Bloomberg: Failed wells are polluters nobody watches

UC environmental studies professor talks about leaky oil and gas wells

Bloomberg Law turned to a University of Cincinnati expert on leaky oil and gas wells to explain why even capping them is no guarantee that they will not one day create environmental problems.

Companies are obligated to plug oil or gas wells that are no longer productive so they don't pollute the air or water. But some companies simply abandon them to avoid the costs.

Abandoned oil and gas wells can pollute drinking water and leak methane into the atmosphere, contributing to climate change.

The United States could have as many as 3.5 million abandoned or orphaned wells, left behind by companies that have gone out of business or for which there are no regulatory records.

UC Associate Professor Amy Townsend-Small

Amy Townsend-Small. Photo/Jay Yocis/UC

But according to Bloomberg Law, even many wells that have been plugged with concrete or other materials can fail over time. And since there is little government monitoring, nobody knows the full extent of the problem.

UC College of Arts and Sciences Professor Amy Townsend-Small teaches environmental studies. She has been studying the issue of leaking oil and gas wells across the United States.

She told Bloomberg that going back to examine capped wells has not been a priority because of the high number of uncapped wells that are leaking oil or gas.

“It would be great if all of these things could be monitored, if there was unlimited money,” she said, referring to plugged wells. “We cannot get money for this kind of research.”

Meanwhile, other energy practices could be contributing to more leaking oil and gas wells, Bloomberg reported.

Hydraulic fracturing for natural gas involves injecting wastewater and chemicals into the ground to extract natural gas. But Bloomberg found that pressure from this process has caused blowouts of nearby capped wells.

“This wastewater is corrosive because of high salt concentrations,” Townsend-Small said.

Bloomberg said Congress approved $4.7 billion in the 2021 bipartisan infrastructure law to plug wells, but there are no state or federal requirements to ensure the seals work.

Read the Bloomberg Law story.

Featured image at top: UC graduate Jacob Hoschouer measures methane emissions at the site of an abandoned well in Texas. Photo/Provided

Related Stories

6336 Results
4

UC Day of Giving a success

April 28, 2021

University of Cincinnati Day of Giving’s 24-hour challenge was a tremendous success this year, raising $2,219,197 with 3,232 gifts. The fourth annual UC Day of Giving raised its most money to date with alumni, donors, students, faculty and staff joining together to support UC and UC Health.

5

'To make him proud was high on her list'

April 1, 2021

Alex Lewis lost her 82-year-old grandfather to Covid-19 just five weeks before her dream school showed up on the front steps of Roger Bacon High School to tell the senior that she has been admitted to the University of Cincinnati College of Nursing as part of a touching Decision Day surprise effort this year.

7

President picks exceptional talent

April 28, 2021

The University of Cincinnati 2021 Presidential Leadership Medal of Excellence Awards honor six undergraduate scholars for scholarship, leadership, character, service and the ideals of the university. Awardees are spotlighted for exceptional academics, creativity, community service and innovation.

8

Listen: Cincy Playhouse shares CCM audio plays

May 28, 2021

Each audio play is its own story, and you can listen to these pieces for free in any order you choose. They represent a year-long collaboration that reached into many corners of Cincinnati. Students from all over UC (CCM Acting, Sound Design, Stage Management, Commercial Music Production, Digital Media, and the College of Arts & Sciences’ Fiction PhD program) and local professional writers (YA author Liz Coley and musician, comedian and raconteur Paul Strickland) came together to make something truly special. Paul Strickland's play will be available soon. The Playhouse is assisting CCM by hosting and helping to promote these free audio plays.

9

UC staff have elected their 2021-23 Staff Senators

June 8, 2021

Join us in congratulating the 2021-23 new Staff Senate members! Elections were held in early May, and new senators will begin their two-year term in July 2021. All UC staff are encouraged to be part of the enthusiasm and excitement for our new senators by attending the Staff Senate online meeting via WebEx, June 30, 9-11 a.m.

10

UC LGBTQ Center founder takes on new diversity role

June 1, 2021

When Leisan Smith, ’99, ME ’03, began work this year as the inaugural chief equity officer at the prestigious Columbus School for Girls, the school’s staff and faculty were thrilled. The job description, they said, “was written for you.”