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BP, Chevron are Top Spenders at Small US Gulf of Mexico Oil and Gas Auction

  • BP's $21 million bid leads auction
  • Chevron bids nearly $11.5 ​million for three blocks

March 11 (Reuters) - A sale of drilling ‌rights in the Gulf of Mexico on Wednesday ended with $46.98 million in high bids from oil and gas companies, ​with a single bid from BP accounting ​for nearly half of the total, according to ⁠a livestreamed U.S. government auction.

The sale, conducted by ​the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, yielded ​far less industry interest than the last one three months ago. President Donald Trump's administration has prioritized regular lease sales, and is planning ​for 30 in the region through 2040.

A $21 million ​high bid from BP for a block in the Green Canyon ‌area ⁠was by far the auction's highest. Other high bidders included Chevron, Woodside Energy, Shell, LLOG Exploration and Anadarko. Chevron's high bid total, for three blocks, ​neared $11.5 million.

The ​bids were read ⁠via livestream on BOEM's website.

"Today's results are an important and necessary step ​forward," Lanny Erdos, the Interior Department's acting ​assistant ⁠secretary for land and minerals management, said at the auction. "We have restored certainty. For far too long, the ⁠offshore ​industry has operated under delays ​and policy reversals."

BOEM is an arm of the Interior Department.

Reporting by ​Nichola Groom; Editing by Mark Porter and Will Dunham

Source: Reuters


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