Senator Cynthia Lummis is celebrating a very big check headed back to Wyoming, courtesy of energy production on federal lands. According to new numbers from the Department of the Interior, the agency disbursed $14.61 billion in Fiscal Year 2025 from oil, gas, and mineral activity, and more than $500 million of that is coming to the Cowboy State.
Yes, Wyoming’s energy sector is basically paying the nation’s bills and sending us home with leftovers.
Lummis credited expanded American energy production for lowering costs and pumping real dollars back into local communities, saying the move supports jobs, boosts prosperity, and fulfills another White House promise that was “made and kept.”
For Wyoming, this isn’t abstract federal budget fluff. This is money that flows into schools, roads, counties, conservation programs, and all the unglamorous things that keep life functioning between Cheyenne and the Tetons.
It also means that despite whatever stereotype outsiders have of Wyoming (“Do they even have electricity out there?”). The state remains one of the country’s top engines of domestic energy output, and federal revenue seems to agree.
At Antlers Arch, we’ll keep an eye on where this money goes, how it affects budgets across the state, and whether any of it trickles far enough west to buy Jackson Hole a few more parking spaces. (A man can dream.)
AntlersArch founder and the voice behind Teton Tattle.