In almost every instance, whenever an energy company drills for oil or gas on federal property, it’s supposed to pay a royalty or tax to the government. Last month, CBS News reported that the Interior Department’s diligence in collecting those royalties is little more than a bad joke.
As the investigative report explained, the Interior Department has basically been letting Big Oil do whatever the industry wants. A CBS source said the Interior Department’s Minerals Management Service, the vast majority of the time, simply allows royalties to be paid on the “honor system.” Earl Devaney, Interior’s Inspector General, noted in September, “Simply stated, short of a crime, anything goes at the highest levels of the Department of the Interior.”
But what if there were a crime?
The Interior Department’s Minerals Management Service claimed it conducted audits of unpaid royalties on about 20% of the energy companies who drill on federal property. Unfortunately, for reasons that were unclear, the agency “could not accurately count” its own oil and gas audits — and as a result, it reported audits that never occurred. The scheme has cost taxpayers as much as $10 billion in lost revenue.
Today, the story got considerably more interesting. Congressional Quarterly’s Jeff Tollefson found that Interior officials may have known about the unpaid royalties all along — and may have also intentionally hid the problem.
Justin Rood noted, “One official may even have lied to Congress about when she knew things were screwy with her agency’s energy contracts, which have allowed companies like ExxonMobil and Shell to pay billions less than they should have to extract oil and gas from federal lands.”
Here’s an excerpt from CQ’s report:
A much-anticipated report to Congress will allege that Interior Department officials covered up a problem with oil and gas leases after it was discovered in 2000, according to congressional aides.
The Interior Department inspector general (IG) also has been investigating whether Johnnie Burton, head of the agency that collects royalties, might have been told about the problem earlier than she said in congressional testimony last fall.
This news comes shortly after we learned that the Justice Department is “investigating whether the director of a multibillion-dollar oil-trading program at the Interior Department has been paid as a consultant for oil companies hoping for contracts.”
Which comes shortly after we learned that former Interior Secretary Gale Norton has sailed through the revolving door to become a lawyer for Royal Dutch Shell.
Which comes shortly after revelations that officials at Bush’s Interior Department tried to hide information that federal incentives for oil drilling in the Gulf of Mexico isn’t cost effective, doesn’t produce a lot of oil, and is generally just a massive give-away to oil companies.
You know, I’m starting to get the impression that Bush’s Interior Department might be beholden to Big Oil. I can’t wait to see what Henry Waxman does to these guys.