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Gulf Awash In 27,000 Abandoned Oil And Gas Wells

JEFF DONN and MITCH WEISS   07/ 7/10 09:22 PM ET   AP

Gulf Abandoned Wells

Leading environmental groups and a U.S. senator on Wednesday called on the government to pay closer attention to more than 27,000 abandoned oil and gas wells in the Gulf of Mexico and take action to keep them from leaking even more crude into water already tainted by the massive BP spill.

The calls for action follow an Associated Press investigation that found federal regulators do not typically inspect plugging of these offshore wells or monitor for leaks afterward. Yet tens of thousands of oil and gas wells are improperly plugged on land, and abandoned wells have sometimes leaked offshore too, state and federal regulators acknowledge.

Melanie Duchin, a spokeswoman with Greenpeace, said she was "shell-shocked" by the AP report and upset that government wasn't "doing a thing to make sure they weren't leaking."

Of 50,000 wells drilled over the past six decades in the Gulf, 23,500 have been permanently abandoned. Another 3,500 are classified by federal regulators as "temporarily abandoned," but some have been left that way since the 1950s, without the full safeguards of permanent abandonment.

Petroleum engineers say that even in properly sealed wells, the cement plugs can fail over the decades and the metal casing that lines the wells can rust. Even depleted production wells can repressurize over time and spill oil if their sealings fail.

Regulators at the Minerals Management Service – recently renamed the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement – have routinely been accepting industry reports on well closures without inspecting the work. And no one – in industry or government – has been conducting checks on wells that have been abandoned for years.

In its investigation, the AP found a series of warnings. For instance, the General Accountability Office, which investigates for Congress, warned in 1994 that leaks from offshore abandoned wells could cause an "environmental disaster." The report stated: "MMS does not have an overall inspection strategy for targeting its limited resources to ensuring that wells are properly plugged and abandoned."

The GAO report suggested MMS set up an inspection program, but the agency never did.

According to a 2001 study commissioned by MMS, agency officials were "concerned that some abandoned oil wells in the Gulf may be leaking crude oil." But nothing came of that warning.

The oil that has been gushing from a BP PLC well since an exploratory oil rig exploded April 20 is an uncomfortable reminder of the potential for leaking at abandoned wells. The well was being prepared for temporary abandonment when it blew out, setting off one of the worst environmental disasters in U.S. history.

Wells are abandoned temporarily for a variety of reasons. In the case of the BP spill, the well was being capped until a later production phase. Oil companies also may temporarily abandon wells as they re-evaluate their potential or develop a plan to overcome a drilling problem or damage from a storm. Some owners temporarily abandon wells to await a rise in oil prices.

Regulations for temporarily abandoned wells require oil companies to present plans to reuse or permanently plug such wells within a year – and then an annual review – though the AP found those rules are used to allow wells to remain "temporarily" abandoned forever.

Sen. Mark Udall, D-Colo., sent a letter Wednesday to Interior Secretary Ken Salazar asking whether regulators have authority to do inspections of abandoned wells. He said regulators may ultimately need to check industry paperwork more carefully or inspect the work itself.

"We can't afford the leak that's now occurring. We certainly couldn't afford additional leaks in the future," Udall said.

He added that there's generally been a trust of industry, "but I think this is a case where we ought to trust – but we ought to verify."

Environmental activists called for the government to study the extent of leaking, conduct inspections and monitor these wells over the years.

Melinda Pierce, deputy director of national campaigns for the Sierra Club, said the AP investigation shows that the government must do more to prevent another oil disaster.

"From exploration to drilling to the sealing of abandoned wells, the government must step up safety inspections and oversight to ensure that oil companies don't cut corners that could put our marine resources and coastal economies at risk," she said.

Derb Carter, a director with the Southern Environmental Law Center, said government inaction on abandoned wells is "not unlike the way we dealt with hazardous waste years ago where we just buried it somewhere and didn't think about it."

Elgie Holstein, the senior director of strategic planning for the Environmental Defense Fund's land, water and wildlife program, said "it certainly makes sense" for the government to periodically inspect abandoned wells to ensure that they have been properly plugged. Holstein is a former U.S. Energy Department official during the Clinton administration who was on President Obama's transition team.

