not an efficient 
strategy for achieving politically and economically sustainable 
emissions reductions over the coming decades. Other policies such as 
prioritizing lower carbon sources of energy, reducing demand for 
emitting activities, and market-based policies might be better choices 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
if the goal is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

    Thank you for your time.

                                 ______
                                 

    Mr. Stauber. Thank you very much. Our next witness is Mr. 
Chett Chiasson, who is the Executive Director for Port 
Fourchon, based in Cut Off, Louisiana.
    Mr. Chiasson, you are now recognized for 5 minutes.

STATEMENT OF CHETT CHIASSON, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, PORT FOURCHON, 
                      FOURCHON, LOUISIANA

    Mr. Chiasson. Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman and members of 
the Committee. My name is Chett Chiasson, and I am the 
Executive Director of the Greater Lafourche Port Commission, 
otherwise known as Port Fourchon. I appreciate the opportunity 
to appear before you today.
    Mr. Chairman, I have more extensive written testimony that 
I would like to submit for the record with your approval.
    I applaud this Committee for holding this hearing today, 
and I endorse H.R. 5616 by Louisiana Congressman and my friend, 
Garret Graves.
    I also want to recognize the long-standing and continued 
efforts of my Congressman, Majority Leader Steve Scalise, on a 
host of issues but in this context for the work on H.R. 1 and 
his collaboration with Chairman Westerman and other members of 
this Committee in getting this legislation passed by the House.
    What H.R. 5616 means to me is promoting a level of 
certainty in the Federal regulatory process. Port Fourchon is a 
governmental entity, a political subdivision of the state of 
Louisiana operating autonomously. We have a board of 
commissioners consisting of nine elected board members, each 
serving 6-year terms. Thus, at all times, we serve not only as 
a vital part of our community, but are held accountable to and 
by our community for our operations.
    An integral part in providing services to our tenants and 
supporting the economy of our region and state is a necessity 
to plan for the future: developing a yearly budget, forecasting 
future expenses and revenues, developing and adjusting as 
necessary our 5-year capital improvement program.
    Everything we do is impacted by Federal and state policies, 
whether it is related to offshore energy production, 
environmental protection, or international trade, and a host of 
other matters. We actively and effectively work with our state 
and Federal representatives on policy matters impacting our 
industry. But the most difficult aspect of working within a 
framework of Federal, state, and local laws is the uncertainty 
of what will occur in the future, even the near future, with 
respect to policies.
    The issue of lease sales and development of a 5-year plan 
for Gulf of Mexico leasing is a perfect example. Offshore 
operators, who essentially are our customers' customers, must 
plan multiple years in advance for investments in the hundreds 
of millions of dollars for projects that will take multiple 
years to develop, once permitted, before they ever begin 
producing. Our tenants, in turn, must develop future plans to 
accommodate their customers' needs, which in turn requires Port 
Fourchon to anticipate our customers' future needs, nearly all 
of which requires us budgeting for future revenue and 
expenditures.
    In brief, a bold, 5-year plan with guaranteed lease sales 
is the best indicator for us as to where the Gulf of Mexico 
energy activity will head in the near future.
    Let me switch gears quickly on two other matters. The first 
is offshore renewable energy.
    The interest in offshore renewables has peaked dramatically 
in the past couple of years. There are weeks that I spend as 
much time meeting with potential tenants and other industry 
groups discussing offshore renewable energy as I do 
conventional energy. We currently have two written agreements, 
not leases yet, but two agreements with potential tenants who 
are actively planning for offshore renewable projects in the 
Gulf, not far from Port Fourchon. I like to refer to this next 
chapter in the Gulf of Mexico's future as an energy addition, 
the addition of renewable energy of America's energy portfolio.
    This subject does and will continue to be debated as to 
whether or when we transition away from the use of fossil fuels 
in this country and throughout the world. I, for one, do not 
see the discontinuation of fossil fuels in my lifetime, if at 
all. I say that more as a consumer of products and services 
than I do as someone in the energy industry. But what I do see, 
what I am actively engaged in at this very moment, is securing 
the addition of renewable energy in the Gulf of Mexico in my 
lifetime. But that also requires reliable governmental planning 
at the Federal and state level, and a coordination of planning 
for continued conventional and renewable energy.
    As happy as I was to see BOEM develop wind energy areas and 
recently conduct their first lease sale for wind in the Gulf, I 
was disappointed in the areas that BOEM selected for the sale, 
which I believe had an impact on the low number of bids 
received. That is an entirely different topic, and goes beyond 
the scope of this hearing or my testimony, but we are actively 
working with BOEM on that issue, and I remain encouraged over 
the prospect of the addition of renewable energy in the Gulf of 
Mexico's energy portfolio that it supplies to this country.
    However, the common thread to all of this is steady, 
reliable, multi-year Federal leasing policies for all available 
energy activities.
    Finally, Mr. Chairman, while my written testimony discusses 
this in more detail, I want to briefly mention the current 
Rice's whale issue. This, too, is an example of where Federal 
policy significantly impacts commercial operations in the Gulf. 
I would like to stress that the efficiency of commercial 
maritime operations, as well as safety of vessels and mariners 
operating in the Gulf, must at all times be given great 
consideration.
    This concludes my oral remarks. Again, I appreciate the 
opportunity to appear before you today, and would be pleased to 
answer any questions. Thank you.

    [The prepared statement of Mr. Chiasson follows:]
   Prepared Statement of Chett C. Chiasson, MPA, Executive Director, 
         Greater Lafourche Port Commission, Galliano, Louisiana
                       on H.R. 5616 and H.R. 1121

    Good morning Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee. My name is 
Chett Chiasson, and I am the Executive Director of the Greater 
Lafourche Port Commission, otherwise known as Port Fourchon. I 
appreciate the opportunity to appear before you today.
    While I appear today on behalf of Port Fourchon, I also serve on 
the Louisiana Governor's Advisory Commission for Coastal Activities, 
the Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority Finance 
Corporation, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management's Renewable Energy 
Task Force, the Executive Board of Restore or Retreat, a regional non-
profit coastal restoration advocacy group. I am also on the Board of 
Directors of the American Association of Port Authorities (Vice Chair), 
the Board of Directors of the Gulf Ports Association (Vice President), 
a member of the Ports Association of Louisiana, National Ocean 
Industries Association, and Business Network for Offshore Wind. I hold 
a B.A. and Masters Degree in Public Administration from Louisiana State 
University.
    Port Fourchon is located on the Gulf of Mexico near the mouth of 
Bayou Lafourche, and is the only Louisiana port directly on the Gulf of 
Mexico. Although 675 million barrels of domestically produced and 
imported crude oil per year are transported via pipelines through or 
near the Port, Port Fourchon does not itself handle any bulk oil and 
gas. Rather, we are an intermodal offshore services and supply port. 
More than 250 companies utilize Port Fourchon in servicing offshore 
energy activities in the Gulf of Mexico, carrying equipment, supplies 
and personnel to offshore locations. In terms of service, Port 
Fourchon's tenants provide services to more than 90 percent of all 
deepwater rigs in the Gulf of Mexico, and roughly 45% of all shallow 
water rigs in the Gulf. Eighty percent of all Gulf oil now comes from 
deepwater Gulf of Mexico operations. In total, Port Fourchon plays a 
key role in providing nearly 20% of the nation's oil supply--or one in 
every five barrels of oil in the country is serviced by Port Fourchon.
    Translating that to economic impact, offshore oil and gas 
activities produce 345,000 U.S. jobs, $28.6 billion in Gross Domestic 
Product impact, and more than $5 billion annually in government 
revenues. Gulf of Mexico energy activities will produce $353 million in 
Gulf of Mexico Energy Security Act (GOMESA) funding, and $1 billion in 
funding for the Land and Water Conservation Fund.
    The local impact of our Port operations to South Louisiana is 
significant. Port Fourchon is responsible for over 8000 direct jobs in 
the Houma-Thibodaux MSA. Eight out of the top ten taxpayers in 
Lafourche Parish are either a tenant of the Port or otherwise operate 
in the offshore energy sector. The economic activity from Gulf of 
Mexico energy operations supports not just jobs, but provides 
substantial funding to Lafourche Parish and neighboring Parishes, and 
other local governmental entities, providing services like after school 
programs, economic development assistance, public works projects, and 
emergency preparedness. Offshore energy serves as an economic base for 
our levee and water districts, and emergency responders. Offshore 
energy production is vital to all of these services that impact our 
daily lives, where we live, work and raise our families. Simply put, 
offshore energy is the underpinning of our economy and quality of life.
    I applaud the Committee for holding this hearing today, and I 
endorse the underlying concepts in H.R. 5616 and H.R. 1121. What these 
bills mean to me is promoting a level of certainty in the federal 
regulatory process, and with respect to H.R. 5616, provide certainty 
with the pending 2023-2028 National Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) Oil 
and Gas Leasing Program. Being a governmental entity, Port Fourchon at 
all times serves not only as a vital part of our community, but we are 
held accountable to and by our community for our operations. An 
integral part in providing services to our tenants and supporting the 
economy of our region and state is the necessity to plan for the 
future--developing a yearly budget, forecasting future expenses and 
revenues, developing and adjusting as necessary our 5 year Capital 
Improvement Program. Everything we do is impacted by federal and state 
policies, whether it's related to offshore energy production, 
environmental protection, international trade and a host of other 
matters. We actively and I believe effectively work with our state and 
federal representatives on policy matters impacting our industry--we 
try to contribute to policy decisions at these levels as much as 
possible. But the most difficult aspect of working within a framework 
of federal, state and local laws is the uncertainty of what will occur 
in the future--even the near future, with respect to these policies. We 
as a Nation cannot predict with any level of certainty the next natural 
disaster, the next pandemic, or the next international conflict. All of 
these, of course, impact all of our daily lives today. But we as a 
Nation should be able to develop governmental policies in a reliable 
and timely fashion, particularly those policies that impact investment 
by local governments and the private sector.
    The issue of lease sales and the development of the next 5-year 
plan for Gulf of Mexico leasing is a perfect example. Offshore 
operators, who essentially are the customers of our customers, must 
plan multiple years in advance for investments in the hundreds of 
millions of dollars, for projects that will take multiple years to 
develop once permitted, before they ever begin producing. Our tenants, 
in turn, must develop future plans to accommodate their customer's 
needs, which in turn requires Port Fourchon to anticipate our 
customers' future needs, nearly all of which requires us budgeting for 
future revenues and expenditures. In brief, a BOEM 5 year plan, with 
guaranteed lease sales, is the best indicator for us as to where the 
Gulf of Mexico energy activity will head in the near future.

    A recent study conducted by the American Petroleum Institute (API) 
and the National Ocean Industries Association (NOIA) forecasted the 
economic impact from a lapse of a 5-Year Program. The report states:

     With a 5-year offshore leasing program, the Gulf of Mexico 
            is projected to produce an average of 2.6 million barrels 
            of oil and natural gas from 2022-2040. A delay in the 
            program could mean nearly 500,000 barrels per day less over 
            that time period.

     In 2036, the lost Gulf of Mexico production could mean 
            885,000 fewer barrels of oil and natural gas per day--a 33% 
            decrease from where the Country would be with a 5-year 
            offshore leasing plan in place.

     370,000 American jobs are supported by Gulf of Mexico 
            offshore production. Nearly 60,000 of those could be lost 
            without a 5-year offshore leasing program.

     Direct jobs supporting the offshore oil and gas industry 
            pay on average nearly $70,000. That's 29% higher than the 
            national average salary.

     On average, $1.5 billion per year in government revenue 
            could be lost with reduced offshore production. That's 
            revenue that could be used for public education, 
            infrastructure, conservation projects, coastal restoration 
            and hurricane protection programs.

    Let me switch my testimony to other matters. The first is offshore 
renewable energy. The interest in offshore renewable energy has peaked 
dramatically in the past couple of years. There are weeks that I spend 
as much time meeting with potential tenants and other industry groups 
discussing offshore renewable energy as I do conventional energy. We 
currently have two written agreements with potential tenants who are 
actively planning for offshore renewable projects in the Gulf, not far 
from Port Fourchon. I like to refer to this next chapter in the Gulf of 
Mexico's future as ``energy addition''--the addition of renewable 
energy to America's energy portfolio.
    The Gulf of Mexico's involvement in renewable energy is not new. 
More than ten years ago, offshore service companies located at Port 
Fourchon began building vessels designed to participate in offshore 
wind turbine installation in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic coast. 
Currently, Edison Chouest Offshore has vessels under construction 
designed to participate in offshore renewable development. Indeed, it 
is the expertise that has been developed in the offshore oil and gas 
industry over the past 70 years--with technology that continues to be 
developed every year, which serves as the foundation for the growing 
offshore renewable energy industry.
    The relationship and dependency between offshore conventional 
energy and renewable energy is now even more prominent under the 
recently enacted Inflation Reduction Act (IRA.) This law requires an 
oil and gas lease sale to be held within one year of conducting an 
offshore wind lease. Lease Sale 261, just conducted yesterday 
(September 27), was the last oil and gas lease sale under the current 
5-year plan. Thus, under the IRA, without a new 5-year plan and lease 
sales conducted under that plan, offshore wind leases can only be 
issued through September 2024.
    The subject as to whether or when we transition away from the use 
of fossil fuels in this country and throughout the world continues to 
be debated. I for one do not see the discontinuation of fossil fuels 
use in my lifetime, if at all. I say that more as a consumer of 
products and services than I do as someone in the energy industry. But 
what I do see, what I am actively engaged in at this very moment, is 
securing the addition of renewable energy in the Gulf of Mexico--in my 
lifetime. But that also requires reliable governmental planning at the 
federal and state level, and a coordination of planning for continued 
conventional and renewable energy. As happy as I was to see BOEM 
develop Wind Energy Areas and recently conduct their first lease sale 
for wind in the Gulf of Mexico, I was disappointed in the areas that 
BOEM selected for the sale, which I believe had an impact on the low 
number of bids received. That's an entirely different topic and goes 
beyond the scope of this hearing or my testimony, but we are actively 
working with BOEM on that issue, and I remain encouraged over the 
prospect of the addition of renewable energy in the Gulf of Mexico's 
energy portfolio that it supplies to this country. However, the common 
thread to all of this is steady, reliable, multi-year federal leasing 
policies for all available energy activities.
    Finally I want to briefly mention the current Rice's Whale issue. 
This too is an example of where federal policy significantly impacts 
commercial operations in the Gulf of Mexico. This issue is part of 
litigation and a separate rulemaking involving a host of industry and 
NGO participants, but I would like to stress that the efficiency of 
commercial maritime operations, as well as safety of vessels and 
mariners operating in the Gulf, must at all times be given great 
consideration. Moreover, the inclusion and input of those commercial 
companies operating in the maritime domain must be actively solicited. 
Port Fourchon operates seven days a week, 24 hours a day. At Port 
Fourchon, approximately 270 vessels will utilize our Port on any given 
day. In order for the supply chain to efficiently serve offshore energy 
activities, these vessels must operate around the clock. The 
restrictions stated in the Stipulated Stay agreement puts offshore 
service activities and mariners' safety at risk, as well as efficient 
operations of commercial maritime activities. The proposed measures, 
including designating new off-limit areas for vessel activity, imposing 
speed restrictions, and limiting nighttime and low-visibility transit, 
will significantly hinder the industry's capacity to conduct offshore 
energy exploration and production in the Gulf of Mexico. Moreover, 
while on the one hand I am at a loss as to why the Notice to Lessees 
(NTL) related only to oil and gas activities, on the other hand, I 
presume if these measures were to become final, it would impact 
offshore renewable energy development as well as commercial fishing and 
tourism.
    I appreciate the opportunity to appear before you today, and I 
would be pleased to respond to any questions the Committee may have. 
Thank you.

