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Environment

Platform Holly Plugs First Well

State Lands Commission holds update on progress in decommissioning offshore oil wells.

Platform Holly Plugs First Well

Over the angry lamentations of the Santa Barbara community, offshore oil platforms began to go up in the '60s, a dangerous blight on the seascape for residents — borne out by the massive '69 spill — profitable for the fossil-fuel industry — until Venoco went bankrupt in 2016. Its Platform Holly in the Ellwood Field went dormant, quickly turning into a rusted hulk, which the State Lands Commission has been restoring in order to get the drill platform ready to close 30 well bores by pumping cement down them. But some see the rigs as an opportunity, not an eyesore. Original ideas of how to use the platforms comprised a part of the November 7 State Lands meeting on the decommissioning.

As part of Venoco's shutdown, caused in part by the Refugio Oil Spill and the closure of the oil pipeline, the company quitclaimed Holly to State Lands, saddling the state with the costs of removing the wells, estimated to be in the neighborhood of $348 million. Venoco's bond amount posted against such an eventuality was $22 million. ExxonMobil is handling the overall decommissioning, with daily operations in the hands of contractor Beacon West. As well, State Lands has been quietly talking with members of Chumash tribes, because Piers 421, a part of the Ellwood field that sits below the Sandpiper Golf Course cliffs, lies close to cultural sites.

On Halloween, they closed the first well on Holly, said Jeff Planck, minerals manager for the agency. The state staff has become accustomed to the Goleta meetings; this was the fifth, he said. Planck described Holly as a rustbucket, saying it has taken 15,000 manhours to replace equipment on the platform and get it working again. Shutting down the well involved using a "coil tubing unit" to push cement into the well at the production level, then more cement was fed by gravity into the interval between the Monterey oil-bearing strata up to the sea floor. Even the cook could call a halt to the operation if something dangerous is spotted, Planck said, as he emphasized the safety rules on the platform.