After repeated requests, federal regulators acknowledged Tuesday that some abandoned wells have leaked in the past. However, a government petroleum engineer, Eric Kazanis, told the AP that abandoned wells aren't considered a risk and aren't "supposed to leak."

Oil companies say they plug correctly, and that seals on properly plugged wells should last virtually forever.

Greg Rosenstein, a vice president at Superior Energy Services, a New Orleans company that specializes in this work for offshore wells, maintained that properly plugged wells "do not normally degrade."

When pressed, though, he acknowledged: "There have been a few occasions where wells that have been plugged have to be entered and re-plugged."

___

The AP National Investigative Team can be reached at investigate(at)ap.org

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Leading environmental groups and a U.S. senator on Wednesday called on the government to pay closer attention to more than 27,000 abandoned oil and gas wells in the Gulf of Mexico and take action to k...
Leading environmental groups and a U.S. senator on Wednesday called on the government to pay closer attention to more than 27,000 abandoned oil and gas wells in the Gulf of Mexico and take action to k...
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05:11 AM on 07/09/2010
CLEAN SOLAR IS MEAN

If you compare greasy oil to clean Solar energy, there are some serious negatives to solar power: cars run on Solar powered electricity have limited distance capacity; batteries needed to store solar electricity need Lithium, a very rare mineral, converting from oil to Solar would destroy the oil industry which employs millions of workers. Besides, nations in the northern and southern hemispheres and tropical rain forest lands would never have enough sunlight to maintain Solar power.

A hundred years from now we don't know the problems Massive Solar fields could cause. Earth might become a scorched land with nothing left but solar panels in a dust covered planet.

Let's stick with oil, at least we know the negatives with dirty oil: We can avoid going in the toxic oceans and on the tar ball beaches; we can wear gas masks if the smog gets too unbearable, and science is always coming up with new pain killing drugs for oil causing cancers.

And think of all the American soldiers that sacrificed their lives in wars to steal from oil countries, and the rag head men, women and children that died to help build the oil industry; these wars would all have all been in vain, a total waste of time and money if we converted from Oil to Solar energy now.

We have too much invested in the oil industry to change to Solar.

For the BOTTOM LINE, let's stick with oil.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Vindictive
Some days I'm crazier than others.
08:00 PM on 07/10/2010
Sticking with oil isn't an option. Regardless of what's "clean" the oil industry has passed the point at which their ability to produce can increase. Oil is becoming harder and harder to recover because we have depleted most of the easily accessible reserves. You will probably never see gasoline below $2 a gallon in the U.S. again. Sadly, the worst part isn't what it will do to transportation or energy production when we run out. There are hundreds of other petroleum products that are "critical" to modern society that are going to become more and more expensive as well. Pharmaceuticals, cheap plastics, computer components... as oil production falls off, there is going to be a direct correllation in inflationary prices for millions of other things.

Oil isn't an option.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DevonTexas
Eternal Optimism
10:56 AM on 07/08/2010
In light of the recent Gulf Disaster, this is just too overwhelming for the general population. This news will probably be met with a shrug, unfortunately.
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12:38 PM on 07/08/2010
Very good point.

A number of previous administrations back to the 1970s have over-looked these potential poison generators as have the fossil-fuel industry in general.

Hopefully, the recent Hemispheric Disaster will prompt those who originated the well sites to do the right thing?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
oMeoMi
04:23 PM on 07/08/2010
Yep. This information totally flies in the face of our being clueless, it is information that distracts us from self-deception and could severely damage one's proud sense of normality by hindering denial.
07:23 AM on 07/08/2010
the fact is, the oil companies wanted to dismantle many of the off-shore oil rigs.
the fishermen protested because the best fishing is around the same rigs.

turns out that coral is growing on these rigs and fish live and thrive about these artificial reefs.
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12:40 PM on 07/08/2010
Got some proof?