                                 ______
                                 

    Mr. Stauber. Thank you for your testimony. I will now 
introduce our next witness, Ms. Breon Robinson, who is the 
Southwest Louisiana and Southeast Texas Organizer for Healthy 
Gulf in New Orleans, Louisiana.
    You are recognized for 5 minutes, Ms. Robinson.

  STATEMENT OF BREON ROBINSON, ORGANIZER, HEALTHY GULF, LAKE 
                       CHARLES, LOUISIANA

    Ms. Robinson. Thank you all for the opportunity to appear 
before you today to discuss offshore drilling in the Gulf of 
Mexico.
    While I am here to speak against the leasing and drilling 
that is looking to potentially be done, I look forward to also 
discussing the beauty and uniqueness of the Gulf Coast, the 
coast and its people that are on the verge of extinction due to 
oil and gas buildout.
    My name is Breon Robinson, and I live in Lake Charles, 
Louisiana, which is part of Calcasieu Parish in the southwest 
Louisiana region. I am a fourth-generation resident of the 
North Lake Charles/Goosport community, and currently I am a 
student at Louisiana State University's Manship School of 
Communications, majoring in political communication. Aside from 
that, I have been an active member in my community, working on 
a variety of issues ranging from civic engagement to 
environmental justice.
    Growing up in the heart of sportsman's paradise, I have 
grown to love this beautiful place. From the food, the unique 
scenery, to our Cajun and Creole culture, there will never be 
any other place like home. Memories from my childhood get me 
excited, where I often like to imagine the next generation of 
my bloodline who will inhabit this land. But then those dreams 
soon get pushed away to our harsh reality with this mass 
incline of oil and gas buildout that is plaguing my state. From 
there it makes me think, will there even be a Louisiana in 50 
years?
    When I was approached with this opportunity, I sought after 
it with the goal of bringing what Louisiana means to me to this 
Committee. Coming with me is good, but also the bad; the 
devastation, but also the resilience, living in a community 
that is surrounded by huge oil and gas, yet 3 years after 
Hurricanes Laura, Delta, Winter Storm Uri, a historic 100-year 
flood, tornadoes, and many more, we are still fighting to even 
receive the most basic necessities needed to survive.
    For decades, we have been promised by these oil and gas 
companies that allowing them into our communities would bring a 
better economy, well-paying jobs, and an overall better way of 
living. Yet decades later, our community is dealing with 
homelessness like never before, and those jobs are being thrown 
to outsiders who will come and go after their assignment is 
done.
    Before industry, our people thrived off the environment 
through seafood and lumber. We were one with Mother Earth. As I 
begin to read more into H.R. 5616, it began to frustrate me 
that a politician who was elected and paid by our tax dollars 
would be OK without having community input on this bill.
    As I have witnessed the buildout, I have also witnessed the 
devastating decline of life in community from oil and gas. 
Although this offshore leasing and drilling will not be 
directly in front of our faces, it will affect us as if it is.
    In this bill proposal they are looking to offer four large 
leases for sale in the Gulf of Mexico. And if this was to pass 
and happen, these sales will not have to go through NEPA or any 
environmental reviews.
    As I stated earlier, our community thrived in the seafood 
industry. Now, there is a new generation of fishermen who are 
looking to still thrive in this same industry, although they 
are now having to co-exist and share the waters and land with 
industries who are not looking to do that fairly. Between the 
devastation that is happening onshore and what is looking to 
occur offshore, this will be a hard hit for our coast, which, 
by the way, is one of the natural protections from hurricanes, 
hurricanes that have now intensified in the last 20 years, 
thanks to climate change.
    I believe Louisiana and the Gulf Coast have the potential 
to be great away from oil and gas. We brag about being top of 
the list for things like partying, drinking, and sports, yet we 
forget we are still very far behind as far as education, 
housing, and health care. Millions of generations of 
Louisianans are dying off due to pollution and are migrating to 
other states, so we are not having people wanting to stay due 
to these issues.
    I love Louisiana just as much as any other person living 
here, and I will continue to fight to keep Louisiana clean and 
beautiful for the next generations to come. Thank you.

    [The prepared statement of Ms. Robinson follows:]
                  Prepared Statement of Breon Robinson

    Chair Westerman, Ranking Member Grijalva, and Members of the 
Committee, thank you for the opportunity to appear before you today to 
discuss offshore drilling in the Gulf of Mexico. While I am here to 
speak against the leasing and drilling that is looking to potentially 
be done, I look forward to also discussing the beauty and uniqueness of 
the Gulf Coast--a coast and its people, that are also on the verge of 
extinction due to oil and gas buildout.
    My name is Breon Robinson, and I live in Lake Charles, LA, which is 
part of Calcasieu Parish and the Southwest Louisiana region. I am a 
fourth-generation resident of the North Lake Charles/Goosport 
community. Currently, I am a student at Louisiana State University's 
Manship School of Communications, majoring in Political Communication. 
Aside from that, I have been an active member in my community, working 
on a variety of issues ranging from civic engagement to environmental 
justice.
    Growing up in the heart of Sportsman's Paradise, I have grown to 
love this beautiful place. From the food, the unique scenery, to our 
Cajun/Creole culture, there will never be any place like home. Memories 
from my childhood get me excited, where I often like to imagine the 
next generation of my bloodline who will inhabit this land. But then, 
those dreams soon get pushed away to our harsh reality with this mass 
incline of oil and gas buildout that is plaguing my state. From there 
it makes me think, will there even be a Louisiana in the next 50 years?
    When I was approached with this opportunity, I sought after it with 
the goal of bringing what Louisiana means to me to this House 
Committee. Coming with me is good, but also the bad. The devastation, 
but also the resilience. Living in a community that is surrounded by 
huge oil and gas buildout, yet 3 years after Hurricanes Laura and 
Delta, Winter Storm Uri, a historic 100-year flood, tornadoes and more, 
we are still fighting to receive the most basic necessities needed to 
survive. For decades, we have been promised by these oil and gas 
companies that allowing them into our communities would bring a 
``better'' economy, ``well-paying jobs'' and just an overall better way 
of living. Yet, decades later, our community is dealing with 
homelessness like never before, and those jobs are being thrown to 
outsiders who will come and go after their assignment is done. Before 
industry, our community thrived off the environment through seafood and 
lumber. We were one with Mother Earth.
    As I began to read more into the Bridge Protection Act of 2023, it 
began to frustrate me that a politician who is elected and paid by us, 
would be ok without having community input on this bill. As I have 
witnessed the buildout, I have also witnessed the devastating decline 
of life and community from oil and gas. Although this offshore leasing 
and drilling will not be directly in our faces, it will affect us as if 
it is. In this bill proposal, they are looking to offer four large 
leases for sale in the Gulf of Mexico, and if this was to pass and 
happen, these sales would not have to go through NEPA or any 
environmental reviews.
    As I stated earlier, our community thrived in the seafood industry. 
Now, there is a new generation of fishermen who are still looking to 
thrive in the seafood industry, although they are now having to co-
exist and share the water and land with industries who are not looking 
to do that fairly.
    Between the devastation that is happening onshore and what is 
looking to occur offshore, this will be a hard hit for our coast, which 
by the way is one of our natural protections from hurricanes--
hurricanes that have now intensified in the last 20 years thanks to 
climate change.
    I believe Louisiana and the Gulf Coast have the potential to be 
great away from oil and gas. We brag about being top of the list for 
partying, drinking and sports, yet we forget we are still dragging at 
the bottom of education, housing and healthcare. If we continue to put 
profit over people, New Orleans might become Atlantis by 2050. Or we 
will continue to see a mass decline of generations of Louisianans dying 
off due to air pollution and/or migrating off to other states. I love 
Louisiana just as much as any other person living here and I will 
continue to fight to keep Louisiana clean and beautiful for the next 
generations to come.

                                 ______
                                 

    Mr. Stauber. Thank you very much for your testimony. I want 
to thank all the witnesses for being here today and their 
testimony.
    The Chair will now recognize Members for 5 minutes of 
questions, and I will now recognize myself for 5 minutes.
    Mr. Tarpley, Ms. Robinson suggested that the oil and gas 
sector has not significantly improved the economy or the 
quality of life in the Gulf region, with jobs often going to 
non-local workers who leave upon completion of their 
assignments. Could you provide an overview of the current 
workforce landscape in Louisiana and the broader Gulf region?
    And are the jobs in the oil and gas sector comparatively 
well-paying?
    Mr. Tarpley. Thank you for that question. Going through the 
current employment in the Gulf for the Gulf states, I think, is 
important.
    Right now, Texas is 154,000, Louisiana is 104,000, Alabama 
is 29,000, and Mississippi is 22,000. And then the rest of the 
United States all added up together is 57,000. These are very 
well-paid jobs. Depending on skill level, it could be anywhere 
between a $50,000-a-year job up to $150,000 a year. The entry 
level jobs, many of them, don't require a college education. 
These jobs open up the middle class to many folks in Texas and 
Louisiana and these other states. Also, industry-wide, 28 
percent of those jobs are filled by minorities and, in fact, 18 
percent are filled by Hispanics.
    So, I would disagree with the perception that this has not 
helped these economies. I think this is a huge part of the 
economies of these states.
    Mr. Stauber. Mr. Chiasson, how does the oil and gas 
industry in the Gulf of Mexico leverage lease sales to 
strengthen the local economy and enhance the quality of life?
    Mr. Chiasson. Thank you for that question. Everything that 
happens in terms of, even prior to leasing, from seismic work 
and into leasing and then exploration and production and all of 
those things have an impact on what I do every day in my port. 
And it has a direct impact on the economy of my community.
    And what we need to understand is that all of that energy 
that is provided to this country is beneficial to the country. 
But at the same time, the state of Louisiana has a 
constitutional amendment that every dollar that comes back to 
the state from GOMESA is spent on protection and restoration of 
our communities in terms of levees, and marsh restoration, and 
the like.
    Mr. Stauber. Do you have a comparison between the average 
paycheck at Port Fourchon and elsewhere in the state?
    Mr. Chiasson. The average household income of the state of 
Louisiana is about $58,000. And the average in our area and 
offshore workers is about $70,000.
    Mr. Stauber. Could you elaborate on how Port Fourchon 
navigates its operational demands while ensuring the well-being 
of the surrounding communities?
    Mr. Chiasson. Yes. Our whole mindset in Port Fourchon is 
about holistic resiliency. Everything we do when it comes to 
providing the services for the oil and gas industry, at the 
same time we are looking at how resilient can we be in our 
communities, what kind of infrastructure do we need to build 
for that resiliency, and every speck of sand that we dredge, 
material we dredge in Port Fourchon for our slip development or 
our channels, we utilize beneficially either to create marsh in 
the surrounding area for protection, as well as for industrial 
development.
    [Chart.]
    Mr. Stauber. The chart behind me illustrates the timeline 
for oil and gas development in the deepwater Gulf of Mexico, 
along with the associated costs for oil and gas operator. As 
you can see, between the time an operator begins pre-leasing 
evaluation, obtains a lease, and performs exploration activity 
it can take a decade or more before first production. Over this 
decade, upwards of $1 billion can be spent. Is that accurate?
    Mr. Chiasson. Absolutely.
    Mr. Stauber. So, I would just ask that the impact, the 
incredible impact these investments have in your community, can 
you expand on the long-term effects the Biden administration's 
failure to carry out leasing will have for years to come?
    Mr. Chiasson. I think it is interesting that you ask about 
long-term effects because I think we are seeing effects 
immediately, right now, based on the lack of leasing and not 
the delivery of a 5-year plan that we can see today. It has an 
impact on all the products, goods, and services. Higher prices 
for everything.
    So, what we are seeing today, if we don't continue to have 
a 5-year plan and have leases, this current rate of products, 
goods, and services will continue for the long term.
    Mr. Stauber. Thank you, and I ask unanimous consent that 
this chart is entered into the record.

