LOS ANGELES, Feb. 5, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — While approvals for new oil well drilling permits in California dwindled to 73 in 2024–from 2,664 in 2019 when Governor Newsom took office, 2024 ended with oil regulators dropping the ball on requiring adequate amounts of bonding to protect taxpayers from plugging and cleanup in a massive oil acquisition deal, Consumer Watchdog and FracTracker Alliance said today.
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Instead, regulators halved the bonding requirement for the California Resources Corp. (CRC) acquisition of Aera Energy to $30 million for one “shared liability” bond instead of considering two bonds totaling a maximum $60 million, via a legal loophole, even though ProPublica reports Aera’s well plugging costs start at $1.1 billion.
“We commend the Newsom Administration for dwindling permit approvals,” said Consumer Advocate Liza Tucker. “But now that oil drilling is sunsetting, the state is exposing Californians to grave fiscal risk instead of making sure the money is there for oil companies to plug wells and clean up their messes. Exhibit A is the Administration’s coddling of CRC and Aera Energy that now make up the biggest onshore oil producer in California. The Newsom Administration reduced the amount of their bonding of wells instead of increasing it.”
“CRC has been a sponge for low producing oil and gas wells in California, and the company has already undergone Chapter 11 reorganization,” said Kyle Ferrar, Western Program Director at FracTracker Alliance. “Our research shows that average daily per well production for CRC and Aera is unsustainably low, and it will be hard to generate profit from these wells to properly plug them, much less remediate the environmental contamination of Aera’s oil fields. It’s therefore incredibly vital that California obtains sufficient bonding for these companies.”
Governor Newsom signed AB 1167 (Carrillo) into law in 2023, requiring oil and gas well operators to adequately bond wells and production facilities acquired from another company. This bonding with the California Geologic Energy Management Division (CalGEM) under the Department of Conservation (DOC) ensures the eventual plugging and reclamation costs are covered by the operator, not the public, and Newsom was widely praised by environmental advocates for its signing.
Last June, David Shabazian, the then director of the Department of Conservation, refused to honor the law. In a specious letter to the bill’s author, Assembly Member Wendy Carrillo, Shabazian stated, “Based on the SEC filings and materials provided to the Department, it is evident that only ownership of Aera Energy LLC is being transferred, not any of Aera’s assets.”
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