Red herring fallacy.

heh
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emmanuel goldstein
Have you had your two minutes today?
03:36 PM on 07/08/2010
well if these are artificial refs, shouldn't we be keeping close tabs on the oil caps to make sure they stay healthy reefs?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
From the Raft
12:39 AM on 07/08/2010
I think the Gulf Coast should be re-named the "Love Coast" in memory of Love Canal, NY.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
From the Raft
12:37 AM on 07/08/2010
If that fake government agency charged with regulating these oil wells would require oil companies to adhere to the lease agreements and the agency conducted their own follow up inspections the unemployment in the Gulf would be eliminated.
06:32 AM on 07/08/2010
Meaning thousands more gov employees could be created? I think we are at the choking point with gov employees, we need private sector real jobs not more clipboard carrying bureaucrats.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
separatingwheatfromchaff
09:50 AM on 07/08/2010
Pray tell how do we get compliance without the evil government employees?Clipboard bureaucrats that do their job could have saved us from this disaster.
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11:38 PM on 07/07/2010
Due respect to the writers, this is rife with weasel words, lack of fact checking, outright error and hyperbole.

"General Accountability Office?"

"Some," "may," "possibly." No specifics are given on what has leaked, when it leaked, how much it leaked and what was done to mitigate the leakage.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
From the Raft
12:30 AM on 07/08/2010
"Some" leaked oil from abandoned wells "may" pollute beaches and "possibly" kill wildlife but that's what the Gulf states wanted. Let them sleep in their own beds and eat their salads with "oil!"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jeannette Harris
owner ACR Inc.
11:13 AM on 07/08/2010
It might be important to remember and keep in mind that ecosystems, especially of the size of the Gulf of Mexico, are resources for all of us, not just residents along or near its coastline. Sometimes people, like children, have to be saved from themselves and their worst instincts and self-delusions that are temporarily gratifying but harmful in the long run including to them. Personally, although I don't live too near it, I have a strong interest and concern that area be naturally healthy and beautiful as possible. If nothing else, I might like to go swimming or boating or just lying in the sun there one day again, or recommend it to family and friends for that and its unique cultures, e.g. Cajun.
06:30 AM on 07/08/2010
Well said, thank you very much, a voice of reason in a sea of naysayers.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
TeeLolly
10:39 PM on 07/07/2010
Is there nothing in the oil companies' leases that requires them to clean up their mess when they're through?
11:15 PM on 07/07/2010
Yss- it is called Federal regulations and laws. Did you not read the part that says how rare it is for plugged wells to present problems? The wells are plugged, gone, adios, kaput- no longer there, The article is making a mountain out of a mole hill that does not exist...
12:17 AM on 07/08/2010
So if an old well begins to leak but no one is there to see it it doesn't actually happen.

Out of sight, out of mind.
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cef911f1
Dog loving, liberal old white guy living in SC.
09:24 PM on 07/07/2010
Instead of touting smaller government, maybe the Republicans should focus on effective government. Dems too.
10:06 PM on 07/07/2010
I wonder why the news outlets are slowly being shut out and cannot take pictures of this tragedy. Now, reporters have been threatened with being arrested if they take pictures. Chicago politics has gone national. UNBELIEVABLE. This administration is so incompetent.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jeannette Harris
owner ACR Inc.
11:16 AM on 07/08/2010
Is it that horrible to know and view? Many have nightmares as it is with what's been shown and it isn't likely that situation has improved, however painful to the mind and heart it might be.
09:15 PM on 07/07/2010
Don't blame this on Obama. It started long before Obama, or even yours truly, was born.
06:02 AM on 07/08/2010
Yes it started in 1948 when the first offshore GOM well was drilled and as a result, billions of dollars have been deposited int the US Treasury, millions of jobs created, the Nazisand the Soviets were defeated by the American Industrial machine (fueled by oil) and the US leads the world in terms of standard of living. During your lifetime you have enjoyed the benefits of cheap energy such as electriciy, air conditioning, gasoline and diesel powered vehicles and thousands of petrochemical products. Now a bogus story about PLUGGED wells creates this stir. Much ado about nothing but it is vogue to slam the oil industry due to the Macondo well (1 out of over 50,000 wells) is it not?
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emmanuel goldstein
Have you had your two minutes today?
03:50 PM on 07/08/2010
The Machine will be the death of us all. You sound like you work for DuPont or something.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Vindictive
Some days I'm crazier than others.
08:09 PM on 07/10/2010
Or, you know... if you count the other leaking wells... Ixtoc and the one 32 miles from Macando thats been leaking since 2004 under the supervision of the EPA.... thats 3 out of 50,000. Then we can talk about Nigeria, or Brazil... The fact that its suddenly "in vogue" to slam the oil industry as you put it doesn't make the oil industry above reproach, nor does it make the indictments leveled at the industry wrong in any way.

