Senior Dems warn against sharing offshore drilling revenue with statesDear Colleague:
We are writing to express our serious concern about proposals to shift Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) revenues from the federal Treasury to coastal states. This issue may arise in the context of the Senate’s upcoming work on the budget for fiscal year 2011 as well as during debates on other measures including climate and energy legislation.
We strongly oppose diversion of this important source of federal revenue, and we strongly urge you to resist its inclusion in any legislative vehicle. As you may recall, a state “revenue sharing” amendment was offered to the budget resolution for FY 2010 in April 2009, and it was defeated by a vote of 60-38. A similar effort was defeated by a vote of 13-10 during markup of S. 1462 in the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee in June 2009.
The OCS receipts are one of the most significant sources of revenue to the U.S., amounting to billions of dollars each year. These revenues will total about $6 billion in 2010 and are estimated by the Minerals Management Service (MMS) to total over $40 billion over the next five years.
Revenue sharing proposals that have been offered by some Senators would allocate 37.5 percent of OCS revenues to state and local governments. If this formula were applied to all oil and gas resources in the OCS, the federal treasury would lose hundreds of billions of dollars over the life of these offshore resources as compared to what will be received under existing law.
The fiscal consequences of such a loss would be devastating, particularly given the enormous demands on the federal Treasury and our need to reduce the deficit. There is no justification for using these significant national resources to provide benefits only for a few coastal states and their citizens. Rather, they must be available for the important public needs of all Americans.
In addition to the vital issue of fiscal responsibility, there are other important policy reasons for retaining the current law. The resources of the OCS belong to the entire nation, not any one state. In 1947, the Supreme Court clearly ruled that the offshore areas are owned by the United States as an important feature of national sovereignty. In contrast to federal lands onshore, the offshore resources do not lie within the border of any state and do not affect the property tax base of the states.
In addition, our coastal states already receive significant revenue as a consequence of associated offshore production. Under existing law, coastal states can claim a seaward boundary of up to three miles from their coastline (nine miles for Gulf Coast States), and these States receive 100 percent of the revenue from development of offshore minerals in these waters. Further, coastal states receive 27 percent of all bonuses and royalties for mineral production in the three miles seaward of the states’ waters to compensate for any drainage that could occur as a result of production in Federal waters. In 2010, six coastal states will receive an estimated $79.4 million under this so-called “8(g)” provision, and these payments are estimated to total about $590 million over the next five years. More than $3 billion has been paid to these states under this provision since it was enacted.
Again, we urge you to oppose the inclusion in any legislation of provisions directing federal OCS receipts to the states. We should not divert these important revenues from the federal Treasury and the benefit of all Americans.
Sincerely,
Jeff Bingaman Byron Dorgan Jay Rockefeller
Not sure what the implications are, but it seems that these Senators are concerned about the government losing revenues.