Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumCA Oil Well Cleanup Law, Toughest In America, Ignored As State Agency Runs Legal Sidestep Maneuver
Last October, California passed the nations strongest law to address the glut of oil and gas wells that are unplugged and ownerless, many leaking pollutants into the environment. The legislation required that, as part of any sale or transfer of wells, the purchasing company set aside enough money in financial instruments known as bonds to cover the entire cleanup cost of low-producing wells if the companies go out of business without plugging them. It was a striking departure from the piecemeal steps taken by other state legislatures and federal agencies to reduce the number of orphan wells. California lawmakers repeatedly cited ProPublicas work on the subject as a reason to act.
But in its first major test, California regulators sidestepped the law. The California Geologic Energy Management Division, the states oil regulatory body, announced in late June that the law does not apply to the merger of California Resources Corp. and Aera Energy, two of the three companies that account for the vast majority of the states oil and gas production. If the law had been enforced, the deal would have provided billions of dollars in new bonds to ensure taxpayers werent eventually left with the cleanup bill.
Department of Conservation Director David Shabazian explained the agencys decision in a letter to Assemblymember Wendy Carrillo, the Los Angeles Democrat who sponsored the new law. The bonding requirements do not apply to stock transfers, nor does the law make any mention of such transactions, Shabazian wrote. In other words, because Aera is still listed as the operator of the wells, the state cant act. That explanation did not appease Carrillo. This deal is exactly why we passed AB 1167, the Orphaned Well Prevention Act, she said in an email to ProPublica and Capital & Main. If a company is drilling for oil in California, they should be responsible for cleaning and closing that oil well. Not enforcing the law as intended sets-up our state for a potential financial catastrophe.
The merger created the largest oil company in the state, with about 16,000 idle wells, which neither produce oil and gas nor are plugged and are at a higher risk of becoming orphans. Thats 40% of the total number of idle wells in the state. Its an absurd interpretation of the law, said Kyle Ferrar, who helped write AB 1167 as Western program coordinator with environmental group FracTracker Alliance. Theyre essentially creating a model to get around this bill.
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https://www.propublica.org/article/california-oil-cleanup-law
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