California Legislature—2015–16 Regular Session

Assembly BillNo. 2729


Introduced by Assembly Members Williams and Thurmond

February 19, 2016


An act to amend Sections 3008, 3208.1, and 3238 of, to amend, repeal, and add Sections 3202, 3204, 3205, 3206, 3207, and 3208 of, and to add Section 3016 to, the Public Resources Code, relating to oil and gas, and making an appropriation therefor.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

AB 2729, as introduced, Williams. Oil and gas: operations.

(1) Under existing law, the Division of Oil, Gas, and Geothermal Resources in the Department of Conservation regulates the drilling, operation, maintenance, and abandonment of oil and gas wells in the state. Existing law requires the State Oil and Gas Supervisor to supervise the drilling, operation, maintenance, and abandonment of wells and the operation, maintenance, and removal or abandonment of tanks and facilities related to oil and gas production within an oil and gas field, so as to prevent damage to life, health, property, and natural resources, as provided; to permit owners and operators of wells to utilize all known methods and practices to increase the ultimate recovery of hydrocarbons; and to perform the supervisor’s duties in a manner that encourages the wise development of oil and gas resources to best meet oil and gas needs in this state. Existing law defines, among other things, “active observation well,” “idle well,” and “long-term idle well” for the purposes of these provisions. Existing law provides that an active observation well is not an idle well.

This bill would limit the definition of “active observation well,” and would expand the definitions of “idle well” and “long-term idle well” by no longer excluding active observation wells from their definitions. The bill would provide that the abandoned underground personal property of an operator becomes the property of the mineral interest owner.

(2) Existing law establishes the Hazardous and Idle-Deserted Well Abatement Fund in the State Treasury. Existing law directs fee moneys collected from operators of idle wells to be deposited in the fund. The moneys in the fund are continuously appropriated to the department for expenditure without regard to fiscal year, to mitigate a hazardous or potentially hazardous condition by well plugging and abandonment.

This bill would instead provide that the moneys in the fund are continuously appropriated to the department for expenditure without regard to fiscal year to mitigate a hazardous or potentially hazardous condition, by well plugging and abandonment, decommissioning attendant production facilities, or both, at a well of a feepaying operator. Because the bill would provide for the deposit of additional moneys in a continuously appropriated fund by expanding the definition of an “idle well,” described above, and would change the purposes for which moneys in a continuously appropriated fund may be used, it would make an appropriation.

(3) Existing law provides that a well is properly abandoned when it has been shown, to the satisfaction of the supervisor, that all proper steps have been taken to isolate all oil-bearing or gas-bearing strata encountered in the well, and to protect underground or surface water suitable for irrigation or farm or domestic purposes from the infiltration or addition of any detrimental substance and to prevent subsequent damage to life, health, property, and other resources.

This bill would provide that proper steps include the plugging of the well, decommissioning the attendant production facilities of the well, or both, if determined necessary by the supervisor.

(4) Existing law authorizes the supervisor or district deputy to order the reabandonment of any previously abandoned well if the supervisor or the district deputy has reason to question the integrity of the previous abandonment. Existing law prescribes the circumstances in which the operator responsible for plugging and abandoning a deserted well is not responsible for the reabandonment of the well. Under existing law, a person who fails to comply with an order issued under these provisions and other requirements relating to the regulation of oil or gas operations is guilty of a misdemeanor.

This bill instead would authorize the supervisor or district deputy to order, or permit, the reabandonment of any previously abandoned well if the supervisor or the district deputy has reason to question the integrity of the previous abandonment, or if the well is not accessible or visible. The bill would revise the circumstances in which the operator responsible for plugging and abandoning a deserted well is not responsible for the reabandonment of the well, and would provide that being responsible for the reabandonment means that the responsible party or parties shall complete the reabandonment and be subject to certain requirements applicable to an operator of a well. Because a violation of an order issued under these provisions would be a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.

(5) Existing law authorizes the supervisor to order certain operations to be carried out on any property in the vicinity of which, or on which, is located any well that the supervisor determines to be either a hazardous or idle-deserted well, as specified.

This bill would authorize a party to plug and abandon a well that the supervisor has determined to be either a hazardous or idle-deserted well by obtaining all necessary rights to the well, and would require that party to be subject to certain requirements applicable to an operator of a well, file with the supervisor the appropriate bond or deposit, and complete the abandonment, as specified. Because a violation of an order issued under these provisions or of certain requirements related to the regulation of oil and gas would be a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.