    [The information follows:]
    [GRAPHIC NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]
                                                                    

    Mr. Stauber. Dr. Upton, in your opening statement and 
written testimony you discussed the dynamics of supply-reducing 
policies and subsequent economic impacts. Can you quickly 
expand on the direct correlation between diminishing domestic 
supply of oil and gas and the inevitable escalation of consumer 
costs?
    Dr. Upton. Yes, sir. So, economic theory is pretty clear on 
this, is that, you know, there are different policies that 
might be aimed at impacting prices for consumers of energy. And 
one of those policies would be a supply-reducing policy.
    An example of that would be discontinuing offshore leasing, 
would be banning some kind of technology like hydraulic 
fracturing. And what that is going to do is it is going to 
reduce the supply that goes to the market. And in response to 
that, what you will get is you will get less product to the 
market and you will get a higher price for consumers.
    So, the economic theory definitely suggests that these 
supply-reducing policies increases prices for consumers.
    Mr. Stauber. Thank you. My time is up, and the next person 
to question is Representative Levin from California.
    You are up for 5 minutes.
    Mr. Levin. Well, thank you very much, Chairman Stauber.
    I have long advocated for protecting the Pacific Coast from 
offshore drilling. I am fortunate to represent one of the most 
beautiful congressional districts in the United States. We have 
incredible resources, but none is more important than 50 miles 
of coastline. Fishing, tourism, and recreation in my district 
and, frankly, all along California's coastline, support jobs 
and economic activity.
    And we have seen the risks posed by offshore drilling 
firsthand. More than 4 million gallons of oil have been 
released in the Pacific Ocean as a result of the massive 1969 
Santa Barbara spill, and also the Refugio Beach spill of 2015, 
the Huntington Beach spill of 2021, and other leaks from oil 
rig and pipeline activity affecting more than 935 square miles 
of ocean. And I am grateful that the current Administration 
indicated they would not include any new leasing off the 
California coast in the next 5-year plan.
    But just because California isn't in this 5-year plan 
doesn't mean a future administration couldn't include it in the 
future. So, to ensure that permanent protection for my 
constituents, I introduced something called the Southern 
California Coast and Ocean Protection Act, which would prevent 
the Department of the Interior from ever issuing oil and gas 
leases off our coast. This is a type of legislation I think we 
should be considering today.
    We should be looking at protecting our coasts, not pushing 
policies that have the potential to do further damage.
    With that, I will turn to my questions. Ms. Robinson, I 
will begin with you.
    My advocacy for protecting our coasts from new offshore 
drilling stems from two simple truths: first, the climate 
crisis is a national and global imperative; and second, every 
community deserves access to a healthy and clean environment. 
It seems like some of my friends across the aisle seem to 
ignore the climate crisis and the many negative environmental 
impacts that offshore oil drilling has on our communities. Can 
you share for me how you have seen communities suffer from both 
indirect and direct consequences of offshore drilling?
    Ms. Robinson. I live maybe 10 minutes from Westlake. And in 
Westlake is a Black, free people of color-founded community 
called Mossville. Mossville had probably over 1,000 people that 
were living there until 30, 40 years ago, when industry decided 
to take that land from those people and build up their oil and 
gas industries there. So, I will definitely say that is one big 
issue and one big thing I have been able to witness in my 25 
years of life.
    I will definitely say, too, living through, I guess you 
would say, five or six natural disasters in the last 3 years, 
that is definitely another thing that is something I have 
witnessed that has happened due to this buildout, due to what 
has happened with climate change.
    Mr. Levin. I will tell you that in no way is this partisan 
in my district. I have scores of community meetings, and we 
have done over 100 town halls. In many of them I ask, ``Is 
there anybody here that actually wants to see drilling off the 
coast of Southern California?'' And I think one time one hand 
went up, and it was somebody who worked for one of the oil 
companies. So, it is not just one party or another.
    Mr. Tarpley, let me ask you a question. If the BRIDGE 
Production Act from my good friend, Mr. Graves, were to become 
law, it seems to me it would short circuit NEPA and lock us 
into decades of oil and gas production that I don't think we 
need.
    And I also want to clear something up that I think is 
important. I have sometimes heard that new oil and gas leases 
will impact today's gas prices, and, in fact, you implied that. 
And there is data that simply contradicts that. The non-
partisan Taxpayers for Common Sense, for example, came out with 
a report recently that said gas prices depend on many factors, 
predominantly the global price of oil and consumer demand, not 
Federal leasing policies, specifically not Federal leasing 
policies.
    I would posit that clean energy is cheap energy, and until 
we transition to a clean energy economy, we are going to be at 
the whims of this global oil market.
    That said, I am concerned about this bill's potential 
elimination of the Secretary's discretion to ensure a fair 
market value for American taxpayers. So, Mr. Tarpley, I am just 
curious, do you believe Americans should receive a fair market 
value for any offshore oil and gas leasing?
    Mr. Tarpley. Well, to the first part of your question----
    Mr. Levin. It is a yes or no. It is a simple question.
    Mr. Tarpley. Yes.
    Mr. Levin. Yes, they should. So, we agree. Ensuring fair 
market value seems like the bare minimum that we ought to have 
for taxpayers. This bill waives that requirement. It takes away 
all Secretarial discretion, and it is imposing oil and gas 
leasing with blunt force.
    It also mandates outdated, arbitrarily low royalty rates, 
no fees on potent methane pollution, and that just doesn't make 
sense. I don't think it makes sense for taxpayers, I don't 
think it makes sense for the climate.
    And I will yield back.
    Mr. Stauber. Thank you very much.
    The next Representative, Mike Collins from Georgia, you are 
up for 5 minutes.
    Mr. Collins. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Mr. Tarpley, I am a little bit of a slow writer, so I 
wanted to catch up on some of your opening statement. You said 
demand will increase. Could you go back over that, and how much 
it will increase?
    Mr. Tarpley. Sure, I am happy to do that. The Energy 
Information Administration predicts that the worldwide demand 
for all forms of energy will increase by 50 percent by 2050. 
And included in my written testimony is that graph, and it 
shows all forms of energy demand is increasing, including oil 
and gas, and including renewables.
    Mr. Collins. All right. I appreciate that. You also said 
natural gas is at a 25-year low. Is that what you were 
reporting?
    That is OK. I may have wrote that down wrong. I just like 
to take a few notes.
    But what I wanted to get at was you also talked about the 
BRIDGE Production Act and how it will ensure regulatory 
roadblocks don't interfere with the access to the oil and gas 
reserves in the Gulf. And I am a small businessman, as well, 
and I am very familiar, being in the trucking industry, of how 
excessive government regulations can stifle the economic 
growth.
    So, my question is, what are some of the regulatory 
roadblocks now that you are facing?
    Mr. Tarpley. Well, I think in regards to the BRIDGE Act, 
the biggest concern is uncertainty. It is very hard to bring 
investment into the offshore industry. As the graph up there 
showed, it is a 10-year buildout for a lot of these projects. 
And when you have continued bureaucratic delays, and schedules 
get pushed back, lease sales get canceled, it is very difficult 
for companies to find the capital to invest in these kind of 
projects. They are very capital intensive, and when there is 
this much regulatory uncertainty, that makes it even more 
difficult.
    It also makes it very difficult on the workforce, because 
the workforce has to look at their prospects for employment. 
And when there isn't even a 5-year lease plan enacted, they 
have to ask themselves, OK, is this a long-term career path for 
me? So, it discourages people from joining the industry.
    So, it really hits the industry in those two ways, both in 
the workforce and in investment.
    Mr. Collins. Right. Mr. Chiasson, I know you had talked 
extensively about that in your opening remarks. I didn't know 
if you wanted to add on to that a little bit.
    Mr. Chiasson. Yes, sir. Thank you. I think, just to add to 
what he said, we are competing on a global scale for investment 
in our country. And when we have a regulatory framework that is 
uncertain, then it is hard for a multi-national corporation to 
make decisions to invest in the United States when it comes to 
producing energy.
    Mr. Collins. All right. Thank you.
    Mr. Chairman, I yield back. That is all I had.
    Mr. Stauber. Thank you very much.
    Representative Dingell from Michigan, you are up for 5 
minutes.
    Mrs. Dingell. Thanks, Mr. Chairman.
    Many of you know that my husband was the person that wrote 
the original NEPA Act, and it was really important to him. And 
I also know that it is 50 years later, and we need to update 
it. It continues to be one of our nation's strongest tools in 
ensuring communities across the country have meaningful input 
on major Federal actions. But NEPA's basic policy is to ensure 
that all branches of government give proper consideration to 
the impacts a project will have on the environment before 
Federal action is taken.
    And as we look at the worsening climate crisis, we have to 
make sure that the voices of the most impacted communities are 
heard. And I do have some concerns about some of the bills we 
are considering today that weaken our nation's long-standing 
environmental laws like NEPA. And how do you protect the 
communities, but make sure that we are doing what we need to 
do? And I have continuously said to my colleagues I want to 
work with them.
    But unfortunately, H.R. 5616 entirely waives NEPA for four 
offshore oil and gas lease sales, and does not allow for any 
community input. NEPA is the strongest tool our communities 
have in protecting themselves and their environment.
    And on top of this, the bill also bars the right to 
judicial relief if the Federal Government gets it wrong. And it 
is vital that affected communities have access to the courts 
for legal violations. So, barring judicial review completely 
erodes the right for industries' benefits.
    I want to work with my colleagues. I know we need to, but 
we have to ensure that it is done in a way that protects our 
climate, our environment, and our nation's frontline 
communities.
    So, Ms. Robinson, why is the ability for your community to 
provide input and the right to judicial review so vital to your 
community?
    Ms. Robinson. It is vital because it opens the eyes to you 
guys, those who are representing us here, to see is it right 
for these people to continue to go through this, or isn't.
    Mrs. Dingell. Thank you.
    Dr. Upton, do you think development should consider and 
balance environmental impacts and comply with environmental 
laws like the Endangered Species Act?
    Dr. Upton. Yes, ma'am. I think, with all governmental 
policies, there is a balance of costs and benefits. And one of 
those would be oil and gas production. And, absolutely, 
balancing costs and benefits would be a wise thing to do as a 
policy-maker.
    Mrs. Dingell. Unfortunately, I don't see balance in this 
bill.
    And Ms. Robinson, before I end, is there anything else you 
want to add?
    Ms. Robinson. One thing I would love to add is for those 
who are for this bill, I want you guys to come to Lake Charles, 
come to Mossville, come to Saint James and Saint John Parishes, 
come to southern Louisiana, and see what is going on.
    And then, from there, maybe it will make you think, OK, 
let's not. Or maybe it will make you think let's try to rewrite 
this to where it does give community input as a vital source, 
and it does allow those community members who feel like maybe 
this is not what is supposed to be happening, give them that 
legal aid to be able to push forward, to press legal things 
against you guys.
    Mrs. Dingell. Thank you for those words.
    I really do want to work with my colleagues because we have 
to have some change. But I don't think corporations should just 
be able to do what they want. I think it needs to be a balanced 
system.
    With that, I yield back.
    Mr. Stauber. Thank you very much. Next up, Representative 
Fulcher.
    Mr. Fulcher. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thank you to 
Congressmen Duncan and Graves for bringing forward the 
legislation.
    I want to just make a brief statement, then I have a 
question for Mr. Upton here. My home state of Idaho, where once 
again the fuel prices have taken an uptick, and when I am out 
and about doing interaction with my constituents, that is right 
at the top of the list, it seems like, every time. Our average 
price, I think, in Idaho as of Monday was $3.91. And our 
friends in California are probably able to drive all the way to 
Idaho and gas up and go back and still be ahead, though, given 
the prices they face. But still, for us, that is high.
    And the national average as of Monday was $3.88, and that 
is a 25 percent increase from the start of the year. And that 
just ripples through everything. Everything is impacted by 
that. And I think that the nationwide average, if you go back 
to January 2021, $2.39, that is up 65 percent. It just impacts 
everybody's budget. So, we are struggling with that, and we are 
not unique struggling with that.
    Dr. Upton, I did get a chance to go through your opening 
statement. But just from your perspective, when you look at 
that landscape, not just in Idaho but across the country, and 
then you consider the potential of offshore sales and the 
leasing scenario there, from your perspective how might 
offshore sales impact the availability of crude oil and 
contribute to the stability of prices over the long haul?
    Dr. Upton. Yes, thanks for the question. There are several 
policies that you could consider that would really impact 
prices for consumers and, in particular, to bring down prices 
for your consumers.
    The first would be expanding energy production in the 
United States. So, of course, one way to do that is through oil 
and gas, but other ways is through renewable energy. So, 
shifting the supply out, if you will, expanding energy access, 
that is going to put downward pressure on prices.
    The other policy tool that you have, and it is less germane 
to the discussion today, would be policies to reduce demand for 
energy. Think of efficiency improvements and those kind of 
things. And, again, that is going to reduce the demand, which 
will put downward pressure on prices. I am not advocating that 
any individual policy would be welfare improving, but these are 
the concepts.
    And then the third policy is really consistency. Within 
economics there is a common theme that people don't like 
uncertainty. We don't like uncertainty in our personal lives, 
companies don't like uncertainty, and uncertainty is 
particularly important when you are making large, upfront 
investments that are going to pay off over a long-time period.
    And most of that uncertainty, candidly, is policymakers. 
You are not going to be able to control what the cost of 
products are, you are not going to be able to control the 
probability that a project is successful, or the price when 
that product comes to market. But the one thing that you can 
control is regulatory and policy uncertainty.
    So, to the extent that you can make regulation and policy 
certain moving forward, that doesn't mean to get rid of all 
environmental protections or not have a process, but to have 
consistency and certainty in that process that will also 
benefit your consumers in the long run in terms of both the 
volatility of prices as well as the level of prices that they 
see.
    Mr. Fulcher. OK. So, of those three options that you put 
forth, Congressman Graves' bill would at least be under the 
category of the very first option you said, which was the 
expanding and I would argue just reclaiming or holding stable 
the supply within offshore sales leases.
    To that end, I want to go back to that particular issue. 
Under that expanding category of offshore sales, how could that 
enhance our energy resilience?
    Can that enhance our energy resilience and help states like 
mine in Idaho to maintain a consistent pricing schedule?
    Dr. Upton. Yes, absolutely. So, you think about the Russian 
invasion of Ukraine, and the response to that that we had, and 
it is kind of incredible to see after that price run-up how 
quickly markets came back into balance. And the reason markets 
were able to come back in balance and bring those prices down 
so quickly is because of economic actors' ability to respond to 
that price.
    So, the more options that we have within the economy in 
order to produce energy, that is going to give more 
flexibility, and it is going to, in the long run, impact our 
energy security, impact the prices we pay as consumers. So, it 
is absolutely tied together.
    Mr. Fulcher. Thank you for that.
    Mr. Chairman, I have run out of time. I just want to close 
by stating, in our state the economy has been relatively 
strong, and that is a good thing. There is economic growth. We 
have actually seen an uptick in the demand for crude, but the 
efficiency has also increased, as well.
    But I appreciate your comments.
    Mr. Chairman, thank you.
    I yield back.
    Mr. Stauber. Representative Kamlager-Dove, you are up for 5 
minutes.
    Ms. Kamlager-Dove. Thank you, Mr. Chair. And for the 
record, as Ranking Member of this Subcommittee, I have to 
oppose these two bills. I forgot to say that before.
    I would also ask unanimous consent to enter into the record 
two articles: a September 25, 2023 New York Times article, 
``Monster Fracks are Getting Far Bigger and Far Thirstier''; 
and the March 10, 2023 Texas Tribune article, ``Landowners fear 
injection of fracking waste threatens West Texas aquifers.''

    Mr. Stauber. Without objection.

    [The information follows:]

`Monster Fracks' Are Getting Far Bigger. And Far Thirstier.

Giant new oil and gas wells that require astonishing volumes of water 
to fracture bedrock are threatening America's fragile aquifers.

New York Times, September 25, 2023, Produced by Claire O'Neill, Matt 
McCann and Umi Syam

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2023/09/25/climate/fracking-oil-
gas-wells-water.html

                                 *****

Along a parched stretch of La Salle County, Texas, workers last year 
dug some 700 feet deep into the ground, seeking freshwater. Millions of 
gallons of it.

The water wouldn't supply homes or irrigate farms. It was being used by 
the petroleum giant BP to frack for fossil fuels. The water would be 
mixed with sand and toxic chemicals and pumped right back underground--
forcing oil and gas from the bedrock.

It was a reminder that to strike oil in America, you need water. Plenty 
of it.

Today, the insatiable search for oil and gas has become the latest 
threat to the country's endangered aquifers, a critical national 
resource that is already being drained at alarming rates by industrial 
farming and cities in search of drinking water.

