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California balks at prospect of offshore leasing

  • Market: Crude oil, Natural gas, Oil products
  • 11/11/25

California governor Gavin Newsom (D) is pushing back against the possibility of a federal plan that would auction new drilling rights off the state's coast for the first time since 1984.

President Donald Trump's administration is preparing to release a "draft proposed program" to guide offshore oil and gas leasing over the next five years. By law, the plan must include twice-a-year lease sales in the US Gulf of Mexico and at least six lease sales in Alaska's Cook Inlet by 2032. The administration is widely expected to propose new leasing in other areas. Newsom said on Tuesday he would oppose any efforts to expand leasing off California.

"Dead on arrival," Newsom said in a social media post on Tuesday.

Trump had already tried to allow oil and gas lease sales off California and other coastal US states during his first term, but he abandoned the idea when it became politically toxic in states key to his re-election bid. Trump could try again through a new five-year offshore leasing plan, which will be subject to public comment before it could be finalized next year.

The US Interior Department, which retained staff to work on the plan during the government shutdown, did not respond to a request for comment.

Oil industry groups have supported restarting offshore leasing off the western US, "particularly in southern California" where there are energy resources and existing offshore infrastructure, according to a comment letter filed this summer. But industry officials recognize that any drilling off California, which is already fighting efforts to restart production from existing offshore facilities, would face significant obstacles.

"Political resistance to further production has had a chilling effect on industry interest in the area," the American Petroleum Institute and other industry groups wrote in a comment letter on 16 June. "Should the political climate reverse, the opportunity for further development exists."

California would have limited options to block oil and gas leasing in federal waters off the state. But it could impose regulations that make offshore resources hard to develop, such as by constraining onshore pipelines and other needed infrastructure.


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