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Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission

The Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission (IOGCC),< formerly the Interstate Oil Compact Commission, is a United States organization, representing the governors of 31 member and seven associate states, that works to ensure the nation's oil and natural gas resources are conserved and utilized to their maximum potential while protecting health, safety and the environment.[3][4]

Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission
AbbreviationIOGCC
Formation1935
TypeInterstate compact
PurposePromote efficient harvesting of oil and gas while protecting health, safety and the environment.
HeadquartersOklahoma City
Region
United States
2023 Chairman
Mark Gordon, The State Governor of Wyoming [1]
Vice-Chair
Tom Kropatsch [2]
Websitehttps://oklahoma.gov/iogcc.html
Formerly called
Interstate Oil Compact Commission

Background edit

In the early days of oil exploration, drilling was governed by the law of capture, which states that the owner of land on which a well resides has the right to any oil from that well even if it was drained from the land of his neighbors. This provided an incentive for each land owner to extract the oil as fast as possible.[5]: 21  Each state tried to regulate its own oil by such measures as proration, the limiting of production to some fraction of capacity; but then two great oil fields, the Oklahoma City Oil Field and the East Texas Oil Field, were discovered. This, along with the Great Depression, led to much waste and very low prices, with a catastrophic effect on the industry. The problems were large enough that the states recognized the need for cooperation.[5]: 33–34 

The compact was formed in 1935 as the Interstate Compact to Conserve Gas and Oil.[6] The purpose of the compact was to eliminate the glut of oil and raise prices for consumers.[7] The interstate compact was seen as an alternative to direct federal regulation that would allow oil producing states to retain more control.[8]

While the National Guard occupied wells in Oklahoma and Texas in 1931–1932, an Oil States Advisory Committee drafted the Thomas-McKeon Bill, which proposed an interstate oil compact and a Federal Interstate Oil Board to recommend quotas. However, the bill was abandoned after oil industry representatives withdrew their support.[5]: 37–38 [9]: 126  From 1933 to 1935, oil was regulated under the National Industrial Recovery Act and the Petroleum Code, which in effect left production control in the hands of industry representatives, with no representation for the states.[5]: 38  The Supreme Court found these regulations unconstitutional in 1935,[10]: 375  and the idea of an interstate compact was revived. On December 3, 1934, Oklahoma Governor-elect E. W. Marland met with the governors of Kansas and Texas to discuss an interstate compact. This led to the drafting of the Interstate Compact to Conserve Oil and Gas, which was ratified by Congress on August 27, 1935.[9]: 150–151  At first, Congress ratified it for only two years at a time, then four years, and finally the compact was made permanent in 1979.[11]: 76 

Some economic historians have described the regulation of oil output under the compact as an example of a price fixing cartel.[12] The production controls of the IOGCC and the Texas Railroad Commission have been cited as precursors to the establishment of OPEC's caps on member state oil production.[13]

The stated purpose of the compact was "conserve oil and gas by the prevention of physical waste thereof from any cause".[14] States that ratified the compact agreed to enact legislation for this purpose. Article VI of the compact constituted "The Interstate Oil Compact Commission," renamed as the Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission in 1991, and its duty was to make recommendations for preventing the physical waste of gas and oil.[10][14]

Organizational structure edit

 
  Member states
  Associate states

Initially the commission had six members: Colorado, Illinois, Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas. It now has 31 member states, 7 associate states and 10 international affiliates (including 7 Canadian provinces and territories).[15] The governor of each member state appoints an official representative who can vote on policy recommendations, and any number of associate representatives who can vote in their place if the official representative is not available. The list of members can be found on the IOGCC website.[16] Many representatives are state regulators overseeing gas and drilling, but as of 2010 at least seven were industry executives and lobbyists.[17] The commission meets biannually, but much of its work occurs in small committee meetings throughout the year.[17] To govern operations, it has steering, finance, resolutions and nominating committees. Other committees are Energy Resources, Research and Technology; Environment and Safety; International; Public Lands; Public Outreach; and State Review.[18]

Transparency and accountability edit

The IOGCC is governed by the compact and several bylaws. The compact did not provide for any resources to support IOGCC; a later bylaw stipulated that its expenses would be paid "from voluntary contributions from the member states and other sources of revenue approved by the Commission". These sources, which include federal grants, have proved to be enough to allow the commission to function.[19]: 144  IOGCC uses an Oklahoma government email address and domain but it is not a state, not a federal agency and does not have to register to lobby the federal government.[20] A plethora of information is available but relatively little of it has come directly from the organization itself. IOGCC claims an exemption from the Open Public Records Act and has removed a provision within its by-laws that formerly said its records are open to the public.[21][22]

