Study finds abandoned oil and gas wells place unfair burden on landowners, taxpayers
CALGARY — The costs of Alberta’s growing stock of abandoned and inactive oil and gas wells are falling unfairly on landowners and taxpayers, says a report from the University of Calgary.
“Landowners have been left behind,” said Braeden Larson of the university’s School of Public Policy. “Landowners got the short end of these burdens that have popped up with the number of wells that have grown in this crisis.”
Larson and co-author Victoria Goodday use industry and government data as well as previous research to point to troubling trends in Alberta’s beleaguered conventional oilpatch.
More than half of Alberta’s wells no longer produce oil and gas but haven’t been cleaned up. That includes 97,000 wells that haven’t been properly closed and another 71,000 that have been closed but not reclaimed.


