>>> From an Article by Zack Budryk, The Hill (Online News), 01/05/22
WASHINGTON, DC — The U.S. has more than double the amount of abandoned oil and gas wells than previously thought, according to a preliminary analysis by the Interior Department.
In a memo Wednesday, the department said there are currently more than 130,000 documented abandoned, or orphaned, wells. Comparatively, a 2019 report from the Interior documented a total of 56,600 orphaned wells across 30 states. Across the entire country they found that the number of abandoned wells in that report ranged from zero to 13,226.
The bipartisan infrastructure bill President Biden signed into law in November of last year includes $4.7 billion to restore and plug orphaned wells. In December, the department released guidance on state applications for grants under the program.
Since then, the majority of states, 26, have submitted notices of intent to apply for the grants, according to the memo. Nearly every state documented contained orphaned wells.
States applying for funding included Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah, West Virginia and Wyoming, according to the memo.
The Interior Department is set to publish the full amount of grant funding each state is eligible to receive in the months ahead, according to the memo. On Thursday, the Bureau of Land Management will host a presentation on its orphaned-well reclamation program.
Plugging orphaned wells has been top priority for Interior Secretary Deb Haaland since her nomination. The White House’s budget request for fiscal 2022 also included a proposal to more than double the enacted 2021 budget for orphaned well cleanup and reclamation, which the administration said would create 250,000 union jobs.
The White House’s more ambitious climate and social spending bill — which has not passed either chamber of Congress — would also put $41 billion toward environmental remediation, including reclamation of orphaned wells.
Its path forward remains unclear after Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) said in December that he would not back the package.
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SEE ALSO:WV-DEP seeks support to hire gas, oil well inspectors, Lacie Pierson, Charleston Gazette, January 18, 2022
Also during the meeting, the Department of Environmental Protection Secretary Harold Ward told the committee that department officials hope to be able to hire eight new natural gas and oil well inspectors before the state receives $165 million in federal grants to manage nearly 6,300 abandoned natural gas and oil wells.
The department currently employs nine people who are responsible for inspecting about 75,000 wells, or about 8,000 wells per inspector, Deputy Secretary of Environmental Protection Scott Mandirola told Senate Finance members during a budget presentation at the Capitol.
“Right now, we’re at a very difficult crossroads,” Ward said. “To be candid with you, we have a solution, and its proposed legislation this year.” DEP officials are asking the Legislature to approve a bill that would allow them to charge a $100 permit fee to raise $1.3 million to support the return of inspectors and other staff to the department’s Oil and Gas Division.
Senators on the committee were alarmed by the ratio of wells to inspectors, raising concerns about public safety as well as the workload on inspectors, even with the potential addition of eight more inspectors. “This is a tragedy that we’ve got wells and things that we know that are leaking,” Sen. Charles Clements, R-Wetzel, said. “Something’s got to be done.”