News Oil & Gas

Race to manage NM land brings up clashing opinions on oil and gas

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An oil pumpjack casts a shadow on a wall as it pulls oil from the Permian Basin oil field on March 14, 2022.

This story was originally published by Source New Mexico.

New Mexicans will decide in the General Election if a new official will come in to manage state land or go with an incumbent that supports renewable energy while overseeing the largest production from extractive businesses in state history.

The N.M. commissioner of public lands is in charge of leasing state land for a place where billions in revenue generated by the oil and gas industry funds public schools and state government operations.

Democratic incumbent Stephanie Garcia Richard leased over 100,000 acres of land for oil and gas production, as of September, in her first term. She said New Mexico enjoys billions of dollars from oil and gas revenue but wants to diversify that funding for when it can’t always deliver that much to the state.

Land leased for oil and gas in New Mexico

Her opponents, Republican Jefferson Byrd and Independent Larry Marker, want to see the booming oil and gas industry grow even further. While they think renewable energy will become more prominent in the future, they both said extraction and production should remain the priority right now.

Although the amount of acres leased has decreased since Garcia Richard started in 2019, New Mexico has produced record amounts of gas and oil during those four years.

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