(6) Existing law prescribes requirements related to acquiring the right to operate a well or production facility, filing with the supervisor an individual indemnity bond for each well drilled, redrilled, deepened, or permanently altered, filing with the supervisor a blanket indemnity bond in lieu of individual indemnity bonds, operators of idle wells not covered under certain indemnity bonds, and the cancellation of an individual or blanket indemnity bond. Existing law directs fee moneys collected from operators of idle wells to be deposited in the Hazardous and Idle-Deserted Well Abatement Fund, a continuously appropriated fund.

Commencing January 1, 2018, this bill would revise and recast these provisions to, among other things, increase the amounts of the required individual and blanket indemnity bonds, require a person acquiring the right to operate a well or production facility to file a specified individual or blanket indemnity bond for each well, increase the fees required to be filed for each idle well if the operator does not file a plan with the supervisor to provide for the management and elimination of all its long-term idle wells, repeal the ability of an operator to provide an escrow account or indemnity bond for each idle well in lieu of paying a fee or filing a plan, and revise the conditions for the cancellation of an individual or blanket indemnity bond. Because the bill would provide for the deposit of additional moneys in a continuously appropriated fund by increasing the amount of fees required to be filed for each idle well, it would make an appropriation. Because a violation of an order issued under these provisions or of certain requirements related to the regulation of oil and gas would be a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.

This bill would require the division, by June 1, 2018, to review and evaluate, and update as appropriate, its regulations pertaining to idle wells, as specified.

(7) The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.

This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.

Vote: majority. Appropriation: yes. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes.

The people of the State of California do enact as follows:

P4    1

SECTION 1.  

Section 3008 of the Public Resources Code is
2amended to read:

3

3008.  

(a) “Well” means any oil or gas well or well for the
4discovery of oil or gas; any well on lands producing or reasonably
5presumed to contain oil or gas; any well drilled for the purpose of
6injecting fluids or gas for stimulating oil or gas recovery,
7repressuring or pressure maintenance of oil or gas reservoirs, or
8disposing of waste fluids from an oil or gas field; any well used
9to inject or withdraw gas from an underground storage facility; or
10any well drilled within or adjacent to an oil or gas pool for the
11purpose of obtaining water to be used in production stimulation
12or repressuring operations.

13(b) “Prospect well” or “exploratory well” means any well drilled
14to extend a field or explore a new, potentially productive reservoir.

P5    1(c) “Active observation well” means a well being used for the
2sole purpose of gathering reservoir data, such as pressure or
3temperature in a reservoir being currently produced or injected by
4the operator, and the data is gatheredbegin insert and reportedend insert at least once
5everybegin delete three years.end deletebegin insert month.end insert

6(d) “Idle well” means any well that hasbegin delete not produced oil or
7natural gas or has not been used for injection for six consecutive
8months of continuous operation during the last five or more years.
9An idle well does not include an active observation well.end delete
begin insert had six
10consecutive months of not producing oil or natural gas or being
11used for injection. An idle well continues to be an idle well until
12it has been properly abandoned in accordance with Section 3208
13or it has been shown to the division’s satisfaction that, since the
14well became an idle well, the well has maintained production of
15oil or gas or been used for injection for a continuous six-month
16period. An idle well does not include a well used to inject or
17withdraw gas from an underground storage facility.end insert

18(e) “Long-term idle well” means any well that hasbegin delete not produced
19oil or natural gas or has not been used for injection for six
20consecutive months of continuous operation during the last 10 or
21more years. A long-term idle well does not include an active
22observation well.end delete
begin insert been an idle well for five or more years.end insert

23

SEC. 2.  

Section 3016 is added to the Public Resources Code,
24to read:

25

3016.  

For purposes of this chapter, abandoned underground
26personal property of an operator shall become the property of the
27mineral interest owner.

28

SEC. 3.  

