"Unplugged Oil Wells in US Pose $30 Billion Cleanup Risk"

TL;DR Summary
A new study has found that there are over 14,000 old, unplugged wells in the Gulf of Mexico, which may cost more than $30 billion to plug. Nonproducing wells that haven’t been plugged now outnumber active wells in the gulf. Nearly 90 percent of the old wells were owned at some point in the past by giant oil companies known as the “supermajors,” including BP, Shell, Chevron and Exxon. Orphaned wells pose a risk of oil and other pollutants leaking into the ocean and smothering wetlands. The $1 trillion infrastructure bill that President Biden signed into law in 2021 sets aside $4.7 billion to plug orphaned wells, both onshore and off.
- Price to Plug Old Wells in Gulf of Mexico? $30 Billion, Study Says. The New York Times
- 14,000 inactive oil and gas wells in US remain unplugged, posing risks for leaks, researchers say ABC News
- 14,000 Inactive Oil & Gas Wells In U.S. Unplugged OilPrice.com
- The Gulf of Mexico Has a $30 Billion Unplugged Oil Well Problem Bloomberg
- Cleanup of Inactive Gulf of Mexico Wells Estimated at $30 Billion, UC Davis Researchers Suggest University of California, Davis
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