Environment

Oklahoma Energy Regulators OK Move Allowing Well Shut-Ins

The Oklahoma Corporation Commission approved an emergency order that allows oil producers to stop or reduce production without losing their leases for nonproduction.

oklahoma.jpeg
In this 21 April 2020 file photo, a pumpjack is seen as the sun sets in Oklahoma City. Oil prices continue to drop, because very few people are flying or driving, and factories have shut amid widespread stay-at-home orders due to coronavirus concerns. The Oklahoma Corporation Commission approved an emergency order on 22 April 2020, that allows oil producers to stop or cut back production without losing their leases for nonproduction.
Credit: Sue Ogrocki/AP.

The Oklahoma Corporation Commission approved an emergency order on 22 April that allows oil producers to stop or reduce production without losing their leases for nonproduction.

The three-member, all-Republican panel that regulates the oil and gas industry in Oklahoma issued its emergency order amid a collapse in oil prices. The per-barrel price has plummeted as demand dried up, and an oversupply has limited storage capacity.

One Oklahoma producer who testified that he operates about 600 wells in the state said he is currently losing $200,000 monthly by producing from economically challenged wells.

“No one understands the oil business better than Oklahoma’s operators,” Commissioner Dana Murphy said in a statement after approving the order. “Today’s action by the Commission gives those operators the freedom and flexibility they need to respond to market forces and decide what actions to take to survive.”

Read the full story here.