
US Interior Secretary Doug Burgum directed the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) to start developing a plan for offshore oil and gas lease sales on the US Outer Continental Shelf (OCS), including likely sales in a newly established 27h OCS planning area offshore Alaska in the High Arctic.
The 11th National OCS program will replace the current 10th Program (2024–29), which includes only three oil and gas lease sales over 5 years—all in the Gulf, Burgum said in a release Apr. 18.
BOEM will work to complete those sales, while it begins to develop the new program, he said. Earlier this month, Burgum directed BOEM to move forward a lease sale in the Gulf, starting with publication in June 2025 of a notice of sale.
BOEM will soon publish in the Federal Register a request for information and comments which starts a 45-day public comment period that serves as the initial step in the multi-year planning process that details lease sales BOEM will hold in the coming years.
The Federal Register notice will also outline BOEM’s new jurisdiction over the High Arctic planning area offshore Alaska, as well as new boundaries for existing planning areas, Interior noted.
The request for information will not propose a specific timeline for future lease sales or outline the potential sale areas. Instead, it invites stakeholders to provide recommendations for leasing opportunities and raise concerns about offshore leasing.
BOEM manages 3.2 billion acres in the OCS, including 2,227 active oil and gas leases covering about 12.1 million acres in OCS regions. Of these, 469 leases are currently producing oil and gas.
BOEM earlier in April increased its estimate of oil and gas reserves in the US Gulf’s OCS by 1.30 billion boe from its 2021 estimate, bringing the total reserve estimate to 7.04 billion boe (OGJ Online, Apr. 14, 2025).