Title 43 › Chapter CHAPTER 29— - SUBMERGED LANDS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - OUTER CONTINENTAL SHELF LANDS › § 1334
The Secretary must run and make rules for leasing on the outer Continental Shelf. The Secretary can change those rules at any time and they apply to all leases when they take effect. The Secretary must work with other federal and state agencies on safety, the environment, and conservation, and must ask the Attorney General (who will consult the FTC) about competition issues. The rules must let the Secretary temporarily stop or suspend any activity at a lease when a leaseholder asks or when there is a threat of serious or immediate harm to people, fish, property, minerals, or the marine or coastal environment. If a lease is suspended, its term is extended by the same amount of time unless the suspension was caused by gross negligence or willful violation. The rules also allow cancellation of a lease after a hearing if continued work would probably cause serious harm, the threat won’t get better in a reasonable time, and cancellation’s benefits outweigh keeping the lease. Cancellation can only happen after operations have been suspended continuously for five years, or for a shorter time if the leaseholder asks. If a lease is canceled, the leaseholder may get money based on one of two formulas (including fair value or reimbursement of costs and payments, with interest); leases issued before Sept 18, 1978 use the fair-value formula. Other rules cover transfers, unitization and pooling, subsurface storage, drilling easements, prompt development, and meeting air-quality standards when activities significantly affect a State’s air. Leases must follow these rules. Nonproducing leases can be canceled after 30 days’ notice for continued default. Producing leases can be forfeited through court proceedings. The Secretary may grant pipeline rights-of-way with strict safety and nondiscrimination conditions, and pipelines generally must offer open access and may be ordered to expand capacity when shippers pay their share (with some geographic exceptions). Leaseholders must produce oil or gas at rates set by Presidential order or by the Secretary of Energy to avoid wasting the resource. Federal agencies that take actions affecting the shelf must tell the Secretary, who then notifies affected State governors. After Sept 18, 1978, flaring is not allowed except when no practical production method exists, to meet a temporary emergency, or for testing. The Secretary must also stop harmful competitive drilling across Federal-State boundaries by promoting cooperative development.
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Public Lands — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
43 U.S.C. § 1334
Title 43 — Public Lands
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73