Section 3202 of the Public Resources Code is amended
29to read:

30

3202.  

begin insert(a)end insertbegin insertend insert A person who acquires the right to operate a well
31or production facility, whether by purchase, transfer, assignment,
32conveyance, exchange, or other disposition, shall, as soon as it is
33reasonably possible, but not later than the date when the acquisition
34of the well or production facility becomes final, notify the
35supervisor or the district deputy, in writing, of the person’s
36operation. The acquisition of a well or production facility shall not
37be recognized as complete by the supervisor or the district deputy
38until the new operator provides all of the following material:

begin delete

39(a)

end delete

P6    1begin insert(1)end insert The name and address of the person from whom the well or
2production facility was acquired.

begin delete

3(b)

end delete

4begin insert(2)end insert The name and location of the well or production facility,
5and a description of the land upon which the well or production
6facility is situated.

begin delete

7(c)

end delete

8begin insert(3)end insert The date when the acquisition becomes final.

begin delete

9(d)

end delete

10begin insert(4)end insert The date when possession was or will be acquired.

begin delete

11(e)

end delete

12begin insert(5)end insert An indemnity bond for each idle well. The bond shall be in
13 an amount as provided in Section 3204 or 3205. The conditions
14of the bond shall be the same as the conditions stated in Section
153204. An operator that has provided an individual bond required
16by this subdivision in an amount as provided in Section 3204 shall
17not be required additionally to comply with the requirements of
18Section 3206. An operator who has provided a blanket indemnity
19bond in the minimum amount required in subdivision (a) or (b) of
20Section 3205 shall additionally comply with Section 3206 for any
21idle wells not covered by a bond provided under Section 3204.

begin insert

22(b) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2018,
23and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
24is enacted before January 1, 2018, deletes or extends that date.

end insert
25

SEC. 4.  

Section 3202 is added to the Public Resources Code,
26to read:

27

3202.  

(a) A person who acquires the right to operate a well or
28production facility, whether by purchase, transfer, assignment,
29conveyance, exchange, or other disposition, shall, as soon as it is
30reasonably possible, but not later than the date when the acquisition
31of the well or production facility becomes final, notify the
32supervisor or the district deputy, in writing, of the person’s
33operation. The acquisition of a well or production facility shall not
34be recognized as complete by the supervisor or the district deputy
35until the new operator provides all of the following material:

36(1) The name and address of the person from whom the well or
37production facility was acquired.

38(2) The name and location of the well or production facility,
39and a description of the land upon which the well or production
40facility is situated.

P7    1(3) The date when the acquisition becomes final.

2(4) The date when possession was or will be acquired.

3(5) An indemnity bond for each well as required under Section
43204 or 3205.

5(b) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2018.

6

SEC. 5.  

Section 3204 of the Public Resources Code is amended
7to read:

8

3204.  

(a) An operator who, on or after January 1, 2014,
9engages in the drilling, redrilling, deepening, or in any operation
10permanently altering the casing, of a well shall file with the
11supervisor an individual indemnity bond for each well so drilled,
12redrilled, deepened, or permanently altered, in the following
13amount:

14(1) Twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each well that
15is less than 10,000 feet deep.

16(2) Forty thousand dollars ($40,000) for each well that is 10,000
17or more feet deep.

18(b) The bond shall be filed with the supervisor at the time of
19the filing of the notice of intention to perform work on the well,
20as provided in Section 3203. The bond shall be executed by the
21operator, as principal, and by an authorized surety company, as
22surety, on the condition that the principal named in the bond shall
23faithfully comply with all the provisions of this chapter, in drilling,
24redrilling, deepening, or permanently altering the casing in any
25well or wells covered by the bond, and shall secure the state against
26all losses, charges, and expenses incurred by it to obtain the
27compliance by the principal named in the bond.

28(c) The conditions of the bond shall be stated in substantially
29the following language: “If the ____, the above bounden principal,
30shall well and truly comply with all the provisions of Division 3
31(commencing with Section 3000) of the Public Resources Code
32and shall obey all lawful orders of the State Oil and Gas Supervisor
33or the district deputy or deputies, subject to subsequent appeal as
34provided in that division, and shall pay all charges, costs, and
35expenses incurred by the supervisor or the district deputy or
36deputies in respect of the well or wells or the property or properties
37of the principal, or assessed against the well or wells or the property
38or properties of the principal, in pursuance of the provisions of
39that division, then this obligation shall be void; otherwise, it shall
40remain in full force and effect.”

begin insert

P8    1(d) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2018,
2and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
3is enacted before January 1, 2018, deletes or extends that date.

end insert
4

SEC. 6.  

Section 3204 is added to the Public Resources Code,
5to read:

6

3204.  

(a) An operator who, on or after January 1, 2018,
7engages in the drilling, redrilling, deepening, or in any operation
8permanently altering the casing, of a well, or who acquires a well,
9shall file with the supervisor an individual indemnity bond for
10each well so drilled, redrilled, deepened, or permanently altered,
11or acquired in the following amount:

12(1) Fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) for each well that is less
13than 10,000 feet deep.

