BILL NUMBER: SB 545 AMENDED
BILL TEXT
AMENDED IN SENATE APRIL 6, 2015
INTRODUCED BY Senator Jackson
FEBRUARY 26, 2015
An act to amend Sections 3008, 3106, 3203, and 3234 of, to add
Section 3215.5 to, to repeal Section 3451 of, and to repeal and add
Section 3450 of, the Public Resources Code, relating to oil and gas.
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
SB 545, as amended, Jackson. 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.
This bill would no longer require the supervisor to perform his or
her duties in that manner. The bill would instead require the
supervisor to authorize the exploration and production of
hydrocarbons, including, among other things, the drilling, operation,
maintenance, and abandonment of wells, and the use of enhanced oil
recovery methods, as defined, and authorize the supervisor to allow
an owner or operator of a well to utilize
drill, operate, maintain, and abandon wells utilizing all known
methods and practices to increase the ultimate recovery of
hydrocarbons if the supervisor finds that those methods and practices
are consistent with existing law.
(2) Existing law requires the operator of a well to file a written
notice of intention to commence drilling with, and prohibits any
drilling until approval is given by, the supervisor or district
deputy. Under existing law, the notice is deemed approved if the
supervisor or district deputy fails to respond to the notice in
writing within 10 working days from receipt and is deemed canceled if
operations have not commenced within one year of receipt.
This bill would require an owner or operator of a well to file an
application for approval to commence drilling, containing specified
information, and would prohibit any drilling until written approval
is given by the supervisor or the district deputy containing
specified findings. The bill would authorize the supervisor, upon
request, to grant a one-year extension if operations have not
commenced within one year of the approval. The bill would
require the applications and approvals by the supervisor
or the district deputy to be posted on the division's Internet Web
site within 10 working days.
(3) The Permit Streamlining Act requires any public agency that is
the lead agency for a development project to approve or disapprove
of a project, as specified. Under that act, if the lead agency or
responsible agency is required to provide public notice of the
development project or to hold a public hearing on the development
project, or both, and the agency has not provided the public notice
or held the hearing, or both, at least 60 days prior to the
expirations of specified time periods, the applicant may file an
action to compel the agency to provide the public notice or hold the
hearing, or both, as specified.
This bill would require the supervisor to perform his or her
duties in conformance with that act.
(4) Existing law generally provides that well records filed by
owners or operators with the supervisor are public records. However,
existing law authorizes the supervisor, upon written request of an
owner or operator, to maintain well records of exploratory wells, or
other wells if the supervisor determines that there are extenuating
circumstances, as confidential information. Under existing law, the
confidential period for an onshore or offshore well is up to 2 or 5
years, respectively, from the cessation of drilling operations, as
defined. Existing law authorizes the supervisor to extend the period
of confidentiality of a well for 6 months upon written request
documenting extenuating circumstances and requires that the total
period of confidentiality, including all extensions, for onshore and
offshore wells not exceed 4 or 7 years, respectively, from the
cessation of drilling operations.
This bill would limit the authorization to maintain the
confidentiality of well records to exploratory wells and only if the
owner or operator includes specified information in the written
request. The bill would deem both the request for, and the granting
of, confidential well status to be public records and would require
that information to be accessible on the division's Internet Web
site. The bill would require all well records of a confidential well,
as defined, to be posted on the division's Internet Web site
within 10 working days once the confidential well period has
ended. The bill would require that the confidential period for an
offshore well not exceed 3 years from the cessation of drilling
operations and would authorize the supervisor to extend the period of
confidentiality for confidential wells for only 6 months, upon
receiving a written request documenting extenuating circumstances.
(5) Existing law requires an owner or operator of a well to keep a
log, core record, and history of the drilling of wells to be
provided to the district deputy within 60 days after the date of
cessation of drilling, rework, or abandonment operations or the date
of suspension of operation. Under existing law, a person who fails to
comply with this and other requirements relating to the regulation
of oil or gas operations is guilty of a misdemeanor.
This bill would in addition require an owner or operator of a well
to report specified information to the applicable regional water
quality control board within 5 days of any loss of well and well
casing integrity. Because a violation of this requirement would be a
crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
(6) Existing law recognizes the Conservation Committee of
the California Oil and Gas Producers and authorizes it or
any other committee of oil producers to make voluntary
recommendations to the supervisor regarding, among other things,
maximum efficient rates of production, as defined, if specified
conditions are satisfied.
This bill would instead authorize any committee of oil producers
to make recommendations to the supervisor regarding oil and gas
exploration and production, as specified, and would require the
division to post any recommendations received by the supervisor on
the division's Internet Web site.
(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: no. Fiscal committee: yes.
State-mandated local program: yes.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
SECTION 1. Section 3008 of the Public Resources Code is amended to
read:
3008. (a) "Well" means any oil or gas well or well for the
discovery of oil or gas; any well on lands producing or reasonably
presumed to contain oil or gas; any well drilled for the purpose of
injecting fluids or gas for stimulating oil or gas recovery,
repressuring or pressure maintenance of oil or gas reservoirs, or
disposing of waste fluids from an oil or gas field; any well used to
inject or withdraw gas from an underground storage facility; or any
well drilled within or adjacent to an oil or gas pool for the purpose
of obtaining water to be used in production stimulation or
repressuring operations.
