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Wyoming Expects $122 Million Surplus Behind Surge In Oil And Gas Production

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Wyoming Expects 2 Million Surplus Behind Surge In Oil And Gas Production


Wyoming’s economic future is looking brighter than it did at the start of the year or even four months ago.

A Consensus Revenue Estimating Group (CREG) report released last week shows a $122 million overall revenue surplus compared to what was forecasted for the state in January. That’s bolstered by a surge in oil and gas production so far in 2024, but Wyoming’s coal industry, once the state’s cash cow, continues to decline, the report says.

CREG makes revenue estimations for the state each October to coincide with the governor’s and Legislature’s preparations for the upcoming budget and legislative sessions. Legislators will have $173 million at their disposal to use for the 2025 supplemental budget.

State Rep. John Bear, R-Gillette, looks at the CREG forecast as an opportunity to cut property taxes while inflicting “less pain” when considering cuts to government services.

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“It’s always harder to control expenditures when you have additional income to work with, but it’s a better problem to have than the other way around,” Bear said. “We will find the right process to fund an efficient government while providing tax relief.”

Bear has requested to be put on the Joint Appropriations Committee, which plays an integral role in crafting the supplemental and biennial budgets. The former chairman of the Wyoming Freedom Caucus, Bear believes controlling state spending is one of the most important aspects of the legislative process.

The CREG forecast shows higher-than-projected revenue in oil and gas and investment income, but less than glowing numbers for coal production, at risk to hit its lowest point in more than 30 years. Sales and use tax revenue was slightly down.

Investments Up

Investment income came in at $742.7 million, slightly higher than what was forecasted. Total Permanent Mineral Trust Fund investment earnings were $93.3 million higher than what was forecasted in January. The State Treasurer’s Office generated $173.2 million in interest in 2024 and $53.8 million in realized capital gains.

Investment income makes up about 30% of the state’s general fund revenue.

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State Sen. Mike Gierau, D-Jackson, a member of the Appropriations Committee, sees these investment gains and the recent development on rare earth minerals as evidence that Wyoming is moving in an encouraging direction when it comes to diversifying its revenue base, a long-expressed desire at the Wyoming Capitol.

Gierau said efforts like carbon capture and storage can also help with this goal while simultaneously keeping Wyoming’s coal industry alive.

“We’ve been talking about diversifying the economy for years and I think we’re making steps in that direction,” Gierau said. “It helps us be a little less reliant on the ups and downs of the energy sector.”

Mineral revenue supplies about half of Wyoming’s budget each year.

Gierau said the biggest value of the state’s investments is that they soften the blows of major energy downturns. For instance, after the COVID-19 pandemic, the state had to cut $430 million from the budget, including 324 state positions.

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Nearly $3 Billion Projected

Gierau worries that the Freedom Caucus considers these investment gains as “pork barrel money” that should be cut from the budget.

Bear said although the investment numbers are encouraging, he doesn’t want them to be confused with the idea that Wyoming is broadening its tax base. He also wants the state to focus on investing in legacy industries rather than green energy pursuits he believes will hinder fossil fuel production.

“I don’t support hurting Wyoming’s legacy industries,” he said. “Those are what got us to where we are financially today.”

Because of strong investment revenues, $179.9 million in investment earnings from the Permanent Mineral Trust Fund was transferred into various savings accounts.

Total forecast for the Public School Foundation Program, which is based on a combination of federal and state mineral royalties, ad valorem tax revenues and mineral investment earnings, exceeded the original projection by $83.2 million.

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Sales and use tax revenue was $17.8 million lower than expected at $1.32 billion. After a strong start to the year, revenues in those sectors declined in the second half.

For the 2023-2024 biennium, total general fund revenue exceeded $3 billion for the first time in state history, with record biennial receipts recorded. Severance tax earnings deposited in the general fund were slightly above the ten-year average, while Permanent Mineral Trust Fund earnings were still below the 10-year average.

General fund revenue was very close to what was forecasted and CREG forecasts this revenue to grow from $2.97 billion in the next biennium to $3.1 billion by 2029-2030.

Oil And Gas Doing Better

Forecasted oil and gas prices are slightly down while actual production exceeded the January forecast by 9%-10%. CREG recently reduced its price forecast of $75 per barrel to $70 for 2024 and 2025.

In total, severance tax revenue was 6.7% higher than anticipated and actual federal mineral royalties were 4.1% higher than anticipated.

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Through the first six months of 2024, annual Wyoming oil production is on pace to increase by 5 million barrels and reach 53.1 million barrels for the year. Wyoming oil rig counts spent most of the last year in the eight- to12-rig range as reported by Baker Hughes, though rig counts have recently reached as high as 14 this fall.