14(2) Eighty thousand dollars ($80,000) for each well that is
1510,000 or more feet deep.

16(b) The bond shall be filed with the supervisor at the time of
17the filing of the notice of intention to perform work on the well,
18as provided in Section 3203, or at the time of acquisition of the
19well, as provided in Section 3202. The bond shall be executed by
20the operator, as principal, and by an authorized surety company,
21as surety, on the condition that the principal named in the bond
22shall faithfully comply with all the provisions of this chapter, in
23drilling, redrilling, deepening, or permanently altering the casing
24in any well or wells covered by the bond, and shall secure the state
25against all losses, charges, and expenses incurred by it to obtain
26the compliance by the principal named in the bond.

27(c) The conditions of the bond shall be stated in substantially
28the following language: “If the ____, the above bounden principal,
29shall well and truly comply with all the provisions of Division 3
30(commencing with Section 3000) of the Public Resources Code
31and shall obey all lawful orders of the State Oil and Gas Supervisor
32or the district deputy or deputies, subject to subsequent appeal as
33provided in that division, and shall pay all charges, costs, and
34expenses incurred by the supervisor or the district deputy or
35deputies in respect of the well or wells or the property or properties
36of the principal, or assessed against the well or wells or the property
37or properties of the principal, in pursuance of the provisions of
38that division, then this obligation shall be void; otherwise, it shall
39remain in full force and effect.”

40(d) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2018.

P9    1

SEC. 7.  

Section 3205 of the Public Resources Code is amended
2to read:

3

3205.  

(a) An operator who engages in the drilling, redrilling,
4deepening, or in any operation permanently altering the casing, of
520 or more wells at any time, may file with the supervisor one
6blanket indemnity bond to cover all the operations in any of its
7wells in the state in lieu of an individual indemnity bond for each
8operation as required by Section 3204. The bond shall be executed
9by the operator, as principal, and by an authorized surety company,
10as surety, and shall be in substantially the same language and upon
11the same conditions as provided in Section 3204, except as to the
12difference in the amount. The bond shall be provided in one of the
13following amounts, as applicable:

14(1) The sum of four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000), which
15does not include the bond or fee required in Section 3206.

16(2) The sum of two hundred thousand dollars ($200,000), which
17does not include the bond or fee required in Section 3206, for any
18operator having 50 or fewer wells in the state, exclusive of properly
19abandoned wells.

20(3) The sum of two million dollars ($2,000,000), which does
21include the bond or fee required in Section 3206.

22(b) A blanket cash bond or blanket surety bond provided prior
23to January 1, 2014, shall be increased to comply with this section
24on or before January 1, 2016.

begin insert

25(c) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2018,
26and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
27is enacted before January 1, 2018, deletes or extends that date.

end insert
28

SEC. 8.  

Section 3205 is added to the Public Resources Code,
29to read:

30

3205.  

(a) An operator who engages in the drilling, redrilling,
31deepening, or in any operation permanently altering the casing, of
3220 or more wells at any time, may file with the supervisor one
33blanket indemnity bond to cover all the operations in any of its
34wells in the state in lieu of an individual indemnity bond for each
35operation as required by Section 3204. The bond shall be executed
36by the operator, as principal, and by an authorized surety company,
37as surety, and shall be in substantially the same language and upon
38the same conditions as provided in Section 3204, except as to the
39difference in the amount. The bond shall be provided in one of the
40following amounts, as applicable:

P10   1(1) The sum of four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000), for
2an operator having 50 or fewer wells in the state, exclusive of
3properly abandoned wells.

4(2) The sum of two million dollars ($2,000,000), for any
5operator having more than 50 wells in the state, exclusive of
6properly abandoned wells.

7(b) A blanket cash bond or blanket surety bond provided prior
8to January 1, 2018, shall be increased to comply with this section.

9(c) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2018.

10

SEC. 9.  

Section 3206 of the Public Resources Code is amended
11to read:

12

3206.  

(a) The operator of any idle well not covered by an
13indemnity bond provided under Section 3204,begin insert paragraph (3) ofend insert
14 subdivisionbegin delete (c)end deletebegin insert (a)end insert of Section 3205, or subdivision (a) of Section
153205.2 shall do one of the following:

16(1) File with the supervisor an annual fee for each idle well
17equal to the sum of the following amounts:

18(A) One hundred dollars ($100) for each idle well that has been
19idle for less than 10 years.

