Energy Brochure 2005
Energy Brochure 2005
Energy Brochure 2005
ENERGY FACTS
Onshore Federal Lands
U.S. Department of the Interior Bureau of Land Mangagement
The Bureau of Land Management manages over 261 million acres of surface land and 700 million acres of subsurface mineral estate, most being in the western states, including Alaska. Its multiple-use mission is to sustain the health, diversity, and productivity of the public lands, including energy and mineral development that helps meet the nations energy needs. The Bureau plays a critical role in facilitating the development of energy resources such as oil and gas, coal, geothermal, hydropower, solar, wind, and biomass in its implementation of the Presidents National Energy Policy. The Bureau is also the leasing agent for all energy minerals on all Federal lands, and as trustee, manages mineral development on over 56 million acres of Indian lands.
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State
Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Florida Illinois Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maryland Michigan Mississippi Montana Nebraska
6,474 67,350 0 71,588 70,339 1,340,546 3,468 1,581 109,649 26,039 64,945 0 30,490 36,506 736,958 6,069
Nevada New Mexico New York North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Pennsylvania South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Virginia Washington West Virginia Wyoming Total
102 25,112 5 746 495 335 145 65 9 332 3,745 15 1 290 18,943 63,370
15,498 3,769,487 1,284 299,487 36,542 120,582 4,894 33,377 2,296 113,398 916,106 10,555 0 54,987 3,719,919 11,671,414
ENERGY FACTS
1
OIL AND GAS SALES AND REVENUES (MMS Mineral Review, FY 2004)
State Alabama Alaska Arkansas California Colorado Florida Illinois Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Michigan Mississippi Montana Nebraska Nevada New Mexico New York North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Pennsylvania South Dakota Texas Utah Virginia West Virginia Wyoming Total Oil Sales Volume (bbls) 262,249 297,556 2,214 15,827,500 3,998,996 1,200 45,925 28,126 9,639 657,931 37,329 470,049 3,434,518 41,871 598,796 30,336,794 ----5,038,396 28,501 150,201 69 172,609 438,329 4,121,756 --------33,345,702 99,346,256 Royalty Revenues ($) 929,356 1,000,456 7,081 21,924,000 15,188,924 3,619 142,300 84,802 3,292 2,100,178 101,153 1,374,627 10,195,884 130,936 1,498,428 91,858,280 ----17,776,148 31,216 390,635 179 567,068 1,481,649 10,636,752 --------84,547,529 261,974,494 Gas Sales Volume (MCF) 681,990 30,438,714 6,902,885 6,733,922 111,355,670 --------13,907,928 294,578 13,462,837 2,424,989 629,599 21,371,718 ------930,158,803 18,310 7,282,857 845,674 12,070,082 93,769 262,814 24,018,895 126,362,710 73,380 759,958 911,199,107 2,221,352,097 Royalty Revenues ($) 406,837 8,241,241 4,083,430 4,279,993 43,703,409 --------6,957,948 109,379 8,469,430 1,294,944 382,126 8,647,005 ----400,848,183 10,913 2,996,728 397,899 6,047,082 24,380 81,748 12,933,238 47,053,522 37,611 346,731 357,110,212 914,103,989
OIL AND GAS ACTIVITY OVER FIVE-YEAR PERIOD (BLM PUBLIC LAND STATS, FY 2004)
Year 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Competitive Leases No. Acres 24,339 26,330 28,317 28,799 21,646 16,792,130 17,031,579 20,781,874 21,461,003 16,744,795 Non-Competitive Leases No. Acres 23,171 23,051 23,327 23,121 21,669 18,022,788 18,478,799 19,443,008 19,299,378 17,934,651 Other Types of Leases No. Acres 2,524 2,525 2,511 2,515 2,521 810,430 796,977 768,574 768,628 766,998
ENERGY FACTS
Total Leases Issued No. 2,900 3,289 2,384 2,022 2,699 Acres 2,650,493 3,997,271 2,812,606 2,064,289 4,157,121
COAL
Coal used almost exclusively to generate electricity Coal power plants accounting for over 51 percent of all U.S. electricity generation of 1,966 billion kWh (2000) U.S. energy consumption: coal 22% Total coal demonstrated reserve base in U.S. 501.1 billion tons (2001) Total short tons of coal produced (FY 2003) from Federal lands 10.2 quadrillion Btus
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ENERGY FACTS
3
GEOTHERMAL
Geothermal energy accounting for 17 percent of renewable electricity generation, and 0.4 percent of total U.S. electricity supply of 14 billion kWh (2000) Most activity in California and Nevada; other active states Utah, New Mexico, and Oregon California: geothermal energy displaces need for over 9 million barrels of oil per year California: 40 percent of worlds geothermal-generated energy produced in Federal land nonFederal power plants Percent of production from BLM leases of the nations Federal geothermal production energy from geothermal resources: California 87% Nevada 9% New Mexico <1% Utah 3%
