California County Approves Underground Carbon Storage Project

Cal­i­for­ni­a’s Kern Coun­ty approves the state’s first project that will attempt to bury cli­mate-warm­ing gas­es under­ground in an effort to lim­it the amount of emis­sions that go into the air, accord­ing to an arti­cle from CAL­mat­ters.

“The project by Cal­i­for­nia Corp., the state’s largest pro­duc­er of oil and gas, will cap­ture of tons of car­bon diox­ide and inject it into the ground in the west­ern San Joaquin Val­ley south of But­ton­wil­low,” the arti­cle explains. “Cal­i­for­nia Resources Corp. plans to annu­al­ly col­lect 1.46 met­ric tons of car­bon diox­ide and inject it into the ground more than a mile deep into the Mon­terey For­ma­tion, a vast struc­ture that has long been a key source of Cal­i­for­ni­a’s oil.”

The site in the San Joaquin Val­ley was select­ed part­ly due to the pres­ence of the deplet­ed Elk Hills oil and gas field, be an ide­al car­bon stor­age . The project, known as Car­bon Ter­ra Vault, is one way oil and gas com­pa­nies are fight­ing to stay and viable as the state works a zero-emis­sions future. “The New­som admin­is­tra­tion has endorsed car­bon cap­ture and seques­tra­tion tech­nol­o­gy as crit­i­cal to Cal­i­for­ni­a’s efforts to tack­le cli­mate change — it plays a major role in the admin­is­tra­tion’s action plan for slash­ing gas­es over the next 20 years.”

In a pub­lic meet­ing, local activists expressed con­cern about the pro­jec­t’s poten­tial to con­t­a­m­i­nate the sur­round­ing area. “They say the tech­nol­o­gy could pro­long the life of oil and gas and that the project would emit air pol­lu­tants that could pose health risks to low-income com­mu­ni­ties in the val­ley.”

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