
North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, at right, and first lady Kathryn Burgum, at left, exit the House of Representatives in the state Capitol in Bismarck, N.D., on Wednesday, Dec. 4, 2024, after Burgum delivered his last budget address to the Legislature. (AP Photo/Jack Dura)
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) โ President-elect Donald Trump has given his choice for Interior secretary a mandate to โDrill baby drill,โ and on Wednesday his pick, North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, offered a rosy budget picture to lawmakers based largely on his stateโs success in extracting near-record levels of oil and gas.
Burgum, whose term ends next week, noted North Dakotaโs status as the nationโs No. 3 oil-producing state in his final proposed budget before he begins his role in Trumpโs administration, pending Senate confirmation. Besides serving as Interior secretary, Trump has chosen Burgum to lead a newly created National Energy Council that intends to ensure U.S. โenergy dominance.โ
โWe look forward to the next four years where we believe that thereโs going to be a shift towards innovation over regulation and an opportunity for North Dakota and our mineral owners to be able to more quickly and easily get permitting to access those natural resources for our country,โ Burgum told a packed House chamber, also lamenting dozens of energy-related federal regulations his state is fighting.
Burgum would seem a good choice to carry out Trumpโs mandate for both the new council and Interior, where he would oversee public lands and natural resources. Environmentalists are worried about what Trumpโs second term will mean for climate-change initiatives. Trump has said he will roll back President Joe Bidenโs policies.
State officials predicted a preliminary all-time high of 19,200 producing oil and gas wells in September. Oil taxes have come in 13% over forecast in the stateโs 2023-25 budget cycle, or $475 million more than projected, according to a November report. Oil production hit nearly 1.2 million barrels per day in September.
North Dakota set its record annual oil production in 2019 โ under Burgum โ at 524 million barrels, according to a historical report. Last year was the stateโs No. 4 year for oil production.
Burgumโs $19.5 billion two-year budget recommendation projects oil production of 1.1 million barrels per day in the 2025-27 budget cycle, with oil prices of $62 and $60 per barrels in each year of the next two budget years, respectively.
Oil tax revenue is a huge driver of the state budget, which relies on oil taxes for everything from school funding to help with property tax relief, health and human services, and infrastructure projects around the state, said longtime Republican Rep. Mike Nathe, a House budget writer.
โOil revenue touches every community in the state,โ Nathe said.
Oil taxes also feed the stateโs sovereign wealth fund, which has grown to over $11 billion since voters created it in 2010. Hundreds of millions of dollars in earnings come off that fund for lawmakers to put to use.
But oilโs volatility hit the state hard in 2016, resulting in a massive revenue shortfall that led to budget cuts and a drain on reserves. Oil forecasts are key to the Legislatureโs budget process.
Other states revenues are in healthy shape. Total general fund revenues are 12% over forecast, or $392 million, according to a report last month. Sales taxes are 12% ahead, or $182 million.
Burgumโs budget includes a $6.5 billion general fund, the state governmentโs main operating account. The 2023 Legislature approved a record $19.6 billion 2023-25 budget, with a $6 billion general fund and billions in federal money. That total budget was over $1 billion more than what Burgum had recommended.
His final template for lawmakers includes increases for state employee salaries and benefits and K-12 education. He outlined focus areas of workforce, housing, infrastructure, information technology and other big items. His recommendations include millions for child care initiatives, addiction help, and housing programs and grants.
The Legislatureโs budget writers will consider Burgumโs budget in their work, but they will also be getting a budget proposal in mid-January from Burgumโs successor, Republican Gov.-elect-Kelly Armstrong, who takes office Dec. 15.
The Legislature convenes in early January. Republicans hold supermajority control of the House and Senate.
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