The Trump administration on Monday invited the oil and gas industry to nominate areas for a potential sale of offshore oil and gas leases in Southern and Central California to be held as soon as next year.
The move is part of a push by US President Donald Trump's Interior Department to expand offshore drilling. It faces strong opposition in California, a state known for ambitious but generally controversial "climate change" policies, environmental regulations and an iconic coastline.
"We're taking the first step toward a stronger, more secure American energy future," Matt Giacona, acting director of Interior's Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, said in a statement.
This step aligns with Trump's energy-dominance agenda, which aims to bolster US fossil fuel production.
The United States has not auctioned off Pacific drilling rights since 1984, and California's coastline has been largely protected from new energy development following a 1969 oil spill in Santa Barbara that inspired key environmental protections.
California Governor Gavin Newsom, a political adversary, and environmental activist groups have condemned the plan, which could replace a more moderate leasing schedule from the Biden administration. They argue that it threatens California's coastal economy and ecosystems.
Federal waters accounted for 14 per cent of US oil production in 2024, but Pacific leases contributed just 0.1 per cent of that output, according to government data.
The oil and gas industry and the public have 30 days to provide comments to BOEM. The first lease sales in Southern and Central California are tentatively scheduled for 2027.
(Reporting by Nichola Groom in Los Angeles; Editing by Bill Berkrot)