The amount of water consumed by the oil industry, revealed in a New 
York Times investigation, has soared to record levels. Fracking wells 
have increased their water usage sevenfold since 2011 as operators have 
adopted new techniques to first drill downward and then horizontally 
for thousands of feet. The process extracts more fossil fuels but 
requires enormous amounts of water.

Together, oil and gas operators reported using about 1.5 trillion 
gallons of water since 2011, much of it from aquifers, the Times found. 
Fracking a single oil or gas well can now use as much as 40 million 
gallons of water or more.

These mega fracking projects, called ``monster fracks'' by researchers, 
have become the industry norm. They barely existed a decade ago. Now 
they account for almost two out of every three fracking wells in Texas, 
the Times analysis found.

``They're the newcomers, a new sector that burst onto the scene and is 
heavily reliant on the aquifers,'' said Peter Knappett, an associate 
professor in hydrogeology at Texas A&M University, referring to 
fracking companies. ``And they could be pumping for several decades 
from aquifers that are already over-exploited and already experiencing 
long-term declines.''

Fracking, which is shorthand for hydraulic fracturing, has transformed 
the global energy landscape, turning America into the world's largest 
oil and gas producer, surpassing Saudi Arabia. Supporters say it has 
strengthened America's national security and created valuable jobs.

But fracking has long been controversial. The process of cracking the 
bedrock by injecting chemical-laced water into the ground can lead to 
spills and leaks and can affect the local geology, sometimes 
contributing to earthquakes. Critics of fracking say it is an irony 
that so much water is being diverted to produce fossil fuels, given 
that the burning of fossil fuels is causing climate change, further 
straining freshwater resources.

The Times documented the surging water usage by examining an industry 
database in which energy companies report the chemicals they pump into 
the ground while fracking. But the database also includes details on 
their water usage, revealing the dramatic growth.

The problem is particularly acute in Texas, where the state's 
groundwater supply is expected to drop one-third by 2070. As the planet 
warms, scientists have predicted that Texas will face higher 
temperatures and more frequent and intense droughts, along with a 
decline in groundwater recharge. Some experts have warned that water 
issues could even constrain oil and gas production.

In the western portion of the Eagle Ford, one of the state's major oil-
producing regions, aquifer levels have fallen by up to 58 feet a year, 
a 2020 study by researchers at the University of Texas at Austin found, 
and fracking's water demands could result in further regional declines 
of up to 26 feet.

Since 2011, BP has dug at least 137 groundwater wells in Texas for its 
oil and gas operations and reported using 9.1 billion gallons of water 
nationally during the past decade. EOG, one of the country's largest 
frackers, consumed more than 73 billion gallons of water for fracking 
at the same time. Apache Corporation, Southwestern Energy, Chevron, 
Ovintiv and other major operators also have intensified water usage, 
the Times analysis found.

Oil companies require no permits to drill their own groundwater wells 
and there is no consistent requirement that groundwater used for 
fracking be reported or monitored. As drought has gripped Texas and the 
surrounding region, many communities have instituted water restrictions 
for residents even as fracking has been allowed to continue unabated.

Pockets of public resistance are emerging. In New Mexico, a coalition 
of tribes and environmental groups is suing the state, saying that 
fracking companies are using up precious water resources and that the 
state has failed to protect the interests of residents. In Colorado, 
residents are fighting a proposed fracking project they fear would not 
just use up local freshwater resources, but risk contaminating a 
reservoir their community depends on.

Holly Hopkins, an executive at the American Petroleum Institute, an 
industry group, said the industry was ``focused on meeting the growing 
demand for affordable, reliable energy while minimizing impacts on the 
environment.'' Its members, she said, were ``continuing to develop 
innovative methods to reuse and recycle'' water used for fracking.

In a statement, Apache said 80 percent of the water it used for 
fracking was either non-fresh or recycled from previous fracks. BP said 
it was ``executing several pilot projects to recycle water'' that would 
``minimize freshwater usage.''

Chevron said that water was vital to its operations and that it aimed 
to use water efficiently and responsibly, saying that it used brackish 
or recycled water for fracking. Southwestern and Ovintiv did not 
respond to requests for comment.

In La Salle County--where workers were drilling the water well last 
year that would supply BP--the local aquifers have already been 
strained by decades of pumping to feed crops and cattle. The local 
groundwater district, Wintergarden, estimates that fracking's water 
needs could surpass those of irrigation by 2030 (though the oil 
industry's notorious boom-and-bust cycles could change that).

Despite the new demand, Wintergarden has little say over the use of 
water for fracking.

According to its rules, when ``moderate'' or ``severe'' droughts occur, 
people should stop washing their cars and restaurants should refrain 
from serving glasses of water unless a customer asks. But only during 
``exceptional'' droughts do the rules extend to fracking, and even then 
they merely discourage it.

Similarly in Laredo, a city on the Mexican border that recently imposed 
water restrictions, residents may water their lawns only three days a 
week, and only at night. Laredo, which in recent years has become 
fracking territory, is facing an impending water shortage: By 2040, 
it's expected to exhaust the available supply of municipal water from 
the Rio Grande allocated to the city every year. Still, even during 
severe drought, fracking is excluded from city or state restrictions.

``This is Texas. If you're using water for oil and gas, it's considered 
exempt,'' said Ronald T. Green, a hydrologist who advises Wintergarden. 
So when fracking plans collide with drought, Dr. Green said, ``you just 
have to hope that if they're a good, community-oriented company, they 
might decide not to frack that well till next year.''

It's happening, of course, because there is money to be made in oil. 
And for those with access to water, it can be easy money.

Bruce Frasier grows onions in Dimmit, one of the three counties that 
make up the Wintergarden water district. But he also sells groundwater 
to a local fracking company for 50 cents a barrel. Given the growing 
size of fracks, ``If you've got the water to sell, you're making a 
fortune,'' Mr. Frasier said.

Wintergarden. Evergreen. Big Springs.

The place names that dot Texas's parched plains hark back to a time 
more than a century ago when groundwater was plentiful.

``Back in those days, you could just dig, and the water would flow,'' 
said Bill Martin, a rancher and farmer who heads the Wintergarden 
Groundwater Conservation District, as he walked his land during a 
recent heat wave, his boots kicking up dust under a scorching sun.

But that water, sometimes called fossil water because scientists 
estimate that it pooled underground as long as 30,000 years ago, 
started to dry up as farms irrigated vast tracts of land. Farms that 
couldn't afford to drill ever deeper started to plant less or shut 
down.

Today, much of America's oil and gas comes from parched land like this. 
And now, fracking companies are the ones scrambling for water. A 2016 
Ceres report found that nearly 60 percent of the 110,000 wells fracked 
between 2011 and 2016 were in regions with high or extremely high water 
stress, including basins in Texas, Colorado, Oklahoma, and California.

This is partly because of the increasing complexity and size of fracked 
wells. For example one technique, horizontal drilling, involves wells 
that stretch thousands of feet sideways, not just downward. In the 
Permian Basin, average well length grew to more than 10,000 feet in the 
first nine months of 2022, compared with less than 4,000 feet in 2010, 
federal data shows.

It is because water is so fundamental to fracking that the longer wells 
typically require far more water.

``As the easier-to-extract areas are tapped to their full potential, 
you need to use more and more desperate measures,'' said A.J. Kondash, 
an environmental scientist at RTI International, a nonprofit research 
organization, who has studied fracking's water use.

The problem is actually two-fold. Fracking companies are pulling more 
water out of the ground, and then, after the fracking process, they 
must treat or dispose of millions of gallons of contaminated water, 
removing it from the natural water cycle.

Some companies are making strides in reusing that fracking wastewater 
to drill for more oil and gas, but it's a small percentage. In the 
sprawling Permian Basin in Texas, the largest oil field in the country, 
just 15 percent of water used for fracking is recycled water, according 
to state estimates.

The Times based its water-use analysis on data from FracFocus, a 
registry of chemicals used in fracking that is operated by two national 
associations of state agencies, the Groundwater Protection Council and 
the Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission. In 27 states, companies 
report the data to FracFocus.

That data revealed surging water use even though the numbers, which are 
self-reported by industry, are sometimes incomplete.

Dan Yates, executive director of the Groundwater Protection Council, 
pointed out that the two agencies that run FracFocus have no regulatory 
authority. The onus is on individual states, he said, to make sure 
operators disclose timely and accurate data.

Rystad Energy, an energy research company, estimated that about 6 to 9 
percent of fracked wells don't get reported to FracFocus.

Of course, water use by energy industries isn't limited to fracking. 
Water is important in oil refining and the cooling of power plants, and 
also plays a role in the mining of lithium and other minerals essential 
in the transition to cleaner energy.

Oil companies say the industry uses substantial amounts of brackish 
water not suitable for drinking, though there is little systematic 
fracking of how much. They also say that drilling fewer, longer wells 
reduces environmental disruption at ground level.

Industry groups also stress that oil and gas production uses a small 
fraction of the water required by other activities, like irrigated 
agriculture.

But researchers at Colorado State University who compared water used 
for fracking in oil- and gas-producing states between 2011 and 2020 
found that, under arid conditions, frackers could use more water than 
irrigation. In La Salle for instance, under arid conditions, fracking 
used more water than irrigation and local homes and businesses 
combined. Fracking activity, they found, responded to oil prices, and 
seemed largely unresponsive to droughts or water restrictions.

Compounding the problem, about a quarter of Texas operates under rules 
that let landowners pump as much water on their property as they like, 
regardless of consequences to neighbors.

``In Texas, if you own the surface, you own everything to the center of 
the earth,'' said Mr. Martin of the Wintergarden water district.

The letter from an oil company arrived for Mario Atencio's family in 
2013, promising riches in exchange for a lease to drill near their home 
in northwestern New Mexico.

Then, Enduring Resources, the Denver-based oil and gas company that 
ultimately acquired the lease, started to drill.

Workers dug a water well near the area where his family raises 
livestock, tapping into the groundwater that had long sustained the 
grazing land the Atencios use to raise goats and sheep. ``They came in 
and they put in water pipelines. Huge pools filled with water,'' Mr. 
Atencio said. ``We thought, `Is this our water? How much water are they 
tapping?' ''

Mr. Atencio, a leader in the local Navajo Nation Chapter, is now part 
of the coalition of tribes and environmental organizations that in May 
sued New Mexico alleging that the state had failed to protect its 
residents from the harms of fracking.

A substantial portion of their complaint focuses on the strain that oil 
and gas development places on freshwater in New Mexico, one of the 
nation's most water-stressed states.

``We're facing some of the worst years of drought in the last 1,200 
years,'' said Julia Bernal of the Pueblo Action Alliance, an Indigenous 
organization that is a party to the lawsuit. Yet energy companies were 
building water pipelines to serve fracking sites, she said. ``There are 
a lot of families that live in the region that don't have access to 
running water.''

New Mexico said it ``vigorously disagrees'' with the lawsuit's 
allegations and was proud of its work regulating oil and gas. Enduring 
Resources didn't respond to requests for comment.

Across the country, investments like these in water for oil and gas--
wells, pipelines and even water distribution companies--are extensive 
and spreading.

In Colorado, the energy exploration companies Anadarko and Noble Energy 
have invested tens of millions of dollars in freshwater pipelines and 
have created companies to sell and distribute water for fracking. In 
2020, Chevron acquired Noble Energy, together with its water business, 
in a transaction worth more than $13 billion.

When Kevin Chan moved to Colorado from California last year, to a 
neighborhood on the banks of the Aurora Reservoir, he said he was 
surprised to learn that more than 150 horizontal fracked wells were 
planned in the region around the reservoir. The wells would potentially 
require a total of 3.9 billion gallons of freshwater from a local water 
district and other sources, according to the energy company behind the 
project, Denver-based Civitas.

Concerned about the water use and risk of oil spills, he formed a 
community group, Save the Aurora Reservoir, to oppose the plan. In 
moving to Colorado, ``I was drawn to the proximity to the mountains, 
being able to go snowboarding,'' Mr. Chan said. ``I didn't expect to go 
up against a multibillion dollar industry.''

Rich Coolidge, a spokesman for Civitas, said several thousand feet of 
rock separated the Aurora reservoir from oil and gas production. He 
said the company was working with local water providers that sell 
surplus supply, but declined to give details.

Some local governments are starting to take action. In 2020, New Mexico 
halted sales of water supplies to oil and gas companies fracking on 
state land. This year, Colorado passed a bill requiring frackers to 
greatly increase their reuse of fracking wastewater. In May, Texas 
passed a bill designed to find more uses for fracking wastewater.

But cleaning up that wastewater, which contains hazardous chemicals, is 
costly and energy-intensive. Even if frackers were able to re-use their 
treated wastewater for all their production, the industry estimates it 
would still generate hundreds of millions of gallons of excess every 
day. And the diversion of fracking wastewater to other uses, whether 
for agriculture or to mist roadways in order to keep down the dust, 
remains contentious because of safety concerns.

So, in states like Texas, it remains cheaper to use groundwater.

Mr. Martin, the rancher and farmer who heads the Wintergarden water 
district, doesn't fault energy companies for that. He himself irrigates 
his cantaloupe fields using groundwater.

Still, as he contemplated a future of ever-dwindling aquifers, he 
struck a somber tone. ``If the water goes away, the whole community 
goes away,'' he said.

                                 ______
                                 
Landowners fear injection of fracking waste threatens West Texas 
aquifers

Operators pump a sea of ``produced water'' underground for disposal. 
Intensifying tremors raise fears that the deep toxic waste pits could 
intermingle with water used for farming and drinking.

Texas Tribune, March 10, 2023 by Dylan Baddour, Inside Climate News, 
and Pu Ying Huang, Texas Tribune

https://www.texastribune.org/2023/03/10/texas-permian-basin-fracking-
wastewater-pollution-oil/

                                 *****

A fracked well in West Texas can produce five times as much wastewater 
as oil. Every day, fleets of tanker trucks haul hundreds of millions of 
gallons of this toxic brine to loosely regulated disposal facilities 
that line the rural highways.

There, companies inject it deep underground into rock formations, where 
they hope it will stay forever.

The situation troubles David Shifflett, a farmer who irrigates his 
crops and draws his drinking water from the ground, which has started 
to heave and bulge in recent years. One tremor left a broad hump and a 
half-mile crevice in his land, not far from his water wells, raising 
fears among him and other landowners that underground storage spaces 
could fracture and leak their toxic contents into aquifers and wells.

``They're pumping so much pressure in there,'' said Shifflett, a 
towering, gray-haired man from a long line of farmers. ``The oil 
companies are going to ruin our water.''