Its great that you think we have the highest standard of living in the world... but we don't. 20 years ago being an American might have been something to be proud of, but not toady. We're rated 52 in healtcare, 32 in education, and the areas we DO excel in aren't things I'd want to claim, like homelessness and suicides.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ministerbruce
The TRUTH in LOVE
08:48 PM on 07/07/2010
There are now 27 thousand reasons, for the Oversight and accountability and we should, completely stop, excepting the Oil & Gas Industries word for anything. We the people need some insight and not from a blurry eyed partier, who just has sex with a lobbyist and an Industry insider, filled MMS with coke and alcohol and paid hookers. They couldn’t even get a plan that was a cut a paste laughing stock.

MMS has to take a close look at all these wells, for them selves and test for strength and hold these; these sex addicted partiers accountable for actual factual data and evidence.
11:11 PM on 07/07/2010
The wells are gone, they are PLUGGED..... Geez- don't you think there might be better things for our government to perhaps concentrate on rather than wells that no longer exist? You are blogging away about sex, drugs, etc- that occurred in Denver, Uncle Sam spent $5 MM investigating it and implicated 3 people- by the way Dencver has nothing to do with the drilling, producing or plugging of wells, that is hadndled out of Lake Charles, Lake Jackson and New Orleans. The topic is PLUGGED wells not wild ass speculation and things that you read on the internet or make up.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ministerbruce
The TRUTH in LOVE
12:43 AM on 07/08/2010
MMS while not doing there job, under Bush and Republicans, is were where this was a problem. And you may trust what you don't, I want to know what MMS, the Oil & Gas Industry don't know, because they haven't checked the majority of these wells. The federals Government was caught flat footed about this and had to rely on the a lying industry and we all know how that went.