Year-over-year rig counts are still lower than in 2023 and total gross products from mining in 2023 ended 5.5% higher than the most recent CREG forecast.

Actual natural gas production through the first six months of 2024 is exceeding the January forecast by 6.8%. The percentage volume of gas stored at the Opal hub in Lincoln County has declined significantly, while sale volumes reported at Cheyenne’s hub have increased from 42% in 2023 to 72% so far in 2024.

Coal Outlook Bleak

Surface coal production volumes are down by about 9%-10% from what was forecasted, while coal prices are slightly up. Overall production is down about 20%.

Coal production, although less volatile than oil, has declined in Wyoming since reaching its peak in 2008, intermixed with a few standalone years of growth.

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Through the first half of 2024, coal production is on pace to record another near-term low, trending below the low 2020 production levels and at a risk of falling below 200 million tons produced for the first since 1992, which would mark the lowest point of coal production in Wyoming in more than 30 years.

CREG’s January report forecasted a 19% decline over the next three years, which Richards now believes was probably overly optimistic.

Gierau said as recently as five years ago he thought coal would be a significant player in Wyoming’s revenue portfolio for the next 40 years. Now, he’s not so sure.

“The market shares are dwindling faster than what we thought,” he said.

When considering the negative outlook for this industry, Bear said it’s particularly critical that lawmakers be fiscally conservative with the taxpayers’ money. He wants to study the most recent budget and see if incremental cuts can be made to unnecessary spending.

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Volatility

Generally, oil is considered the most influential factor on Wyoming’s revenue picture, said CREG Co-Chair Don Richards during a Joint Appropriations Committee meeting last week, which gives the state some risk when considering its long-term volatility.

Wars in the Middle East and Ukraine are adding a dynamic of uncertainty to the worldwide economic picture.

The CREG report forecasts many more years of economic volatility to come based on the state’s reliance on energy revenue. This revenue is also directly tied to the state’s public K-12 education funding.

About 70% of Wyoming’s oil production comes from federal leases, which adds further volatility to the state’s revenue picture whenever there is a change in presidential administration.

In 2006, severance tax revenue and federal mineral royalties made up 56.7% of revenue deposited into the state’s General Fund and Budget Reserve Account. This year, severance taxes and federal royalties only made up 28.3% of the revenue deposited into these accounts, with sales and use taxes and investment income shouldering a larger share of the load.

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Over the past 10 years, these revenues have only comprised more than a 40% share of these accounts once. That’s in comparison to the previous 10 years where they never comprised less than a 40% share.

“Wyoming’s revenue portfolio is very slowly becoming more diversified and less reliant on mineral production while still remaining volatile,” the CREG report reads.

Other Mining

Trona production is on pace to slightly exceed the January forecast of 20.8 million tons. Soda ash prices have ranged from more than $200 per ton in the spring of 2023 to $150 per ton this spring.

As a result of two uranium mines coming on board in Wyoming this fall, CREG is forecasting 350,000 pounds of production this year, which it expects to grow to 3 million pounds by 2030.

Over the intermediate and long term, CREG expects total uranium demand to outstrip production levels, which would likely lead to higher prices and resuming Wyoming’s mining operations. CREG forecasts $58 per pound of uranium pricing in 2024, rising to $75 per pound before 2030.

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What’s Next?

The Appropriations Committee will start working on the supplemental budget at its next meeting from Dec. 9-13. During election years, new members of the Appropriations Committee typically sit with current members even before taking office as a way of shepherding them into the highly dense budgetary process, but Gierau isn’t sure this will happen next month.

As a result of the August primary, four members of the Appropriations Committee were voted out of office and another member is retiring. Because of this and the new leadership in the Senate and House, the makeup of this committee will likely look significantly different heading into 2025.

The Legislature as a whole also appears it will shift substantially to the right, at least in the House.

Gierau said he hopes that the new members of the committee will take time to learn the processes and functions of how Wyoming’s proverbial checkbook works.

He’s been encouraged by the comments Rep. Chip Neiman, R-Hulett, the likely next House speaker, has been making about the budgetary process in recent months.

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Gierau also said Gov. Mark Gordon has already sent a directive to the state’s agencies to create lean budgets in preparation for the new makeup of the Legislature. Of the state’s more than 100 agencies, fewer than 25 are requesting budget increases, he said.

But a more than $400 million request will be on the table for Capital Construction, which includes building and renovating public schools in Wyoming.

“That’s one where the rhetoric of the Freedom Caucus is going to run head on into the State Construction Department,” Gierau said.

Leo Wolfson can be reached at leo@cowboystatedaily.com.



