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Alberta vows to impose oil, gas well cleanup timelines on energy companies

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    Alberta vows to impose oil, gas well cleanup timelines on energy companies

    Alberta vows to impose oil, gas well cleanup timelines on energy companies
    Jeff Lewis Environment Reporter
    Renata D’Aliesio
    Calgary
    Published November 26, 2018 Updated 7 hours ago
    Alberta has pledged to impose cleanup timelines on energy companies in a major policy shift to reduce growing financial and environmental risks tied to tens of thousands of idled oil and gas wells across the province.
    Energy Minister Margaret McCuaig-Boyd said on Monday she has also told the Alberta Energy Regulator to beef up oversight of energy companies’ financial health. But she stopped short of committing to legislative changes that would give the provincial regulator greater powers over corporate takeovers where the buyer has insufficient funds to meet cleanup obligations.
    “We absolutely are looking at targets and timelines" to ensure companies meet their cleanup obligations, she said in an interview. “Because for too long, operators were allowed to just punt these things down the road until the point there were no operators left to be responsible for them.”
    The commitment comes after a six-month Globe and Mail investigation published this weekend that revealed about 20 per cent of all oil and gas wells in British Columbia, Alberta and Saskatchewan are inactive, and that there are 54,147 more idle wells in those three provinces than there were in 2005. Such wells no longer produce oil and gas, but have not been plugged.
    Another 84,569 wells have been abandoned, many of them for decades. Those wells have been filled with cement and capped because there is no profit left in them, but companies have not yet reclaimed the sites and restored the surrounding land to its original state.
    Video explainer: Take a look inside the booming trade of unprofitable oil and gas wells in Western Canada that is allowing companies to evade cleanup costs. The Globe and Mail
    More from this feature
    • Investigation
    Hustle in the oil patch

    • Inactive wells
    A surge in idle wells triggers fears of trouble

    • Backstory
    Wrestling with new players in the patch

    The Globe investigation also detailed a brisk trade in distressed wells and other facilities, in which major companies routinely offload properties saddled with hefty cleanup obligations onto smaller players with scant ability to pay for remediation. The deals were approved even in cases where purchasers didn’t meet the Alberta regulator’s test for financial fitness.
    The deal-making has flourished since oil prices crashed in 2014, aggravating concerns over unfunded liabilities as a string of corporate bankruptcies punted hundreds of millions of dollars in cleanup costs onto the wider industry and the public.
    Neither Saskatchewan Energy Minister Bronwyn Eyre nor B.C. Energy Minister Michelle Mungall were available for an interview by deadline on Monday.
    Last year, Alberta’s NDP government loaned the industry $235-million to accelerate cleanup of defunct wells. Such wells have no solvent operator; their number in Alberta alone has swelled to 4,349, up from 545 in 2014. Ms. McCuaig-Boyd said the provincial loan has accelerated cleanup of more than 2,400 wells while creating 1,600 jobs.
    Alberta’s pledge to tighten cleanup regulations risks antagonizing an industry beset by weak prices. Some of the sector’s biggest companies have called for government relief to address export bottlenecks that have led to steep discounts on much of the province’s heavy oil.
    The province has asked Ottawa to subsidize the purchase of rail cars to transport oil under a three-year plan estimated to cost about $3-billion. Meanwhile, a supply glut and low prices have stung Western Canada’s natural gas industry.
    Ms. McCuaig-Boyd would not say when the province would introduce cleanup timelines, but the commitment comes amid a wider policy review to address the glut of dormant wells and future industry liabilities the provincial regulator has pegged as high as $260-billion. That review was supposed to be completed by the end of 2017.
    She said she has directed the Alberta Energy Regulator (AER) to improve mechanisms to assess company’s finances to stop major companies offloading cleanup obligations. But she blamed successive provincial governments for failing to address mounting liabilities tied to unprofitable wells and other infrastructure.
    “They’ve allowed it to grow over a number of years," she said. "That’s why this isn’t a simple solution and we need to take the time to make sure we’re closing the loopholes that we need to and, really, monitoring corporate health is one of the biggies, so companies aren’t allowed to continue to do this.”
    There are several stark differences between how regulators in Western Canada and the United States manage idle wells and the transfer of energy assets.
    Alberta, Saskatchewan and B.C. focus on a company’s asset-to-liability ratio when determining whether to allow a firm to acquire energy assets. So do many states, such as North Dakota, Nevada and Pennsylvania, but they also look at the company’s debt and the amount of inactive wells involved in the transfer.
    Security-deposit rules also differ. States such as California and Texas require security bonds from all producers, while Alberta, Saskatchewan and B.C. only request deposits from firms that fall below their financial stress tests.
    Many U.S. states require companies to seek continuing approvals and post security bonds to keep wells inactive. In some cases, they have to show evidence that the wells could be returned to production, if commodity prices improve. Alabama and Nevada require operators to put a well back into production or begin cleaning it up within two years.
    University of Calgary economics associate professor Lucija Muehlenbachs has studied Alberta’s inactive wells. Her predictive modelling, released last year, showed that most of the province’s idle wells would remain dormant even if oil prices rose an astronomical 200 per cent.
    The AER, itself, found that less than 0.1 per cent of wells that had been idle for more than 10 years were brought back online in 2016 and 2017.
    “The longer a well is inactive it is even less likely to be reactivated,” Ms. Muehlenbachs said.
    “It is troubling when I read about 122,000 inactive wells,” she added. “What is the loss of the land? What is the methane emissions from these inactive wells? What’s the water contamination risks?”

