H.R. 7377118th CongressHouse Bill

Royalty Resiliency Act

Signed into law

This act modifies the process under which oil and gas leaseholders who have entered into certain joint drilling agreements (i.e., a communitization agreement or a unit agreement, except agreements containing Indian lands) to drill wells on leased land pay royalties to the Department of the Interior under the Federal Oil and Gas Royalty Management Act of 1982. Under current law, Interior must issue a determination of allocations of royalty payments for oil and gas production under a joint agreement within 120 days of a request for determination. Generally, the first leaseholder to drill must pay any royalties due to Interior for all oil and gas production on the land subject to the agreement until Interior determines the royalty allocations of each leaseholder. If Interior fails to issue the determination by that deadline, then it must waive interest due on royalty obligations until the end of the month following the month in which the determination was made. Under the act, a leaseholder must pay royalties on oil and gas production based on the lessee's proposed allocation of production under the joint agreement until Interior issues a determination of royalty allocations. After Interior issues the determination, then the lessee must correct, if necessary, the amount of royalties paid by the end of the third month following the month in which the lessee received the determination from Interior. Subject to the full and timely payment of monthly royalties in accordance with the agreement, Interior must waive interest due on royalty obligations until the end of the third month.

Introduced Feb 15, 2024Last action Sep 20, 2024
Introduced in HouseFeb 15, 2024
Reported by CommitteeApr 16, 2024
Show change summary

The reported version adds a cross-reference to the Federal Oil and Gas Royalty Simplification and Fairness Act of 1996, clarifying which prior law amendments are being modified. This is a technical change that ensures the amendment applies to the correct version of the statute and does not alter the substantive policy being changed.

Passed HouseJul 22, 2024
Show change summary

Based on the text provided, there are no substantive policy changes between the reported and engrossed versions. Both versions contain identical language for the title and the section that amends Section 111(j) of the Federal Oil and Gas Royalty Management Act. The changes appear to be procedural or technical in nature rather than substantive policy modifications.

Passed SenateSep 11, 2024
Signed into LawSep 20, 2024
Show change summary

I cannot identify substantive differences between the two versions provided. Both versions contain identical language in the sections shown. To provide an accurate summary of changes, I would need to see the complete text of Section 2 and any additional sections that follow, as the amendments to Section 111(j) appear to be truncated in both versions.

The President has signed this bill. It is now the law of the land.

What changed in the latest version · AI-generated

I cannot identify substantive differences between the two versions provided. Both versions contain identical language in the sections shown.…

Summary compares to previous version · Enrolled Bill on Apr 16, 2026

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