Alaska receives $13.5 million from Interior Department Six coastal states receive $65 million from revenues earned from outer continental shelf leases Petroleum News Alaska
The U.S. Department of the Interior’s Minerals Management Service has disbursed $13.5 million to the state of Alaska. This is the 14th installment in a series of annual payments based on 1985 settlement legislation regarding the allocation of royalties, rents and bonuses from certain federal offshore oil and gas leases, MMS said April 27.
A total of $65 million goes to six coastal states: Alabama, Alaska, California, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas.
The 8(g) zone The 1978 Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act Amendments provided for certain coastal states and the federal government to share revenues earned from OCS leases, generally, three to six miles beyond a state’s coastal boundary. This area, known as the 8(g) zone, is named after the enabling paragraph of that legislation. Between 1978 and 1986, revenues earned in the 8(g) zone were placed in escrow, pending agreement on a formula for dividing those earnings.
In 1986 Congress determined that coastal states would receive 27 percent of the 8(g) income held in escrow, with the remaining 73 percent going to the federal government.
At that time, the escrow account contained about $6 billion, about $1.5 billion of which was paid to the states. The remaining $4.5 billion went into the U.S. Treasury General Fund.
More money coming The settlement also identified an additional $650 million to be paid to the states, incrementally, over a 15-year period: 3 percent of their share for each of the first five years, 7 percent annually for the second five years, and 10 percent annually for the final five years.
Now in their “10 percent years” of the agreement, the states receive $65 million annually. Currently, the annual payments to individual states are: California, $28.9 million; Alaska, $13.4 million; Texas, $13.4 million; Louisiana, $ 8.4 million; Alabama, $0.7 million; Mississippi, $0.2 million.
Including this year’s payment, these states have received a combined total of $585 million, 90 percent of the $650 million.
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