The fracking boom kicked off here more than a decade ago. The steady 
crescendo of earthquakes began a few years after. At first, Shifflett 
said, they sounded like shotguns in a distant field. Then they grew: a 
magnitude 3.5 quake in 2016 and a magnitude 5.0 quake in 2020. One of 
the quakes that hit late last year, a magnitude 5.4, felt like a truck 
hit the house.

Decades of research have linked injection wells to earthquakes, but 
much less is known about how the combination can affect groundwater. 
Although injection wells are intended to hold their contents forever 
and protect aquifers from contamination, oozing wells and bubbling 
lakes of gassy brine in a nearby part of West Texas show that things 
underground don't always go according to plan.

Shifflett, 74, has nothing against oil. He votes Republican, hangs a 
cross above his door and leans an old rifle on his living room wall. 
Oil companies are doing their jobs, he said. For this situation, he 
blames the government--specifically, Texas' oil field regulator, the 
Railroad Commission, which issues permits for fracking wastewater 
injection wells.

``If they ruin the water out here, there won't be anyone left. This 
will be a desert with no inhabitants,'' he said from his dining room 
table. ``It's only a matter of time.''

Injection disposal of toxic waste is a common practice for refineries 
and chemical plants. What sets the Permian Basin apart is the volume. 
As oil production surged here in recent years higher than in any other 
U.S. oil field, the amount of wastewater rose in step.

Every barrel of Permian oil comes up with several barrels of mucky 
fluid called ``produced water''--mostly hypersalty water that has 
stewed for millions of years underground with hydrocarbons, mixed with 
the proprietary chemical cocktails injected by drillers to fracture 
shale. Millions of barrels surface every day. Some of the fluid is 
reused in fracking, but most is injected underground for disposal.

According to one 2020 study by the Bureau of Economic Geology at the 
University of Texas at Austin, the amount of produced water from the 
Permian Basin was over six times greater than that from other major 
U.S. shale plays combined. Such massive amounts of wastewater, the 
study said, ``raise questions about. whether subsurface disposal 
capacity can accommodate these volumes.''

In Reeves County, Texas Railroad Commission records show 377 injection 
well permits issued within the last five years, among more than 1,000 
dating to the 1960s. One permit from this January, for example, allows 
an operator to inject up 35,000 barrels, orl.5 million gallons, per day 
at up to 1,950 pounds per square inch of pressure.

Underground pollution

Although this landscape is dry, a veritable sea lies beneath, contained 
by hundreds of feet of sediments and caverns. The water is too salty to 
drink without treatment, but Shifflett said it gives a unique sweetness 
to the pecans and peppers he has grown alongside hay, wheat and 
sunflowers on his 2,000 acres.

He and other landowners have tried for years to convince the Texas 
Railroad Commission that the boom in wastewater injection threatens 
their aquifers. For now, there's no definitive proof that it's true.

''A link between injection wells and induced seismicity is well 
established. The link between injection wells and groundwater qualities 
is lesser known,'' said Zacariah Hildenbrand, a research professor at 
the University of Texas at El Paso who has studied groundwater in 
fracking areas of Texas. ``It's an absolutely phenomenal research 
question.''

Last month, at the Permian Basin Water in Energy Conference in Midland, 
environmental attorney Adam Friedman gave a presentation warning of 
potential liabilities if injection disposal wells contaminate 
groundwater.

``There are no examples of this that I'm aware of; it's just that the 
logical relationship of injecting these fluids is that there's the 
potential for upward migration,'' said Friedman, a partner at McElroy, 
Sullivan, Miller & Weber LLP. ``I just would have to think that it has 
to be happening.''

Even if injection isn't polluting active water wells today, he said, 
water wells in 15 years may find contaminants in deeper aquifers that 
aren't used today.

The Texas Oil and Gas Association declined to comment for this report. 
Several injection well developers did not respond to queries.

Subterranean pollution in the oil patch is hard to track. A century of 
booms and busts in West Texas have left many areas with groundwater 
pollution of undetermined origin.

For Shifflett, waiting for certain proof of groundwater contamination 
means waiting until it's too late. He hasn't had any problems yet. But 
just up State Highway 17, his neighbor Ashley Giesbrecht has noticed 
troubling signs.

Several years ago, Giesbrecht said, 50 acres of wheat and 80 acres of 
barley surrounding a certain well turned brown and died. He doesn't 
know why. The rest of his fields are producing slightly less than he 
thinks they should. He cultivates 925 acres with groundwater pumped 
through 32 wells drilled to various depths.

``They seem to have gotten a little bit saltier, but I'm not going to 
say it was the oil field. Could have been a coincidence,'' he said from 
a leather recliner in the corner of his living room. ``I can't really 
verify everything.''

Giesbrecht, 43, came to farm Reeves County from Georgia in 2009, lured 
by cheap land. Soon after, the fracking boom arrived here. Within 10 
years, it would make the Permian Basin the second-largest oil producer 
in the world. A steady torrent of people, companies and heavy machines 
roared into agricultural communities to drill wells, take the oil and 
pump the waste back underground.

Since then, Giesbrecht has made money selling his well water to oil 
companies. He's not sure if farming has a future here.

``The oil field's kind of notorious for messing up the groundwater,'' 
he said. ``My idea is to sell enough water to where I could save up and 
buy somewhere else if they do ruin the water.''

Thousands of holes

Drillers have made thousands of holes in the ground. They all run 
through the aquifers and then continue thousands of feet down to 
hydrocarbon deposits and pressurized waste pits. The holes are cased in 
cement and steel, which corrode over time. If a big earthquake hits, 
there's no telling what could break.

``You punch enough holes in it, the whole country's going to fall 
apart,'' said Greg Perrin, general manager of the Reeves County 
Groundwater Conservation District. ``I know it's not a good thing 
coming.''

He said disposal companies injected 121,000 acre-feet of water, or 39.4 
billion gallons, beneath Reeves County in 2021, the last year with 
available data. That's a column of water with a 1-acre base nearly 23 
miles tall, shoved underground. An acre-foot equals about 326,000 
gallons, or enough to cover an acre of land in 1 foot of water.

The pace hasn't slowed since then, he said.

``Every week there are five to six new applications for injection wells 
in our paper,'' said Teresa Winkles, 63, an administrative assistant at 
the groundwater district. ``You've got all this pressure under there. 
It's got to go somewhere.''

In theory, injection wells fill confined formations, and their contents 
never escape. When they reach capacity, they are plugged with cement 
and sealed off forever. Ensuring it all happens according to plan falls 
to the Texas Railroad Commission.

In an email, a spokesperson for the agency, R.J. de Silva, said that 
the commission ``takes all precautions to ensure the safety of 
residents and the environment'' and that injection wells were designed 
to keep their contents separate from freshwater.

De Silva said the commission knew of one issue in the mid-2000s when 
produced water turned up in groundwater near an injection well in 
Winkler County and that the issue was resolved.

``Injection wells are cemented and monitored with pressure gauges to 
ensure that they are isolating freshwater,'' de Silva said. ''Any wells 
that are known to be leaking must cease operations and repair the 
well.''

De Silva pointed to the commission's Rule 3.46, which requires 
applicants for injection well permits to ``demonstrate that fluids will 
be confined.''

The rule says that ``conditions exist that may increase the risk that 
fluids will not be confined''--among them, ``seismic events.'' It also 
requires that any nearby abandoned wells ``have been plugged in a 
manner that will prevent the movement of fluids from the disposal zone 
into freshwater strata.''

According to Katie Smye, a researcher who studies injection wells at 
the UT-Austin's Bureau of Economic Geology, new wells are typically 
built to satisfactory standards. It's the thousands of old wells 
drilled before wastewater injection that concern her.

``They were not drilled or cased to withstand the pressures we are now 
seeing,'' she said.

Injection increases pressure in formations used for disposal, she said. 
That pressure can affect the old wells that pass through those 
formations, creating pathways between the wastewater and the freshwater 
aquifers.

In the history of the Permian Basin, she said, some 60 billion barrels 
of produced water have been disposed of, about half since 2010. Several 
hundred billion more will still need to be dealt with as Permian oil 
production continues, she said.

``This is what causes potential concerns for injection capacity and 
breaching of that injection capacity constraint,'' Smye said.

``Oil field apocalypse''

Some 50 miles east of Reeves County, evidence abounds that things 
underground aren't working according to the state's rule. Eruptions of 
wastewater are occurring where they shouldn't be, well casings are 
falling apart and fluids once injected into oil wells are appearing in 
the groundwater.

In Crane, Ward and Pecos counties, the scrappy ruins of midcentury oil 
boomtowns contrast with the busy fracking hubs of today. A rush on 
conventional oil came and went decades ago, but the holes and the water 
that it left in the ground remain.

Back then, drillers injected produced water back into oil pockets to 
squeeze out remaining crude, then plugged and capped their wells. 
Records from the Railroad Commission show 3,784 permits for injection 
in Crane County, most of them in the 1980s and 1990s, with 719 active 
injection wells today.

Now, abandoned wells ooze crude onto the surface. Busted casings gurgle 
up brine mixed with hydrogen sulfide gas in toxic pools on the surface. 
One old well formed a sinkhole that ate a highway.

The largest, Lake Boehmer in neighboring Pecos County, started forming 
20 years ago and now covers 60 acres as salty, odorous water continues 
to gush up from underground. The Railroad Commission said Lake Boehmer 
falls beyond its jurisdiction because the original oil well permit was 
transferred to a water well permit in 1951, without producing any 
hydrocarbons after the transfer.

``This is kind of like the oil field apocalypse,'' said Schuyler Wight, 
a fourth-generation West Texas rancher whose land has at least nine 
wells leaking oil onto the surface. ``They've got everything pressured 
up so much.''

People here haven't drunk the groundwater for decades, Wright said. But 
only in the last few years have some wells started to blow sky-high. 
One of them, a Chevron well, started spraying fluid into the air on the 
Antina Cattle Co. ranch in 2021. The landowner, Ashley Watt, sued 
Chevron and three other companies in December, accusing them of 
negligence, fraud and violation of Texas' natural resource code for, 
among other things, causing groundwater pollution.

In addition to monetary damages, the lawsuit asks Chevron and the other 
defendants to clean up the site so the groundwater, surface water and 
land are ``returned to the condition prior to any pollution or 
contamination.''

Analysis of the groundwater near the well, conducted for Chevron by 
consulting firm GHD, discovered radioactive contaminants and linked 
them to ``produced water.'' Sarah Stogner, an oil and gas attorney who 
represents Watt, said the tests were requested by the Railroad 
Commission and shared with her by Chevron lawyers. Chevron did not 
respond to a request for comment.

``The contaminants found in our freshwater aquifer are a result of 
produced water,'' said Stogner, who ran for a seat on the Railroad 
Commission last year on a platform of abandoned well cleanup and 
groundwater protection but lost to an incumbent in the Republican 
primary.

In January 2022, another well in Crane County erupted in a 100-foot 
geyser, KOSA News in Midland reported, and the Railroad Commission told 
residents during a public meeting that it didn't know what caused the 
pressure.

Watt, alarmed by the surface activity, wondered what was happening 
below ground. Her land holds 250 wells, most of them decommissioned, 
plugged and capped 6 feet underground. She commissioned excavations to 
check their condition; of 56 wells unearthed late last year, at least 
50 were leaking.

Some ooze oil and water out of pea-sized holes in the visibly corroded 
casing. Others gurgle gas bubbles up through pools of dark water. 
Beside others, permanent wet spots in the ground suggest nearby leaks 
below the excavation.

``That's going into the groundwater,'' said Hawk Dunlap, an 
international oil field firefighter, as he stood over a bubbling black 
puddle in a pit he excavated.

Dunlap, a fourth-generation oil worker and sixth-generation Texan, has 
traveled the world working on oil field disasters. Unlike the tall 
plumes of chemical fires that attract much attention, the problems of 
West Texas water are all underground, out of sight and easy to ignore.

``This is the worst I've ever seen. I've been in 102 countries. I have 
never seen anything like this. And there is nothing in my mind that can 
fix it,'' he said. ``You go around the world telling everybody how 
great Texas is, then come home and see this. It's rather 
embarrassing.''

Earthquakes and springs

West Texas is vast, and people live far apart from one another. Water 
travels slowly underground, seeping through saturated sand or 
meandering through a deep labyrinth of caverns. Many distinct water-
bearing formations are layered underground. Some spots are isolated 
systems. Contamination in one place doesn't mean contamination 
everywhere.

In the far south of Reeves County, near the foothills of the Davis 
Mountains, natural springs still gush clean water that nourishes 
surrounding farms and towns. Toyahvale sits amid a cluster of five 
towns. Neta Rhyne moved here in 1979 when her husband became 
superintendent of the state park surrounding the largest of the natural 
water sources--San Solomon Springs. Now she owns a shop across the 
street and loves the critters of the quiet desert.

She said this region's largest earthquake in memory, a magnitude 5.7 in 
1995, before fracking, happened 40 miles southeast of here and turned 
San Solomon Springs murky for a week. Seismicity affects the 
subterranean caverns that feed the springs, she said, and she worries 
what earthquakes and wastewater injection could do.

That's why she's concerned about what could happen if the rapid pace of 
wastewater injection continues.

``It's billions and billions of gallons a day that they're pumping into 
the ground,'' she said. ``It will eventually find a path into our 
freshwater.''

Scientists have known for decades that this practice can cause movement 
in the earth. Geologists with the U.S. Geological Survey used an 
injection well to create earthquakes in Colorado in 1968. After the 
fracking boom reignited interest, a 2015 study in the journal Science 
said ``wastewater injection wells induce earthquakes.''

Earthquakes caused by human activity--also known as ``induced 
seismicity''--can happen when fluids injected deep underground enter 
and ``lubricate'' existing faults, causing them to slip, according to 
Kevin Urbanczyk, a hydrogeologist and professor at Sul Ross State 
University in the nearby town of Alpine.

Fault slips can change the formations that contain injected wastewater.

``The idea with those deep well injections is they're going into 
confined aquifers,'' Urbanczyk said from his desk, heaped in geological 
texts and diagrams. ``If you induce seismicity, you can change the 
confining layer.''

Earthquakes also threaten the casings on thousands of holes that run 
through the aquifers to the waste pits and hydrocarbons beneath.

``It could break that casing just like it breaks roads and concrete 
paths,'' said Jeff Bennett, a hydrogeologist who worked 15 years with 
the National Park Service in West Texas.

If well casing breaks, it can open pathways connecting freshwater 
aquifers to underground waste pits.

Protesting permits

That's why Rhyne has protested every permit application for an 
injection well in her area for the last seven years--she guesses about 
100.

The first time was 2016. She saw the application notice in her local 
paper and mailed a notice of protest. Later, a lawyer called to set a 
court date in Austin, almost 400 miles away.

It was only a pre-hearing to determine if Rhyne had legal standing as 
an ``affected person'' to bring a complaint against the disposal well 
developer, whose legal team was waiting for Rhyne in Austin.