20(B) Two hundred fifty dollars ($250) for each idle well that has
21been idle for 10 years or longer, but less than 15 years.

22(C) Five hundred dollars ($500) for each idle well that has been
23idle for 15 years or longer.

24(2) Provide an escrow account in a federally insured bank that
25does business in, and has an office in, the State of California, by
26depositing the amount of five thousand dollars ($5,000) for each
27idle well, in the following manner:

28(A) The escrow account shall be accessible only by the
29supervisor and the money shall be retained in the escrow account
30exclusively for use by the supervisor for plugging and abandoning
31the operator’s idle wells that become deserted pursuant to Section
323237.

33(B) The money in the escrow account may be released only by
34the supervisor and only in amounts covering any idle well that has
35properly been plugged and abandoned, returned to production or
36injection or converted to an active observation well, if that money
37remaining in the escrow account is sufficient to fully fund the
38required deposits for all of the operator’s remaining idle wells.

39(C) The required deposit for each idle well shall be funded
40completely within 10 years of the date the well becomes idle, or
P11   110 years from January 1, 1999, for any well that is idle as of
2January 1, 1999.

3(D) The operator shall fund the escrow account at the rate of at
4least five hundred dollars ($500) per well per year.

5(E) Failure of an operator in any year to provide the minimum
6funding for any idle well shall result in the institution of the annual
7fees required by paragraph (1) for that idle well, and all money
8already on deposit for that idle well shall be treated as previously
9paid annual fees and shall be deposited into the Hazardous and
10Idle-Deserted Well Abatement Fund specified in subdivision (b)
11for expenditure pursuant to that subdivision.

12(3) File with the supervisor an indemnity bond that provides
13the sum of five thousand dollars ($5,000) for each idle well. The
14bond shall be subject to the conditions provided in Section 3204.

15(4) On or before July 1, 1999, file a plan with the supervisor to
16provide for the management and elimination of all long-term idle
17wells not covered under paragraph (1), (2), or (3).

18(A) For the purposes of the plan required by this paragraph,
19 elimination of an idle well shall be accomplished when the well
20meets the requirements of Section 3208.

21(B) A plan filed pursuant to this paragraph shall meet all of the
22following requirements and conditions:

23(i) The plan shall cover a time period of no more than 10 years
24and may be renewed annually thereafter, subject to approval by
25the supervisor.

26(ii) The plan shall be reviewed for performance annually by the
27supervisor, and be subject to amendment with the approval of the
28supervisor.

29(iii) The required rate of long-term idle well elimination shall
30be based upon the number of idle wells under the control of an
31operator on January 1 of each year, as specified in clausebegin delete IV.end deletebegin insert (iv).end insert
32 The supervisor may require additional well testing requirements
33as part of the plan.

34(iv) The plan shall require that operators with 10 or fewer idle
35wells eliminate at least one long-term idle well every two years;
36operators with 11 to 20, inclusive, idle wells eliminate at least one
37long-term idle well each year; operators with 21 to 50, inclusive,
38idle wells eliminate at least two long-term idle wells each year;
39operators with 51 to 100, inclusive, idle wells eliminate at least
40five long-term idle wells each year; operators with 101 to 250,
P12   1inclusive, idle wells eliminate at least 10 long-term wells each
2year; and operators with more than 250 idle wells eliminate at least
34 percent of their long-term idle wells each year.

4(v) An operator who complies with the plan is exempt from any
5increased idle well bond or fee requirements.

6(vi) An operator who fails to comply with the plan, as
7determined by the supervisor after the annual performance review,
8is not eligible to use the requirements of this paragraph, for
9purposes of compliance with this section, for any of its idle wells.
10That operator shall immediately provide one of the alternatives in
11paragraph (1), (2), or (3) for its idle wells and may not propose a
12new idle well plan for the next five years. An operator may appeal
13to the director pursuant to Article 6 (commencing with Section
143350) regarding the supervisor’s rejection of a plan and plan
15amendments and the supervisor’s determinations of the operator’s
16failure to comply with a plan.

17(b) All fees received under this section shall be deposited in the
18Hazardous and Idle-Deserted Well Abatement Fund, which is
19hereby created in the State Treasury. Notwithstanding Section
2013340 of the Government Code, the moneys in the Hazardous and
21Idle-Deserted Well Abatement Fund are hereby continuously
22appropriated to the department for expenditure without regard to
23fiscal year, to mitigate a hazardous or potentially hazardous
24begin delete conditionend deletebegin insert condition,end insert by well plugging andbegin delete abandonment.end delete
25begin insert abandonment, decommissioning the attendant production facilities,
26or both, at a well of an operator subject to the requirements of
27this section.end insert

28(c) Failure to file, for any well, the bond or fee required under
29this section shall be conclusive evidence of desertion of the well,
30permitting the supervisor to order the well abandoned.

