The new program will be run out of the United Mine Workers of America Career Centers, Inc.’s (UMWACC) Ruff Creek Training Center in Greene County where Governor Josh Shapiro visited earlier this month to highlight bipartisan investments in workforce development.
UMWACC’s Gas Well Capping Technician program – the first-ever registered apprenticeship program for UMWA – provides workers with the knowledge to plug abandoned and orphaned wells that have the potential to cause health, safety, or environmental concerns and to mitigate harmful emissions and provide an economic boost to rural Appalachian communities transitioning away from fossil fuel economies.
“We have a huge abandoned well problem in Pennsylvania, and we need qualified and well-trained people to plug them. There are more than 350,000 orphaned and abandoned wells across our Commonwealth – and they make up nearly 8% of our total methane emissions.” said Department of Environmental Protection Acting Secretary Jessica Shirley. “Sooner or later, every orphaned well is going to be a threat to the environment and public health, and we need people with the skills and training to plug the wells and restore the surrounding landscape. In addition to removing the threat that old wells pose, some active wells could find new life as geothermal wells, capturing buried heat for clean energy.”
The Gas Well Capping Technician program is officially registered with the Apprenticeship and Training Office, housed within the state Department of Labor & Industry, and will train workers on the following topics: safety, well capping techniques, cement properties and skills, and land remediation.
“The Shapiro Administration is committed to addressing the needs of in-demand industries and preparing workers with the skills needed to be successful in our workforce,” said L&I Secretary Nancy A. Walker. “The Registered Apprenticeship Occupation of Well Capping Technicians program offers a solution to both of those goals, by providing real career opportunities for individuals dedicated to the environmental and public health of our Commonwealth.”
“This is a positive step toward addressing unemployment in Appalachia's coal mining communities,” said UMWA International President Cecil E. Roberts. “The program will not only help stop leaking gas and oil wells but also provide workers with family-sustaining wages. Capping abandoned and orphaned wells is expected to take decades.”
“We are very excited about this program,” said Clemmy Allen, Executive Director of the UMWA Career Centers, Inc., a nonprofit 501c3 company. “The Well Capping Technician is one of the in-demand occupations in which dislocated coal miners and their families, as well as all those residing in rural mining communities of Appalachia, can train for without relocating. The partnership with the UMWA International union ensures workers will be paid family sustaining wages with benefits in good union jobs. We are proud to sponsor this program.”
Pennsylvania has a long history of energy development, including the first commercial oil well in 1859.
[The conventional oil and gas industry also has a long history of abandoning wells as a routine business practice to avoid responsibility for plugging them and sticking taxpayers with the bill. How do you think we now have 350,000 abandoned conventional wells? Read more here.
[This practice continues today. So far in 2024, DEP has issued 722 new and continued violations to conventional oil and gas well owners for well abandonment. Read more here.]
In 2022 the U.S. Department of the Interior awarded Pennsylvania an initial grant of $25 million to plug conventional orphaned and abandoned gas wells. DEP has plugged more than 250 wells since Governor Josh Shapiro took office, more than have been plugged over the last nine years combined.
Learn more about abandoned conventional oil and gas wells by visiting DEP’s Abandoned & Orphan Conventional Oil & Gas Well Program webpage.
Click Here for the complete Shapiro Administration announcement.
