ExxonMobil has begun formally walking away from more than 160 federal offshore leases covering roughly 850,000 acres in the Gulf of Mexico, retreating from acreage the company had earmarked for large-scale carbon storage. Several relinquishments were already accepted by federal regulators as of mid-June.
The company picked up the shallow-water tracts in lease sales held in 2021 and 2023 for a combined outlay under $25 million. The acreage held little value for conventional drilling but was seen as prime real estate for future sub-seabed CO2 injection.
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Regulatory Delay Behind the Retreat
The retreat tracks back to the federal permitting framework these leases depended on. The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law gave the U.S. Department of the Interior authority over offshore carbon sequestration in 2021, and the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management has managed that authority ever since. The implementing rule, however, remains unfinished years past the deadline Congress set, and without it, operators have no clear path to convert idle leases into active storage sites.
That leaves companies holding non-producing acreage with ongoing costs and no fixed timeline for a return. For a company managing a global portfolio, letting go of federal tracts stuck in regulatory limbo is a straightforward capital discipline call, not a signal on the technology itself.
Exxon's CCS Ambitions Stay Intact Elsewhere
The federal pullback stands in contrast to where ExxonMobil is actually putting money to work. In October 2024, the company signed the largest offshore CO2 storage lease in the country, over 271,000 acres of submerged land off Jefferson, Chambers, and Galveston Counties, with the Texas General Land Office, where state permitting has moved without the same holdup.
Onshore, Exxon's carbon-capture-as-a-service business along the Gulf Coast industrial corridor is reportedly scaling ahead of internal projections, anchored by agreements with large industrial emitters. The company has maintained its target of transporting and sequestering 30 million tons of CO2 per year by 2030, even after pausing its Baytown project.
Taken together, the picture is less "Exxon steps back from CCS" and more "Exxon redirects capital toward the parts of the CCS pipeline that are actually moving." Federal waters remain attractive long term, but only once BOEM finishes the rule that would let companies operate there with confidence.
The relinquishment adds to a growing list of examples where state-level permitting is outpacing federal action on carbon storage, a gap that's shaping up to be one of the sector's bigger watch items heading into the back half of 2026.
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