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( ) Indicates the number of Direct Use facilities or power plants. (1) Provides an alternative source of energy for greenhouses, tilapia farms, and other commercial uses
ENERGY FACTS
GEOTHERMAL LEASES
(Competitive & Non-Competitive Public Domain & Acquired Lands) (BLM PUBLIC LAND STATISTICS, FY2004)
State California Idaho Nevada New Mexico Oregon Utah Total Number 70 3 242 4 57 9 385 Acres 98,865 2,465 356,861 4,581 54,151 8,047
522,970
WIND
Accounts for 6 percent of renewable electricity generation and 0.1 percent of total energy supply of 6 billion kWh (2000) About 20 percent of installed energy capacity on Federal lands Abundant wind energy potential: West, Great Plains, and New England Nevada: largest potential for wind development; approximately 46 percent of 22 million acres of BLM administered land with commercial energy development potential California wind energy project: 2,960 wind turbines installed on public lands with capacity to generate 315 megawas of electrical power; can supply needs of about 300,000 people Currently 22 wind-energy right-of-way authorizations for wind energy production on public lands in California and Wyoming covering approximately 5,000 acres; can generate about 500 megawa hours of electrical power Additional 9 right-of-way authorizations for wind energy site testing and monitoring activities in Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington Extension of Federal wind energy production tax credit and State-level tax credits generating renewed interest in commercial wind energy projects on public lands 60 new applications in Arizona, Nevada, Idaho, California, Utah, New Mexico, and Wyoming
ENERGY FACTS
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RIGHTS OF WAY
Provides access for electrical transmission lines, oil and gas pipelines, roads, telephone/ telegraph lines, water pipelines, and communication sites.
*MLA 10 290 243 1,201 18 110 308 112 17,776 22 788 5,833 26,711
**FLPMA/ Other 1,093 4,326 5,577 4,866 47 4,885 3,239 7,338 8,328 8,975 4,231 9,453 62,385
Total 1,103 4,616 5,820 6,067 65 4,995 3,547 7,450 26,104 8,997 5,019 15,286 89,069
Rents($) 276,474.18 1,074,172.77 2,401,884.78 691,351.53 1,374.52 750,372.62 141,244.34 2,471,473.94 1,448,680.64 562,256.17 708,527.95 1,476,824.80 12,005,257.98
Of these ROWs:
ENERGY FACTS
13,400 are electric transmission linear 25,401 are oil and gas pipelines 4,638 are telephone/telegraph lines 44,527 other other ROWs for roads, water pipelines, communication sites, et al Total length of authorized ROWs (assumes average width of 100 feet): Transmission lines 71,613 miles Oil and gas pipelines 36,310 miles Telephone/telegraph 4,638 miles Total area of electrical transmission lines 868,035 acres Total area of oil and gas pipelines 220,062 acres Total area of telephone/telegraph lines 54,274 acres Total area of non-linear and other types of ROWs 5,484,347 acres
SOLAR
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Solar energy from the sun used to generate electricity, heat water, and heat, cool and light buildings Accounts for 1 percent of renewable electricity generation and 0.02 percent of total U.S. electricity supply of 0.5 billion kWh (2000) No pending applications or existing right-of-way authorization on BLM public lands for large concentrated solar power commercial generating facilities BLM generating 177 megawa hours of electricity from photovoltaic systems each year from over 600 installations BLM a leader in implementing cost eective photovoltaic systems and demonstrating appropriate use of the technology
BIOMASS
Organic maer can be used to provide heat, make fuel, and generate electricity Accounting for 76 percent of renewable electricity generation and 1.6 percent of total U.S. electricity supply of 61 billion kWh (2000) BLM managing 55 million acres of forest and woodlands Primary focus of biomass thinning treatments restore long-term ecological function BLM developing biomass utilization strategy to address forest health and restoration concerns; reduce hazardous fuels Estimated 12 million acres in need of restoration which could lead to biomass removal Estimated 120,000 acres per year needing biomass treatments- could lead to an estimated 650 gigawa hours of electricity per year
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HYDROPOWER