(b) "Prospect well" or "exploratory well" means any well drilled
to extend a field or explore a new, potentially productive reservoir.
(c) "Active observation well" means a well being used for the sole
purpose of gathering reservoir data, such as pressure or temperature
in a reservoir being currently produced or injected by the operator,
and the data is gathered at least once every three years.
(d) "Idle well" means any well that has not produced oil or
natural gas or has not been used for injection for six consecutive
months of continuous operation during the last five or more years. An
idle well does not include an active observation well.
(e) "Long-term idle well" means any well that has not produced oil
or natural gas or has not been used for injection for six
consecutive months of continuous operation during the last 10 or more
years. A long-term idle well does not include an active observation
well.
(f) "Enhanced oil recovery method" means the process of obtaining
stranded oil, not recovered from an oil reservoir,
by utilizing certain extraction processes, including, but not
limited to, thermal recovery, gas injection, chemical injection, and
water flooding.
(g) "Confidential well" means an exploratory well with records
that the division maintains as confidential information in accordance
with Section 3234.
SEC. 2. Section 3106 of the Public Resources Code is amended to
read:
3106. (a) The supervisor shall authorize the exploration and
production of hydrocarbons, including drilling, stimulation, the use
of enhanced oil recovery methods and well completion techniques,
operation, reworking, maintenance, and abandonment of wells and the
operation, maintenance, and removal or abandonment of tanks and
facilities attendant to oil and gas production, including pipelines
not subject to regulation pursuant to Chapter 5.5 (commencing with
Section 51010) of Part 1 of Division 1 of Title 5 of the Government
Code that are within an oil and gas field. These activities shall be
authorized in a manner so as to prevent, as far as possible, damage
to life, health, property, and natural resources; damage to
underground oil and gas deposits from infiltrating water and other
causes; loss of oil, gas, or reservoir energy; and damage to
underground and surface waters. waters
suitable for irrigation or domestic purposes or otherwise
uncontaminated waters that could be treated to be suitable for
irrigation or domestic purposes.
(b) The supervisor may allow an owner or operator of a well to
utilize drill, operate, maintain, and abandon
wells utilizing all methods and practices known to the oil
industry to increase the ultimate recovery of underground
hydrocarbons if the supervisor finds that those methods and practices
are consistent with this division. To further the elimination of
waste by increasing the recovery of underground hydrocarbons, it is
hereby declared as a policy of this state that the grant in an oil
and gas lease or contract to a lessee or operator of the right or
power, in substance, to explore for and remove all hydrocarbons from
any lands in the state, in the absence of an express provision to the
contrary contained in the lease or contract, is deemed to allow the
lessee or contractor, or the lessee's or contractor's successors or
assigns, to do what a prudent operator using reasonable diligence
would do, having in mind the best interests of the lessor, lessee,
and the state in producing and removing hydrocarbons, including, but
not limited to, the injection of air, gas, water, or other fluids
into the productive strata, the application of pressure, heat, or
other means for the reduction of viscosity of the hydrocarbons, the
supplying of additional motive force, or the creation of enlarged or
new channels for the underground movement of hydrocarbons into
production wells, when these methods or processes employed have been
approved by the supervisor, except that nothing contained in this
section imposes a legal duty upon the lessee or contractor, or the
lessee's or contractor's successors or assigns, to conduct these
operations.
(c) The supervisor may require an operator to implement a
monitoring program, designed to detect releases to the soil and
water, including both groundwater and surface water, for aboveground
oil production tanks and facilities.
(d) The supervisor shall administer this division in conformance
with Chapter 4.5 (commencing with Section 65920) of Division 1 of
Title 7 of the Government Code.
SEC. 3. Section 3203 of the Public Resources Code is amended to
read:
3203. (a) The operator of any well, before commencing the work of
drilling the well, shall file with the supervisor or the district
deputy a written application for approval to commence drilling. The
application shall detail all the methods and practices expected to be
used for the well, including, but not limited to, well stimulation
treatments and enhanced oil recovery methods. The application shall
also demonstrate that the drilling and any method utilized will pose
no threat to the de minimis risk to
public health and safety. Drilling shall not commence until written
approval is given by the supervisor or the district deputy, finding
that the project is consistent with Section 3106 and that
the public health and safety and the environment will not be harmed.
3106. If operations have not commenced within one
year of approval of the application, the approval shall be deemed
canceled, unless the applicant makes a written request for an
extension with a reason for the extension. The supervisor may grant a
one-year extension of the approval in writing. The application shall
contain the pertinent data the supervisor requires on printed forms
supplied by the division or on other forms acceptable to the
supervisor. The supervisor may require other pertinent information to
supplement the application.