31(d) Nothing in this section prohibits a local agency from
32collecting a fee for regulation of wells.

begin insert

33(e) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2018,
34and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
35is enacted before January 1, 2018, deletes or extends that date.

end insert
36

SEC. 10.  

Section 3206 is added to the Public Resources Code,
37to read:

38

3206.  

(a) The operator of any idle well shall do either of the
39following:

P13   1(1) No later than January 31 of each year, for each idle well that
2was an idle well at any time in the last calendar year, file with the
3supervisor an annual fee equal to the sum of the following amounts:

4(A) Five hundred dollars ($500) for each idle well that has been
5idle for less than three years.

6(B) Two thousand dollars ($2,000) for each idle well that has
7been idle for three years or longer, but less than five years.

8(C) Five thousand dollars ($5,000) for each idle well that has
9been idle for five years or longer, but less than 10 years.

10(D) Ten thousands dollars ($10,000) for each idle well that has
11been idle for 10 years or longer.

12(2) File a plan with the supervisor to provide for the management
13and elimination of all long-term idle wells.

14(A) For the purposes of the plan required by this paragraph,
15elimination of an idle well shall be accomplished when the well
16has been properly abandoned in accordance with Section 3208, or
17it has been shown to the division’s satisfaction that, since the well
18became an idle well, the well has maintained production of oil or
19gas or been used for injection for a continuous six-month period.

20(B) A plan filed pursuant to this paragraph shall meet all of the
21following requirements and conditions:

22(i) The plan shall cover a time period of no more than five years
23and shall be subject to approval by the supervisor who may
24prioritize the order in which idle wells are addressed.

25(ii) The plan shall be reviewed for performance annually by the
26supervisor, and be subject to amendment by the supervisor, or by
27the operator with the approval of the supervisor.

28(iii) The required rate of long-term idle well elimination shall
29be based upon the number of idle wells under the control of an
30operator on January 1 of each year, as specified in clause (iv). The
31supervisor may require additional well testing requirements as part
32of the plan.

33(iv) Unless and until the operator has no long-term idle wells,
34the plan shall require that operators with 10 or fewer idle wells
35eliminate at least three long-term idle wells each year; operators
36with 11 to 20, inclusive, idle wells eliminate at least six long-term
37idle wells each year; operators with 21 to 50, inclusive, idle wells
38eliminate at least 12 long-term idle wells each year; operators with
3951 to 100, inclusive, idle wells eliminate at least 30 long-term idle
40wells each year; operators with 101 to 250, inclusive, idle wells
P14   1eliminate at least 60 long-term wells each year; and operators with
2more than 250 idle wells eliminate at least 25 percent of their
3long-term idle wells each year.

4(v) An operator who fails to comply with the plan, as determined
5by the supervisor after the annual performance review, is not
6eligible to use the requirements of this paragraph, for purposes of
7compliance with this section, for any of its idle wells. That operator
8may not propose a new idle well plan for the next five years. An
9operator may appeal to the director pursuant to Article 6
10(commencing with Section 3350) regarding the supervisor’s
11rejection of a plan and plan amendments and the supervisor’s
12determination of the operator’s failure to comply with a plan. If
13the supervisor’s determination that the operator failed to comply
14with the plan is not timely appealed, or if the director upholds the
15supervisor’s determination upon appeal, then the operator shall
16immediately file the fees required under paragraph (1) for each
17year that the operator failed to comply with the plan.

18(b) All fees received under this section shall be deposited in the
19Hazardous and Idle-Deserted Well Abatement Fund, which is
20hereby created in the State Treasury. Notwithstanding Section
2113340 of the Government Code, the moneys in the Hazardous and
22Idle-Deserted Well Abatement Fund are hereby continuously
23appropriated to the department for expenditure without regard to
24fiscal year, to mitigate a hazardous or potentially hazardous
25 condition, by well plugging and abandonment, decommissioning
26the attendant production facilities, or both, at a well of an operator
27subject to the requirements of this section.

28(c) Failure to file, for any well, the fee required under this
29section shall be conclusive evidence of desertion of the well,
30permitting the supervisor to order the well abandoned.

