Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 149— - NATIONAL ENERGY POLICY AND PROGRAMS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - OIL AND GAS › Part Part A— - Production Incentives › § 15907
Creates a plan the Secretary of the Interior must start within 60 days after November 15, 2021 to plug, clean up, and restore orphaned oil and gas wells on federal land. Key words: "Federal land" means land run by the Departments of Agriculture or the Interior; "idled well" is a well unused for at least 4 years with no future use; "Indian Tribe" is as defined in title 25; "operator" is any entity that told authorities it is responsible; "orphaned well" on Federal or Tribal land is a well not used for an authorized purpose and either has no known operator or the operator cannot do the work (State/private wells follow the State’s definition); "Tribal land" is land owned by a Tribe held in trust or with a federal restriction on sale. The program must find and list orphaned wells and related pipes and facilities, score them by health, safety, and environmental risk, pay to plug wells and restore land and habitat, keep public cost records, try to find responsible parties and seek reimbursement, measure methane and water contamination, and pay attention to impacts on low-income, Tribal, and communities of color. The Bureau of Land Management must review idled wells regularly and work to lower their number. The Secretary must work with the Department of Agriculture, Tribes, and the States and consult the Department of Energy and the Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission. The Secretary must also give States three kinds of grants (initial, formula, and performance) and set rules for how States may use the money (for plugging, finding undocumented wells, ranking, public reporting, tracking emissions, habitat restoration, decommissioning infrastructure, and related program costs). States may spend up to 10 percent on administration except in certain start-up cases. Initial grants: up to $25,000,000 per State if the State applies within 180 days after November 15, 2021 and meets listing conditions; up to $5,000,000 for other eligible States. Initial funds must be sent within 30 days, unused funds returned after 1 year, and a report due within 15 months. Formula grants use a formula the Secretary sets and account for job losses from March 1, 2020 through November 15, 2021 and the number and cost of documented orphaned wells; States must give notice within 45 days after November 15, 2021 and the Secretary will publish eligible amounts by 75 days after that date. Formula and performance grant applications must be completed to get funds, which are to be distributed within 60 days; formula grant leftovers must be returned after 5 years. Performance grants include regulatory improvement grants (up to $20,000,000 per qualifying reform, one per reform) and matching grants that fill the gap between a State’s 2010–2019 average annual spending and the State’s pledged spending; matching grants are limited to $30,000,000 per State total for fiscal years 2022 through 2031 and one per fiscal year. For Tribes, the Secretary must either give grants or, if the Tribe asks, do the work for the Tribe. Tribal funds may be used for plugging, cleanup, habitat restoration, finding undocumented wells, public cost reporting, and building Tribal programs. Tribes may spend up to 10 percent on administration except for starting program work. The Secretary will consider Tribal unemployment and the number of Tribal orphaned wells when awarding grants. Tribal funds must be distributed within 60 days of a complete application, and unused funds are returned after 5 years unless an extension is agreed. The Secretary of Energy will provide technical help. The Secretary must report to Congress within 1 year after November 15, 2021 and then at least once a year with an updated well inventory, estimates of methane and other emissions and reductions, jobs created or kept, and acres restored. The program does not change who is legally responsible for wells, does not remove the Secretary’s duties under title 25 section 396c or U.S. trust duties to Tribes, and does not free owners or operators from possible liability or reimbursement obligations. Money is authorized for fiscal year 2022 and is available until September 30, 2030 as follows: to the Secretary $250,000,000 for the federal program, $775,000,000 for initial grants, $2,000,000,000 for formula grants, $1,500,000,000 for performance grants, and $150,000,000 for the Tribal program; to the Secretary of Energy $30,000,000 for research and development; and to the Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission $2,000,000.
Full Legal Text
The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 15907
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73