NewsClips:
-- Tribune-Democrat: Shapiro, Mineworkers Create Apprenticeship To Plug Oil & Gas Wells Abandoned By Conventional Well Owners
-- Wilkes-Barre Times: State Announces Apprenticeship Program To Plug Oil, Gas Wells Abandoned By Conventional Well Owners
Resource Links:
-- DEP Issues 711 Violations To Conventional Oil & Gas Well Owners For Abandoning Wells So Far In 2024 [PaEN]
PA Oil & Gas Industry Public Notice Dashboards:
-- Range Resources Shale Gas Water Pipeline Suffers Blowout In Washington County [PaEN]
-- 9-Year-Old Drives Tractor Into Conventional Well Causing Gas Leak [PaEN]
-- PA Oil & Gas Industrial Facilities: Permit Notices, Opportunities To Comment - August 31 [PaEN]
-- DEP Posted 66 Pages Of Permit-Related Notices In August 31 PA Bulletin [PaEN]
Related Articles:
-- Sept. 19 Webinar: A Year Later: Have Leaders Addressed Health Concerns From Natural Gas Development Raised In University Of Pittsburgh Public Health Studies? [PaEN]
-- State, United Mine Workers Announce First-In-PA Registered Apprenticeship Program To Plug Oil And Gas Wells Abandoned By Conventional Well Owners; DEP Issued 711 Violations For Well Abandonment So Far In 2024 [PaEN]
-- Pittsburgh Works Together Releases New Report: The PJM Grid In Peril: What Will Keep The Lights On? [PaEN]
-- Sen. Yaw To Introduce Bills To Establish PA Baseload Energy Development Fund Based On Texas Model; And Have One Permit For Power Plants [PaEN]
-- Ready For 100% Montgomery County: Communities With Half The County Population Support Clean Energy Future [PaEN]
-- DEP Permitting Efficiency: 19,222 Permits Since 11/2023; Decisions On 15,794; 2 Currently Eligible For PAyback Did Not Meet Decision Deadlines; No Application Fees Refunded [8.27.24]
-- Washington & Jefferson College To Host Pittsburgh Regional Carbon Capture Conference Oct. 22 In Washington County [PaEN]
NewsClips:
-- TribLive Guest Essay: Gov. Shapiro Needs To Step Up His Environmental Game - By Tom Pike, Protect PT
-- Public News Service: Shale Gas Fracking Boom In PA Raises Health, Environmental Concerns
-- Tribune-Democrat: Shapiro, Mineworkers Create Apprenticeship To Plug Oil & Gas Wells Abandoned By Conventional Well Owners
-- Wilkes-Barre Times: State Announces Apprenticeship Program To Plug Oil, Gas Wells Abandoned By Conventional Well Owners
-- TribLive: PA Apprenticeship Program Expands To Including Training To Plug Oil, Gas Wells Abandoned By Conventional Well Owners
-- Pittsburgh Business Times: State, United Mine Workers Partner On New Apprenticeship On Plugging Oil & Gas Wells Abandoned By Conventional Well Owners
-- The Center Square - Anthony Hennen: Natural Gas Subsidy Plan Rolled Out To Stabilize Grid [Sen. Yaw’s Energy Development Fund ]
-- Utility Dive: PA Senator [Sen. Yaw] To Introduce Energy Fund Bill, Bill To Require One Permit With One ‘Statute of Limitations’ For Power Plant Projects
-- Reuters: Texas Energy Fund Approves Gas-Fired Power Plants For Next Stage Of Consideration
-- Utility Dive: Texas Energy Fund Elects 17 Gas-Fired Power Plant Projects Totaling Almost 10 GW For Possible Loans
-- Utility Dive: PJM December Electricity Auction Prices Could Jump 157% Over July Auction, Morgan Stanley
-- The Center Square - Anthony Hennen: Pittsburgh Works Report: Red Tape, New Power Plant Delays Put PJM Electric Grid ‘In Peril’
-- Utility Dive Guest Essay: Getting Real About Electric Grid Reliability In PJM After July Capacity Auction - By Glen Thomas, Former Chair of the PA Public Utility Commission
-- PennLive Guest Essay: Troubling Times Are Ahead For American Energy - By Commonwealth Foundation [59% Of Energy On PA’s Electric Grid Comes From One Fuel]
-- TribLive Guest Essay: Biden Clean Power Plant Reboot Will Cripple PA’s Energy Affordability - By Sen. Greg Rothman (R-Cumberland) [Need To Diversify Our Energy Generation Away From 59% Natural Gas To Prevent Price Spikes]
-- WHYY/BillyPenn: PECO Customers Could Face Double-Digit Electricity Bill Increases Next Year; Experts Blame Growing Demand, Lagging Transition To Renewable Energy
-- Inside Climate News: US Appetite For Electricity Grew Massively In First Half Of 2024; Solar Power Rose To The Occasion
-- Chesapeake Bay Journal - Ad Crable: Air Monitoring Study By CNX Resources Finds Fracking ‘Poses No Public Health Risk’; Environmental Groups Critical
-- WHYY: Philadelphia Gas Commission Passes Rules To Limit Public Participation In Budget Process
[Posted: August 26, 2024] PA Environment Digest
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