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BLM - the primary agency with responsibility for the initial identication and evaluation of potential waterpower sites The Federal Power Act of 1920 (FPA) the principal authority for authorizing non-Federal development of water on Federal lands BLM - permits non-government agencies to build dams and reservoirs on Federal lands through issuance of rights-of-way Currently 40 hydroelectric projects on BLM lands subject to license renewal over next 10 years Accounting for about 7 percent of total power generation; fourth largest source of U.S. electricity generation of 276 billion kWh (2000) States depending heavily on waterpower as source of energy: Idaho, Washington, Oregon, Maine, South Dakota, California, Montana, and New York Energy production from Bureau of Reclamation dams not included
ENERGY FACTS
7
OIL SHALE
Oil shale resources in the U.S. enormous; over 50% of worlds estimate of 2.6 trillion barrels of oil from oil shale resource Green River oil shale deposits largest with estimated 1.5 trillion barrels of oil Federal Government owns approximately 72% of oil shale acreage In Colorado; Federal Government owns approximately 78% of surface acreage and 82% of shale oil in-place Original oil shale leases, Ca, Cb, Ua, and Ub relinquished No Federal oil shale leases at this time Research and development leasing proposal is underway
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URANIUM/ NUCLEAR
Uranium (U3O8) reserves and resources - 268 million pounds @ $30 per pound forward cost (operating and capital costs); 1,422 million pounds @ $100 forward costs (2001) Total production of uranium in U.S. - estimated 2,344,107 pounds (2002) No exploratory holes drilled; 1,000 development holes drilled in 2002 U.S. energy consumption; nuclear 8% Mining claims are located on Federal Lands but there is no leasing Almost 20% share of total U.S. generating capacity of 754 billion kWh (2000) Nuclear fuel costs low and well below that of major competing fossil fuels
ENERGY FACTS
TAR SANDS
Estimated resource in U.S.- 40 to 76 billion barrels of oil Economics and technology hinder development No tar sands leases on Federal lands at present
BLM
US ENERGY CONSUMPTION BY ENERGY SOURCE: 2000 ACTUAL AND EIA FORECAST for 2025
Actual 2000 Quadrillion BTU Traditional Sources Petroleum Products Natural Gas Coal Nuclear Power Conventional Hydropower Other Sub Total-Traditional Non-Hydro Renewables Geothermal Wood Other Biomass Municipal Solid Waste Solar Thermal, Electric & Hot Water Solar Photovoltaic Ethanol Wind Sub Total-Non Hydro Renew. Total 38.39 24.07 22.64 7.87 2.84 0.31 96.12 0.30 0.41 2.07 0.31 0.06 0.00 0.14 0.05 3.34 99.46 % of Total 38.60% 24.20% 22.76% 7.91% 2.86% 0.31% 96.64% 0.30% .41% 2.08% 0.31% 0.06% 0.00% 0.14% 0.05% 3.36% 100.00% EIA Forcast for 2025 Quadrillion BTU 56.22 25.81 29.42 8.43 3.12 0.07 133.07 1.02 0.40 3.42 0.44 0.09 0.01 0.34 0.37 6.09 139.16 % of Total 40.40% 25.73% 21.14% 6.06% 2.24% 0.05% 95.62% 0.73% 0.29% 2.46% 0.32% 0.06% 0.01% 0.24% 0.27% 4.38% 100.00%
Title based on Energy Information Administrations (EIA) Annual Energy Outlook 2003 and from Meridian Clan Fuels, LLC
DEFINITIONS
Megawa: 1 million was. Gigawa: a unit of power equal to 1 billion was MCF: 1,000 cubic feet TCF: trillion cubic feet Bbls (barrels of liquid, i.e. oil): one barrel equals 42 U.S. gallons BTU: British Thermal Units: amount of energy to raise temperature of 1 pound of water 1 degree Fahrenheit
CREDITS
SOURCES OF INFORMATION:
U.S. Department of the Interior National Energy Policy Report, 2001 Bureau of Land Mangagement
BLM Public Land Statistics, 2004 MMS Minerals Review FY 2004 Coalbed Methane Development Information, Powder River Information Council U.S Department of the Interior: Interim Report of the Oil Shale Advisory Board to the Secretary of the Interior, February 1965 U.S. Department of Energy, Tar Sands Program Plan, FY 1989, June 1989
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ENERGY FACTS
Interesting Facts
1 barrel of crude oil = 6 million Btus
5 trillion Btus = enough energy to heat 100,000 single family homes per year in the U.S.
1 quadrillion (1x1015) Btus = 170 million barrels of crude oil; 45 million tons of coal; 1 trillion cubic feet of natural gas
One thousand megawatts can supply 1 million people with electrical power.
Coal, nuclear energy, natural gas, and hydropower account for about 95 percent of total electricity generation; oil and renewable energy contribute remainder
http://www.blm.gov