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Wyoming power plant booming with suspected UFO, drone sightings — but still no answers after over a year

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Wyoming power plant booming with suspected UFO, drone sightings — but still no answers after over a year


Fleets of drones and suspected UFOs have been spotted hovering over a Wyoming power plant for more than a year, while a local sheriff’s department is still searching for clues.

Officials with the Sweetwater County Sheriff’s Office recorded scores of beaming, drone-like objects circling around the Red Desert and Jim Bridger Power Plant in Rock Springs over the last 13 months — though they didn’t specify how many, the Cowboy State Daily reported.

Multiple drone or suspected UFO sightings have been reported at the Jim Bridger Power Plant in Rock Springs, Wyoming. UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Sheriff John Grossnickle was one of the first to witness the spectacles, and last saw the mind-boggling formation on Dec. 12, his spokesperson Jason Mower told the outlet.

The fleets periodically congregate over the power plant in coordinated formations, Mower claimed.

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The sheriff’s office hasn’t been able to recover any of the suspected UFOs, telling the outlet they’re too high to shoot down.

The law enforcement outpost’s exhaustive efforts to get to the truth haven’t yielded any results, even after Grossnickle enlisted help from Wyoming US Rep. Harriet Hageman — who Mower claimed saw the formation during a trip to the power plant.

Hageman could not be reached for comment.

A spokesperson for the Sweetwater County Sheriff’s Office said that the drones typically hover too high up for them to shoot down. X/@JerzyBets

“We’ve worked with everybody. We’ve done everything we can to figure out what they are, and nobody wants to give us any answers,” Mower said, according to the outlet.

At first, spooked locals bombarded the sheriff’s office with calls about the confounding aerial formations. Now, though, Mower said that people seem to have accepted it as “the new normal.”

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Mower noted that the objects, which he interchangeably referred to as “drones” and “unidentified flying objects,” have yet to pose a danger to the public or cause any damage to the power plant itself.

John Grossnickle, the sheriff of Sweetwater County, claimed he saw the objects. LinkedIn/John Grossnickle

“It’s like this phenomenon that continues to happen, but it’s not causing any, you know, issues that we have to deal with — other than the presence of them,” he told the outlet.

The spokesperson promised the sheriff’s office would “certainly act accordingly” if the drones pose an imminent harm.

Meanwhile, Niobrara County Sheriff Randy Starkey told the Cowboy State Daily that residents of his community also reported mystery drone sightings over Lance Creek — more than 300 miles from the Jim Bridger Power Plant — starting in late October 2024 and ending in early March.

Another sheriff’s office one county over also reported similar sightings over a creek. phonlamaiphoto – stock.adobe.com

Starkey said he’s “just glad they’re gone,” according to the outlet.

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Drone sightings captured the nation’s attention last year when they were causing hysteria in sightings over New Jersey.

Just days into his second term, President Trump had to clarify that the drones were authorized by the Federal Aviation Administration to quell worries that they posed a national security threat.

Still, the public wasn’t convinced, but the mystery slowly faded as the sightings plummeted.

In October, though, an anonymous source with an unnamed military contractor told The Post that their company was responsible for the hysteria.

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Barrasso bill aims to improve rescue response in national parks

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Barrasso bill aims to improve rescue response in national parks


Much of Wyoming outside of Yellowstone and Grand Teton also struggles with emergency response time.

By Katie Klingsporn, WyoFile

Wyoming’s U.S. Sen. John Barrasso is pushing legislation to upgrade emergency communications in national parks — a step he says would improve responses in far-flung areas of parks like Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks. 

“This bill improves the speed and accuracy of emergency responders in locating and assisting callers in need of emergency assistance,” Barrasso told members of the National Parks Subcommittee last week during a hearing on the bill. “These moments make a difference between visitors being able to receive quick care and continue their trip or facing more serious medical complications.”

The legislation directs the U.S. Department of the Interior to develop a plan to upgrade National Park Service 911 call centers with next-generation 911 technology. 

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Among other things, these upgrades would enable them to receive text messages, images and videos in addition to phone calls, enhancing their ability to respond to emergencies or rescues in the parks. 

A rescue litter is delivered to Jenny Lake Climbing Rangers. A new report compiled by ranger George Montopoli and his daughter Michelle Montopoli show trends in search and rescue incidents in Grand Teton National Park. Photo: Courtesy of Grand Teton National Park

Each year, rangers and emergency services respond to a wide range of calls — from lost hikers to car accidents and grizzly maulings — in the Wyoming parks’ combined 2.5 million acres. 

Outside park boundaries, the state’s emergency service providers also face steep challenges, namely achieving financial viability. Many patients, meantime, encounter a lack of uniformity and longer 911 response times in the state’s so-called frontier areas. 

Improving the availability of ground ambulance services to respond to 911 calls is a major priority in Wyoming’s recent application for federal Rural Health Transformation Project funds. 

