Title 30 › Chapter 3A— LEASES AND PROSPECTING PERMITS › Subchapter I— GENERAL PROVISIONS › § 192
All royalties the United States is owed from an oil or gas lease must be paid in oil or gas when the Secretary of the Interior asks. When a lease is issued and from time to time after that, the Secretary must offer the government's share of oil or gas for sale, unless he keeps it for government use. He will advertise the sale and sell by sealed bids or public auction for whatever time he decides. He can reject all bids if he thinks that is best. If no acceptable bid is received, a buyer fails to pay, or taking the highest bid is not in the public interest, he can re-advertise, sell privately for at least the market price, or accept money from the leaseholder instead. If local refineries that do not have their own crude cannot find enough oil on the open market, the Secretary must give them preference and may sell royalty oil to them privately for at least the market price, for processing or use only, and may split the oil among refineries in the production area. While a permanent sale contract is being arranged, current royalty oil or gas may be sold privately at not less than the market price. Any U.S. department or agency may also buy such royalty oil or gas privately at not less than the market price.
Full Legal Text
Mineral Lands and Mining — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
30 U.S.C. § 192
Title 30 — Mineral Lands and Mining
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60