The Interior Department just laid out a decades-long offshore leasing calendar under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, locking in regular auctions in the Gulf of America and Alaska’s Cook Inlet. At least 30 Gulf sales and six in Cook Inlet are scheduled, according to a Department of the Interior press release—the clearest signal yet that the Trump administration is leaning hard into offshore drilling as the backbone of its energy agenda.
The Gulf still does the heavy lifting when it comes to US oil production, pumping 14–15% of all U.S. crude. Twice-yearly lease sales give operators something they haven’t had in years: predictability. That matters when deepwater projects eat billions in upfront capital. A guaranteed sales schedule lowers risk and ensures the pipelines, rigs, and jobs tied to Gulf production keep humming.
Cook Inlet is smaller but politically potent. Six planned sales through 2032 mark a reversal from Biden-era policy and reinforce Alaska’s role as both an energy hub and an Arctic gateway. It’s also a clear pitch to Asian buyers that American crude and LNG remain viable counters to Russian and Middle Eastern supply.
The move comes on the heels of July’s surprise onshore leasing push in Louisiana, Michigan, and Mississippi—states hardly known as federal leasing hotspots. Put together, the message is blunt: no basin is too obscure, and no lease too small, when the White House is trying to hammer home “energy dominance.”
The first auction, cheekily named “Big Beautiful Gulf 1,” is set for December 10. The name might be a wink at the politics behind it, but the schedule itself matters. After years of whiplash on federal leasing, at least companies now know when the sales are coming. In an industry used to volatility, just having dates on the calendar is a win.
By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com
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