Barrasso’s office did not respond to a WyoFile request for comment on the state’s broader EMS challenges by publication time. 

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The bill from the prominent Wyoming Republican, who serves as Senate Majority Whip, joined a slate of federal proposals the subcommittee considered last week. With other bills related to the official name of North America’s highest mountain, an extra park fee charged to international visitors, the health of a wild horse herd and the use of off-highway vehicles in Capitol Reef National Park, Barrasso’s “Making Parks Safer Act” was among the least controversial. 

What’s in it

Barrasso brought the bipartisan act along with Sens. Angus King (I-Maine), Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-Miss.) and John Hickenlooper (D-Colo.). 

The bill would equip national park 911 call centers with technological upgrades that would improve and streamline responses, Barrasso said. He noted that hundreds of millions of visitors stream into America’s national parks annually. That includes more than 8 million recreation visits to Wyoming’s national parks in 2024. 

“Folks travel from across the world to enjoy the great American outdoors, and for many families, these memories last a lifetime,” he testified. “This is a bipartisan bill that ensures visitors who may need assistance can be reached in an accurate and timely manner.”

President Donald Trump, seated next to U.S. Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyoming, meets with members of Congress on Feb. 14, 2018, in the Cabinet Room at the White House in Washington, D.C. Photo: White House

The Park Service supports Barrasso’s bill, Mike Caldwell, the agency’s associate director of park planning, facilities and lands, said during the hearing. It’s among several proposals that are “consistent with executive order 14314, ‘Making America Beautiful Again by Improving our National Parks,’” Caldwell said. 

“These improvements are largely invisible to visitors, so they strengthen the emergency response without deterring the park’s natural beauty or history,” he said.

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Other park issues 

National parks have been a topic of contention since President Donald Trump included them in his DOGE efforts in early 2025. Since then, efforts to sell off federal land and strip park materials of historical information that casts a negative light on the country, along with a 43-day government shutdown, have continued to fuel debate over the proper management of America’s parks.  

Several of these changes and issues came up during the recent National Parks Subcommittee hearing. 

A person walks the southwest ridge of Eagle Peak in Yellowstone National Park during the 2024 search for missing hiker Austin King. Photo: Jacob W. Frank // NPS

Among them was the recent announcement that resident fee-free dates will change in 2026. Martin Luther King Day and Juneteenth will no longer be included in those days, but visitors won’t have to pay fees on new dates: Flag Day on June 14, which is Trump’s birthday and Oct. 27, Theodore Roosevelt’s birthday. 

Conservation organizations and others decried those changes as regressive. 

At the hearing, Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-NM), assured the room that “when this president is in the past, Martin Luther King Jr. Day and Juneteenth will not only have fee-free national park admission, they will occupy, again, incredible places of pride in our nation’s history.”

Improvements such as the new fee structure “put American families first,” according to the Department of the Interior. “These policies ensure that U.S. taxpayers, who already support the National Park System, continue to enjoy affordable access, while international visitors contribute their fair share to maintaining and improving our parks for future generations,” Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum said in an announcement.

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WyoFile is an independent nonprofit news organization focused on Wyoming people, places and policy.



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Evacuations spread from fires in South Dakota, Wyoming due to strong winds from coast-to-coast storm

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Evacuations spread from fires in South Dakota, Wyoming due to strong winds from coast-to-coast storm


Large, fast-moving fires are causing evacuations in South Dakota and Wyoming due to the impacts of a coast-to-coast storm.

The FOX Forecast Center said winds have been gusting up to 70 mph in the Pennington County, South Dakota area, which has caused the wildfire to spread rapidly.

COAST-TO-COAST STORM CAUSES TRAVEL ISSUES DUE TO HURRICANE-FORCE WINDS, HEAVY RAIN ACROSS NORTHWEST

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The blaze, known as the Greyhound Fire, is approximately 200 acres in size. The fire is burning two to three miles south of Keystone and is moving east, according to the Pennington County Sheriff’s Office.

Highway 40 and Playhouse Road are closed as crews work to contain the fire.

People living along the highway between Playhouse Road and Rushmore Ranch Road have been evacuated, officials said.

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TWO KIDS WAITING FOR THE BUS CRITICALLY INJURED DUE TO STRONG WINDS IN IDAHO

Crews are asking anyone in an evacuation zone to leave the area. Officials are advising people in the area to check the Pennington County Public Safety Hub.

People in the Winchester Hills area of Cheyenne, Wyoming, have also been evacuated due to a grass fire.

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The FOX Forecast Center said winds are gusting up to 75 mph in the area.

The National Weather Service has issued a Fire Warning and says there is a shelter at South High School for evacuated residents.

Check for updates on this developing story.



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