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-Caveat Lector-
Oil Companies Exceed Fed. Land Limit

Sun May 30, 3:35 PM ET

By DAVID PACE, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - A single New Mexico family and a dozen big oil companies,
including one once headed by Commerce Secretary Don Evans, now control
one-quarter of all federal lands leased for oil and gas development in the
continental United States despite a law intended to prevent such
concentration, federal records show.

Since 1997, mainly as a result of mergers and acquisitions, six companies
have exceeded the legal limit of 246,080 acres in lease holdings on public
lands in states other than Alaska. But the Bureau of Land Management
(<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/DailyNews/manual/*http://search.news.yahoo.com/search/news?p=%22Bureau%20of%20Land%20Management%22&c=&n=20&yn=c&c=news&cs=nw>news
-
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/DailyNews/manual/*http://search.yahoo.com/bin/search?cs=nw&p=Bureau%20of%20Land%20Management>web
sites), in charge of enforcing the 1920 law, has chosen to extend
compliance deadlines for years.

In fact, an Associated Press computer analysis found the Interior
Department agency permitted companies it knew were in violation of the law
in Wyoming to continue to acquire thousands of acres of new oil and gas
leases in that state. The bureau has given the companies additional years
to comply.

"They should not be purchasing leases," said Tom Lonnie, the bureau's
assistant director for minerals, realty and resource protection. Before
acquiring a lease, a company must certify that its holdings do not exceed
the legal limit.

The government can cancel leases held by companies that exceed the cap.
Agency officials acknowledge they have never done that nor denied a
company's request for more time to comply.

Companies in violation of the state limit as a result of a merger or
acquisition have 180 days to comply.

"We try to work with them instead of hitting them with a hammer," said Bob
Bennett, the bureau's Wyoming state director.

When Anadarko Petroleum of Houston asked for a two-year extension to get
back into compliance after a 2000 merger with Union Pacific Resources put
it over the limit in Wyoming, the bureau said yes. That was the case, too,
for a 2002 request by Encana Oil and Gas of Canada.

In the first 15 months of Anadarko's extension, the company acquired 70 new
leases in Wyoming totaling more than 100,000 acres. A year after granting
Encana the extension, the bureau allowed Encana to acquire two new leases
totaling more than 2,000 acres in the state.

Anadarko relinquished 50 of its leases to meet a deadline this April 30 to
get back under the acreage cap, Lonnie said. Encana has until October to
comply. Four other companies that had gone over the cap in Wyoming since
1997 are now in compliance.

Bureau officials say they have to rely on companies to provide accurate
accounts of their holdings because the agency's computerized records do not
track transfers of lease operating rights or the ownership of divided
shares of leases.

The lax enforcement coincides with the Bush administration's push to open
new public lands for oil and gas development. In March, bureau records
showed 40 million acres of federal lands were under lease in the
continental United States. That is 5.3 million more acres than when
President Bush
(<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/DailyNews/manual/*http://search.news.yahoo.com/search/news?p=%22President%20Bush%22&c=&n=20&yn=c&c=news&cs=nw>news
-
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/DailyNews/manual/*http://search.yahoo.com/search/search?p=George+W.+Bush>web
sites) took office.

Companies and individuals that dominate federal oil and gas leasing have
been major financial supporters of Bush and the Republican Party. Since the
1999, the top 25 owners of federal oil and gas leases have directed 86
percent of their $8.2 million in political donations to the GOP.

Individuals and companies affiliated with the Yates family of Artesia,
N.M., which is by far the biggest lease holder, have given $276,926 to GOP
parties and candidates since 1999, and just $11,400 to Democrats.

Vice President Dick Cheney
(<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/DailyNews/manual/*http://search.news.yahoo.com/search/news?p=%22Dick%20Cheney%22&c=&n=20&yn=c&c=news&cs=nw>news
-
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/DailyNews/manual/*http://search.yahoo.com/search?p=dick+cheney>web
sites) visited Artesia in March to raise money for a GOP congressional
candidate backed by the Yates. A month earlier, he was in Albuquerque for a
presidential campaign fund-raiser that took in more than $200,000.

Denver-based Tom Brown Inc. was over the acreage limit in Wyoming from 1997
to 2000, while current Commerce Secretary Evans was the company's chief
executive.