    #2
    Something needs to done and as far as orphan wells goes it a pretty simple solution. Wanna drill a new well? Clean up a orphan well than the new well license is issued.

    Comment


      #3
      It's a sad commentary that the accounting and planning divisions of the major and junior companies in the oil industry continue to see their liabilities as some form of perverted asset.


      You ask what that means? And so did I more than a year ago.

      Well that capital cost has been paid on those lease sites...hasn't it. It's going to cost from $51000 (assumed average in SE Sask for environmental cleanup and decommissioning the well alone); so why not keep that money if there is any potential of redrilling the field in the future.


      Then you rearrange the status quo by suckering in a small handful of landowners who see that $500 to $750 annual rents for additional wells drilled on what are referred to as pads; is substantially better than nothing (also known as we'll put it on the other side of the fenceline if you know what they mean).

      Just ask Crescent Point in the Torquay area or Vermillion in SE Sask if you don't believe the figures; and the ideas behind oil company benefits concerning padsites.. Or look at the CNRL Court appeal to a Surface Rights Arbitration pad issue and you'll see that oil company feels 600 per additional well is an exhorbitent amount over the $500 that they feel should be awarded.

      I'm coming around to saying that oil companies who are standing firm on paying zero dollars tax on injection wells; don't pay a cent for taxes on abandoned wells (but not cleaned up lease sites); have never even been assessed or paid fees or taxes on the miles of pipe in the ground that never has been caught by the "honor system" of self reporting; nor as yet any company that has supported the principle that it is grossly unfair for mandated setbacks from sour facilities and wells to be restricted to the land control they actually have in place. And after squeezing the service industries into bankruptcy or downsizing or getting out while there is still some company value; and begging for further municipal tax relief (a couple years ago); and now this new "Pad drilling program" to really squeeze land owners...and the ongoing deliberate ignoring of keeping up with cleanups and restoration and remediation...maybe its past due to ask "And what do oil companies intend to do next"

      Readers will of course know that all these injustices exist to the extent of "the limits that the electorate will tolerate".

      And while at it; maybe some councillors could report on the SARM midterm convention; where one would think these and other issues would have been fully hammered out in the resolution debates.

      But this is the worst time to be bringing these matters up. With crude oil hovering at $50 or so (and Canadian crude discounted to the equivalent of 9 cent per pound hogs; maybe those in charge during profitable oil prices should be exposed on some "Wall of SHAME". Pun appropriate???

      Nevertheless; its time to address these issues in the context of not being deliberately difficult for anyone to develop the necessary crude oil infrastructure; or those who would prematurely make irresponsible energy source decisions that will ruin land locked provinces and the investments that form the basis of our developed country, OR deliberately punishing areas where Mother Nature typically deals a cruel hand to inhabitants that few world citizens would tolerate as their home. All the while showing a world insensitivity and lack of thankfulness for what those areas provide in regards energy and food for the world at large.
      Last edited by oneoff; Nov 27, 2018, 18:14.

      Comment


        #4
        in simple terms.
        The oil industry has not been the total net benefit to our society as is claimed. Some individuals have raked in too much money without owing up to the cost that we all now are paying for.
        And yet with this not solved The propaganda goes on how great his all is. Not that it can't be but in my opinion the oil industry has bought off politicians to be able to continue to do all these things only promoting the big numbers of what it does and not including all the costs that have to be accounted for. And because of owning governments we are all left paying for
        The repairs or fix up. While many have big fat bank accounts or more likely bags of money buried in their back yard. And yet we re brainwashed into the belief flooding the market with inferior oil product will again be such a boom for us all.
        all done with out any plan of who is going to pay the cost for all this. There is absolutely no proof the world will pay more for our oil if there is a pipeline in fact logic wiuld say they will pay less unless we refine it here. But then buyers would have to charge world price for gas and oil, when the only reason our inferior crude is moving is because it's cheap.

