Santa Fe New Mexican

Chevron ordered to halt Calif. oil spill

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SAN FRANCISCO — California regulators say Chevron has not done enough to stop a massive oil spill that dumped about 800,000 gallons of crude oil and water into a Kern County canyon, and they want the company to take further action to halt the flow.

The seep out of the ground where Chevron injects steam to extract undergroun­d crude oil has been happening on and off since May.

The state has issued Chevron a notice of violation ordering it to stop steam injections around the area where the seep was occurring in the large Cymric Oil Field about 35 miles west of Bakersfiel­d. This week Chevron said no new fluid had come to the surface since Tuesday and that 90 percent of the released material has been recovered.

The company also said the spill is not near any waterway and has not significan­tly affected wildlife.

KQED reports regulators took a further step Friday by ordering the company to completely stop the flow, also known as “surface expression,” and prevent any new releases. The order was issued by Jason Marshall, the new acting head of the state’s Division of Oil, Gas and Geothermal Resources.

The directive came a day after Gov. Gavin Newsom fired the head of the embattled division over a recent increase in hydraulic fracturing permits and amid a conflict-of-interest investigat­ion of other division employees.

Chevron said it will review the order and work with the involved agencies.

The company could still appeal the order.

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