31(d) Nothing in this section prohibits a local agency from
32collecting a fee for regulation of wells.

33(e) By June 1, 2018, the division shall review and evaluate, and
34update as appropriate, its regulations pertaining to idle wells. The
35update shall include idle well testing requirements and provide an
36option for temporary or partial well abandonment in lieu of testing
37at the discretion of the supervisor.

38(f) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2018.

39

SEC. 11.  

Section 3207 of the Public Resources Code is
40amended to read:

P15   1

3207.  

begin insert(a)end insertbegin insertend insert Any individual or blanket indemnity bond issued
2in compliance with this chapter may be terminated and canceled
3and the surety be relieved of all obligations thereunder when the
4well or wells covered by such bond have been properly completed
5or abandoned or another valid bond has been substituted therefor.
6Should the person who has filed a blanket bond properly complete
7or abandon a portion of hisbegin insert or herend insert wells covered by the bond, the
8bond may be terminated and canceled and the surety be relieved
9of all obligations thereunder upon the filing by such person of an
10individual bond for each well which is still not producing or which
11hebegin insert or sheend insert is still engaged in drilling, redrilling, deepening, or
12permanently altering the casing. Liability as to individual wells
13that have been completed or drilled and abandoned under a blanket
14bond may also be terminated.

begin insert

15(b) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2018,
16and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
17is enacted before January 1, 2018, deletes or extends that date.

end insert
18

SEC. 12.  

Section 3207 is added to the Public Resources Code,
19to read:

20

3207.  

(a) Any individual or blanket indemnity bond issued in
21compliance with this chapter may be terminated and canceled and
22the surety relieved of all obligations thereunder when the well or
23wells covered by such bond have been properly abandoned pursuant
24to Section 3208, or another valid bond has been substituted
25therefor. Should the person who has filed a blanket bond properly
26abandon a portion of his or her wells covered by the bond, the
27bond may be terminated and canceled and the surety relieved of
28all obligations thereunder upon the filing by such person of an
29individual bond for each well that is still not abandoned. Liability
30as to individual wells that have been properly abandoned under a
31blanket bond may also be terminated.

32(b) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2018.

33

SEC. 13.  

Section 3208 of the Public Resources Code is
34amended to read:

35

3208.  

begin insert(a)end insertbegin insertend insert For the purposes of Section 3207, a well is properly
36completed when it has been shown, to the satisfaction of the
37supervisor, that the manner of producing oil or gas or injecting
38fluids into the well is satisfactory and that the well has maintained
39production of oil or gas or injection for a continuous six-month
40period. A well is properly abandoned when it has been shown, to
P16   1the satisfaction of the supervisor, that all proper steps have been
2taken to isolate all oil-bearing or gas-bearing strata encountered
3in the well, and to protect underground or surface water suitable
4 for irrigation or farm or domestic purposes from the infiltration or
5addition of any detrimental substance and to prevent subsequent
6damage to life, health, property, and other resources.begin insert For purposes
7of this subdivision, proper steps include the plugging of the well,
8decommissioning the attendant production facilities of the well,
9or both, if determined necessary by the supervisor.end insert

begin insert

10(b) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2018,
11and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
12is enacted before January 1, 2018, deletes or extends that date.

end insert
13

SEC. 14.  

Section 3208 is added to the Public Resources Code,
14to read:

15

3208.  

(a) For the purposes of Sections 3206 and 3207, a well
16is properly abandoned when it has been shown, to the satisfaction
17of the supervisor, that all proper steps have been taken to isolate
18all oil-bearing or gas-bearing strata encountered in the well, and
19to protect underground or surface water suitable for irrigation or
20farm or domestic purposes from the infiltration or addition of any
21detrimental substance and to prevent subsequent damage to life,
22health, property, and other resources. For purposes of this
23subdivision, proper steps include the plugging of the well,
24decommissioning the attendant production facilities of the well,
25or both, if determined necessary by the supervisor.

26(b) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2018.

27

SEC. 15.  

Section 3208.1 of the Public Resources Code is
28amended to read:

29

3208.1.  

