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Who will clean up the 'billion-dollar mess' of abandoned US oilwells?

  
Via:  Ender  •  3 years ago  •  17 comments

By:   Heather Hansman

Who will clean up the 'billion-dollar mess' of abandoned US oilwells?
As oil companies go out of business, they are leaving a legacy of abandoned wells that leak huge amounts of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere

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Jill Morrison has seen how the bust of oil and gas production can permanently scar a landscape.

Near her land in north-east Wyoming’s Powder River Basin, where drilling started in 1889, more than 2,000 abandoned wells are seeping brine into the groundwater and leaking potent greenhouse gasses.

The problem is getting worse. As the oil and gas industry contracts owing to the pandemic, low prices and the rise of renewables, more than 50 major companies   have gone bankrupt in the last year. Joe Biden’s recent order to pause drilling on federal land could drive that number higher. Morrison, a rancher and the head of the Powder River Basin resource council, said the crash was exacerbating the abandonment issue.

“They drill baby drilled themselves right out of business,” Morrison said. “We’re seeing something we’ve never seen before in the oil and gas industry, in terms of the downturn, and there’s going to be a billion-dollar mess to clean up.”

Unplugged wells,   either orphaned well, which have no liable party, usually due to bankruptcy, or idle, abandoned ones, where the company has walked away, but could still be liable, cause rampant methane emissions – up to 8% of US total according to a   2014 analysis . They also leak brine, oil and fracking fluid into the groundwater, and carcinogenic gases, like benzine, into the air, and as their numbers increase the impacts grow.

“Methane is a strong greenhouse gas, it’s a precursor for ozone, and harmful for human health,” said Mary Kang, a McGill civil engineering professor who conducted the study. “Even just a few wells can be responsible for big emissions, and there are all the other associated risks, and impacts to wildlife and ecosystems.”

The impacts aren’t just here in the rangy fields of Wyoming. There are unremediated wells in Los Angeles neighborhoods and Pennsylvania farms. There could be as many as 3.2m abandoned wells in the US, according to a 2018   EPA report , but this is probably an undercount because both federal and state programs for regulating and monitoring non-producing wells are incomplete. There are an estimated 2,500 of them in the Powder River Basin alone.

So many have been left uncapped because the regulations and bonding requirements, the money that companies pay ahead of time as insurance,   for those wells are so minimal that it’s nearly impossible to hold drillers responsible or to pay for cleanup. Some companies simply walk away from wells, meaning they are still liable; when firms go out of business, they are not.

The penalties for not cleaning up a well are minimal when there’s nothing but a small bond holding a company responsible. “How do you convince operators to comply when there’s no carrot and no stick?” said Frank Rusco, a director in the US Government Accountability Office’s natural resources and environment team.

That means the profits for drilling go to individual companies while the damages, both environmental and financial, are largely borne by the local community and by state and federal taxpayers. “Unplugged wells devalue property, they’re a mess to work around, it can lead to groundwater pollution, and no one is really tracking it,” Morrison said.

The thinktank   Carbon Tracker , reports it could cost $280bn to reclaim wells, and public bonding data indicates that states have less than 1% of that money in secure bonds.

Cleanup for an individual well can cost anywhere from $20,000 to $1m. It involves filling it with clay or concrete, covering the surface, replacing topsoil, and removing any pipes or waste like fracking fluid.

Wyoming is shaking the stick harder than other places. In 2014, slumping prices set off a wave of bankruptcies and places like the Powder River Basin were hit hard by abandonment. In response, the Wyoming oil and gas commission upped their bonding fees, but there is still a big gap in funding.

Wyoming has 64,000 orphaned unplugged wells, which would cost an estimated $10bn to remediate, according to an   October report   from the Carbon Tracker Initiative. Even with the increased bonding requirements, as of the most recent tally the state had about $225m in bonds.

The Center for American Progress recently published a plan for a   $2bn   orphan well cleanup fund, which would both address the pollution and support 14,000 to 24,000 jobs in energy-producing states like Wyoming. And in September, Senator Michael Bennett of Colorado introduced a bill that included those recommendations to create a federal cleanup fund, and increase minimum bonds.

“I think this is a two-step solution, first would be creating a cleanup fund to address the giant backlog of orphan wells that are scattered across the nation,” said report author Kate Kelly, public lands director at the center. “Then, the heart of the problem is that we have inadequate bonding requirements in places that allow oil and gas companies to walk away and leave taxpayers holding the bag.”


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Ender
Professor Principal
1  seeder  Ender    3 years ago

Screw you guys, I'm going home...

 
 
 
cjcold
Professor Quiet
1.1  cjcold  replied to  Ender @1    3 years ago

There are now 1,334 Superfund sites in the U.S. 

Nice legacy we're leaving for our progeny.