As Bush's campaign chairman, Evans raised millions of dollars from the oil
industry for the winning 2000 campaign. When he resigned at Tom Brown
before joining the Cabinet in 2001, Evans received a retirement package
worth more than $5 million.



Encana, which the government says has exceeded the acreage limit since
2002, announced plans last month to acquire Tom Brown. The merger would
join two of the top three federal oil and gas lease owners.

Environmental groups contend the administration is rewarding its financial
backers by ignoring the acreage law while pushing more public lands into
development.

"It's clear from the data that there is no reason for the Bush
administration to issue leases on America's last remaining wild public
lands, other than as a favor to their most generous political patrons,"
said Dave Alberswerth, public lands director for the Wilderness Society.

Lonnie, the BLM's assistant director, said administration officials have
left enforcement of the acreage law to bureau officials in the states. He
said agency officials are following the same policies they used in the
Clinton administration.

Enforcement efforts consist mainly of annual record title checks by bureau
officials in each state, Lonnie said. Companies near the limit are asked to
produce a record of their holdings for review. But Lonnie said no attempt
is made to verify that the record is complete unless there is reason to
believe something has been omitted.

Congress limited oil and gas lease ownership in 1920 amid concerns that a
few companies would monopolize mineral rights on public lands by cornering
leases they did not intend to exploit. But changes in the law over the
years and new interpretations have allowed companies to amass far more than
the current 246,080-acre limit per state.

Legislation pending in Congress would remove any producing lease from that
cap.

The top 25 of the more than 10,000 owners of oil and gas leases, for
example, now control more than one-third of all leased acres and 37 percent
of the acres in leases actually producing oil and gas, the AP analysis found.

The Yates family, through nearly three dozen companies, individuals and
trusts operating out of the same building in Artesia, controls 2.7 million
acres of oil and gas leases on public lands. That includes more than 1
million acres in Wyoming, more than 800,000 acres in New Mexico and more
than 500,000 in Nevada.

"We pay very close attention to that acreage limitation and are in
compliance with it all the time," said Randy Patterson, vice president for
exploration at Yates Petroleum.

A dozen companies with Yates family members as officers show up in BLM
lease owner records, all with the same address. When the General Accounting
Office
(<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/DailyNews/manual/*http://search.news.yahoo.com/search/news?p=%22General%20Accounting%20Office%22&c=&n=20&yn=c&c=news&cs=nw>news
-
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/DailyNews/manual/*http://search.yahoo.com/bin/search?cs=nw&p=General%20Accounting%20Office>web
sites), the investigative arm of Congress, questioned the arrangement in
1994, the bureau's chief lawyer ruled the law does not require that lease
holdings of affiliated companies or individuals be counted together.

The acreage limit applies to individuals and their share of leases held by
corporations in which they own more than 10 percent. When the bureau last
audited individual holdings in the Yates family businesses eight years ago
in Wyoming, it found no violations of the acreage cap.

Large public corporations cannot take advantage of the law the way the
Yates family does because their subsidiaries are considered part of the
company and their combined lease holdings must be below the state acreage
limit.

Both big oil companies and independent operators have another way to amass
lease holdings in excess of the state limit. They can enter into agreements
with other companies, approved by the government, to develop the oil or gas
on several adjoining leases as a unit under fairly strict controls. In
return, they get to exclude that acreage from the cap.

Tom Brown, for example, owns 378,790 acres of oil and gas leases on public
lands in Colorado, but more than 260,000 acres are excluded from the cap
because of such agreements. Encana owns more than 400,000 acres of leases
in Colorado, but only 155,715 are counted against the acreage limit.

In all, Encana controlled more than 1 million acres of federal oil and gas
leases in March; Tom Brown controlled 856,887 acres.

Other companies that have been in violation of the acreage cap in recent
years, all in Wyoming, are BP Amoco, Devon Energy Corp., and Marathon Oil.
The combined public land oil and gas leases of those companies in March
were 645,969 acres by Devon, 446,615 by BP Amoco, and 358,611 by Marathon.

On the Net:

A list of the top 100 federal land lease holders is available at:
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/ap_on_go_ot/storytext/SIG=11b8rh7o6/*http://wid.ap.org/oilgas/lease_acres.html>http://wid.ap.org/oilgas/lease_acres.html



Please let us stay on topic and be civil.-Home Page- www.cia-drugs.org
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www.ctrl.org DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER ========== CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please! These are sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis- directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector. ======================================================================== Archives Available at:

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