(a) To prevent, as far as possible, damage to life,
30health, and property, the supervisor or district deputy maybegin delete orderend delete
31begin insert order, or permit,end insert the reabandonment of any previously abandoned
32well if the supervisor or the district deputy has reason to question
33the integrity of the previousbegin delete abandonment.end deletebegin insert abandonment, or if the
34well is not accessible or visible.end insert

begin delete

35The

end delete

36begin insert(b)end insertbegin insertend insertbegin insertTheend insert operator responsible for plugging and abandoning
37deserted wells under Section 3237 shall be responsible for the
38reabandonment except in the following situations:

39(1) The supervisor finds that the operator plugged and
40abandoned the well in conformity with the requirements of this
P17   1division in effect at the time of the plugging and abandonment and
2that the well in its current condition presents no immediate danger
3to life, health, and property but requires additional work solely
4because the owner of the property on which the well is located
5proposes construction on the property that would prevent or impede
6access to the well for purposes of remedying a currently perceived
7future problem. In this situation, the owner of the property on
8which the well is located shallbegin insert obtain all rights necessary to
9reabandon the well andend insert
be responsible for the reabandonment.

10(2) The supervisor finds that the operator plugged and
11abandoned the well in conformity with the requirements of this
12division in effect at the time of the plugging and abandonment and
13that construction over or near the well preventing or impeding
14access to it was begun on or after January 1, 1988, and the property
15owner, developer, or local agency permitting the construction
16failed either to obtain an opinion from the supervisor or district
17deputy as to whether the previously abandoned well is required to
18be reabandoned or to follow the advice of the supervisor or district
19deputy not to undertake the construction. In this situation, the
20begin delete owner of the property on whichend deletebegin insert person or entity causing the
21construction over or nearend insert
the wellbegin delete is locatedend delete shall be responsible
22for the reabandonment.

23(3) The supervisor finds that the operator plugged and
24abandoned the well in conformity with the requirements of this
25division in effect at the time of the plugging and abandonment and
26after that time someone other than the operator or an affiliate of
27the operator disturbed the integrity of the abandonment in the
28course of developing the property, and the supervisor is able to
29determine based on credible evidence, including circumstantial
30evidence, the party or parties responsible for disturbing the integrity
31of the abandonment. In this situation, the party or parties
32responsible for disturbing the integrity of the abandonment shall
33be responsible for the reabandonment.

begin insert

34(c) For purposes of this section, being responsible for the
35reabandonment means that the responsible party or parties shall
36complete the reabandonment and be subject to the requirements
37of this chapter as an operator of the well. The responsible party
38or parties shall file with the supervisor the appropriate bond or
39security in an amount specified in Section 3204, 3205, or 3205.1.
P18   1If the reabandonment is not completed, the supervisor may act
2under Section 3226 to complete the work.

end insert
begin delete

3(b)

end delete

4begin insert(d)end insert Except for the situations listed in paragraphs (1), (2), and
5(3) of subdivisionbegin delete (a),end deletebegin insert (b),end insert nothing in this section precludes the
6application of Article 4.2 (commencing with Section 3250) when
7its application would be appropriate.

8

SEC. 16.  

Section 3238 of the Public Resources Code is
9amended to read:

10

3238.  

(a) For oil and gas produced in this state from a well
11that qualifies under Section 3251 orbegin delete whichend deletebegin insert thatend insert has been inactive
12for a period of at least the preceding five consecutive years, the
13rate of the charges imposed pursuant to Sections 3402 and 3403
14shall be reduced to zero for a period of 10 years. The supervisor
15or district deputy shall not permit an operator to undertake any
16work on wells qualifying under Section 3251 unless the mineral
17rights owner consents, in writing, to the work plan.

18(b) An operator who undertakes any work on a well qualifying
19under Section 3251 shall have up to 90 days from the date the
20operator receives written consent from the supervisor to evaluate
21the well. On or before the 90 day evaluation period ends, the
22operator shall file with the supervisor a bond orbegin delete depositend deletebegin insert securityend insert
23 in an amount specified in Section 3204, 3205, or 3205.1, in
24accordance with the requirements of whichever of those sections
25is applicable to the well, if the well operations are to continue for
26a period in excess of the 90-day evaluation period. The conditions
27of the bond shall be the same as the conditions stated in Section
283204.

begin insert

29(c) A party may plug and abandon a well that qualifies under
30Section 3251 by obtaining all necessary rights to the well. That
31party shall be subject to the requirements of this chapter as an
32operator of the well, file with the supervisor the appropriate bond
33or security in an amount specified in Section 3204, 3205, or 3205.1,
34and complete the abandonment. If the abandonment is not
35completed, the supervisor may act under Section 3226 to complete
36the work.

end insert
37

SEC. 17.  

No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
38Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
39the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
40district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
P19   1infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
2for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of
3the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within
4the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
5Constitution.



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