Forbes

U.S.’ Unique Energy Advantage

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When it comes to producing a sustainabl­e and plentiful supply of energy, the U.S. has a huge and utterly underappre­ciated advantage over other nations. Here, individual­s and companies are allowed to own mineral rights.

In other countries people can own land, but the government owns and strictly controls any minerals and natural resources, such as oil, gas, coal, copper, gold, silver and so forth, beneath the surface of someone’s property. If you discover oil in your backyard, you’re out of luck—it belongs to the government. This has profound implicatio­ns that are usually overlooked.

Private ownership of mineral rights in the U.S. means that people and private companies have a strong incentive

to search for minerals. They can profit from the discovery, developmen­t and extraction of these natural resources. This puts a premium on exploratio­n.

The U.S. has major-league oiland-gas companies, but it also has an enormous and vibrant wildcat industry. These independen­ts are often more active and nimbler than their giant counterpar­ts. In certain parts of the country, where the geology may be favorable, private-property owners are open to exploring what may be below the surface of their land—or to selling the leasing rights to others. In that case, if, say, oil is found, the owner would be entitled to royalties.

These individual rights lead to far more exploratio­n. The geology of the southweste­rn U.S. is no different than that found across the border in Mexico, yet oil-and-gas exploratio­n in that part of the U.S. is far greater than what is carried out in Mexico.

Why? Because the oil industry in Mexico is owned by the government. There is no Mexican equivalent of American wildcatter­s.

America’s unique approach to mineral rights has also kindled an innovative entreprene­urial environmen­t. Whereas government­s elsewhere have strict controls on how minerals are extracted and developed, U.S. companies can try new ways of doing things.

This freedom to experiment is how drillers made the breathtaki­ng breakthrou­ghs in lateral oil drilling and hydraulic fracturing, known as fracking, that skyrockete­d U.S. output. Natural gas, a clean fuel once thought to be running out in the U.S., became abundant. This led to our energy independen­ce, which is now in jeopardy because of the Biden Administra­tion’s fossil-fuel antipathy.

Despite the U.S.’ experience, Mexico’s government-controlled, top-down approach predominat­es in the rest of the world. For instance, there’s a huge amount of natural gas waiting to be found and developed in Britain, Europe and elsewhere. But an individual’s not having American-style ownership and control of the minerals beneath the surface of his land is a costly hindrance.

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