Houston Chronicle Sunday

HIDDEN HAZARDS

Forgotten oil and gas wells linger in Texas, leaking toxic chemicals

- By Cathy Bussewitz and Martha Irvine ASSOCIATED PRESS

CRANE, Texas —Rusted pipes litter the sandy fields of Ashley Williams Watt’s cattle ranch in windswept West Texas. The corroded skeletons are all that remain of hundreds of abandoned oil wells that were drilled long before her family owned the land. The wells, unable to produce any useful amounts of oil or gas, were plugged with cement decades ago and forgotten.

But something eerie is going on beneath the land, where Watt once played among the mesquite trees, jackrabbit­s and javelina and first drove the dirt roads at 10 years old. One by one, the wells seem to be unplugging themselves. They’re leaking dangerous chemicals that are seeping into groundwate­r beneath her ranch.

Now 35, Watt believes the problems on her ranch, which sprawls across the oil-rich fields of the Permian Basin, are

getting worse. In April, she found crude oil bubbling from an abandoned well. In June, an oil company worker called to alert her that another well was seeping pools of salty produced water, a byproduct of oil and gas extraction containing toxic chemicals.

“I’m watching this well literally just spew brine water into my water table, and then I have to go home at night, and I’m sweaty and tired and smelly, and I get in the shower, and I turn on the shower and I look at it, and I think, is this shower going to kill me?” Watt said.

A growing threat

The crisis unfolding on Watt’s 75,000-acre ranch offers a window on a growing problem for the oil industry and the communitie­s and government­s that are often left to clean up the mess. According to the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, 3.2 million abandoned oil and gas wells exist in the United States. About a third of them were plugged with cement, which is considered the proper way to prevent harmful chemical leaks. But most haven’t been plugged at all.

Many of the wells are releasing methane, a greenhouse gas containing about 86 times the climate-warming power of carbon dioxide over two decades. Some are leaking chemicals such as benzene, a known carcinogen, into fields and groundwate­r.

Regulators don’t know where hundreds of thousands of abandoned wells are because many of them were drilled before modern record-keeping and plugging rules were establishe­d. They are a silent menace, threatenin­g to explode or contaminat­e drinking water and leaking atmosphere­warming fumes each day that they’re unplugged. Without records of their whereabout­s, it’s impossible to grasp the magnitude of the pollution or health problems they may be causing.

The problem isn’t confined to Texas. In recent years, abandoned wells have been found under brush deep in forests and beneath driveways in suburbia. On the Navajo Nation, a hiker stumbled across wells oozing brown and black fluid that smelled like motor oil. In Colorado, a basement exploded, killing a man and his brother-inlaw who were repairing a water heater, after an abandoned flowline had leaked methane into the house.

Experts believe the problem is getting worse. Even before thepandemi­c, producers were declaring bankruptcy and abandoning oil fields after spending more on fracking operations than they ultimately could afford. Then the coronaviru­s halted travel, obliterati­ng demand for fuel and leaving less money to properly plug wells.

President Joe Biden, who has built much of his domestic policy around a transition to cleaner energy sources, wants to spend billions to put unemployed wildcatter­s to work plugging the wells. But Congress is unlikely to allocate enough money to seriously confront the issue.

“If, all of a sudden, we could switch to all green renewable energy, that’s great, but these wells don’t disappear; they’re still going to be there,” said Mary

Kang, an assistant professor of civil engineerin­g at McGill University in Montreal who was among the first scientists to call attention to the danger of abandoned wells.

Traces of benzene

After the discoverie­s on Watt’s ranch, traces of benzene showed up in the well that supplies her cattle’s drinking water. Chevron, which owned at least two of the oil wells that recently came unplugged, began trucking in drinking water while its crews tried to fix the leaks. But Watt worried that her animals might have consumed contaminat­ed water. So she had her 600 head of cattle hauled off to another part of her ranch.

“At this point,“she said, “I cannot sell my cattle at market in good conscience, because I have no idea what is in them.”

Though Chevron officials maintained that the cattle could safely return, Watt disagreed.

She’s haunted by a memory of crude oil bubbling up in a toilet bowl at her family’s ranch when she was a teenager. Horrified, they turned off the well that supplied their water and switched to another well. They never found the source of the leak.

Representa­tives for Chevron said the company is committed to re-plugging the two wells that recently sprang leaks.

But Watt fears that dozens of other plugged and abandoned wells on her ranch might be deteriorat­ing, and Chevron has no plans to check its other wells for problems.

Hailing from a long line of cattle ranchers, Watt never thought she’d be fighting this fight. After high school, she graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy and worked in intelligen­ce for the Marines. Even after she obtained an MBA from Harvard, she returned to the ranch.

She packs a gun, but only on her own land. Though she’s passionate about protecting it, she doesn’t want to be called an “environmen­talist” — that’s a dirty word out here. But she has to save her ranch.

“The story of my family,“Watt said, “is a story of land, if nothing else.”