``They had all their fancy lawyers and their briefcases,'' Rhyne 
recalled. ``I lost, of course. They got their permits.''

In 2020, Rhyne wrote in a legal brief to the Railroad Commission that 
San Solomon Springs was damaged by the 1995 earthquake 40 miles away. 
Accordingly, she wrote, an injection well proposed 20 miles from the 
springs could threaten her livelihood.

``Acceptance of this argument would necessarily deem every resident or 
business owner within at least a 40 mile radius of every proposed 
injection well as an `affected person,' '' a lawyer for the well 
developer wrote in response. ``Rhyne must be dismissed as a protestant 
in this matter.''

In May 2021, the commission dismissed the complaint.

Rhyne said the Railroad Commission has never granted her legal standing 
as an ``affected person'' to bring her complaint to a formal hearing. 
(A 2021 report by the watchdog group Commission Shift found that 
wastewater disposal companies were top contributors to railroad 
commissioners' campaigns.)

Shifflett, the Reeves County farmer, spent years asking the Railroad 
Commission to slow down this trajectory. He has his correspondence with 
the commission and filings from developers to prove it.

``This proposed well is not that far from our water zones,'' he wrote 
in one letter of protest from 2015. ``How many salt water disposals is 
enough? There are quite a few all around this location within just a 
few miles. Do we need a disposal on every corner?''

In the years that followed, dozens more disposal wells appeared in his 
area, and with them came the earthquakes. He keeps copies of the Pecos 
Enterprise that reported some of the big ones.

In 2017, a quake left a 14 inch bulge on his land and opened a crevice 
5 feet deep and a half mile long. It wrecked his irrigation system. 
Shifflett complained to the Railroad Commission that this was caused by 
injection wells. But the commission, Shifflett said, told him drought 
probably caused the deformations in his land.

``They said it was all drought,'' Shifflett recalled. ``I said I never 
seen a drought make an 18-inch-wide crack 5 feet deep into the 
ground.''

At a hearing in Austin, Shifflett presented the commission a March 2018 
study by a geophysicist with Southern Methodist University in Dallas, 
which identified surface deformations for a radius of 2 kilometers 
centered on a particular West Texas injection well.

The study, said a university blog post, ``suggests the area's unstable 
ground is associated with decades of oil activity and its effect on 
rocks below the surface of the earth.''

An attorney for the well developer NGL Water Solutions Permian asked 
the commission to reject the study as flawed and irrelevant.

``Shifflett admitted on the record at the prehearing conference that he 
is not a scientist, and that he can't explain the technical report,'' 
wrote the attorney, George C. Neal, in an October 2018 response to 
Shifflett's complaint, which the commission later dismissed.

Shifflett traveled seven times to address authorities in Austin, but 
he, like Rhyne, was never granted legal standing to bring forth a 
challenge. Eventually, he said, the commission threatened to charge him 
to continue filing complaints.

``They said if you come back again you'll need to pay like the oil 
companies do,'' he said. ``Needless to say, I didn't go back. It didn't 
do any good anyway.''

                                 ______
                                 

    Ms. Kamlager-Dove. Ms. Robinson, I heard you, and I want 
you to know that, with or without a government shutdown, I am 
coming to your town, and I am bringing folks with me because we 
want to see it with our own eyes.
    And the way I, Congressional Research Service, and the 
lawyers we have spoken to read this, all NEPA analysis is 
waived for the four new lease sales that would be required in 
this bill. That means that there would be no environmental 
analysis or public comment. It also waives the requirements for 
the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management to consider balancing 
environmental damage, size, impact, and timing. None of that 
analysis will be included here, although when we had a hearing 
yesterday it seemed like they wanted all that. So, go figure.
    Ms. Robinson, I want to thank you for your testimony. What 
does it mean to you that you have some elected officials here 
from your state who are saying that rushing to oil and gas 
drilling is more important than hearing from the community on 
the impacts of that drilling?
    Ms. Robinson. Honestly, it is not surprising. Living in 
Louisiana, being active in Louisiana, being an active voter in 
Louisiana, showing up to meetings in Louisiana, living through 
many things in Louisiana where government officials could have 
shown up and spoke up for us, I am not surprised.
    Ms. Kamlager-Dove. H.R. 5616 waives judicial review so no 
one can sue to stop a lease sale, even if it is done illegally, 
even if there are illegal impacts on public health, even if the 
drilling could harm endangered species.
    You have talked about the vibrancy of your community and of 
Louisiana. Can you discuss what the Gulf Coast region could 
look like years from now if states and the Federal Government 
work together to reduce fossil fuel pollution and achieve 
environmental and climate goals while creating good-paying 
jobs?
    Because I am certain you do not believe it is binary. You 
can have both. You can have clean air and clean water, and you 
can have good-paying jobs.
    Ms. Robinson. Yes. So, there have been talks, there has 
been research that New Orleans could be under water. It could 
become Atlantis in 2050. Everyone loves New Orleans. Everyone 
loves Mardi Gras. But just imagine in the next 30 to 50 to 100 
years, there is nothing, there is nothing left. That is what 
Louisiana could become if we continue this overall oil and gas 
buildout.
    Ms. Kamlager-Dove. As you were talking and as I was reading 
your testimony, I actually was thinking back to Hurricane 
Katrina and Black people fending for their lives, sitting on 
the top of roofs, begging for help, begging for this Federal 
Government to see them, to acknowledge them.
    And instead, what I also saw were a whole bunch of folks 
holed up in the Superdome, trapped like animals, like 
criminals, completely ignored by this government. And we have 
an obligation to rectify that, along with making sure that 
Deepwater doesn't happen again to anyone else, to workers who 
are working on those rigs, to fishermen who depend on clean 
water for their livelihood, and for communities who live 
adjacent to those communities.
    I appreciate you reminding us how important all voices are 
in our communities. Could you just give me for a few seconds--
because I do want to just say one thing in closing--about 
Cancer Alley in relationship to this?
    Ms. Robinson. Cancer Alley is in southeast Louisiana. We 
are dealing with pretty much the same things in southwest 
Louisiana where this buildout with air pollution is killing 
generations of people, young and old. Not even is it just only 
killing people, but it is giving people these underlying 
illnesses or different diseases.
    My mentor, her daughter, acquired a skin disease because of 
this pollution in sulfur. Her son had a seizure behind the 
wheel because of the pollution in Westlake. So, these things 
are affecting us in so many ways, not only in Cancer Alley, but 
also in southwest Louisiana.
    Ms. Kamlager-Dove. Thank you, Ms. Robinson.
    I just want to end, Mr. Chair, with a quote from a Texan 
farmer: ``The oil companies are going to ruin our water. If 
they ruin the water out here, there won't be anyone left.''
    With that, I yield back.
    Mr. Stauber. Thank you very much. Now we go to the Chairman 
of the Full Committee, Representative Westerman.
    Mr. Westerman. Thank you, Chairman Stauber. Thank you to 
the witnesses for being here today.
    When I walked in and was hearing some of the questioning, I 
was checking to make sure I was in the right hearing because I 
first walked in and thought we were having a hearing to do away 
with NEPA, to just take it off of the books. That is what it 
sounded like was happening. And then I just heard this being 
compared to the hearing we had yesterday, where we were talking 
about NEPA. And it is one of these situations where sometimes 
we seem to know so much about what just isn't so.
    Mr. Tarpley, is there anything in this bill that does away 
with NEPA?
    Mr. Tarpley. Well, Mr. Chairman, I think we got kind of 
lost in the discussion there. This bill wouldn't be necessary 
if we had the 5-year plan in place that the law requires. And 
if the American people had access to these resources through 
the 5-year plan, as the law requires them to, this bill 
wouldn't be necessary.
    Mr. Westerman. Has there been a NEPA analysis done on, I 
think, Sale 267? Or I may have the number wrong, but has there 
been previous analysis done?
    Mr. Tarpley. There has been previous analysis done.
    Mr. Westerman. Tell me if I am mistaken, but isn't the goal 
just to hopefully have somewhat of a level playing field?
    Mr. Upton talked about risk and certainty, which, as long 
as you can create uncertainty and risk, you incentivize people 
not to invest. And that is what a lot of the policies of this 
Administration, I wouldn't say policies, the actions of this 
Administration are, are to create uncertainty, to make the risk 
seem larger or unknown to drive investment away.
    I just went back and was re-reading Mr. Graves' bill. There 
is no waiving of NEPA. There is no short-cutting environmental 
protections.
    Mr. Huffman. Would the gentleman yield for a question that 
will correct his misunderstanding of the bill?
    Mr. Westerman. No, this is my time. You will get some time 
in a moment.
    Mr. Huffman. I just wondered if you wanted to be corrected 
with a question.
    Mr. Westerman. I am asking the witnesses questions because 
I have heard the rhetoric on your side of the dais so far.
    Ms. Robinson, do you believe NEPA is a bedrock 
environmental law? Should it be followed?
    Ms. Robinson. Of course.
    Mr. Westerman. Should we ever waive it to build stuff in 
national parks?
    Ms. Robinson. No, you shouldn't waive it at all. You should 
give those agencies that are supposed to make sure things are 
being done in a certain way, you should give them that access 
to do that, but then also you should also still give community 
input, whether you are building a community park or offshore 
drilling.
    Mr. Westerman. I agree with what you just said. Do you 
think Mr. Graves' bill waives NEPA?
    Ms. Robinson. From what I read, I do believe that. I do 
believe it is not looking to acquire NEPA in any of their 
guidance or any other agency that is trying to give 
environmental reviews before anybody leases off the Gulf.
    Mr. Westerman. If I were to tell you that the Council of 
Environmental Quality that works in the White House just 
recently waived environmental laws, waived NEPA, waived the 
Endangered Species Act so they could build structures on a 
national park, would you think I was talking about something 
that happened in reality, or would you think I was making that 
up?
    Ms. Robinson. I am thinking you are talking about that in 
reality.
    Mr. Westerman. Because it did happen just a couple of weeks 
ago, and that is not what is happening here. We are trying to 
create a level playing field and force the Administration to do 
the job that Congress has mandated that they do through the 
law. And I think it is disingenuous to talk about doing away 
with environmental laws.
    Mr. Chiasson, can you talk a little bit about the amount of 
money that gets spent and the effort that goes in to actually 
fulfill the NEPA process, and then what it is like to hit a 
roadblock because somebody in the Administration is moving the 
goalpost, or saying, ``That wasn't enough,'' or ``You forgot 
this''?
    And how does that feel when you are trying to do a job and 
you never can figure out what the deliverables are because they 
change?
    Mr. Chiasson. Yes, as a port authority, when you are trying 
to do development in a water and a marsh type of environment, 
we have to go through a NEPA process very, very extensively, 
and it costs a lot of money.
    But that is not the issue. The issue is the goalposts 
always moving. And we need to make sure that we have the laws 
written out, and what we have to follow, and what we have to 
achieve, and let us achieve those.
    Mr. Westerman. Have you ever built anything where the NEPA 
process got waived?
    Mr. Chiasson. No.
    Mr. Westerman. I yield back.
    Mr. Stauber. Thank you, Mr. Chair. We will now recognize 
Mr. Mullin for 5 minutes.
    Mr. Mullin. Thank you, Mr. Chair. I would yield to my 
colleague, Mr. Huffman, for a point of clarification.
    Mr. Huffman. I thank the gentleman very much. Folks, I hate 
to say this, but we just heard some first order gaslighting 
about what this bill says and does. I guess it assumes nobody 
is going to read the bill.
    But at page 3, from lines 11 through 19, it is right there 
in black-letter text that these new mandatory lease sales that 
would have to happen under this bill shall be deemed compliant 
with NEPA based on a 2017 to 2022 programmatic EIS Record of 
Decision that was done years ago. It is over. There will be no 
new NEPA process for these new lease sales. And because that 
was programmatic, there will be no site specific NEPA at all. 
Zip. Nothing. And that is a waiver of NEPA by any, any 
reasonable interpretation.
    Mr. Westerman. Will the gentleman yield?
    Mr. Huffman. I will give you a chance to correct what you 
said, Mr. Chairman.
    Mr. Westerman. You said there will be no site-specific 
NEPA.
    Mr. Huffman. No site-specific NEPA, because the 
programmatic NEPA from the prior lease sales is deemed to 
comply with NEPA in its totality. It is right there in the 
bill. No site-specific, not even any new programmatic. No NEPA 
at all.
    Mr. Westerman. Mr. Tarpley, Mr. Upton--well, it is your 
time. I was going to ask them that question, but I shouldn't do 
that on your time.
    Mr. Huffman. Just read it.
    Mr. Westerman. Now, I believe they still have to do a site-
specific analysis.
    Mr. Huffman. No, there is no NEPA at all for these lease 
sales.
    Mr. Westerman. No, there has been NEPA done in the past, 
and the Administration failed to act on the projects when the--
--
    Mr. Huffman. Let me read you the language of the bill at 
line 15: ``shall be sufficient for purposes of complying with 
the National Environmental Policy Act.''
    Mr. Westerman. What shall be?
    Mr. Huffman. For the lease sales under this section, 
meaning the programmatic that was already done and closed shall 
be sufficient for all purposes for these lease sales. It is the 
only way to read it.
    Mr. Westerman. But listen to what you said. And it starts 
at line 12. The final programmatic environmental impact 
statement and Record of Decision shall apply. There was NEPA 
done on this project.
    Mr. Huffman. On a prior set of lease sales, on a prior 
plan. There will be no new NEPA. It is done. That Record of 
Decision is closed and done.
    Mr. Westerman. And how many times are we going to have to 
do NEPA?
    Mr. Huffman. And now we are going to mandate at least four 
new lease sales with no new NEPA whatsoever.
    Mr. Westerman. Because the Administration didn't do the 
lease sales when this NEPA was done.
    Mr. Huffman. It is a waiver of NEPA.
    Mr. Westerman. So, now they say the clock ran out, and 
guess what? You get to go do the NEPA all over again, so we can 
run the clock out again and come back and say, ``Go do the NEPA 
all over again.''
    Mr. Huffman. No.
    Mr. Westerman. Enough has to be enough.
    Mr. Stauber. Mr. Mullin, go ahead.
    Mr. Mullin. I am glad I was a witness to that exchange, as 
a freshman in this Committee. It got my blood pumping a little 
bit.
    With the remaining time, let me just ask a question 
specific to my district and ports. I am proud to represent the 
Port of Redwood City in beautiful San Mateo County, California. 
So, the question is simply for Mr. Chiasson.
    The impact on the Port of Redwood City and ports around the 
country with regard to a looming government shutdown, can you 
talk about the economic impact of that, and then the impact on 
jobs and the broader economy?
    Mr. Chiasson. In terms of what?
    Mr. Mullin. How a shutdown would affect day-to-day 
operations of those ports, and what your feeling is about 
impacts on the broader economy.
    Mr. Chiasson. Specifically for Port Fourchon, the 
government shutdown doesn't have much of an impact on me. We 
are going to continue to do and provide the services necessary 
to provide energy for this country, no matter what happens, 
whenever it happens. It is essential that we do that.
    Mr. Mullin. And do you think there is a broader impact on 
the economy with the government shutdown?
    Mr. Chiasson. I think there is potential to have some 
broader impacts when it comes to, if there is any impact to CBP 
or anything like that, yes.
    Mr. Mullin. Thank you.
    I yield back.
    Mr. Stauber. Thank you. The Chair now recognizes Mr. Graves 
from Louisiana for 5 minutes.
    Mr. Graves. Thank you. I want to thank all the witnesses 
for being here today. I appreciate it.
    Mr. Chiasson, your port board, how do they get their jobs?
    Mr. Chiasson. They are an elected port commission by our 
community.
    Mr. Graves. Would you consider that sort of reflecting the 
objectives, priorities, or the views of your community?
    Mr. Chiasson. Absolutely.
    Mr. Graves. Do you support this bill?
    Mr. Chiasson. Yes.
    Mr. Graves. Thank you very much. I appreciate it.
    Mr. Chairman, just a question about a hearing. A hearing is 
designed to do what? Why do we have these hearings?
    Mr. Stauber. Well, to discuss the pros and cons of any 
bill.
    Mr. Graves. Thank you. So, another way of saying we are 
getting input, is that correct?
    Mr. Stauber. That is correct.
    Mr. Graves. Yes. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I am always 
fascinated by my friends here and some of the things that are 
said. I am beginning to think that the comments that are made 
are on purpose, just to force us to spend all of our time going 
back and correcting the record said another way, 
misunderstanding about how things work.
    Dr. Upton, I heard folks talking about fair market value, 
and I know you spent a lot of time in your testimony talking 
about economics. The Inflation Reduction Act, have you spent 
any time looking at that?
    Dr. Upton. Yes, sir, I have.
    Mr. Graves. Does that do anything to distort economics of 
energy?
    Dr. Upton. Yes, sure. The Inflation Reduction Act has a lot 
of, I would say, supply-side policies.
    Mr. Graves. Said another way, it subsidizes certain energy 
technologies to make them more attractive.
    Dr. Upton. That is absolutely accurate.
    Mr. Graves. So, in the case of a technology that has been 
around for, I don't know, 40 or 50 years, it kind of seems like 
at some point, if it can't stand on its own two feet, maybe we 
should look elsewhere or do something else. Is that a fair 
assessment?
    Dr. Upton. Well, I guess you would have to weigh the 
environmental----
    Mr. Graves. Overall pros and cons?
    Dr. Upton. That is right, the overall pros and cons. In the 
example of energy, of course, there are negative externalities. 
So, you would want to value that externality and then compare 
that to the size of the subsidy.
    Mr. Graves. But again, there is a tipping of the scale 
there as a result of subsidies that are in the bill in terms of 
disrupting economics that would otherwise just be balanced 
based upon natural factors. Is that fair?
    Dr. Upton. Absolutely, yes.
    Mr. Graves. OK. And then the other thing I heard folks 
saying that fair market value was not contemplated whenever 
offshore energy production would occur. Well, you have two 
different types of revenue--well, actually three different 
types of revenue generated from a lease sale. One of them is 
rental payments, which we will just put on the shelf for just a 
minute. But one of them is bonus bids. Isn't that like an 
auction?
    Do you view an auction as being maybe a way to determine 
fair market value of an item?
    Dr. Upton. Yes, sir, I do.
    Mr. Graves. I mean, I think Sotheby's has figured out that 
that seems to work, right?
    Dr. Upton. Yes, sir.
    Mr. Graves. And then you also have royalty rates. And 
royalty rates, if I remember correctly, those were actually set 
by--let me think. What was that knuckle-dragging 
Administration? Oh, wait a minute. That was the Obama 
administration that set those. I mean, look, seriously. And, of 
course, I said that in jest, suggesting that my friends were 
indicating that there was some Republican administration that 
had set those figures.
    And then one other point to make here. The Environmental 
Impact Statement that was done, as the Chairman of the Full 
Committee noted, that EIS was done on this very area. It was 
done on this very area for this very type of activity. And 
because this is the most produced offshore area in America, it 
is redoing what was redone, what was redone, what was redone, 
what was redone.
    But I am glad that my friends are concerned about the 
environment. I am. I am very glad that my friends are concerned 
about the environment because, when you look at the Energy 
Information Agency under the Biden administration, it clearly 
shows that there is a projected increase in oil and gas demand 
globally over the next few decades. So, then you look at where 
you get the lowest carbon intensity--because I know my friends 
share my objective about carbon intensity--and guess where you 
get some of the lowest carbon intensity barrels in the world?
    Mr. Huffman. UAE.
    Mr. Graves. That was close. Actually, Gulf of Mexico. So, 
if you have an objective--and, look, I know that my friend has 
an objective of employing people and creating economic activity 
in the UAE, but I would like to see economic activity, I see 
your campaign signs every time I go there but I would like to 
create economic activity, employment in the United States, and 
specifically down in the areas where our communities live and 
work, where we have higher wages. So, I think it is really 
important that we do that production in the Gulf of Mexico.
    So, Mr. Chairman, I want to thank my friends for continuing 
to throw out all of these statements that, unfortunately, 
aren't supported by fact, and I appreciate the opportunity to 
correct the record. And I can't wait for the opportunity to 
continue correcting the record as we continue through this bill 
hearing and markup.
    I yield back.
    Mr. Stauber. Thank you, Mr. Graves.
    Ms. Kamlager-Dove. I would like to ask unanimous consent to 
enter into the record this 2017 study by Oil Change 
International, which shows the U.S. Government directly 
subsidizes fossil fuels at $20.5 billion annually.

