Financial liabilities and environmental implications of unplugged wells for the Gulf of Mexico and coastal waters
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
5-1-2023
Abstract
Plugging and abandoning (P&Aing) wells is a policy priority because unplugged wells present potential financial and environmental risks to the public. Offshore wells, compared with land wells, generally produce more, cost more to P&A and present different environmental risks. Here we estimate that the cost to P&A all 14,000 unplugged, non-producing wells in US Gulf of Mexico offshore waters, inland waters and wetlands is US$30 billion. Wells in shallower waters closer to shore make up 90% of inactive wells but only 25% of total P&A costs. They also present larger environmental risks. Prior owners of wells in federal waters (deeper and farther from shore) can be held liable for P&A costs if the current owner does not P&A them. We find that 88% of outstanding P&A liability in federal waters is associated with wells currently or formerly owned by one of the large, financially stable ‘supermajor’ companies.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Nature Energy
First Page
536
Last Page
547
Recommended Citation
Agerton, M., Narra, S., Snyder, B., & Upton, G. (2023). Financial liabilities and environmental implications of unplugged wells for the Gulf of Mexico and coastal waters. Nature Energy, 8 (5), 536-547. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41560-023-01248-1