The Denver Post

N.M.EYES HIGHER ENERGY BONDS

- By Susan Montoya Bryan

It was the 1970s when New Mexico last increased the amount of bond money oil and gas companies are required to put up before drilling. State Land Commission­er Stephanie Garcia Richard says it’s time to take another look.

It was the 1970s when New Mexico last increased the amount of bond money that oil and gas companies are required to put up before drilling. As developmen­t continues at a record pace, State Land Commission­er Stephanie Garcia Richard says it’s time to take another look.

Legislatio­n that called for a study of the issue stalled during the recent session, but Garcia Richard announced just a day after lawmakers adjourned that she’s moving forward with the effort. She said her office has the funding to begin the work.

The review could take months. Given all the infrastruc­ture and developmen­t on state trust lands, officials said the amount of bonding needed to ensure taxpayers aren’t left paying for any clean-up and restoratio­n after oil, gas or other minerals are extracted is currently unknown.

Garcia Richard described it as an urgent issue that could leave “taxpayers and our state trust land beneficiar­ies on the hook for potentiall­y millions of dollars.”

Concerns about the inadequacy of bonds goes beyond New Mexico. A report released last fall by the U.S. Government Accountabi­lity Office highlighte­d bonding shortfalls on federal lands and found that oil and gas bond amounts largely have not been updated in 40 years or more and fail to serve their intended purpose.

Abandoned wells have been a major issue across much of the West and some officials are concerned the problem could grow given the exponentia­l increase in

developmen­t in places such as the Permian Basin, a booming area that straddles the Texas-New Mexico border.

Once the New Mexico study is complete, the State Land Office could propose raising bond requiremen­ts through a rule-making process.

That would involve a series of public meetings.

The agency manages millions of acres of surface land and mineral estate throughout New Mexico.

That includes more than 30,000 active leases and rights of way for everything from agricultur­e to oil and gas developmen­t, renewable energy projects and mining.

State officials are most concerned about unplugged and abandoned wells.

According to the State Land Office, the average cost of plugging a well is more than $28,000 and the cost to remediate contaminat­ion associated with a single lease can range from $5,000 to millions of dollars depending on the extent of contaminat­ion.

The New Mexico Oil Conservati­on Division tallies the number of orphaned and abandoned wells throughout the state at 711, of which only 6% have been plugged.

While the state has a restoratio­n program funded by a tax on oil and gas operators, officials say its $5 million budget would be drained quickly considerin­g the number of wells needing to be plugged and remediated.

The State Land Office pointed to a case of contaminat­ion in Lea County that occurred five years ago. The bond covered only $10,000, but the current estimated cost of cleaning up the spilled produced water is over $600,000.

Aside from well sites, the study will require the State Land Office to review more than 10,000 miles of oil and gas-related pipelines in rights of way throughout the state.

Officials say the existing exposure for decommissi­oning pipelines and remediatin­g rights of way on state lands alone is hundreds of millions of dollars.

 ?? Charlie Riedel, Associated Press file ?? Pumpjacks work in a field near Lovington, N.M. It was the 1970s when New Mexico last increased the amount of bond money that oil and gas companies are required to put up before drilling. As developmen­t continues at a record pace, State Land Commission­er Stephanie Garcia Richard says it’s time to take another look.
Charlie Riedel, Associated Press file Pumpjacks work in a field near Lovington, N.M. It was the 1970s when New Mexico last increased the amount of bond money that oil and gas companies are required to put up before drilling. As developmen­t continues at a record pace, State Land Commission­er Stephanie Garcia Richard says it’s time to take another look.

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