HR-7831-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.
Sponsored by Mike Kennedy (R-UT)
What it does
This bill would extend the Bureau of Land Management's (BLM) authority to collect permit processing fees from oil and gas companies applying to drill on federal lands. The fees are deposited into the BLM Permit Processing Improvement Fund, which supports the agency's permit review operations. Current law authorizes fee collection through FY2026; this bill would extend that authority through FY2037.
Who benefits
BLM, which retains dedicated funding to process permits more efficiently. Oil and gas companies that benefit from a funded, staffed permitting office capable of faster permit reviews. Federal taxpayers, who avoid having general appropriations fund permit processing costs that are instead borne by industry applicants. Rural communities and workers in energy-producing regions who depend on active drilling activity on federal lands.
Who is hurt
Oil and gas companies and smaller independent drillers that pay the fees, increasing their operating costs. New market entrants with limited capital who may find per-application fees a proportionally larger burden than established operators. Environmental and conservation groups that prefer reduced drilling activity on federal lands may view continued permitting infrastructure as enabling expanded fossil fuel extraction.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Permit Processing Improvement Fund has provided BLM with stable, dedicated funding to reduce permit backlogs and improve review timelines, benefiting both industry and the public interest in efficient land management. They contend that allowing the authority to lapse would shift processing costs to general taxpayers or slow permitting, disrupting domestic energy production on federal lands and the jobs and revenues that depend on it.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that extending fee collection through 2037 entrenches a permitting infrastructure that facilitates expanded oil and gas extraction on public lands, working against federal climate commitments and the long-term transition away from fossil fuels. They contend that Congress should use this reauthorization as an opportunity to reassess whether BLM's permitting capacity should be scaled back rather than funded for another decade.