    Mr. Stauber. Without objection.

    [The information follows:]

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The full document is available for viewing at:

https://docs.house.gov/meetings/II/II06/20230928/116323/HHRG-
118-II06-20230928-SD009.pdf

                                ------                                


    Mr. Stauber. Representative Huffman, you are up for 5 
minutes.
    Mr. Huffman. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    Was anyone here yesterday? It was an interesting and almost 
surreal experience because in the Natural Resources Committee 
my colleagues across the aisle, who have spent the last 9 
months attacking our bedrock environmental laws in every way 
one could think up, were advocating for more aggressive 
enforcement of environmental laws under NEPA, and other 
environmental laws in order to prevent migrants from occupying 
a shelter on a piece of National Park Service land.
    Mr. Graves. Will the gentleman yield?
    Mr. Huffman. No, I will not.
    So, in some ways it is reassuring to be back here in the 
more normal context of my Republican colleagues back at it, 
attacking and waiving and undermining our environmental laws. 
And this is the most naked one I think I have seen yet, a 
mandated lease sale with no environmental process whatsoever 
associated with it, and also some waivers of taxpayer 
protection and other reforms. This is pretty brazen stuff.
    But look, I have had a lot of back-and-forth with my 
colleague from Louisiana over the years. We get along. It is 
sometimes lighthearted. So, I could probably give all of his 
arguments and he could give a lot of mine. There are some 
greatest hits that we hear all the time. The gentleman who 
knows better does real careful parsing and snipping of 
baselines and data sets to try to suggest that----
    Mr. Graves. Are you referring to me or you?
    Mr. Huffman [continuing]. The Trump administration was 
great for climate, that he actually caused emissions to go down 
during his 4-year term, never mind that the Obama policies and 
market conditions had set certain things in motion, and then 
the world economy went to sleep during COVID. The gentleman is 
happy to snip that piece of data, and suggest Trump was great 
for climate, despite the wrecking ball he took to climate 
policy and climate action, and then turn around and suggest 
that because President Biden presided over an incredible 
economic recovery and emissions began to go up, that somehow 
the Biden administration has been bad.
    You can play with numbers all you want. I can argue that in 
the last NBA season Steph Curry and I combined for an average 
of 15 points per game.
    [Laughter.]
    Mr. Huffman. And if I were like my friend from Louisiana, I 
could even pound the table and say it is a fact, it is true, 
because it is. But it is total BS.
    And maybe the biggest whopper of all is this one we are 
hearing now about all of this new oil and gas production--the 
poor beleaguered fossil fuel industry that is rolling in record 
profits, it is enjoying record production--that we have to do 
all of this new stuff as a climate action because somehow our 
fossil fuel production is cleaner than the other guys.
    I am not kidding when I talk about the UAE because I have 
met with oil executives and leaders from the UAE who dispute 
the claim that our dirty fossil fuels are cleaner than theirs. 
They say they are powering their refineries with solar energy, 
and they have done much more to reduce methane loss. They say 
they have the prettiest horse in the glue factory. But, of 
course, our oil and gas industry disputes that. Heck, in Norway 
they are getting ready to power their oil and gas extraction 
with a bunch of offshore floating wind platforms. Maybe they 
have the prettiest horse in the glue factory.
    Why are we even talking about winning this race to the 
bottom, when all of the science and everything we know about 
this climate crisis tells us all of this is non-responsive to 
the crisis? We have to stop using fossil fuel. We have to 
disengage and phase out.
    And I am old enough to remember something incredibly 
similar to this gaslighting our fossil fuel is cleaner BS that 
we are hearing. A few decades ago, when the tobacco industry 
was killing a lot of people just like the fossil fuel industry, 
and they were rolling in profits, and all of a sudden the 
science started resolving all doubt about the cancers they were 
causing and the other health effects they were causing. So, 
they rolled out filtered cigarettes. And they started getting 
doctors and other people to say how much safer, how much 
healthier these filtered cigarettes were. They knew better. 
They knew that it did nothing to reduce all the death, and 
cancer, and everything else. But they said it anyway, because 
there was a lot of money to be made. And here we are again.
    Ms. Robinson, I just want to ask you, when you hear the 
cold comfort of oil and gas talking heads saying our fossil 
fuel is cleaner than someone else's, does that make the tumors 
any smaller in Cancer Alley? Does it make it any easier to deal 
with the death and the health effects that your region is 
suffering from?
    Ms. Robinson. It does not.
    Mr. Huffman. Thank you.
    I yield back.
    Mr. Stauber. I thank you very much. And at the Chair's 
discretion, we are going to allow round two of discussions. And 
my good friend from Louisiana, Mr. Graves, is up.
    Mr. Graves. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I want to thank my 
friend from California. And I want to be very clear, he is my 
friend. He is my friend. I go to dinner with him, I have hosted 
him in Louisiana. I am still waiting for that invite to 
California that I know after 5 years is coming. But he is a 
friend of mine, we just violently disagree.
    And I want to be clear, Mr. Chairman. Whenever I noted that 
emissions from the Gulf of Mexico have some of the lowest 
intensity in the world, that is just the Gulf of Mexico. That 
is not paired with Mr. Huffman's points in the basketball game. 
So, that was clearly an apples-to-Volkswagen comparison that 
was noted earlier.
    So, Mr. Chairman, I am glad that my friends are so 
concerned about economics, because we watched recently where 
the Federal Government, BLM, actually reduced royalty rates for 
solar projects in California, once again ignoring economics or 
fair market value.
    I am glad that my friends are so concerned about NEPA, and 
I am waiting for their objection, and I would be happy to yield 
to any of them to explain their objection that they lodged 
whenever this Administration did a categorical exclusion for EV 
charging stations.
    Now, let me be very clear, because there seems to be a lot 
of confusion. The hearing yesterday had to do with waiving NEPA 
for an activity that had never occurred, or never been studied 
on National Park Service land. Whereas, what this bill does is 
it allows you to tee off of an existing NEPA analysis on the 
exact same activity in the exact same geographical area, and an 
activity that has occurred more in this region than probably 
any other offshore area of the world. I know at one point 
within the last 20 years, approximately three-fourths of all of 
the offshore energy structures in the world were in the Gulf of 
Mexico. This isn't any novel idea. This occurs in this area.
    I want to be very clear that what you see happening here is 
this is an argument of convenience for, I am afraid, people in 
this room that folks are trying to distort facts and trying to 
shove their arguments into places where they clearly don't fit. 
We have heard arguments about economics that are clearly 
disrupted. You use an auction. You have heard arguments about 
the environment. There is study after study that show lowest 
carbon-intensity barrel. The Biden administration's own 
projections on oil and gas show that you are going to have 
global demand increases, particularly in developing nations.
    Mr. Chairman, when you look globally, I believe it is the 
International Energy Agency's Chairman who said that the 
greatest reductions in energy emissions in world history 
occurred because of what the United States did, and that was 
largely attributable to natural gas. Why in the world would we 
not move in that direction?
    And let me give you one last example, Mr. Chairman. If you 
were to take 1 year, 1 year of LNG that was sent, liquefied 
natural gas or natural gas that was supplied to Europe, 
supplied to the European Union from Russia, from Vladimir 
Putin, and replaced it with U.S. LNG, you would have somewhere 
around a 215 million-ton reduction in emissions.
    And let's make note that would be for free, and to economic 
benefit to the United States, to the detriment of Vladimir 
Putin--my friends instead, across the aisle, would rather see 
taxpayers actually spend money funding this. It is completely 
non-sensical.
    Mr. Chiasson, I guess based upon some of the testimony that 
I have heard today you live in south Louisiana, do you not?
    Mr. Chiasson. Absolutely. Yes, I do.
    Mr. Graves. And Mr. Chiasson, you were born and raised 
there, your family is there, you have kids. Would you do things 
that you know are actually to the detriment of your community 
and to your family?
    Mr. Chiasson. No.
    Mr. Graves. And Mr. Chiasson, I have known you most of your 
life. You are an expert on energy. In fact, an expert on 
offshore energy. Your port is capable of supplying 90 percent 
of the offshore energy sector. You are one of the nation's 
experts in this area.
    I mean, isn't it somewhat absurd that people are alleging 
that you would shoot yourself, or your community and your 
family in the foot?
    Mr. Chiasson. Absolutely. I would contend that what you see 
in Port Fourchon, just in our port itself, the water in Port 
Fourchon is cleaner than the Mississippi River. If you come and 
fish on a platform offshore, the water is clear, blue, and very 
nice. And that fish is not causing me any problems at all.
    Mr. Graves. That is right, the top fisheries production in 
the continental United States in this exact same area.
    Mr. Chairman, look, in closing I just want to say that my 
friends that are concerned about the environment, concerned 
about communities, as a result of shutting down energy 
production like this Administration is doing, we are going to 
see nearly a 30 percent reduction in investment for GOMESA, 
which, as you know, is for coastal wetlands restoration, for 
hurricane protection, leaving our communities vulnerable as a 
result.
    And for my friends that care about national parks, it is 
going to be a 30 percent reduction in funds from offshore 
energy revenues to go to the Land and Water Conservation Fund. 
Facts hurt, I guess.
    I yield back.
    Mr. Stauber. Thank you.
    Representative Kamlager-Dove, you are up for 5 minutes.
    Ms. Kamlager-Dove. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    I think what taxpayers want to see is the government stay 
open, and Congress do its job to make sure that all of our 
agencies are fully operational so that when we do have a 
natural disaster FEMA is on the line to take their call.
    I do want to refute some statements that were made earlier. 
CEQ didn't waive NEPA. They used emergency alternative 
arrangements.
    Also, the CEQ regulations, specifically, 40 CFR 1506.12, 
don't you love staff when they help you make sure that you get 
the regulations correct? Those regulations and guidance provide 
for alternative arrangements for NEPA compliance in emergency 
situations. Agencies are not to delay immediate actions 
necessary to secure lives and safety of citizens or to protect 
valuable resources.
    And another correction. I have not heard Biden yet say that 
he is shutting down energy production. It is a fallacy being 
distracted by what we really should be doing, which is on 
voting on bills to keep the government open instead of this. I 
think that is a higher priority.
    And to complement what my colleagues have said, let's not 
mix up truths. Let's not share fallacies. Let's not shut the 
government down, and let's get some of this information 
straight about what the regulations do and what has been done 
in the past.
    Thank you. And with that, I yield back.
    Mr. Stauber. Thank you very much. I will now recognize 
myself for 5 minutes, and I will give my time to Representative 
Graves.
    Mr. Graves. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Chairman, I can't 
even begin to tell you my concern about the lack of 
understanding of how NEPA works.
    My friend, the Ranking Member, was just saying that there 
is no comparison to what I mentioned on the categorical 
exclusion for EV charging stations. So, let's explain what a 
categorical exclusion is.
    And I hope you are in the anteroom so you can hear me.
    A categorical exclusion is granted whenever you have 
carried out sufficient reviews for a like activity. You then 
can effectively say, ``We have studied the heck out of this. We 
understand the environmental repercussions. Therefore, we are 
going to effectively allow for that understanding to suffice,'' 
and that is how a categorical exclusion works.
    Let me see if I can give you another analogy. We have 
already done Environmental Impact Statements for energy 
production in the Gulf of Mexico time, and time, and time 
again. And since this Administration has violated the law and 
not carried out their 5-year plan as required, then we are 
going to use the previous one.
    Now, what has distinguished from that is what we talked 
about yesterday, where on the National Park Service an activity 
that has never been subjected to an Environmental Impact 
Statement, it was just waived. This isn't even remotely 
comparable to that. And it is very concerning that we would 
have people who are here in charge of this policy that 
apparently don't have that appropriate understanding, based 
upon the comments that I heard. That is my belief, that there 
is a clear misunderstanding here. Very, very concerning.
    My friends sit here and talk about emissions reduction, but 
yet when you bring emissions reduction strategies that are 
proven, and I will read you the statistic. ``The magnitude of 
expected greenhouse gas reduction is even larger when 
increasing the production and use of the Gulf of Mexico's 
largest crude category in place of similar crudes from outside 
of the U.S. and Canada.'' You know what the difference is? A 50 
percent reduction. This is math.
    You have the Biden administration's EIA that says that 
global demand for oil and gas are going to go up. You have the 
source that is up to a 50 percent reduction compared to other 
supplies in terms of emissions. And we are saying, yes, we are 
going to go to UAE. Are you kidding me?
    And all this is being done to advance an agenda that is not 
based upon math, it is not based upon science. It is based upon 
facts.
    Ms. Robinson, I have to be very candid. I am sorry that you 
were brought here and, in my opinion, subjected to all this 
because somebody is trying to get you to tout an agenda that is 
just simply not informed by fact.
    I represent south Louisiana, I was born and raised there, 
and I have three kids there. I love the community. I love the 
community and I would never do anything to harm. I have fought 
for more funds for resilience. I have restored more acres of 
coastal wetlands than anybody else, spent billions of dollars 
fighting for it. I have been threatened to fight for that 
community, to protect the community, to protect the ecological 
productivity of that region.
    And I am just going to apologize to you because facts, 
data, and science are simply not on the side of the argument 
that is being made right now. I fully support reductions in 
emissions, but we have to use strategies that actually make 
sense and are based upon math and science, not out here in this 
emotional realm that, unfortunately, this place has migrated 
to.
    The reality is that you have already seen a projected 31 
percent reduction in investment in the Gulf of Mexico. The 
reality is that all of my friends across the aisle that were 
here last Congress voted for mandatory production on lease 
sales in the Gulf of Mexico. They seem to have left that out.
    I am going to say it again. All of my friends over here 
that were in Congress last session voted for a bill that 
mandated oil and gas lease sales in the Gulf of Mexico, period. 
I don't know why they left that out. That is a fact.
    And this Administration, by the way, hasn't complied with 
the law that says explicitly that the lease sale is supposed to 
happen right now, and it is not happening because they are 
ignoring the law because that is what they do when it is 
convenient.
    Mr. Chairman, I am going to submit some information for the 
record. I ask that the ICF study showing emissions reduction 
from production in the Gulf of Mexico be included in the 
record, and I also plan to submit some questions for the record 
for our witnesses.
    I want to thank you very much for being here today.
    Mr. Stauber. Without objection.