The people, need to know and the only way for that to happen is for our Government to have the capability to examine for them selves what is and is not. Presently you don't know your keyboard from lie and I' am not taking your word for what you don't know..
06:10 AM on 07/08/2010
How do you "check" these wells? What makes you think no one "checked" them? You think that MMS has to be standing there when the tubing is pulled, the wells are cemented and cut below the mudline, the deck is removed and the jacket is pulled? You are thinking that the professional companies that plug wells and remove facilities are lying criminals? Just exactly how many federal employees do you think we need? You think the MMS didn't do their job under Bush and Republicans? But they did under Clinton and Obama- how do you account fot that? Oh and you became an expert on this subject when- when the above article came out? What is you experience in these matters?
08:27 PM on 07/07/2010
These time-bombs in the Gulf should bring us to our senses, but will we ever learn? After the annual July 4th orgy of patriotism, perhaps we should ask ourselves what it truly means to love one's country.
Is the BP Gulf disaster an anomaly? Or is it more like a true reflection how our professed love for country translates into action?
We sing songs of love about the country, it seems as if we treat the environment much as a client treats a prostitute - he uses her, abuses her, and then thinks he can walk away from the damage with no cost to himself. It's a dangerous delusion.
Our planet is in deep crisis - and must demand that our politicians turn away from fossil fuels towards renewable alternatives without delay.
06:10 AM on 07/09/2010
They are not time bombs!! They are plugged wells- wells that are gone, done, finished, finito. Granted temporarily abandoned wells do need to be permanently abandoned but once they are that is it, they are done. You are drinking the kool aid- you are letting the press and bloggers get you all worked up over nothing.
11:57 AM on 07/09/2010
Your posts are completely absurd and contradictory.
Here you claim that once wells are plugged, they are safe - the next minute you post that 'stuff happens'. Of course this 'bad stuff' happens - the oil industry is particularly reckless, greedy and corrupt, and their wells are constructed based on the lowest bid, and regulations are bypassed.
Here's the truth: wherever the oil industry goes, it poisons the earth. sea and air. We need to turn to alternatives without delay.
07:57 PM on 07/07/2010
But according to conservatwits the free market is self regulating, so how can we have that many abandoned wells? Wouldn't the integrous companies take care of them?! Wouldn't conservatwits take them to task, in defense of free market standards?!
06:18 AM on 07/08/2010
How can we have that many abandoned wells? That's easy- we have drilled a hell of a lot of wells and they depelete, i.e. there is no more oil and gas producing from them, so they are plugged. What's not to understand?
06:16 AM on 07/09/2010
Are you thinking the term "abandoned" is synonymous with dumping a lover? You do not need to be concerned about those wells, they were not jilted- they were either dry holes or they reached the end of their economic life- plugging and abandoning a well is a necessary thing. Rest assured they have been coddled, nurtured and taken very good care of before they reach the end.
04:05 PM on 07/07/2010
Here is a novel approach, why don't we accept some responsibility? Maybe we could voluntarily wean ourselves of oil addiction. If we have to drive...then...drive easy, or bike, bus, walk, or car pool. Reduce oil consumption and we attack their bottom line and we save some cash. Remember...DRIVE EASY...CONSERVE
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LooseCaboose
06:04 PM on 07/07/2010
How about we reduce consumption of Bp's biggest customer: THE U.S. MILITARY! End the wars, bring the troops home, reduce consumption by 30% annually. Oddly enough.
04:01 PM on 07/07/2010
This is irresponsible blogerism. The title is intended to portray a disaster when in fact it is 27,000 PLUGGED wells, yes some of them might leak so what? Stuff happens. If they do they will be addressed but that is rare damn rare that wells leak after they are plugged.Why does the article not mention the billions of dollars reaped by the treasury from royalty on these wells?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LooseCaboose
05:14 PM on 07/07/2010
I guess because we are on the verge of the greatest ecological disaster in the history of the industry and with what appears to be good reason the continuous integrity of that industry has become highly suspect.
So, you are from Texas and perhaps affiliated with our Oillee friends?
11:07 PM on 07/07/2010
You think I might be? Yes I have been in the industry for 30 years, I have worked onshore and offshore, both domestic and international.
06:15 PM on 07/07/2010
Where is the evidence that these wells were plugged?
10:59 PM on 07/07/2010
Well let's see- perhaps the fact there where the platforms used to be there is nothing and where the actual wells were there is nothing- guess the absence of wells might be a clue not to mention the paperwork.
11:18 PM on 07/07/2010
New Orleans- get a plane ticket- head down there and inspect to your heart's desire.
03:28 PM on 07/07/2010
I hate to disappoint but there is nothing sinister or any collusion on behalf of the oil companies to screw the public or ruin the environment. Wells are temporarily abandoned because either (1) insufficient wells have been drilled to prove up the economics to justify setting a platform and devleoping the reserves, (2) the well has depleted or has become uneconomical to produce or (3) the well was a dry hole and has future utility as a sidetrack candidate. Typically wells are plugged in batches and most companies mob equipment when they have economies of scale- i.e. several wells to plug. Yes sometimes wells leak- they are dealt with. Now before anybody jumps up and shouts MACONDO!!, MACONDO!!- not remotely related to this topic at hand..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LooseCaboose
05:11 PM on 07/07/2010
Those three rationales do NOT sound like temporary abandonment, they sound permanent.
are you saying that Bp does not have wells that could become produces with a production rig on them that are now temporarily abandoned or not?
11:03 PM on 07/07/2010
I gave examples where wells might be temporarily abandoned, was it too difficult to understand? As to whether BP has other TA'd wells, I don't have a clue, I suspect they probably do.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LooseCaboose
05:15 PM on 07/07/2010
The sinister part is the misrepresentation, the collusion can be exemplified in the Disaster Preparation Reports that were filed by several companies, all appearing to be exactly the same.
Now,...c'mon which one do you work for Texas?
11:04 PM on 07/07/2010
I am working for my 6th small independent company spread out over my 30 year career.