Your Followed Topics

Top 2 colorado energy and carbon management commission News Today

#1
There are thousands of dirty old drill sites in Colorado. The state gave oil firms a $1bn pass
#1 out of 2100.00%
business3h ago

There are thousands of dirty old drill sites in Colorado. The state gave oil firms a $1bn pass

  • Colorado regulators largely exempted plugged wells from full bonding, delaying cleanup and shifting costs to the public.
  • Bonding for the three companies totaled only $146 million, far below the estimated $1.3 billion owed under the rules.
  • SB-181 aimed to fund cleanup upfront, but regulators later isolated remediation bonds from the annual director’s review.
  • EcMC Director Julie Murphy acknowledged the agency had not assigned bonding for thousands of spills and remediation projects.
  • Falsified lab reports by contractors complicated oversight, prompting enforcement actions without fines.
  • The investigation links thousands of cleanup sites to the three major operators, overlapping with open spills.
  • Experts warn the public will still pay decades of cleanup costs if bonds remain underfunded.
  • Colorado regulators described the system as a balance between protecting today and reducing long-term risk.
  • The investigation examines how plugging, remediation, and reclamation are treated differently under the rules.
  • State data shows more than 14,611 plugged wells exist with incomplete cleanup under current oversight.
Vote 0
0
#2
Colorado Gave $1.3 Billion Carve-out to Oil Companies While Thousands of Dirty Sites Await Cleanup
#2 out of 2
business3h ago

Colorado Gave $1.3 Billion Carve-out to Oil Companies While Thousands of Dirty Sites Await Cleanup

  • The investigation finds Chevron, Oxy, and Civitas owe about $1.3 billion in bonding for cleanup, but have posted only $146 million.
  • ECMC’s handling allowed plugged wells to be removed from bonding calculations, reducing overall obligations.
  • The report notes widespread falsification of environmental data by contractors on behalf of the Big Three.
  • The initiative SB-181 aimed to up-front bond cleanup costs, but enforcement lagged as rules were phased in.
  • The analysis links thousands of open spills and dead wells to the Big Three’s legacy in Colorado’s Weld County.
  • Advocates claim the public bears risk as cleanup drags on and bonds remain inadequate.
  • Colorado regulators defend the framework as strong but acknowledge slow implementation.
  • The story emphasizes Weld County as a focal point for pollution and remediation challenges.
  • The Guardian and DeSmog corroborate state data showing ongoing spills and delayed reclamation.
Vote 0
0

Explore Your Interests

Unlimited Access
Personalized Feed
Full Experience
or
By continuing, you agree to the Privacy Policy.. You also agree to receive our newsletters, you can opt-out any time.

Explore Your Interests

Create an account and enjoy content that interests you with your personalized feed

Unlimited Access
Personalized Feed
Full Experience
or
By continuing, you agree to the Privacy Policy.. You also agree to receive our newsletters, you can opt-out any time.

Advertisement

Advertisement