 
 
 
Perrie Halpern R.A.
Professor Principal
1.1.1  Perrie Halpern R.A.  replied to  cjcold @1.1    3 years ago

Just a minor inconvenience/sarc. 

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
2  Kavika     3 years ago

Add this to a number of environmental disasters, abandoned mines in Nevada, the larges nuclear topic spill in US history still hasn't been cleaned and it's been 50 years in NM. Abandoned uranium mines. 

 
 
 
321steve - realistically thinkin or Duu
Sophomore Guide
3  321steve - realistically thinkin or Duu     3 years ago

Yep it's all been about the money. When the money runs out so do unscrupulous people, leaving a mess is not unusual when people can get away with it. 

There is always some assholes who will take whatever money they can and run away leaving a trail of tears when the gravy-train stops.

SAD

For some reason somehow trump comes to mind. 

 
 
 
Ender
Professor Principal
3.1  seeder  Ender  replied to  321steve - realistically thinkin or Duu @3    3 years ago

The 64,000 abandoned and unplugged wells in just one state kinda blew me away.

They have no responsibility at all. Then will come up with some excuse that the oil was for our benefit anyway so we should just take the lumps...

 
 
 
epistte
Junior Guide
3.1.1  epistte  replied to  Ender @3.1    3 years ago

Orphan wells are a major problem in Ohio as well.

There are thousands more out there that have yet to be found or identified in this state,” Chini said. “We get calls every day from people building homes or plowing fields that come across these wells.”

By one state count , there are as many as 19,000 orphan sites in Ohio, where the first oil well was drilled in 1814. Applying current reclamation costs to that number suggests the state could face a $2 billion cleanup bill.

Matt Hammond, president of the Ohio Oil and Gas Association, acknowledged in an email that there are “tens of thousands of orphan wells spread across the state,” although most were deserted before modern laws were written.

The Department of Natural Resources, which has plugged more than 1,000 deserted wells to date, is experimenting with an aerial magnetometer, a tool that measures magnetic fields, to identify more wells.

 
 
 
Ender
Professor Principal
3.1.2  seeder  Ender  replied to  epistte @3.1.1    3 years ago

Stop the presses!

Well howdy stranger ! Great to see ya !

 
 
 
Perrie Halpern R.A.
Professor Principal
3.1.3  Perrie Halpern R.A.  replied to  Ender @3.1.2    3 years ago

Same here. Nice to see you! 

 
 
 
Trout Giggles
Professor Principal
3.1.4  Trout Giggles  replied to  epistte @3.1.1    3 years ago

Hey! So glad you came home!

 
 
 
sandy-2021492
Professor Expert
3.1.5  sandy-2021492  replied to  epistte @3.1.1    3 years ago

Good to have you back!

 
 
 
cjcold
Professor Quiet
3.2  cjcold  replied to  321steve - realistically thinkin or Duu @3    3 years ago

Corporations change names and legal ramifications faster than a cuttlefish can change colors.

 
 
 
321steve - realistically thinkin or Duu
Sophomore Guide
3.2.1  321steve - realistically thinkin or Duu   replied to  cjcold @3.2    3 years ago

And who pays for that ? 

WE DO. 

SAD 

As a responsible human irresponsible humans bug me. 

 
 
 
bbl-1
Professor Quiet
4  bbl-1    3 years ago

Who will clean up the messes?  The US taxpayers of course.  You people daft or what?

Remember, under Supply Side Economics, business has one priority and only one priority and that is to make profit, buy legislation/government and place all liability on those who pay for the government they own.

 
 
 
Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
5  Bob Nelson    3 years ago

This is/was entirely predictable. Regulatory oversight is ans always has been toothless opposite the petroleum industries. We (taxpayers) give Big Oil billions in subsidies every year, but you can be sure that we'll also get stuck for this cleanup.

Now let's talk about all the money the fexkless Obama Agave to Solyndra... Now THAT was a scandal!!

 
 
 
bbl-1
Professor Quiet
5.1  bbl-1  replied to  Bob Nelson @5    3 years ago

Solyndra money was a pittance.  Solyndra's product was far superior, many times more efficient than any on the market.  Unfortunately the cost was high and consumers decided to use the cheaper product made in China, which continues to this day.  Had Solyndra survived, the costs would recede and for once the US could have been the leading manufacturer of Solar in the World.  Big OIL and political anti-renewables doomed the venture.  The cost has nothing to do with it.

Want to talk about scandals?  Shouldn't we audit the tax payer money sent for border security and incarceration by the Trump Administration?  Where did it go?  Not for tooth brushes and soap, remember? 

 
 
 
Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
5.1.1  Bob Nelson  replied to  bbl-1 @5.1    3 years ago

I was just blowing off steam.

On another forum, I'm hassling with a bunch of Trumpists / Big Oil apologists.

 
 

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