Colorado oil firms allowed to avoid $1bn in cleanup bonds, investigation finds
An investigation by The Guardian and DeSmog examined thousands of state documents to create what it describes as an unprecedented picture of the public toll from aging oil and gas sites in Colorado. The investigation found that Chevron, Oxy (Occidental Petroleum) and Civitas Resources collectively own more than 14,600 dead oil and gas sites where production has ended but pollution or other impacts remain, overlapping with more than 6,000 open spills. According to the investigation, since 2019 the Colorado Energy and Carbon Management Commission (ECMC) could have forced the three companies to hand over as much as $1.3bn in financial collateral but instead allowed them to provide only a sliver of what they might have owed. The investigation also found that if the current pace of cleanup continues, it will take the three companies decades to clean up their existing backlog. In 2024, the regulator said contractors for all three companies had falsified environmental paperwork at hundreds of sites, a situation the companies and the commission say they are investigating. The ECMC acknowledged slow implementation of tightened rules but defended its performance, stating it uses a “risk-based system” to determine financial assurance levels. Chevron stated that assertions it is out of compliance or avoiding its financial assurance responsibilities are false, while Oxy and Civitas did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
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Sources: The Guardian
