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Gulf Oil Spill Investigation Now Includes Tens Of Thousands Of Abandoned Wells

JEFF DONN   07/15/10 08:12 PM ET   AP

Abandoned Oil Wells

A lead congressional committee investigating the Gulf of Mexico oil spill has broadened its inquiry, now checking if tens of thousands of abandoned oil and gas wells are leaking or even being monitored for leaks.

Committee members wrote in a letter Thursday to Interior Secretary Ken Salazar that they were responding to an Associated Press investigation released last week on the 27,000 abandoned wells in the Gulf. The AP reported that the wells are not routinely inspected when plugged or subsequently monitored for leaks.

"These wells could pose an additional danger to the Gulf Coast environment and economy," wrote U.S. Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, and Rep. Edward Markey, D-Mass., who heads the subcommittee on energy and environment. They asked for details on the number of wells as well as leaking and inspection requirements. They asked for an initial reply by Monday.

Some wells have been abandoned in the Gulf since drilling first began in federal waters in the 1940s. Oil companies leave them behind when they are done using them to explore or produce.

Of 50,000 wells ever drilled in the Gulf, 23,500 have been permanently abandoned, the AP reported. Another 3,500 are classified as "temporarily abandoned," but some have been left in that condition since the 1950s without the full safeguards of permanent abandonment.

Petroleum engineers say that even in properly sealed wells, 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 seals fail.

BP PLC was temporarily abandoning the Deepwater Horizon well when it blew out on April 20, killing 11 workers.

In response to the AP investigation, leading environmental groups have called for the government to study the possible extent of leaking wells, to conduct work inspections and to monitor abandoned wells over the years.

Sen. Mark Udall, D-Colo., sent a separate letter last week asking Salazar whether regulators have authority to conduct inspections of abandoned wells. He said regulators may ultimately need to check industry paperwork more carefully or inspect the work themselves.

On Thursday, Kendra Barkoff, a spokeswoman for the Interior Department, said the agency was reviewing the latest congressional request. She added that "without question, we must raise the bar for all offshore oil and gas operations."

She gave few details but said the agency is evaluating "a series of options" to make sure that well operators can afford the costs of abandonment. Oil and gas companies eventually will have to spend at least $3 billion to perform permanent plugging on wells in federal waters, according to estimates of the newly named U.S. Bureau of Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement, which regulates offshore drilling.

In its investigation, the AP found a series of past warnings about the risks at abandoned wells. The Government Accountability Office, which investigates for Congress, warned that leaks could cause an "environmental disaster." The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has estimated that up to 17 percent of abandoned wells are improperly plugged on land.

___

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

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A lead congressional committee investigating the Gulf of Mexico oil spill has broadened its inquiry, now checking if tens of thousands of abandoned oil and gas wells are leaking or even being monitore...
A lead congressional committee investigating the Gulf of Mexico oil spill has broadened its inquiry, now checking if tens of thousands of abandoned oil and gas wells are leaking or even being monitore...
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07:17 AM on 08/01/2010
And it’s one two three what are we living for, don’t ask us we don’t give a damn, there’s no God and there aren’t no plan, and we don’t care if it sounds rather rude, but our kids will surf on waves of crude, yippee the worlds gunna die!

And its five six seven lets drill to the heart of the Earth, and give black mucky seas a birth, it’s the final evolution you see, the death of you and me, just like the dinosaurs there’s nothing special about us, so why make such a fuss.

So it’s A B P what are they drilling for, the Earth has an oily core so let’s go deep and score!

Lay BP lay, lay oil across the big blue sea, whatever profits you see in your head, they are rushing to you from the deep-sea bed, lie BP lie, lie about how the sea will eat that oil.

Let us hope that you can find a way, to stop your geyser for another day, stay BP stay, stay with your well a while.

I’d like to be, under the sea, near a gushing oil geyser in the shade, we’d swim about, near BP’s spout, in our oily hideaway beneath the waves, we would be so happy you and me, no one there to take our oily shade away. I’d like to be, in w10- 40 seas, in an octopus’s garden, with BP shade.
08:10 PM on 07/17/2010
The oil spill was no accident. just another example of socialized risks and privatized profits.
This is the BEST article on the spill that I've read:
http://news.infoshop.org/article.php?story=2010no-accident-bp
Every gulf coast resident should read this!!!!
It touches on economic ecological and political failings and compares the bp spill to the ongoing situation with oil companies in the Niger delta.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Okieborn
Equal Rights For All !
12:06 PM on 07/18/2010
Your right !
The oil spill wasn't an accident, it was because Bush and his oil buddies dropped all regulatory investigations and rules so the oil barrons could drill baby drill and not have anyone looking over their shoulders !!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dfranz
With Liberty and Justice for all
03:24 PM on 07/17/2010
It would not supprise me at all if most or all of the old wells are just sitting there waiting for something to happen. There are many potential possibilities that could go wrong. It's time our legislators started doing their jobs and make safety a major concern. If anyone wonders how bad it could get, as if the gulf disaster isn't enough, checkout the Indonesian mud gusher which they cannot stop and will gush for 30 years. Gas drillers caused that one and have tried to deny it for 4 years.

When they say they know what they are doing, they don't.

http://articles.latimes.com/2010/jul/10/world/la-fg-indonesia-mudslide-20100710
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ZeraLee
A Citizen's View from Main Street
05:49 AM on 07/17/2010
As a programmer, when I find a problem I look for the same problem in other places it might occur. This has saved me a great deal of time and effort that it would have taken to track each instance down one at a time.

