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Almost 400 violations levelled at California oil firms

Don Horne   

News

Oil and gas companies drilling in state waters off Southern California violated regulations nearly 400 times in the past three years, according to a report being released Wednesday by an environmental group.

Records compiled by the Center for Biological Diversity – obtained by The Associated Press – show state violations ranging from severe corrosion to failed and missing tests required to gauge the strength of wells.

No civil penalties were issued for any of the violations, according to a spokesman for the state agency responsible for overseeing oil operations. The group said the problems could pose a serious threat to the environment if aging infrastructure fails and spills oil on beaches near major cities.

“Knowing these facilities have been out there decades upon decades upon decades is a sign you’re going to see a lot of corrosion and disrepair,” Kristen Monsell, an attorney for the centre, told The Associated Press. “We need to start getting all of this dirty decaying infrastructure out of our ocean for good.”

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The findings come three years after a corroded two-foot wide pipe owned by Plains All American Pipeline ruptured on land and spilled 120,000 gallons of crude that flowed toward the Santa Barbara coast. More than a fifth of the oil ended up in the ocean.

The group produced its findings based on a California Public Records Act request filed with the Department of Conservation for all violations notices issued to offshore oil operations by the Division of Oil, Gas and Geothermal Resources since 2015.

The agency regulates oil and gas drilling and production throughout the state and in waters up to three miles from shore. The violations don’t include platforms in federal waters, where President Donald Trump intends to expand oil and gas drilling. Of the 381 violations, about 290 were racked up by the state’s biggest oil and gas producer, California Resources Corp., and two subsidiaries, THUMS Long Beach Co. and Tidelands in Long Beach and the Huntington Beach areas.

A spokeswoman for the California Resources Corp. told The Associated Press that the company and its affiliates believe they were in “substantial compliance” with well integrity testing practices. Most of the violations were for missing integrity tests required at least every five years.

The environmental group found long lapses — some exceeding 20 years — between tests.

Most of the missing and failed tests by THUMS on islands owned by the city of Long Beach were for injection wells used to stimulate oil and gas production or dump waste waters from the drilling process.

“THUMS and Tidelands and their affiliates operate thousands of wells and work proactively with stakeholders to ensure safe and environmentally responsible operations,” spokeswoman Margita Thompson told The Associated Press. “Our active injection wells are in compliance with the five-year DOGGR injection well integrity test.”

Don Drysdale, a spokesman for the state regulatory agency, said Tuesday that the division was still trying to verify that mechanical integrity tests were completed and passed by THUMS and Tidelands. He said no civil penalties were issued.

(The Associated Press)

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