Albuquerque Journal

OIL, GAS BOOMING

Revenue hits record $3.1B in NM

- BY KEVIN ROBINSON-AVILA JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

State revenue from oil and gas activity soared to a record $3.1 billion in fiscal year 2019, up 41% from the $2.2 billion generated the year before, according to the latest annual report from the New Mexico Tax Research Institute.

Industry-generated income accounted for 39% of all general fund revenues, the highest share in recent history.

The Tax Research Institute produces the annual report, released Thursday, under contract with the New Mexico Oil and Gas Associatio­n.

NMOGA Executive Director Ryan Flynn said FY 2019 marked the first year that state revenue from oil and gas has ever topped $3 billion.

“We’ve had historical levels of production for three years in a row now, and that’s generating historic levels of state revenue,” Flynn told the Journal.

That, in turn, offers unpreceden­ted opportunit­ies for investment­s in public education, state infrastruc­ture, and public safety, Flynn added.

Public schools and higher education received $1.36 billion from state oil and gas revenue in FY 2019, up $300 million from FY 2018. That includes almost $1.06 billion for primary and secondary education, and $302 million for state universiti­es, colleges and other higher education institutio­ns, according to the report.

“Oil and gas revenue provides enough money to support about 29,000 teachers around the state,” Flynn said.

Although industry activities are concentrat­ed in the southeaste­rn and northweste­rn corners of New Mexico, the biggest public education beneficiar­ies are concentrat­ed in the Mid-Rio Grande Region. Bernalillo, Santa Fe, Sandoval and Valencia counties received a combined $624 million, or nearly half of the $1.36 billion in education-related revenue generated by oil and gas, according to the report.

Bernalillo County was the top recipient with $435.9 million, followed by Doña Ana County with $195.2 million.

The revenue windfall will continue in the new fiscal year that begins in July, with state and legislativ­e economists projecting $797 million in “new money” for the FY 2021 budget. That’s the difference between current spending levels and projected revenue for the upcoming year.

Those latest projection­s are down from earlier estimates in August of $907 million in new money, reflecting moderate prices for oil, plus a significan­t slowdown in production in other U.S. oil and gas basins. But production levels continue to rise on New Mexico’s side of the Permian Basin in the southeaste­rn part of the state, where the region’s highly-productive geology offers operators some of the nation’s most-lucrative gushers.

New Mexico currently has 102 active drilling rigs, virtually unchanged from a year ago, Flynn said. In contrast, the Texas rig count fell from about 500 in January 2019 to about 400 now, and Oklahoma from about 100 to 52.

Official year-end production totals are pending, but NMOGA projects output climbed above 300 million barrels last year, up from 249 million in 2018.

 ??  ??
 ?? EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL ?? Two drilling rigs are installed in the Permian Basin southeast of Carlsbad.
EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL Two drilling rigs are installed in the Permian Basin southeast of Carlsbad.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States