Sen. Yaw Introduces Bill To Prohibit State Government From Owning Any Clean Energy Credits; Would Force The Use Of More Taxpayer Money To Plug Conventional Oil & Gas Wells Routinely Abandoned By Conventional Well Owners
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Sen. Gene Yaw (R-Lycoming) has reintroduced legislation-- Senate Bill 1330-- to prohibit state government from owning any clean energy credits and force the sale of those taxpayer assets to plug oil & gas wells routinely abandoned by conventional well owners. Similar legislation was introduced in 2021 as Senate Bill 945 in a bid to undermine efforts by Gov. Wolf to have state government purchase nearly 50% of the electricity it uses from new solar energy facilities in six counties. Read more here. The legislation was reported out of the Senate Environmental Committee in January 2022 and died in the Senate Appropriations Committee. Senate Bill 1330 would prohibit state government from owning clean energy credits it receives from buying renewable energy and require those credits it holds to be sold undermining efforts to transition to clean energy.. The proceeds of the sale of these taxpayer assets are directed to go into the Marcellus Legacy Fund to be used to plug oil and gas wells routinely abandoned by conventional well owners. Of course when the bill says to sell the clean energy credits you also sell the electricity the state was going to use to power its operations, so state government will be forced to buy the electricity it needs a second time or go dark. So the bill actually requires state government to buy the electricity it needs twice, since the proceeds from the clean energy credits are directed into the Marcellus Legacy Fund. Click Here for Sen. Yaw’s complete announcement. Wells Continue To Be Abandoned By The Hundreds While raising money to plug abandoned conventional wells seems like a worthy goal, it does nothing to stop the rising tide of NEW well abandonments by this industry that continues to abandon their wells by the hundreds every year. As DEP pointed out in a December 2022 report on the conventional oil and gas industry, well abandonment is the most frequent violation issued by DEP to this industry and it is done routinely to avoid plugging responsibilities. Read more here. Pennsylvania is already set to receive $395 million in federal taxpayer funding under the federal Bipartisan Infrastructure Act to plug wells abandoned by conventional oil and gas well owners in the state. So far in 2024, DEP has issued more than 763 notices of violation to conventional oil and gas well owners for abandoning and not plugging wells they own. Read more here. In 2023, DEP issued 472 notices of violation to conventional oil and gas well owners for abandoning and not plugging wells they own. Read more here. From 2017 through 2023, DEP reported well abandonment was the most frequent violation by conventional operators and issued 4,266 violations for abandoning wells without plugging them. Read more here (2017-2021). Read more here (2022). Read more here (2023) As reported in the media, DEP has only $15 per well in bonds on hand to deter future abandoned wells from existing oil and gas well owners. Read more here. In 2022, Sen. Yaw introduced and Gov. Wolf signed legislation to prohibit DEP from increasing bond amounts on conventional oil and gas wells for 10 years. Read more here. The law undercut efforts by several environmental groups to increase conventional well bond amounts to more nearly match the cost of plugging those wells by taxpayers in a petition submitted to the Environmental Quality Board. Read more here. In addition, any conventional oil and gas well drilled before April 18, 1985-- which is most of them-- are not required to have any plugging bonds, leaving the entire cost of those well pluggings to be paid for by taxpayers. Legislation has been introduced-- House Bill 962 (Vitali-D-Chester)-- to restore DEP’s authority to increase conventional well plugging bond amounts and it was reported out of the House Environmental Committee in July 