(b) After the completion of any well, this section also applies,
as far as may be, to the deepening or redrilling of the well, any
operation involving the plugging of the well, or any operations
permanently altering in any manner the casing of the well. The number
or designation of any well, and the number or designation specified
for any well in an application filed as required by this section,
shall not be changed without first obtaining a written approval of
the supervisor.
(c) If an operator has failed to comply with an order of the
supervisor, the supervisor may deny approval of proposed well
operations until the operator brings its existing well operations
into compliance with the order. If an operator has failed to pay a
civil penalty, remedy a violation that it is required to remedy to
the satisfaction of the supervisor pursuant to an order issued under
Section 3236.5, or to pay any charges assessed under Article 7
(commencing with Section 3400), the supervisor may deny approval to
the operator's proposed well operations until the operator pays the
civil penalty, remedies the violation to the satisfaction of the
supervisor, or pays the charges assessed under Article 7 (commencing
with Section 3400).
(d) The applications and written approvals by the supervisor or
the district deputy shall be posted on the division's Internet Web
site.
SEC. 4. Section 3215.5 is added to the Public Resources Code, to
read:
3215.5. For any well, regardless of the operation or activity
taking place, if there is any loss of well and well casing integrity,
that loss and any resultant action or remedial work shall be
reported by the operator to the applicable regional water quality
control board with within five days of
the event.
SEC. 5. Section 3234 of the Public Resources Code is amended to
read:
3234. (a) (1) Except as otherwise provided in this section, all
of the well records, including production reports, of any owner or
operator that are filed pursuant to this chapter are public records
for purposes of the California Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5
(commencing with Section 6250) of Division 7 of Title 1 of the
Government Code).
(2) Those records are public records when filed with the division
unless the owner or operator requests, in writing, that the division
maintain the well records of onshore exploratory wells or offshore
exploratory wells as confidential information. The owner or operator
shall give a detailed explanation and rationale for keeping the
records of the exploratory well confidential and the supervisor shall
respond in writing as to whether the confidential well status has
been granted. Both the request for, and the granting of, confidential
well status are public records, and shall be made accessible on the
division's Internet Web site. For onshore wells, the confidential
period shall not exceed two years from the cessation of drilling
operations as defined in subdivision (e). For offshore wells, the
confidential period shall not exceed three years from the cessation
of drilling operations as specified in subdivision (e).
(3) Well records maintained as confidential information by the
division shall be open to inspection by those persons who are
authorized by the owner or operator in writing. Confidential status
shall not apply to state officers charged with regulating well
operations, the director, or as provided in subdivision (c).
(4) On receipt by the supervisor of a written request documenting
extenuating circumstances relating to a particular well, including a
well on an expired or terminated lease, the supervisor may extend the
period of confidentiality, as set forth in paragraph (2), for no
more than six months.
(5) Once the confidential well period has ended, all well records
shall be immediately posted on the division's
Internet Web site. site within ten working
days.
(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of subdivision (a) regarding
the period of confidentiality, the well records for onshore and
offshore wells shall become public records when the supervisor is
notified that the lease has expired or terminated.
(c) Production reports filed pursuant to Section 3227 shall be
open to inspection by the State Board of Equalization or its duly
appointed representatives when making a survey pursuant to Section
1815 of the Revenue and Taxation Code or when valuing state-assessed
property pursuant to Section 755 of the Revenue and Taxation Code,
and by the assessor of the county in which a well referred to in
Section 3227 is located.
(d) For the purposes of this section, "well records" does not
include either experimental logs and tests or interpretive data not
generally available to all operators, as defined by the supervisor by
regulation.
(e) The cessation of drilling operations occurs on the date of
removal of drilling machinery from the well site.
SEC. 6. Section 3450 of the Public Resources Code is repealed.
SEC. 7. Section 3450 is added to the Public Resources Code, to
read:
3450. (a) The Conservation Committee of the
California Oil and Gas Producers or any other committee of oil
producers may issue recommendations to the supervisor relating to oil
and gas exploration and production, if both of the following are
satisfied:
(1) Copies of those recommendations are delivered to the
supervisor.
(2) A committee issuing the recommendations makes available to the
supervisor its records, files, minutes, reports, and other data
pertaining to those recommendations.
(b) The division shall post any recommendation received by the
supervisor pursuant to subdivision (a) on the division's Internet Web
site.
(c) (1) The supervisor, in his or her discretion, may express his
or her disapproval of any recommendation received pursuant to
subdivision (a).
(2) The supervisor, in the absence of a recommendation by a
committee of oil producers or if the supervisor deems a
recommendation to be insufficient or incorrect, may issue
recommendations relating to oil and gas exploration and production.
(3) Oil producers may comply or agree to comply with the
supervisor's recommendation, but neither a disapproval by the
supervisor nor a recommendation by him or her shall constitute a
basis for implying an obligation for oil producers to comply with
that disapproval or recommendation.
(d) Nothing in this section shall authorize the production of oil
or gas in violation of this division.
SEC. 8. Section 3451 of the Public Resources Code is repealed.
SEC. 9. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the
Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the
meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
Constitution.