Trump Administration Reopens Door to Offshore Oil Leasing in California

Federal regulators have officially reopened a door California politicians have spent years trying to weld shut.

The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management on Thursday announced it will prepare a programmatic environmental impact statement for potential oil and gas lease sales in the Northern, Central, and Southern California program areas, launching the first formal step required under NEPA.

Translation: California’s offshore leasing conversation is no longer theoretical.

The notice covers roughly 11,876 lease blocks spanning about 65 million acres of the Pacific Outer Continental Shelf. The proposal stems from the draft 11th National OCS Leasing Program, which contemplates one sale in Northern California, two in Central California, and three in Southern California.

The BOEM says the purpose is to provide access to blocks that may contain economically recoverable oil and gas.

Acting Director Matt Giacona framed the move in pocketbook terms, citing California’s energy affordability crunch and national energy security goals.

For the industry, the immediate impact is procedural. This is scoping, not spudding. Even under an aggressive timeline, any lease sale would be years away from first oil. California’s offshore output today is a rounding error compared to the Gulf of Mexico.

But strategically, it matters.

California currently imports the majority of its crude oil from Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Ecuador, and Brazil. If even a part of this offshore acreage proves viable, it could marginally offset imports and stabilize in-state refinery supply.

It is unlikely, however, to move global benchmarks. It would not flip the U.S. export balance. But it could reduce dependence on long-haul foreign barrels feeding West Coast refiners.

The BOEM is also weighing alternatives, including a no-sale option and a narrower sale limited to areas near existing Southern California infrastructure.

Opposition from Sacramento is fierce and litigation is a near certainty. Still, the signal to markets is that federal energy policy is tilting toward supply. Whether California’s coastline actually sees new rigs is another story entirely.

By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com

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