Bloomberg Businessweek - USA (2020-08-10)

(Antfer) #1
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ILLUSTRATION


BY


LAUREN


MARTIN


Thebillwouldalsomakea startonmendingthebroken
systemforfundingwellcleanups.Pollutersshouldbe held
accountableforcleaninguptheirownmesses.They’relegally
requiredto,andbesides,that’swhatcorporateresponsibility is
allabout.Butmanytrytousebankruptcytoescapetheir obli-
gationstoworkersandshifttheircleanupresponsibilities to
taxpayers.ThebillSpeakerNancyPelosishepherdedthrough
theHousewouldrequirecompaniestosetasideenoughmoney
toretirewellsbeforetheydrillnewones.Atthemoment, states
cantrytoattractbusinessbyminimizingthatrequirement,
whichis howwe’veendedupinthismess.Weneeda national
standardtopreventit fromhappeningagain.
Thebillis stalledintheSenate.Republicansareskeptical
aboutfurtherstimulus,andtheadministrationisn’tconcerned
aboutclimatechange.Butcleaningupwellshelpseverybody.
It fightsclimatechange,createsjobs,andis affordable. Biden
is righttopushforit,buttheideais toogood—andtheneeds of
unemployedgasandoilworkerstoourgent—towaitfor2021. 
Formorecommentary,gotobloomberg.com/opinion

 BLOOMBERG OPINION August 10, 2020


AsCongressdebateshowtoaddresstheeconomiccalamity
wearefacing,wehaveanunprecedentedopportunitytoput
peopletoworkaddressingtheclimatecrisis—andlet’sstartby
hiringlaid-offoilandgasworkerstohelpleadtheway.
Thefactis,theU.S.oilandgassectorwasintroubleeven
beforethepandemicstruck.Lastyearmorethanthreedozen
producersdeclaredbankruptcy,hobbledbydecliningenergy
pricesandrisingdebt.Thepaceoffilingshasquickenedwith
thespreadofthecoronavirus,andevenafterthevirusthreat
subsides—whichis unlikelytobeanytimesoon—cheaprenew-
ableswilldrivemorecompaniesunder.
Thisturmoilhashurtoilandgasworkers—some100,
havebeenlaidoffin2020—andcommunitiesthatdependon
fossilfuelextractionaresuffering.Thebankruptcieshavealso
leftscarsontheenvironment,intheformofabandonedwells.
Some3 millionsuchsitesarescatteredacrossthecountry,
accordingtotheEnvironmentalProtectionAgency,andmost
leakcopiousamountsofmethane,a powerfulgreenhousegas.
ButtheU.S.canmeetbothchallengesinonestroke—bypay-
inglaid-offenergyworkerstocleanupabandonedwells.
Plugginga singlewellcancutitsmethaneemissionsby99%,
accordingtotheEPA,andtheworkrequiresskillsthatoiland
gasworkersalreadypossess.Yetdespitethebesteffortsof
stateregulators,mostabandonedwells—morethan2 million—
remainunplugged.A federalprogramtoplugso-calledorphan
wellscouldcreateasmanyas120,000 well-payingjobs,while
preventinghundredsofthousandsoftonsofgreenhousegases
fromescapingintotheatmosphere.It’sanideathatappealsto
environmentalgroups,fossilfueldependentstates,andeven
somefossilfuelindustryleaders.
Joe Biden has included the idea as part of his green energy
campaign platform. I’ve spoken with him about it, and I know
how strongly he supports it. It’s a perfect example of how
expanding the economy and fighting climate change go hand
in hand. Biden gets it, and this is the kind of practical policy—
one that helps hard-hit communities while also protecting the
environment—that he would lead as president.
However, we need these jobs right now, and the infra-
structure stimulus bill passed by the House would create
a federal well-plugging program. While it could be more
ambitious—it would plug about 60,000 wells, far less than the
500,000 experts have proposed—it’s a step in the right direc-
tion. Its $2 billion price tag should be modest enough to appeal
to Republicans, many of whom represent states such as Texas
and Oklahoma that would see immediate job benefits.

SocialmediagiantTencentreportsearningsonAug.12,
amidmountingpressureonChinesetechnologycompanies
from governments focusing more closely on data security.

AGENDA


 New Zealand’s
central bank sets rates
on Aug. 12. A strong
currency and low
inflation have raised calls
for stimulus, including
negative interest rates.

 Royal Caribbean
Cruises reports second-
quarter earnings on
Aug. 10. The pandemic
has hit the industry
particularly hard.

 J.P. Morgan hosts
a virtual automotive
conference on Aug. 11-
to explore the road to
recovery for the battered
transport sector.

 The USDA World
Agricultural Supply and
Demand Estimates, a
closely watched gauge
of demand for crops
such as soy and wheat,
is due on Aug. 12.

 China provides
economic data on July
industrial production
and retail sales on
Aug. 14. Economists
are looking for signs of
a rebound.

 The U.S. Court of
Appeals in Washington
on Aug. 11 reconsiders
a ruling to dismiss a
criminal case against
former national security
adviser Michael Flynn.

○ By Michael R. Bloomberg

Hire Laid-Off Oil and


Gas Workers to Fight


Climate Change


SocialmediagiantTencentreportsearningsonAug 12

 Will the U.S. Pull Another Plug?

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