Activities edit

To identify best practices, IOGCC surveys member states and assesses their activities. It catalogues innovative programs and shares the information with states, and it hosts biannual meetings that draw together representatives from the government, the oil industry and environmentalists.[23] IOGCC is an advocate for states' rights, arguing that state regulation is more effective than "one size fits all" federal regulation.[24] As well as creating reports, it creates model statutes as a guide for legislation by states.[25]

Issues that IOGCC has worked on include national energy policy, carbon sequestration, environmental stewardship, hydraulic fracturing and produced water.[26]

Price fixing edit

In the 1930s and 1940s, the commission functioned as a price fixing cartel. According to the legal scholar Blakely Murphy, the commission operated under the guise of resource conservation but primarily existed to protect the interests of oil producers.[27]

Carbon sequestration edit

A large part of the human contribution to global warming is from the emission of carbon dioxide (CO2) as a result of burning fossil fuels.[28] One way to reduce the contribution is to capture the CO2 before it enters the atmosphere and sequester it by injecting underground in depleted oil and natural gas fields, saline formations and coal beds.[29][30] Recognizing that the oil and gas industry has a lot of experience with injecting CO2 into the ground for enhanced oil recovery, the IOGCC launched the Geological CO2 Sequestration Task Force in 2002 to investigate the issues surrounding sequestration.[31] A two-phase study was funded by the Department of Energy. Phase I concluded that the states had the knowledge and experience to regulate sequestration safely. In phase II, started in 2006, the task force prepared a report that included a model statute for the states with explanations on how to implement it.[31][32]

Awards edit

The IOGCC has three awards:

  • The E. W. Marland Award, established in 1994, recognizes an outstanding state legislator.
  • The Warwick Downing Award, established in 2005, recognizes an individual outside state governments who has made an outstanding contribution to the IOGCC.
  • The highest honor, established in 2001, is the Chairman's Stewardship Award for exemplary efforts in environmental stewardship.[33] This award has four categories: Environmental Partnership (for partnerships with industry led by non-industry organizations); Energy Education; Small Company and Large Company.[34]

