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What is the Railroad Commission of Texas?

Background

The Railroad Commission of Texas (RRC) is the state agency that regulates the oil and gas industry, natural gas utilities, pipeline safety, the natural gas and hazardous liquid pipeline industry and surface coal and uranium mining in Texas. The commission is also responsible for research and education to promote the use of liquefied petroleum gas as an alternative fuel. It is the oldest regulatory agency in the state and one of the oldest of its kind in the nation.

The Texas Legislature established the commission in 1891 to regulate the booming railroad industry. The commission began to regulate oil production in the early 20th century as the industry started to boom in Texas. By the mid-1930s, Texas flooded world markets with so much oil that its price plummeted globally, prompting the federal government to impose limits on production at each well, a responsibility granted to the Railroad Commission in Texas.

The commission had exceptionally strong influence over world oil prices from the 1930s through the 1960s but was displaced by OPEC (Organization of Petroleum Exporting Companies) after 1973. In 1984, the federal government assumed regulation of railroads, trucking and buses, but the Railroad Commission kept its name. The RCC commission an annual budget of $79 million and focuses entirely on oil, gas, mining, propane and pipelines, setting monthly production quotas.

In 2013, a bill to reform the agency and update its name failed to pass the Texas legislature.

In 2012, Republican Barry Smitherman widely won re-election to the commission and serves as chairman. Republicans Christi Craddick and David Porter also serve as commissioners.

In June 2014, the RRC drew concern over its media and transparency policy after revelations that the agency’s executive director had prohibited media interviews of staff.

In the last three years, the commission has issued more oil and gas drilling permits than in any three year period since the 1980’s.

Railroad Commissioners are elected to six-year terms, with one Commissioner seeking election every two years. The three-member commission was appointed by the governor until an amendment to the state’s constitution in 1894 established the commissioners as elected officials serving overlapping terms. No specific seat is designated as Chairman. The Commissioners decide who will serve as Chairman.

Click here for a history of the Railroad Commission of Texas.

Latest Posts

Smitherman, Craddick Win Primary Runoff for Railroad Commission

There weren’t any real surprises in tonight’s Republican primary runoff for two of the seats on the Railroad Commission of Texas. That’s the state agency in charge of regulating the oil and gas industry in Texas. Incumbent chair Barry Smitherman won another turn at his seat after beating challenger Greg Parker. In the runoff for […]

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The Railroad Commission of Texas, which, despite its name, actually oversees oil and gas drilling in the state, enacted a new “revolving door” policy this week. Up until now, the commission had followed what’s already in the state employee ethics handbook. The new rules, proposed by commission chair Barry Smitherman, take things a bit further. “Adopting this policy […]

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In December, Texas enacted fracking disclosure rules, which require drilling companies to itemize what chemicals they use in the hydraulic fracturing process. Any well that got a permit from February 1, 2012 on has to make the disclosure on the website FracFocus.org. But there was an exception for “trade secrets,” chemicals that are part of a […]

Primary Results: Two Railroad Commission Races Headed For a Runoff

It would be a stretch to say it was a nail-biter, but two races for the Railroad Commission are headed for a runoff on July 31. To take a primary in Texas, you must get fifty percent plus one vote, and in the Republican Primary races for two seats on the Railroad Commission, no candidate […]

Indian Tribe Drops Opposition to Eagle Pass Border Coal Mining Project

Our friends at the Texas Tribune report today that the Kickapoo Traditional Tribe of Texas has dropped its opposition to a coal mining project along the Texas-Mexico border. The project in question is the Dos Republicas Coal Partnership, which would take coal from a strip mine along the border in Maverick County, Texas and ship it […]

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The Railroad Commission of Texas, which, despite its name, actually oversees oil and gas drilling in the state, has two seats up for election this fall. One of them will likely be re-taken by its current inhabitant (and chairman of the commission), incumbent Barry Smitherman. But the other seat is wide open after Elizabeth Ames Jones […]

Drilling Still on the Rise in Texas

Oil and gas drilling in Texas is alive and well, according to a new numbers from the Railroad Commission of Texas. The commission says that 943 oil permits were completed this March, meaning that they’ve been built and are either scheduled to produce or already producing. That’s up from 518 oil completions during March 2011. […]

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