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The MMS's Minerals Revenue Management is responsible for
management of all revenues associated with both federal offshore and
onshore mineral leases. The effort is one of the federal government’s
greatest sources of non-tax revenues. While MMSs Offshore Minerals Management offices contend with
all aspects of offshore federal leasing, federal onshore mineral
leasing activities are managed by the Department of the Interior’s
Bureau of Land Management and the Department of Agriculture’s U.S.
Forest Service.
Indian mineral leases (which are not federal leases
and located only onshore) are administered by the Bureau of Indian
Affairs and the Bureau of Land Management. The MMS MRM, in conjunction
with the Bureau of Indian Affairs, provides revenue management services
for mineral leases on Indian lands.
Operationally based at the Denver Federal
Center in Colorado, the Minerals Revenue Management has field offices
near principal energy development areas in Texas, Oklahoma and New
Mexico to augment the program.
Some federal lands are leased to
individuals and companies for minerals development. Lease holders
competitively bid, initially pay a bonus and subsequently, rent for the
right to develop these onshore and offshore lands.
If minerals are found, extracted and
sold, the federal government is entitled to a certain percentage of, or
royalty on, the production.
Using sophisticated, computerized
accounting systems, the MRM processes approximately $900 million (mostly
via electronic funds transfers) each month. Bonuses, rents and royalties
from nearly 67,000 leases can amount to several billion dollars each
year -- an amount that peaked to more than $12 billion in 2006, but
averages from $6 to $7 billion in recent years. Totals fluctuate with
market prices, amount of production, and the number of lease sales.
For offshore leases, the Minerals Revenue
Management distributes the collected money to U.S. Treasury accounts. In
recent years, annual deposits have been nearly $900 million to the Land
and Water Conservation Fund and $150 million to the Historic
Preservation Fund. The remainder is sent to the U. S. Treasury's General
Fund. Additionally, a portion of royalties from certain offshore federal
leases, adjacent to seaward boundaries of coastal states, are shared
with those states.
Distribution of revenues associated with
onshore federal lands is split 50-40-10, with 50 percent of the money
going directly to the state within which the specific lease was located.
Forty percent is sent to the Reclamation Fund of the U.S. Treasury. This
special account finances the Bureau of Reclamation's water projects in
17 western states. The remaining 10 percent goes to the Treasury's
General Fund.
One exception, Alaska, gets a 90 percent
share of the revenues. The remainder goes to the U.S. Treasury.
In Fiscal Year 2006, 34 states received
$2.2 billion as their cumulative share of onshore federal leases.
Money collected for Indian mineral leases
is all -- l00 percent -- turned over to respective Indian tribes or
individual Indian mineral owners through the Office of Trust Funds
Management.
The MRM is comprised of more than 500
federal and 300 contractor employees, including accountants and computer
experts, auditors, geologists, economists, administrators and more.
While expertise may vary according to his or her
profession, each employee is charged with enthusiasm toward total
quality service to their customers, the MMS and the Nation. |