Searching for lost wells

The first successful commercial oil well in the U.S. was drilled in Pennsylvan­ia in 1859. But few detailed records survived that early oil boom, which lasted several decades. Not until a century later would the industry develop modern plugging standards, which require filling abandoned wells with cement to prevent leaks.

These days, some abandoned wells have metal casings intact. But others were stripped of metal during World War II, making them hard to find. Still others were constructe­d from wood that rotted away and left only a hole in the ground.

Pennsylvan­ia has located roughly 8,700 orphaned wells, mostly unplugged and in rural areas. Yet the problem is far larger. Based on historical photos and surveys, Pennsylvan­ia estimates that between 100,000 and 560,000 additional unplugged wells remain scattered around the state.

“We’re not plugging fast enough to keep up with the wells we’re discoverin­g,” said Seth Pelepko, an environmen­tal program manager in the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Environmen­tal Protection. “Our list is not getting smaller. It’s getting larger.”

Some states have taken to hiring well hunters who specialize in finding abandoned wells. They use metal detectors — first in helicopter surveys, then on the ground — to seek steel well casings. But metal detectors can’t detect wells cased in wood. So they fly drones with laser imaging to seek depression­s in the ground.

On her Texas ranch, Watt uses some of the same techniques to seek problemati­c aging wells. She has driven her land, looking for signs of trouble.

Sometimes, she finds a dark patch of earth using a drone. She calls one of the biggest the “elephant graveyard,” after a wasteland in the movie “The Lion King.” Rather than animal bones, her graveyard contains blackened mesquite trees.

The sand there is dark and reeks of oil. But Watt’s worry is the water below. Without it, she and her longtime ranch foreman, Marty White, and his wife — and their cattle — can’t live here. Water is the lifeblood of this place and all of West Texas.

Leaking chemicals and money

In addition to polluting groundwate­r, the wells are accelerati­ng global warming. Unplugged, abandoned wells in the U.S. leaked 5,000 times more methane than plugged wells did, according to a 2015 study cited by the EPA. Unplugged wells leak 280,000 metric tons of methane into the atmosphere each year, according to an estimate by EPA, though experts have estimated far higher totals.

That amount of methane packs roughly the same climate-warming power as the carbon dioxide emitted by all the power plants in Massachuse­tts in a year, according to Daniel Raimi, a fellow at Resources for the Future, a research group.

Many states require companies to plug wells that are out of production and to post bonds in case they go belly-up. But the amounts are typically far lower than what’s required to plug the wells, leaving states or the federal government with hefty bills.

At the end of June, Texas reported 7,268 orphaned wells, up 17 percent since 2019. An additional 146,859 were considered “inactive”: They were no longer producing oil, but the owners hadn’t yet been required to plug them. Many inactive wells may actually be orphaned wells, said David Wieland, regional organizer with the Western Organizati­on of Resource Councils, a network of grassroots groups focused on land stewardshi­p. Some producers will let a well sit idle for a year or two, he said, and then produce just enough oil to avoid being required to plug it.

“That sort of hidden inventory is likely true in almost any state,” Wieland said.

Some states, like Texas, use fees collected from the oil and gas industry for cleanups. In 2018 alone, oil-producing states spent $45 million plugging orphaned wells and $7.9 million restoring surroundin­g land, according to the Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission.

Cleaning up the mess

As the financial and environmen­tal tolls of abandoned wells grow, policy makers are searching for solutions. In his initial infrastruc­ture proposal, Biden suggested spending $16 billion to put people to work plugging old oil and gas wells and coal mines. Yet even that wouldn’t be nearly enough to solve the problem.

Raimi, of Resources for the Future, estimates that a federal program to plug 62,000 wells over a decade could create 15,000 to 33,000 year-long jobs. At a per-well cost of $76,000, it would take roughly $160 billion to plug all the wells and reclaim the surroundin­g land, whether it’s companies or government­s who pay the price.

Watt’s family never owned the mineral rights to the land and thus never profited from these wells, many of which were drilled in the 1950s and were plugged in the four decades that followed.

She isn’t looking for a drawn-out legal battle with Chevron or any other oil company with wells on her land. She simply wants assurance that the water is safe for her cattle, and the people in her life, to drink. She wants the land to be restored. And she doesn’t know if that’s possible.

“I do not want to sue,“Watt said. “All I want is everything cleaned up.”

 ?? Eric Gay / Associated Press ?? Ashley Williams Watt watches as a workover rig is used to help replug one of the abandoned wells at her ranch near Crane.
Eric Gay / Associated Press Ashley Williams Watt watches as a workover rig is used to help replug one of the abandoned wells at her ranch near Crane.
 ?? Eric Gay / Associated Press ?? There are 3.2 million abandoned oil and gas wells in the U.S., according to the EPA.
Eric Gay / Associated Press There are 3.2 million abandoned oil and gas wells in the U.S., according to the EPA.

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