    [The information follows:]
    [GRAPHICS NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]
                                                                 

    Mr. Stauber. I want to thank the witnesses. But before I 
wrap up my comments here, the Ranking Member had said she had 
never heard the President talk about fossil fuels and ending 
fossil fuels. I am going to enter into the record a September 
6, 2019 article in the Associated Press written by Steve 
Peoples, where he was in Newcastle, New Hampshire with the 
President when then-candidate Biden looked a young lady in the 
eye and said, and I quote, ``I want you to look at my eyes. I 
guarantee you, I guarantee you, we are going to end fossil 
fuels.'' And that was by candidate Biden.

    [The information follows:]
In intimate moment, Biden vows to `end fossil fuel'

AP News, September 6, 2019 by Steve Peoples

https://apnews.com/united-states-presidential-election-
9dfb1e4c381043bab6fd0fa6de ce3974

                                 *****

NEW CASTLE, N.H. (AP)--Joe Biden is looking voters in the eye and 
promising to ``end fossil fuel.''

The former vice president and Democratic presidential candidate made 
the comment Friday after a New Hampshire environmental activist 
challenged him for accepting donations from the co-founder of liquified 
natural gas firm.

Biden denied the donor's association to the fossil fuel industry before 
calling the young woman ``kiddo'' and taking her hand. He said, ``I 
want you to look at my eyes. I guarantee you. I guarantee you. We're 
going to end fossil fuel.''

The activist, 24-year-old Rebecca Beaulieu, later said she appreciated 
that Biden took her question seriously, but that he was not satisfied 
with Biden's plan to eliminate net carbon emissions by 2050.

She also said she found Biden's use of ``kiddo'' patronizing.

                                 ______
                                 

    Mr. Stauber. I want to thank the witnesses for their 
valuable testimony and the Members for their questions.

    The members of the Subcommittee may have some additional 
questions for the witnesses, and we will ask you to respond in 
writing. Under Committee Rule 3, members of the Committee must 
submit questions to the Committee Clerk by 5 p.m. on Tuesday, 
October 3. The hearing record will be held open for 10 business 
days for these responses.

    If there is no further business, without objection, the 
Committee stands adjourned.

    [Whereupon, at 3:53 p.m., the Subcommittee was adjourned.]

            [ADDITIONAL MATERIALS SUBMITTED FOR THE RECORD]

    Prepared Statement of the Hon. Jeff Duncan, a Representative in 
               Congress from the State of South Carolina

    H.R. 1121, the Protecting the American Energy Production Act, is 
straightforward: It prohibits the President from declaring a moratorium 
on the use of hydraulic fracturing, unless Congress authorizes the 
moratorium. It also expresses the sense of Congress that states should 
maintain primacy for the regulation of oil and gas production on state 
and private lands.
    Natural gas is affordable, reliable, safe, clean, and abundant. It 
keeps the lights on when the wind is not blowing, and the sun is not 
shining. It can be used as feed stock to create fertilizer that 
nourishes the food we eat. It can be transported safely across state 
lines through pipelines and can be exported across the ocean to fuel 
our allies abroad in times of need.
    The American people need natural gas, and the President should not 
be able to singlehandedly prohibit fracking without the consent of 
Congress. This Administration has been extremely hostile to fossil 
fuels in the midst of an energy crisis.
    Also, Under current law, each State has primary regulatory 
authority over oil and natural gas production. This was made clear in 
the bipartisan Energy Policy Act of 2005. State regulatory bodies are 
best informed to regulate operations in their own state, this bill 
reaffirms that.
    We are already beginning to see the consequences of poor energy 
policy. Blackouts are becoming normalized in states like California 
that have become increasingly reliant on ``renewable'' energy while 
shutting down access to reliable baseload power.
    Of course, wind and solar is cheaper when the taxpayer is 
subsidizing the cost. Unfortunately for the ratepayer, this is a poor 
investment. The reality is that not all energy is the same. Wind or 
solar energy are simply not as valuable as the energy stored in natural 
gas. We need an ``all-of-the-above'' energy matrix that is diversified, 
and ensures we have baseload generation. This includes natural gas.
    Factories and hospitals do not close on a cloudy day, and where 
``renewables'' fail, natural gas can be reliably ramped up to meet 
demand. We do not need to go backwards. Grids do not have to be 
unreliable, and in 21st century, Americans should not have to settle 
with blackouts. We need to build out our natural gas infrastructure in 
order to achieve American energy dominance, and it begins with our 
ability to extract it through fracking.
    The Shale Revolution has launched America towards energy 
leadership. We became a net exporter of energy--reducing prices here at 
home and undercutting the leverage of our Russia (Putin), China, and 
OPEC. The best defense against our adversaries is more United States 
energy production.
    The Shale Revolution also saved Americans billions of dollars. It 
is estimated the shale revolution saved U.S. consumers $203 billion 
dollars annually, breaking down to $2,500 per family of four.
    It also lowered energy-related greenhouse gas emissions by 527 
metric tons per year. Innovation in the oil and gas sector has made the 
United States a leader in not only energy production but also emission 
reductions. The United States produces energy cleaner and safer than 
nearly anywhere in the world and we need policies that reflect this 
reality instead of ones that undercut our success. Natural gas is 
clean, affordable, and reliable and we should be increasing its 
production, not prohibiting it. This bill reflects this reality and 
would help in delivering affordable and reliable energy to Americans.
    I urge support of H.R. 1121 to increase American energy production 
and restore energy leadership.

                                 ______
                                 
                        Statement for the Record
                       Bureau of Land Management
                    U.S. Department of the Interior
                              on H.R. 1121

    Thank you for the opportunity to provide this Statement for the 
Record on H.R. 1121, Protecting American Energy Production Act.

    H.R. 1121 states it is the ``sense of Congress that States should 
maintain primacy for the regulation of hydraulic fracturing for oil and 
natural gas production on State and private lands.'' The bill also 
prohibits the President from issuing a moratorium on the use of 
hydraulic fracturing unless Congress authorizes the moratorium.

    The Biden-Harris Administration is committed to the highest 
standards of safety and responsible oil and gas development on public 
lands. As President Biden has repeatedly stated, oil and gas operations 
will continue into the future while we transition to a clean energy 
economy. Neither the President, the Secretary of the Interior, nor the 
Bureau of Land Management (BLM) have proposed a moratorium on the 
practice of hydraulically fracturing oil and gas wells. The BLM also 
notes that States already have discretion over the use of hydraulic 
fracturing for oil and gas development on State and private lands. 
Hydraulic fracturing is a common practice for stimulating the flow of 
oil or gas from a wellbore, and the BLM estimates that the majority of 
oil and gas wells in production have been hydraulically fractured.

    The Department of the Interior is concerned that H.R. 1121 would 
unduly limit the President's discretion in managing the safe and 
environmentally protective development of Federal resources from 
Federal lands. As such, the Department does not support the bill.

                                 ______
                                 

Submissions for the Record by Rep. Westerman

                        Statement for the Record
                      American Petroleum Institute
             in support of H.R. 5616, BRIDGE Production Act
                           September 28, 2023

    ``API appreciates the intent of the BRIDGE Production Act and the 
forward thinking of Congressman Graves in introducing this bill. The 
importance of the Gulf of Mexico offshore oil and natural gas industry 
cannot be denied. The Gulf of Mexico accounts for nearly 15% of U.S. 
oil production and supports an estimated 345,000 jobs throughout the 
country. For the past year-and-a-half the offshore oil and natural gas 
industry has been forced to rely on legislation and court orders to 
have regular and meaningful lease sales. The Biden Administration has 
failed to complete the required 5-year Program on time, reduced, and 
attempted to introduce harmful restrictions on oil and natural gas 
vessel traffic in the Gulf of Mexico. The BRIDGE Production Act will 
provide for much needed offshore lease sales and help give companies 
the certainty needed to continue to invest in Gulf of Mexico 
exploration and development.''

Holly Hopkins
Vice President of Upstream Policy

                                 ______
                                 

BRIDGE Production Act Will Help Lower Energy Costs and Tame Inflation

Consumer Energy Alliance, September 20, 2023

https://consumerenergyalliance.org/2023/09/bridge-production-act-will-
help-lower-energy-costs-and-tame-inflation/

                                 *****

WASHINGTON--Consumer Energy Alliance (CEA), the leading energy and 
environmental advocate for families and businesses, applauds the 
introduction of the BRIDGE Production Act of 2023 by Congressman 
Garrett Graves.

``With oil prices back over $90 and Saudi Arabia and Russia extending 
their 1.3 million barrel per day production cut through the end of this 
year, American families and businesses struggling with higher energy 
prices need real solutions. The Bridge Production Act is that 
solution,'' CEA Vice President Kaitlin Hammons said.

``This bill will remove the uncertainty in the Gulf of Mexico federal 
leasing program caused by years of intentional delays by the Biden 
Administration. The Gulf of Mexico is one of the least carbon-intensive 
producing regions in the world. Refusing to make good use of an 
integral piece of American energy security is irresponsible policy and 
bad for the environment.''

``A price hangover from the highest inflation in 40 years remains, and 
gas is more expensive today than it was last year, heading toward $4 a 
gallon. Higher energy prices increase the price of everything--from 
groceries to lumber to clothing to appliances--pulling money from our 
pockets and boosting inflation. Americans deserve relief at the pump, 
and everywhere else they shop. Congress is right to step in on behalf 
of American families and small businesses to ensure we can keep energy 
prices down and energy security strong.''

Congressman Graves' bill is the companion to the Senate version 
introduced by Senators Cassidy and Cruz in July.

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