References edit

  1. ^ "Officers". Interstate Oil & Gas Compact Commission. Retrieved 2024-03-24.
  2. ^ "Officers". Interstate Oil & Gas Compact Commission. Retrieved 2024-03-24.
  3. ^ Baca, Marie C. (9 December 2010). "Some Appointees to Oil and Gas Commission Are Industry Execs, Lobbyists". Our Investigations. ProPublica. Retrieved 23 September 2014.
  4. ^ Marginal Wells (oklahoma.gov)
  5. ^ a b c d Lovejoy, Wallace F.; Homan, Paul T. (2011). Economic aspects of oil conservation regulation. Hoboken: Taylor and Francis. ISBN 9781135985462.
  6. ^ Joint resolution consenting to an interstate oil compact to conserve oil and gas Pub. Res., No. 64 (1935); 74TH CONGRESS. SESS. I. CHS. 780, 781.
  7. ^ Leach, Richard H. "The Interstate Oil Compact: A Study in Success." Okla. L. Rev. 10 (1957): 274.
  8. ^ Murphy, Blakely M. "The Interstate Compact to Conserve Oil and Gas: An Experiment in Co-Operative State Production Control." Miss. LJ 17 (1945): 314.
  9. ^ a b Nash, Gerald D. (1968). United States Oil Policy, 1890–1964: Business and Government in Twentieth Century America. University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 9780822975748.
  10. ^ a b Daintith, Terence (2010). Finders keepers? how the law of capture shaped the world oil industry. Washington, DC: RFF Press. ISBN 9781936331765.
  11. ^ Zimmerman, Joseph F. (2002). Interstate cooperation : compacts and administrative agreements. Westport, Conn.: Praeger. ISBN 9780275977566.
  12. ^ Libecap, Gary D. (1989). "The Political Economy of Crude Oil Cartelization in the United States, 1933-1972". The Journal of Economic History. 49 (4): 833–855. JSTOR 2122740.
  13. ^ Grossman, Peter Z (2004). How cartels endure and how they fail: studies of industrial collusion. Cheltenham: Elgar. p. 218. ISBN 1858988306.
  14. ^ a b "Charter". IOGCC. Retrieved 24 September 2014.
  15. ^ "Member states". IOGCC. Retrieved 29 April 2017.
  16. ^ "Member States". IOGCC. Retrieved 3 February 2016.
  17. ^ a b Baca, Marie C. (9 December 2010). "Some Appointees to Oil and Gas Commission Are Industry Execs, Lobbyists". ProPublica. Retrieved 24 September 2014.
  18. ^ "Committees and Workgroups". What We Do. IOGCC. Retrieved 24 September 2014.
  19. ^ Broun, Caroline N.; Buenger, Michael L. (2006). The evolving use and the changing role of interstate compacts : a practitioner's guide. Chicago, Ill.: Administrative Law Section, American Bar Association. ISBN 9781590316436.
  20. ^ DESMOG: Introducing IOGCC: The Most Powerful Oil and Gas Lobby
  21. ^ Energy Wire: Hydraulic Fracturing - Public disclosure database kept private
  22. ^ Huffington Post: IOGCC: The Most Powerful Oil and Gas Lobby You’ve Never Heard Of
  23. ^ "What We Do". IOGCC. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
  24. ^ "States' Rights". Issues. IOGCC. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
  25. ^ "Model Statutes". Issues. IOGCC. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
  26. ^ "Issues". IOGCC. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
  27. ^ Murphy, Blakely M. "Administrative Mechanism of the Interstate Compact to Conserve Oil and Gas: The Interstate Oil Compact Commission, 1935-1948." Tul. L. Rev. 22 (1947): 384.
  28. ^ Houghton, J.T.; Ding, Y.; Griggs, D. J.; Noguer, N.; Linden, P. J. van der; Xiaosu, D.; Maskell, K.; Johnson, C. A., eds. (2001). Climate change 2001: The scientific basis. Contribution of Working Group I to the third assessment report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press. p. 7. ISBN 0521-80767-0. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
  29. ^ "Carbon Sequestration". Issues. IOGCC. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
  30. ^ "Deep saline formations". CO2 storage. ICO2N. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
  31. ^ a b Curtiss, David K. (April 2008). "Carbon sequestration rules emerge". Explorer. American Association of Petroleum Geologists. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
  32. ^ CO2 Storage: A Legal and Regulatory Guide for States (PDF) (Report). IOGCC. December 2007. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
  33. ^ "Award Programs". What We Do. IOGCC. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
  34. ^ "Chairman's Stewardship Awards 2012" (PDF). IOGCC. Retrieved 26 September 2014.

Further reading edit

  • Interstate Oil Compact Commission (1954). The Compact's Formative Years, 1931–1935. Oklahoma City.

