Colorado oil and gas wells can’t fund their own cleanup. Taxpayers may foot the bill | A Carbon Tracker report shows the cost to safely shut down low-producing wells is $3bn more than what they earn
We have this problem in WV, too, but also with coal mines.
Mining companies have to put up reclamation bonds to get permits, but those bonds aren't even close to the cost of cleanup. So companies just abandon ship, forfeit the bonds (which are far less than the cost of cleanup/remediation), and the taxpayers are left to foot the cleanup bill. In the meantime, they leach heavy metals and other toxic crap into nearby communities.
I read an article in Colorado what's happening is due to some sort of legal loophole companies are able to spin off their unprofitable Wells into a tertiary corporation and then that company can go bankrupt and because it has no assets of any value
I'm personally working on this problem. It sucks, and the politics are frustrating as hell, but the people working at the State of CO to reign in oil and gas are making every penny of funding work as hard as it can.
I honestly don't really know. I know that The Environmental Defense Fund and The Clean Air Task Force have a strong presence in the state, so it may be worth donating or volunteering for them.
In Australia, a similar situation occurs where mining companies receive significant subsidies, pay minimal taxes, generate billions in revenue and profit, and leave taxpayers responsible for site remediation costs amounting to hundreds of millions of dollars. Despite these subsidies, Australians do not benefit from cheaper products or electricity. Much of the mined resources are exported, and Australia often buys them back at significantly higher prices. And yet, apparently, Australians are okay with this.