Times Standard (Eureka)

State halts fracking permits in crackdown

- By Adam Beam

SACRAMENTO » California Gov. Gavin Newsom cracked down on oil producers Tuesday, halting approval of hundreds of fracking permits until independen­t scientists can review them and temporaril­y banning another drilling method that regulators believe is linked to one of the largest spills in state history.

The state Division of Oil, Gas and Geothermal Resources announced it will not approve new wells that use high-pressure steam to extract oil from undergroun­d. It’s the type of process Chevron uses at an oil field in the Central Valley that leaked more than 1.3 million gallons of oil and water this summer.

That process is different from fracking, which uses water and other chemicals at high pressure to extract oil. California has 263 pending fracking permits but has not approved any of them since July. That’s when Newsom fired California’s top oil and gas regulator after learning the state had increased fracking permits by 35% since he took office in January, angering environmen­tal groups.

Newsom, a Democrat, called the crackdown necessary to strengthen the state’s oversight of oil and gas extraction “as we phase out our dependence on fossil fuels and focus on clean energy sources.”

“This transition cannot happen overnight; it must advance in a deliberate way to protect people, our environmen­t and our economy,” Newsom said.

California has been a leader on environmen­tal issues, with Newsom’s Democratic predecesso­r, Jerry Brown, making climate change his signature effort. Brown was criticized for failing to ban fracking or oil drilling, arguing that the state needed to tackle demand before moving on to supply.

The oil industry called Newsom’s changes “disappoint­ing,” with the Western States Petroleum Associatio­n saying California’s environmen­tal regulation­s already lead the world.

“Every barrel delayed or not produced in this state will only increase imports from more costly foreign sources that do not share our environmen­tal safety standards,” group president Catherine Reheis-Boyd.

California is one of the top five states for oil production, producing more than 161 million barrels last year. Fracking occurs in some of the state’s largest oil fields, mostly in the Central Valley.

The steam method is less prevalent but accounted for 8 million barrels of the state’s oil production in 2018, according to the Department of Conservati­on. But regulators believe it is linked to the oil spill at a Chevron well that began in May.

It was the largest oil spill in California since 1990, when a tanker unleashed more than 400,000 gallons of crude oil off the coast of Huntington Beach.

But despite its size, the Chevron spill has had minimal effects on the environmen­t.

The oil spilled into a dry creek bed, and the company cleaned it up before rains could wash it into fresh water. It also did not significan­tly harm wildlife, with just a “handful of birds” needing to be euthanized, according to Jason Marshall, chief deputy director of the California Department of Conservati­on.

A second well at the oil field about 35 miles west of Bakersfiel­d has been leaking intermitte­ntly since 2003. State officials ordered Chevron to stop the leak in April, and the company has been making progress, Marshall said.

Regulators have fined the energy giant $2.7 million for the leaks. A Chevron spokeswoma­n referred comment to the Western States Petroleum Associatio­n, whose leader said, “There is nothing more important than the health and safety of the communitie­s where the women and men of our industry work, live and raise their families.”

The moratorium will be in place while two national laboratori­es — Lawrence Livermore and Sandia — study the high-pressure steam process to see what regulation­s, if any, can make it safer. Other wells in California use the steam method and have not had any spills.

“These oil leaks cannot be the cost of doing business,” California Natural Resources Secretary Wade Crowfoot said. “There needs to be a clear trajectory to eliminate them. Not reduce them in number, but fully eliminate them.”

 ?? IRFAN KHAN — LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom tours the Chevron oil field west of Bakersfiel­d where a spill of more than 800,000gallons flowed into a dry creek bed in McKittrick.
IRFAN KHAN — LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE Gov. Gavin Newsom tours the Chevron oil field west of Bakersfiel­d where a spill of more than 800,000gallons flowed into a dry creek bed in McKittrick.

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