US agency to review oil royalties
The Government Accountability Office, the watchdog agency for Congress, is beginning a broad investigation into
potential deficiencies in how the government collects billions of dollars in royalties from companies that produce
oil and gas on federal territory.
Investigators will scrutinize an Interior Department decision to drop claims against Chevron, which is drilling for
oil off Louisiana, said the report.
Republican lawmakers said they had worries about the management of the entire royalty program by the Interior
Department, including its regulations and enforcement practices and the accuracy of basic information.
"They don't know how much oil is coming out of the ground," said Representative Darrell E. Issa, Republican of
California and chairman of the committee's subcommittee on energy. "If an oil company were to give them the right
number, they would take it. If they were to give them the wrong number, they would take it."
The investigation reflects a growing anger in Congress about the Interior Department's vast oil and gas leasing
program, under which the government collects as much as $ 10 bn a year on oil and gas produced on federal land and in
federal waters, said the report.
The Minerals Management Service of the Interior Department, which oversees royalty collections, has come under
growing criticism from lawmakers in both parties for losing track of billions of dollars in royalties. The agency has
been under fire since February for errors on offshore leases that could cost the government more than $ 7 bn over the
next five years, as well as for its sluggish response.
