Texas oil and gas regulators have requested over $100 million in emergency funding to address critical issues involving uncapped wells and oil field wastewater. According to a letter obtained by the Houston Chronicle, the Texas Railroad Commission (RRC), which oversees the state’s oil and gas industry, informed legislators that "emergent issues have developed" since the commission's annual budget request was filed on August 30.
In the letter, Danny Sorrells, Executive Director of the Railroad Commission, emphasized that the commission requires these additional funds to manage the increasing number of leaking wells. Without this financial boost, he warned, the state’s ability to safeguard groundwater from contamination would be compromised.
This urgent appeal follows a dramatic 100-foot geyser that erupted in a West Texas oil field, a region already experiencing earthquakes associated with wastewater injection. The incident raised concerns about the potential involvement of oil field wastewater and how it reached the site.
The commission stated that leaking and erupting wells are straining its current well-plugging budget, which limits efforts to preemptively plug wells before they begin leaking. The requested funds would help the commission stay ahead of these issues. "This is all part of our vigilant work to plug wells," the commission said in a follow-up statement.
This unexpected funding request highlights the escalating nature of well-related challenges in West Texas and marks a 72% increase in state funds sought for well plugging beyond what was initially budgeted. The commission’s original allocation included $234 million for well-plugging activities for 2026 and 2027, with $95 million sourced from federal funds provided by a Biden administration initiative.
The budget documentation noted that many Texas oil fields are aging, which heightens the risks posed by neglected or orphaned wells with no responsible owners to manage them. When owners abandon wells due to bankruptcy or company dissolution, the state inherits these liabilities. These wells can release wastewater to the surface, often necessitating emergency action. During fiscal year 2023, the commission spent nearly $10 million to plug 38 emergency wells. Lawmakers have been cautioned that additional funding will be essential to continue protecting the state’s groundwater effectively.
“The costs and number of emergency wells have increased sharply over the last several years,” the letter stated.
Additionally, the commission requested $2.7 million to employ 10 full-time staff to investigate the effects of wastewater injection, a byproduct of hydraulic fracturing (fracking), on underground formations. This team’s goal would be to identify “the root causes” of incidents like water blowouts and induced seismic activity.
A Legacy of Significant Concerns
This new investigative team would not be the first to address the impacts of oil industry wastewater on underground environments. Earlier this year, environmental organizations including Earthjustice, Commission Shift, and Clean Water Action petitioned the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to investigate Texas’ regulation of oil field wastewater and its "failure to protect drinking water."
In a response letter sent in May, the EPA acknowledged the petition's “substantial concerns” and stated that its regional office in Dallas would need time for a thorough review. More recently, the Environmental Integrity Project and Commission Shift sent another letter raising questions about discrepancies in Railroad Commission data on wastewater wells, underscoring the ongoing scrutiny of how these issues are managed in Texas.