Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Biden’s plan includes $16B for plugging wells, deserted mines

- By Matthew Daly

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden’s $2.3 trillion plan to transform America’s infrastruc­ture includes $16 billion to plug old oil and gas wells and clean up abandoned mines, a longtime priority for Western and rural lawmakers from both parties.

Hundreds of thousands of “orphaned” oil and gas wells and abandoned coal and hardrock mines pose serious safety hazards, while causing ongoing environmen­tal damage. The administra­tion sees the longstandi­ng problem as an opportunit­y to create jobs and remediate pollution, including greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming.

Biden said last month he wants to put pipe fitters and miners to work capping the wells “at the same price that they would charge to dig those wells.”

Many of the old wells and mines are located in rural communitie­s that have been hard-hit by the pandemic. Biden’s plan would not only create jobs, but help reduce methane and brine leaks that pollute the air and groundwate­r. Methane is a powerful contributo­r to global warming.

The Interior Department has long led efforts to cap orphaned wells — so named because no owner can be found — but does not assess user fees to cover reclamatio­n costs. Bond requiremen­ts for well operators, when known, are often inadequate to cover full clean-up costs.

Biden’s plan, which needs approval by Congress, would jump-start the well-capping effort and expand it dramatical­ly.

Similarly, the White House plan would exponentia­lly boost an Abandoned Mine Land program run by Interior that uses

fees paid by coal mining companies to reclaim coal mines abandoned before 1977. About $8 billion has been disbursed to states for mine-reclamatio­n projects in the past four decades, but Biden’s plan would ramp up spending sharply.

Sen. Joe Manchin, the West Virginia Democrat who chairs the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, has long pushed to expand the mine-lands program, which he calls crucial to his state.

“It cannot be forgotten that West Virginia coal miners powered our country to greatness,” Manchin said. While many mine lands in coal communitie­s have been reclaimed, “there is still much more work to be done to clean up damage to the land and water in those communitie­s,” he said.

Wyoming Sen. John Barrasso, the top Republican on the Senate energy panel, ridiculed Biden’s overall plan as “an out-of-control socialist spending spree.”

A spokeswoma­n said

Barrasso “has been very active in trying to reevaluate and improve” the Abandoned Mine Land program.

Barrasso is working with Manchin and other committee members to “responsibl­y reauthoriz­e AML fee collection and facilitate reclamatio­n (of mine sites) across the country,” spokeswoma­n Sarah Durdaller said.

Environmen­tal groups hailed the announceme­nt, saying unplugged wells and abandoned mines pose a significan­t environmen­tal threat. Some former drilling or mining sites have sat unattended for decades.

The National Mining Associatio­n said it supports the renewed focus on abandoned mine lands, but wanted to see more details.

Environmen­tal groups and Democrats have called for stronger bonding requiremen­ts for oil and gas companies that drill on public lands, as well as changes to bankruptcy law that make it harder for companies to evade responsibi­lity for cleaning up old sites.

 ?? MATTHEW BROWN/AP 2018 ?? Water contaminat­ed with arsenic, lead and zinc flows from a pipe out of the Lee Mountain mine and into a holding pond near Rimini, Montana.
MATTHEW BROWN/AP 2018 Water contaminat­ed with arsenic, lead and zinc flows from a pipe out of the Lee Mountain mine and into a holding pond near Rimini, Montana.

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