External links edit

  • Official website

interstate, compact, commission, iogcc, formerly, interstate, compact, commission, united, states, organization, representing, governors, member, seven, associate, states, that, works, ensure, nation, natural, resources, conserved, utilized, their, maximum, po. The Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission IOGCC lt formerly the Interstate Oil Compact Commission is a United States organization representing the governors of 31 member and seven associate states that works to ensure the nation s oil and natural gas resources are conserved and utilized to their maximum potential while protecting health safety and the environment 3 4 Interstate Oil and Gas Compact CommissionAbbreviationIOGCCFormation1935TypeInterstate compactPurposePromote efficient harvesting of oil and gas while protecting health safety and the environment HeadquartersOklahoma CityRegionUnited States2023 ChairmanMark Gordon The State Governor of Wyoming 1 Vice ChairTom Kropatsch 2 Websitehttps oklahoma gov iogcc htmlFormerly calledInterstate Oil Compact Commission Contents 1 Background 2 Organizational structure 2 1 Transparency and accountability 3 Activities 3 1 Price fixing 3 2 Carbon sequestration 3 3 Awards 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksBackground editIn the early days of oil exploration drilling was governed by the law of capture which states that the owner of land on which a well resides has the right to any oil from that well even if it was drained from the land of his neighbors This provided an incentive for each land owner to extract the oil as fast as possible 5 21 Each state tried to regulate its own oil by such measures as proration the limiting of production to some fraction of capacity but then two great oil fields the Oklahoma City Oil Field and the East Texas Oil Field were discovered This along with the Great Depression led to much waste and very low prices with a catastrophic effect on the industry The problems were large enough that the states recognized the need for cooperation 5 33 34 The compact was formed in 1935 as the Interstate Compact to Conserve Gas and Oil 6 The purpose of the compact was to eliminate the glut of oil and raise prices for consumers 7 The interstate compact was seen as an alternative to direct federal regulation that would allow oil producing states to retain more control 8 While the National Guard occupied wells in Oklahoma and Texas in 1931 1932 an Oil States Advisory Committee drafted the Thomas McKeon Bill which proposed an interstate oil compact and a Federal Interstate Oil Board to recommend quotas However the bill was abandoned after oil industry representatives withdrew their support 5 37 38 9 126 From 1933 to 1935 oil was regulated under the National Industrial Recovery Act and the Petroleum Code which in effect left production control in the hands of industry representatives with no representation for the states 5 38 The Supreme Court found these regulations unconstitutional in 1935 10 375 and the idea of an interstate compact was revived On December 3 1934 Oklahoma Governor elect E W Marland met with the governors of Kansas and Texas to discuss an interstate compact This led to the drafting of the Interstate Compact to Conserve Oil and Gas which was ratified by Congress on August 27 1935 9 150 151 At first Congress ratified it for only two years at a time then four years and finally the compact was made permanent in 1979 11 76 Some economic historians have described the regulation of oil output under the compact as an example of a price fixing cartel 12 The production controls of the IOGCC and the Texas Railroad Commission have been cited as precursors to the establishment of OPEC s caps on member state oil production 13 The stated purpose of the compact was conserve oil and gas by the prevention of physical waste thereof from any cause 14 States that ratified the compact agreed to enact legislation for this purpose Article VI of the compact constituted The Interstate Oil Compact Commission renamed as the Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission in 1991 and its duty was to make recommendations for preventing the physical waste of gas and oil 10 14 Organizational structure edit nbsp Member states Associate statesInitially the commission had six members Colorado Illinois Kansas New Mexico Oklahoma and Texas It now has 31 member states 7 associate states and 10 international affiliates including 7 Canadian provinces and territories 15 The governor of each member state appoints an official representative who can vote on policy recommendations and any number of associate representatives who can vote in their place if the official representative is not available The list of members can be found on the IOGCC website 16 Many representatives are state regulators overseeing gas and drilling but as of 2010 at least seven were industry executives and lobbyists 17 The commission meets biannually but much of its work occurs in small committee meetings throughout the year 17 To govern operations it has steering finance resolutions and nominating committees Other committees are Energy Resources Research and Technology Environment and Safety International Public Lands Public Outreach and State Review 18 Transparency and accountability edit The IOGCC is governed by the compact and several bylaws The compact did not provide for any resources to support IOGCC a later bylaw stipulated that its expenses would be paid from voluntary contributions from the member states and other sources of revenue approved by the Commission These sources which include federal grants have proved to be enough to allow the commission to function 19 144 IOGCC uses an Oklahoma government email address and domain but it is not a state not a federal agency and does not have to register to lobby the federal government 20 A plethora of information is available but relatively little of it has come directly from the organization itself IOGCC claims an exemption from the Open Public Records Act and has removed a provision within its by laws that formerly said its records are open to the public 21 22 Activities editTo identify best practices IOGCC surveys member states and assesses