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hatrack

(65,090 posts)
Sun May 10, 2026, 10:35 PM 3 hrs ago

No One Is Certain, But EPA Estimates That There are 3.7 Million Abandoned US Oil/Gas Wells, 58% Of Them Unsealed

There are a few truisms in the oil and gas industry: It is crowded with prodigious egos, there is always a boom around the corner and some industry operators aren’t above walking away from their mess at played-out well sites. Abandoning wells is a deliberate technique to pad marginal oil and gas operators’ profits by dodging cleanup costs. In December, for instance, the New Mexico attorney general sued three Texas oilmen, accusing them of selling more than 500 unproductive wells to shell companies created for the purpose of declaring bankruptcy to avoid remediation costs.

Many of the millions of wells left derelict throughout oil-producing states are abandoned, often unplugged and polluting, some with owners of record and others, orphans with no known owner responsible for cleaning them up. In 2023 the Environmental Protection Agency estimated that there are around 3.7 million abandoned and orphaned oil and gas wells—AOOG for short—in the U.S., out of about 4 to 5 million that have been drilled since 1859. The EPA says 58 percent of abandoned wells it has logged are not plugged. A significant number of the rest were sealed so poorly, or so long ago, that their plugs are failing today. The federal Orphaned Wells Program, using data compiled by the Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission, has documented 141,000 orphaned wells nationally and estimates there are an additional 250,000 to 740,000 out there, somewhere.

EDIT

Each abandoned or orphaned well is a mystery that unravels as it’s plugged. Some are relatively inert on their own, but other unplugged wells might vent hydrocarbons like methane, volatile organic compounds like the carcinogen benzene or deadly gases like hydrogen sulfide. Some leak oil, or a brine called “produced water” contaminated with heavy metals, chemicals or radioactivity. Some pollute underground aquifers or nearby surface waters. Others create their own noxious lakes. Changing subterranean conditions can make previously stable AOOG wells vent or leak.

Wastewater from oil and gas production is typically disposed of by pumping it into spent, adjacent oil and gas wells, but overpressurized underground disposal reservoirs can force it back to the surface where it can disrupt production from other oil and gas wells.In addition to fouling nearby waterways, groundwater, air and ecosystems, AOOG wells contribute to the greenhouse gas pollution that drives global warming. According to the EPA’s 2024 assessment of greenhouse gas emissions, AOOG wells spewed 303 kilotons of methane, ranking fifth among the nine methane emitters in the U.S. energy sector.

EDIT

https://insideclimatenews.org/news/10052026/well-done-foundation-plugging-abandoned-oil-gas-wells/

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No One Is Certain, But EPA Estimates That There are 3.7 Million Abandoned US Oil/Gas Wells, 58% Of Them Unsealed (Original Post) hatrack 3 hrs ago OP
I was in an Area Committee meeting where this was covered. LT Barclay 2 hrs ago #1
Clean oil is right up there with clean coal. multigraincracker 1 hr ago #2
Now jet fuel relogic 27 min ago #3
Signal Hill in Long Beach CA pfitz59 2 min ago #4

LT Barclay

(3,200 posts)
1. I was in an Area Committee meeting where this was covered.
Sun May 10, 2026, 11:06 PM
2 hrs ago

BLM was discussing the problem they had on public lands that they care for. Thousands of holes opened up by small companies that didn’t require a bond and when it didn’t pay off they were abandoned. Even piles of tailings were left behind. This was over 25 years ago.
The simple answer is to bring back the $5 tax per barrel of oil that funded the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund and use some of it to clean up these sites and some for derelict vessels and some for coastal cleanup.

relogic

(228 posts)
3. Now jet fuel
Mon May 11, 2026, 01:10 AM
27 min ago

So we leaves the dregs of oil and gas production at the countless sites to do their polluting, filthy work for decades. Then when we ship it, pipe it and fuel our cars, ships and planes with that commodity we spread the same carbon everywhere to burn and spill .

The 32,000 gallons of jet fuel carelessly spilled from the base in DC into the Potomac is another example of waste and poison that goes on and on.

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