Gulf of Mexico Offshore Well Data — BOEM & BSEE Guide

February 12, 2026 • 7 min read

The Gulf of Mexico is one of the most prolific offshore oil and gas provinces in the world. With over 55,000 wells drilled across thousands of federal lease blocks, GOM data is managed by two primary federal agencies: BOEM (Bureau of Ocean Energy Management) and BSEE (Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement). Navigating these data sources is different from working with state-level data like the Texas RRC.

BOEM vs. BSEE — Who Does What?

Key GOM Data Sources

BOEM Lease Data

BOEM maintains the official record of all federal OCS (Outer Continental Shelf) leases. Available data includes:

BOEM data is accessible through their website at boem.gov. The data downloads are in delimited text format and require some processing to be useful.

BSEE Well Data

BSEE maintains well-level records through their data portal. Key datasets include:

GOM Geography

The GOM is organized into planning areas and protraction areas:

Within each protraction area, the seabed is divided into 3-mile by 3-mile blocks, each identified by an area name and block number (e.g., "Mississippi Canyon Block 778" — Thunder Horse).

Using MineralSearch for GOM Data

MineralSearch tracks 55,000+ Gulf of Mexico wells with data sourced from BOEM and BSEE. The platform lets you search GOM wells by operator, area, block, or API number. Well status, lease information, and production data are integrated into a single searchable interface — saving you from navigating multiple federal websites.

Key GOM Operators

The largest GOM operators by production include:

Search GOM Wells

55,000+ Gulf of Mexico wells. Lease data, well records, and production.

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