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⋅ OIL WELLS OF LA ⋅

Early Oil Pump At Placerita Canyon

For many years I didn't know that I lived near so many oil wells in my dense Los Angeles neighborhood. That office building about ¼ mile from me?  It’s a façade for a recently closed oil and gas extraction site.

Packard Oil Site Residential Street

 

Cardiff Tower Oil Site Residential Street

 

 

The building that looks like a synagogue? No one goes there to pray. It’s a front for another inactive oil well.

 

A wall next to the Beverly Center Mall and across from Cedar Sinai Hospital hides a big, active oil drilling site. 

 

In the historic Adams area of LA, the Murphy oil site operates behind a wall next to a clinic for deaf children, a convalescent home and residential buildings.

The chimney-like flower-power painted structure that used to be at Beverly Hills High School hid a system of oil wells. Once abandoned, the wells were left to be plugged by the City. 

 

 

Early oil digging tools

In 1892, when Charles Canfield and Edward Doheny dug the first oil well in Echo Park, LA was a small town sitting on a big lake of oil. At that time it was possible to keep some distance between the oil producing zones  and residential areas. Now, about half a million Angelenos, from Wilmington to Echo Park, to Downtown LA, to the Westside, spend their daily lives less than a ¼ mile from an unplugged oil well. Not all these oil wells are well maintained, operating with broken cement seals and poorly maintained pipelines. Many are abandoned and left unplugged.

 

 

Oil derrick in the Inglewood Oilfields

Why does this matter? Because people living near oil wells complain about serious health problems. They are backed up by a scientific panel that reported to the California Geologic Energy Management Division (CalGEM) in 2021, a 2019  National Institute of Health (NIH) study, The Center For Biological Diversity (2017) and a steady drumbeat of studies from universities such as Yale, Stanford and USC.  

Oil derrick at Kenneth Hahn State Park

These studies document the long-term health consequences of living near oil drilling sites. Besides the noise, oozing sludge and odor, chemical gasses such as benzene, hydrosulphide and methane are leaked into the air, causing  wheezing, asthma and generally reduced lung function. People suffer from frequent headaches, nausea, nosebleeds and rashes. High risk births as well as various cancers have also been connected to living and working near oil wells.

 

Which brings me to the very sensible California Senate Bill 1137 which was signed into law in September 2022, following similar ordinances passed by local governments. If you care for your health and the health of the community, you would support SB 1137. It does not stop oil drilling in California but it does mandate Health Protection Zones (HPZs), 3200 foot buffer zones, where no new oil wells can be dug too close to your homes, schools, hospitals and shopping areas. The wells that are already there can remain within the 3200 foot buffer zone, but the operators have to make sure that the oil wells are working safely and that they, not the taxpayer, will be responsible for plugging the wells when abandoned.

Gas prices in LA 2022

                                                                                          Will SB 1137 affect gas prices? No, it will not!  California crude oil prices are tied to global oil prices and events. Because California only produces 29% of its oil, with its wells getting old and producing less, we are dependent on oil from other states and countries. Since this crude oil has to go through refineries first, the price of gasoline depends on the refineries as well. Gasoline costs more to refine in California than in other states. Fewer refineries, aging infrastructure, refinery outages and higher demand last year caused a supply problem which forced us to pay way more at the pump.

Unfortunately,  SB 1137 was put on hold  by a well-funded campaign called Stop The Energy Shutdown. By December 2022, they had collected enough signatures to put a referendum on the 2024 ballot to void this law. Stop The Energy Shutdown is funded by the California Independent Petroleum Association (CIPA), its top donors being major oil extraction companies. They have peddled lies about stoppage of oil drilling, tried to connect SB 1137 to higher gas prices, said we will lose jobs and disputed the health findings of various reputable studies. In short, they have used their considerable funds to pull the wool over the public’s eyes by using scare tactics to get needed signatures to put the initiative on the ballot. The referendum will be on the November 2024 ballot.

As I walk past that fake office building near my home, I realize that California cannot do without oil and gas right away, not until we can develop other sources of cleaner and more affordable energy. But common sense health and safety measures and the availability of affordable oil are not incompatible. 

UPDATE: JULY 2024  Faced with a strong opposition and new laws making their way through the State Assembly, Stop The Energy Shutdown pulled the referendum from the November Ballot.  Besides undermining the legislative process, spending over $25 million on the referendum wasn't a complete loss for oil drillers as they continued drilling with impunity for another year. The oil companies say they will now take their battle to court, so stay tuned!