I am glad the investigation is applying this principle to the oil spill problem. It will most certainly save us from more problems in the future. When they said a few weeks ago that they had found oil that did not come from the Deep Horizon hole, I wondered just where it did come from. An abandoned well could be the answer.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jedime
i am.
05:15 PM on 07/16/2010
holy crap- the thought of 27,000 oil wells, let alone 27,000 abandoned oil wells just in the Gulf, is mind-boggling. i can only imagine the shape some of the ones abandoned since the '50s are in (and probably many more than "some").
02:34 PM on 07/16/2010
Well, maybe we can only hope for the best, right ? Cool new private site (not BP and not Gov't ) launched just today as a clearinghouse for new ideas and concepts . . . everything from control to animal rescue.

www.bpspillsolutions.com/BPspill/default.asp

Share it . . . answer the poll question about global regulation .. . check out containment solution or log in and offer your own fixes.”
02:33 PM on 07/16/2010
I hope the investigations result in the arrest of the BP executives responsible for the murder of 11 workers and massive environmental destruction. We cannot let these criminals get away with what they have done. Too many arch-criminals are running free in this country. I am tired of seeing justice punish only the little people.
01:33 PM on 07/16/2010
You may ask, what is the concern...do not change the topic to the abandoned wells....remember it is not the Alamo, but the blowout, blowout.
01:29 PM on 07/16/2010
Keep your eye on the ball and money. Very effective to throw in a red herring. The ball is the explosion that killed 11, what happened, responsibility, how do we avoid other "accidents", what effect on the gulf itself, what impact on the people - concentrate on the present oil blowout. Spill, notice the use of the word spill, this was not a spill. Spill oh just wipe it up, no harm. Notice how some of the posts change folks thinking.... a bit of mind bending I think.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Overtone
See bio on the Aesop Institute website
01:20 PM on 07/16/2010
The life threatening impact of the Gulf gusher may be far more serious than might be imagined!

Capping these wells may be only part of the problem. Substantial oil is coming from fissures in the sea floor. Dealing with those leaks may be incredibly difficult. So far there is little mention of that problem.

See What to Do! at http://www.aesopinstitute.org The subtitle is: A 5 Step Program - to Increase the Odds We Will Survive the Oil Disaster!

400 parts per million of carbon has recently been found to be the Arctic Tipping Point, which could conceivably endanger all of humanity. We are presently approaching 390 ppm. The safe limit is 350 ppm. See www.350.org

A very thin film on the surface of the North Atlantic and Arctic oceans threatens to raise temperatures toward the catastrophic Tipping Point.

If these facts are accurate, an emergency mobilization appears urgent.

Little known and hard to fathom breakthroughs involving radically new energy technologies can help to supersede oil much more rapidly than might be readily understood or believed.

See Moving Beyond Oil on the same Aesop Institute website.

We need far more robust and sensible steps to effectively attack the problems in the Gulf and prevent as much oil as possible from reaching the Atlantic ocean.

Sustainability and practical steps to supersede oil and all fossil fuels are possible.

Taking sufficient action rapidly may require an immense effort.

Ironically, that might readily sharply stimulate a truly robust economic recovery.
01:36 PM on 07/16/2010
There is also a very good chance that there is a hugh bubble of explosive gas in the fizzures, what would happen then.
01:08 PM on 07/16/2010
WOW! I'm impressed. How come this never happened under Bush?
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Lochness71
Here I am.
12:37 PM on 07/16/2010
What exactly does "temporarily abandoned" mean?

Temporarily abandoned = Inpector gone but might come back
Permanently abandoned = Inspector fired and new one will never come back
Giftedroot
A forest from one root.
12:43 PM on 07/16/2010
Temporarily abandoned = we might come back, maybe not.

There really should be a single standard for abandoning a well.

Whether it's temporary or permanent, an "abandoned" well should be plugged as if it will never be used again.
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Lochness71
Here I am.
01:02 PM on 07/16/2010
The problem I have with abandoned wells is they are not built to last a long time.
27,000 wells they will eventually decay and leak with no one checking on them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Vegasyankee
Making Energy for a Strong America!
01:08 PM on 07/16/2010
Temporarily Abandoned = Good wells - Usually a short time of abandonment, proved up reserves, waiting for platform or pipeline placement.

Temporarily Abandoned = Well completely depleted, didn't finish drilling (ran out of money), no reserve found, plan to return and drill deeper or in a different direction.

Most all T&A's (Good or not) require 3 cement plugs to be set & tested.

Permanently Abandoned P&A = No reserves found, reserves depleted.

P&A wells also have 3 plugs set & tested beneath the sea floor, if it's a wild cat location (No platform) the drive pipe is cut below the sea flow and nothing remains.

More of Washington's and Markey's overblown BS to push the next batch of legislation that will stick it to the average working man. I'm about to start voting Democrat so I can go on welfare and sponge off other hard working Americans.
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Lochness71
Here I am.
01:23 PM on 07/16/2010
How does safety regulation stick to the average working man?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mrJJ
如果你不投票,你不能抱怨
12:27 PM on 07/16/2010
Source: Florida Oil Spill Law

Rep. Markey says Congress unable to “PUBLICLY disclose” integrity of wellbore — More (VIDEO)

http://www.floridaoilspilllaw.com/just-in-rep-markey-says-congress-unable-to-publicly-disclose-integrity-of-wellbore-more-video
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12:26 PM on 07/16/2010
Moratorium on drilling until all of these wells are inspected and all leaks repaired.
If the Gulf oil companies have a problem with it, they can find a new line of work (we need a lot of offshore well inspectors, for instance).
12:24 PM on 07/16/2010
Good - this video from the BP Oil Spill Frequency shows the spread of rigs throughout the gulf and it's kind of horrifying how many there are - http://www.frequency.com/video/gulf-of-mexico/100475
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Vegasyankee
Making Energy for a Strong America!
01:10 PM on 07/16/2010
Those aren't rigs, they are platforms. There is a huge difference.