2023, but remains Tabled. Read more here. PA Oil & Gas Industry Public Notice Dashboards: -- DEP Issues Violations To 7 Shale Gas Drillers For Failure To Submit Monthly Waste Generation, Disposal, Production Reports - 1 Company For 3 Years; 2 More Drillers Fail To Disclose Fracking Chemicals [PaEN] -- PA Oil & Gas Industrial Facilities: Permit Notices, Opportunities To Comment - October 5 [PaEN] -- Susquehanna River Basin Commission Sets Oct. 30 Hearing On The Proposed 2025 Fee Schedule; Water Withdrawal Requests, Including 4 Supporting Shale Gas Development [PaEN] -- DEP Posted 72 Pages Of Permit-Related Notices In October 5 PA Bulletin [PaEN] Related Articles This Week: -- DEP Begins Accepting Grant Applications Oct. 9 To Plug Orphan Conventional Oil & Gas Wells Abandoned By Their Owners [PaEN] -- State Fire Commissioner Now Accepting Applications From Local Fire, Emergency Services For Training, Equipment To Respond To Shale Gas Infrastructure Fires, Emergencies [PaEN] -- Center For Coalfield Justice Hosts Oct. 16 In-Person Program In Waynesburg, Greene County On Protecting Public Health, Resources From Shale Gas Development [PaEN] -- PennFuture: Lawmakers Move Bill To Require Clean Solar Energy Facilities To Have Bonds; But Fail To Have Adequate Plugging Bonds For Dirty Oil & Gas Wells Leaving Taxpayers To Pick Up The Cost [PaEN] -- DEP Citizens Advisory Council Meets Oct. 8 On Hydrogen Hubs, Data Centers, Food Processing Residuals, PFAS ‘Forever Chemicals’ Regulation [PaEN] -- No Decision Posted Yet From DEP On Whether Flare Gas Chemical Makeup, Volume At Shell Petrochemical Plant In Beaver County Is Confidential Business Information [PaEN] NewsClips: -- WHYY - Susan Phillips: Fracking In Pennsylvania Hasn’t Gone As Well As Some May Think -- The Allegheny Front - Susan Phillips: Fracking In Pennsylvania Hasn’t Gone As Well As Some May Think -- LancasterOnline Letter: Remembering The Reality Of Fracking - Doing It Safely Or The Wild West - Not For Or Against - By Bruce Riefenstahl, Mount Joy -- Chesapeake Bay Journal - Ad Crable: Pennsylvania Factions Spar Over Treating Roads With Drilling Wastewater -- Olean Times Herald (NY): Marine Vet In McKean County Deals With Fracking Wastewater Injection Well Next Door: ‘I Regret Purchasing This Home’ -- Marcellus Drilling News: Work On Shale Gas Wastewater Injection Well In McKean County Progresses [PDF of Article] -- The Energy Age Blog: Update: Emergency DEP Conventional Well Plugging Continues In Allegheny County -- PennLive - John Beauge: Construction Of PA General Energy Natural Gas Pipelines In Lycoming County Can Begin Despite Concerns For Trail, Wild Trout Streams [Read more here ] -- Federal Pipeline Safety Agency Increases Grants To State With Pipeline, Underground Gas Safety Programs [PA PUC Receive $2.6 Million In Base Grant In 2023] -- Senate Passes Sen. Baker’s Extension Of PA One Call Program For Underground Utility Safety -- The Allegheny Front - Kara Holsopple: New Guidelines Center On The Needs Of People With Disabilities During Petrochemical Disasters -- Marcellus Drilling News: Federal Court Certifies Class Action Lawsuit Against Range Resources For Potentially 204 Landowners Over Lease/Royalty Issues [PDF of Article ] -- Post-Gazette - Anya Litvak: EQT Natural Gas Driller Announces Plan To Cut 15% Of Its Workforce-- About 250 Employees -- Reuters: Natural Gas Producer EQT To Lay Off 15% Of Workforce -- Baker Hughes: PA Natural Gas Rigs Up 1 To 15 From Last Week [Down 28% Since Aug. 23] -- Observer-Reporter: Marcellus Shale Has Wealth Of Natural Gas And More [Royalty Payments, Act 13 Drilling Impact Fees] [PDF of Article] [Part 3] -- The Guardian: LNG Gas Has Far Worse Climate Emissions Than Coal, Cornell Study Finds -- Bloomberg: LNG Gas Traders Choose To Pay Penalties For Not Shipping Gas To Germany To Chase Higher Profits In Asia -- Bloomberg: LNG Gas Exporter New Fortress Energy Stock Plunges After Delaying Dividend Payment [Proposing Gas Export Facilities In PA] [Posted: October 1, 2024] |
10/7/2024 |
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