        Look at what happenned here in saskatchewan. Absolutely no plan for the revenue which obviously was not enough to cover the true development cost of the industry. And now us farmers are the ones being attacked the most or pay for the debt of the boom and we haven't even accounted for the anondoned wells yet???? Wow
        Last edited by the big wheel; Nov 28, 2018, 05:38.

        Comment


          #5
          Great post ONEOFF. Totally agree.

          Comment


            #6
            We have a lot of abandonment going on and a lot more in the future...farm yards wind farms solar farms we have abandoned ships at sea and on a smaller scale all sorts of garbage that’s hauled to the countryside to get dumped like stoves mattress couches dogs cats tires toilets used oil and what ever. We can even dump raw sewage into rivers without penalty. Where do you think those barges of solidified human shit goes that leave Vancouver island go every day? Not China.

            Comment


              #7
              At the root of the of the financial crisis in the oil patch is a huge change in US demand for crude because they have lots of their own and we have a big increase in Canadian production. No one predicted this would happen a decade ago.

              The difficulty in building export pipeline capacity or capacity to move oil to Canada's east coast refineries are making the fundamental situation worse. Currently several midwest refineries are shut down for maintenance, adding to the glut.

              But during the boom years was there much thought put into putting money aside for cleanup? I don't think so. The poorly managed boom drove inflation higher, increased costs for oil production and has potentially left taxpayers with a big cleanup bill.

              Many investors and business owners want to get in and get out. Take the money and run. We need the jobs and the resource revenue to keep oil dependent provinces afloat. But we also need to plan for the future in a way that doesn't leave landowners and taxpayers with a mess left by some fly by night operators who don't care what happens as long as they get their money. If they aren't willing or able to pay for the cleanup then they shouldn't be in business.

              The problem is governments who are either too friendly with, or afraid of the oil industry. Governments need to crack down on this obvious abuse, take a bigger share of royalties from taxpayer owned oil and make sure oil companies pay for cleaning up their own mess. The oil industry is cyclical and everybody knows this. Prices will go up and down and there is no better time to start doing something than now.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by jimmy View Post
                We have a lot of abandonment going on and a lot more in the future...farm yards wind farms solar farms we have abandoned ships at sea and on a smaller scale all sorts of garbage that’s hauled to the countryside to get dumped like stoves mattress couches dogs cats tires toilets used oil and what ever. We can even dump raw sewage into rivers without penalty. Where do you think those barges of solidified human shit goes that leave Vancouver island go every day? Not China.
                You are correct that we all have a responsibility to cleanup and protect our environment. We are on track to turn the earth into one big shit hole landfill unless we live smarter and change our ways.

                Comment


                  #9
                  I believe the number of wells sitting idle and not producing is probably accurate, but the 84,000 odd wells capped and not reclaimed is complete BS. Once the decision to cap takes place the intent is to take them out of commission so that surface leases and property taxes no longer need to be paid. You don't reclaim the site you won't achieve either. There may be a number in transition or a number where the oil company went broke before finishing, but not more wells than non producing wells.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    See I agree with the NDP gov in Alberta its time to clean up your mess oil. Bad timing now with the shit show in oil prices. Could have been handled better. Bankrupt them now. But when the sun shines and they want to drill like crazy that when this should have been imposed.

                    You want a lease here is your plan beginning to end.

                    Cons blew this one.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      It will be interesting to watch the NW here with the steam plants going forward . All are exceeding production projections and more plants are going in . Long term it will be curious to see how those plants get decommissioned and cleaned up.
                      Also the oil by train ..... the oil car loading facility west of Lashburn is huge now . The oil trains 🚂 will be dominant on that line now .
                      All the transfer payments given away to Ontario and Quebec over the years could have paid for a double track system to the coast on both major lines.
                      We are one of the only exporting Nations on earth who have neglected our rail system. Not that oil by train is any safer than a pipeline , but reality is , the oil is going to come to the coast regardless.
                      The tree huggers think that protesting and shutting down pipelines is some sort of win as they are saving Mother Earth is short sighted . The oil is coming anyway , only by train .
                      But that only means grain by train will be back to where it was a few years ago ....

                      Comment


                        #12
                        So do you think the earth muffins will quit once they stop pipelines? Oil by rail will be next.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by LEP View Post
                          So do you think the earth muffins will quit once they stop pipelines? Oil by rail will be next.
                          Lol true , but it will be a lot tougher to combat rail lines . But ya they seem obsessed with crucifying oil at every turn .

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Foreign funding to domestic protestors one of the last few forms of foreign capital being invested in Canada now.protestors will always have work.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              At the same time multinational and international oil companies are lobbying governments and working to protect their interests. That includes making sure that provinces don't toughen the rules around cleaning up the messes left after the well is done.

                              Comment

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