their activities It catalogues innovative programs and shares the information with states and it hosts biannual meetings that draw together representatives from the government the oil industry and environmentalists 23 IOGCC is an advocate for states rights arguing that state regulation is more effective than one size fits all federal regulation 24 As well as creating reports it creates model statutes as a guide for legislation by states 25 Issues that IOGCC has worked on include national energy policy carbon sequestration environmental stewardship hydraulic fracturing and produced water 26 Price fixing edit In the 1930s and 1940s the commission functioned as a price fixing cartel According to the legal scholar Blakely Murphy the commission operated under the guise of resource conservation but primarily existed to protect the interests of oil producers 27 Carbon sequestration edit A large part of the human contribution to global warming is from the emission of carbon dioxide CO2 as a result of burning fossil fuels 28 One way to reduce the contribution is to capture the CO2 before it enters the atmosphere and sequester it by injecting underground in depleted oil and natural gas fields saline formations and coal beds 29 30 Recognizing that the oil and gas industry has a lot of experience with injecting CO2 into the ground for enhanced oil recovery the IOGCC launched the Geological CO2 Sequestration Task Force in 2002 to investigate the issues surrounding sequestration 31 A two phase study was funded by the Department of Energy Phase I concluded that the states had the knowledge and experience to regulate sequestration safely In phase II started in 2006 the task force prepared a report that included a model statute for the states with explanations on how to implement it 31 32 Awards edit The IOGCC has three awards The E W Marland Award established in 1994 recognizes an outstanding state legislator The Warwick Downing Award established in 2005 recognizes an individual outside state governments who has made an outstanding contribution to the IOGCC The highest honor established in 2001 is the Chairman s Stewardship Award for exemplary efforts in environmental stewardship 33 This award has four categories Environmental Partnership for partnerships with industry led by non industry organizations Energy Education Small Company and Large Company 34 References edit Officers Interstate Oil amp Gas Compact Commission Retrieved 2024 03 24 Officers Interstate Oil amp Gas Compact Commission Retrieved 2024 03 24 Baca Marie C 9 December 2010 Some Appointees to Oil and Gas Commission Are Industry Execs Lobbyists Our Investigations ProPublica Retrieved 23 September 2014 Marginal Wells oklahoma gov a b c d Lovejoy Wallace F Homan Paul T 2011 Economic aspects of oil conservation regulation Hoboken Taylor and Francis ISBN 9781135985462 Joint resolution consenting to an interstate oil compact to conserve oil and gas Pub Res No 64 1935 74TH CONGRESS SESS I CHS 780 781 Leach Richard H The Interstate Oil Compact A Study in Success Okla L Rev 10 1957 274 Murphy Blakely M The Interstate Compact to Conserve Oil and Gas An Experiment in Co Operative State Production Control Miss LJ 17 1945 314 a b Nash Gerald D 1968 United States Oil Policy 1890 1964 Business and Government in Twentieth Century America University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 9780822975748 a b Daintith Terence 2010 Finders keepers how the law of capture shaped the world oil industry Washington DC RFF Press ISBN 9781936331765 Zimmerman Joseph F 2002 Interstate cooperation compacts and administrative agreements Westport Conn Praeger ISBN 9780275977566 Libecap Gary D 1989 The Political Economy of Crude Oil Cartelization in the United States 1933 1972 The Journal of Economic History 49 4 833 855 JSTOR 2122740 Grossman Peter Z 2004 How cartels endure and how they fail studies of industrial collusion Cheltenham Elgar p 218 ISBN 1858988306 a b Charter IOGCC Retrieved 24 September 2014 Member states IOGCC Retrieved 29 April 2017 Member States IOGCC Retrieved 3 February 2016 a b Baca Marie C 9 December 2010 Some Appointees to Oil and Gas Commission Are Industry Execs Lobbyists ProPublica Retrieved 24 September 2014 Committees and Workgroups What We Do IOGCC Retrieved 24 September 2014 Broun Caroline N Buenger Michael L 2006 The evolving use and the changing role of interstate compacts a practitioner s guide Chicago Ill Administrative Law Section American Bar Association ISBN 9781590316436 DESMOG Introducing IOGCC The Most Powerful Oil and Gas Lobby Energy Wire Hydraulic Fracturing Public disclosure database kept private Huffington Post IOGCC The Most Powerful Oil and Gas Lobby You ve Never Heard Of What We Do IOGCC Retrieved 26 September 2014 States Rights Issues IOGCC Retrieved 26 September 2014 Model Statutes Issues IOGCC Retrieved 26 September 2014 Issues IOGCC Retrieved 26 September 2014 Murphy Blakely M Administrative Mechanism of the Interstate Compact to Conserve Oil and Gas The Interstate Oil Compact Commission 1935 1948 Tul L Rev 22 1947 384 Houghton J T Ding Y Griggs D J Noguer N Linden P J van der Xiaosu D Maskell K Johnson C A eds 2001 Climate change 2001 The scientific basis Contribution of Working Group I to the third assessment report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Cambridge Cambridge Univ Press p 7 ISBN 0521 80767 0 Retrieved 26 September 2014 Carbon Sequestration Issues IOGCC Retrieved 26 September 2014 Deep saline formations CO2 storage ICO2N Retrieved 26 September 2014 a b Curtiss David K April 2008 Carbon sequestration rules emerge Explorer American Association of Petroleum Geologists Retrieved 26 September 2014 CO2 Storage A Legal and Regulatory Guide for States PDF Report IOGCC December 2007 Retrieved 26 September 2014 Award Programs What We Do IOGCC Retrieved 26 September 2014 Chairman s Stewardship Awards 2012 PDF IOGCC Retrieved 26 September 2014 Further reading editInterstate Oil Compact Commission 1954 The Compact s Formative Years 1931 1935 Oklahoma City External links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission amp oldid 1217204803, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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