The Fight to End Oil Drilling in Los Angeles | Earth Focus | S7 E3
PBS SoCal
0:00 -Nearly half a million Angelenos live within a half a mile of an oil well,
0:05 as Los Angeles continues to be the largest urban oil field in the country.
0:11 -This is the photo of us, youth.
0:14 We were 14 to 17-year-olds, and our lawyer,
0:16 and we were suing the city of Los Angeles for environmental racism in violation
0:21 of the California Environmental Quality Act.
0:25 -LA County has backed off from oil drilling and is
0:28 beginning to decommission old oil wells and ban new ones.
0:35 Communities are still experiencing the negative health effects
0:39 of being in close proximity to oil drilling,
0:42 but they are finding solutions to a healthier future.
0:53 [music] -Los Angeles was built on oil, both physically and economically.
1:00 By the mid-1920s, it had become one
1:03 of the largest oil-exporting regions in the world.
1:08 -I've lived in South LA long enough to know that I need to be very alert
1:13 to and wary of these innocuous notices that come
1:17 in the mail from the city planning department.
1:19 We received a notice that the oil company was planning to drill three new wells.
1:24 Some neighbors and I, we purpose to go door to door and just
1:28 talk with every neighbor to make sure that they were
1:31 aware of the expansion that was being planned and to listen
1:34 about how the oil drill site was impacting them.
1:38 The stories we heard were incredible.
1:41 Ms.
1:41 Kuse shared about how she was sprayed with oil as she was out watering her lawn.
1:47 Sunny, who lived next door to the drill site,
1:49 shared how closed windows could not keep the diesel
1:54 exhaust and petroleum fumes out of his two-year-old daughter's bedroom.
1:58 For fear for her health,
2:00 he and his wife were planning to leave the neighborhood.
2:05 I met with Oscar, who shared how just the deafening din of thousands of feet
2:10 of pipe being driven into the ground had
2:13 robbed residents of the peaceful enjoyment of their home.
2:16 We began to connect those dots and just realized this facility,
2:20 which we were never very fond of, as you can imagine,
2:23 was having an enormous impact on our neighborhood.
2:27 [music] -In 1900, the population of Greater LA was a few hundred thousand,
2:40 and in the 19-teens and '20s really begins to take off.
2:45 By the time we get to the '50s and '60s,
2:49 there are many millions of people living in LA,
2:53 and many of the neighborhoods that are
2:55 in and around oil fields are established already.
2:59 -I think in those early days,
3:01 there was this interesting push-pull where some residents wanted
3:04 the activity because they could actually profit from it.
3:08 That was before there was really an understanding of some of the health impacts.
3:11 Also, I think when there wasn't a lot of regulation and when
3:14 there wasn't a lot of understanding about very safe ways to operate,
3:18 when you'd have spills and explosions and things like that.
3:21 As we started to go further into the LA history,
3:23 that's when you start really seeing some policy decisions that I
3:27 think really led to the landscape that we have right now.
3:31 What we have in LA is a situation where we have
3:34 neighborhoods that tend to have more people of color and minorities.
3:39 You started seeing things like redlining,
3:42 where certain neighborhoods were deemed less attractive
3:45 or less valuable or less deserving of home loans.
3:49 Also, racially based covenants,
3:51 which excluded people on the basis of race from buying homes in certain areas.
3:56 There have been studies now that show that there
3:59 is a correlation between those neighborhoods and oil drilling activity.
4:05 -The first oil well in Southern California was
4:08 a tunnel that was dug horizontally into Sulphur Mountain.
4:13 There, they could see oil seeping out of the mountain,
4:16 so they literally just dug a tunnel to follow it.
4:19 A few years later, in 1892, Edward Doheny was driving his wagon through downtown
4:25 LA and realized there was tar on the wheels.
4:29 Doheny was the first to use what at the time was modern drilling technology.
4:33 They sharpened the end of a tree trunk and used that as their drilling
4:37 apparatus to dig a hole that was several hundred feet deep.
4:41 They managed to puncture one of these reservoirs,
4:44 and oil came flowing up out of it.
4:47 That was really the first commercially successful oil well in the LA area.
4:52 Once the Doheny well was shown to be productive,
4:56 everyone with a piece of property nearby realized they could also drill a well.
5:02 What followed was this mad rush to drill holes to try and get in on the action
5:09 before your neighbor drilled a well and drained
5:12 because they're all tapping the same reservoir.
5:14 There's this rapid rush to tap the reservoir and have everyone get rich.
5:20 I don't think there is a recognition of how harmful it could be to humans.
5:25 It was quite useful as a fuel for weatherproofing and so on.
5:31 I think the recognition that it was also toxic came about decades later.
5:37 By the time we appreciate the dangers of oil to humans,
5:41 the LA oil fields are fully developed,
5:44 and we have people living around and amongst them throughout the basin.
5:50 At that point, it's probably hard to reverse course.
5:56 This is a graph of the population of LA through time.
5:59 You can see it really starts to take off after 1900 in the teens and '20s.
6:04 Of course, this is the same time that oil
6:07 fields of Los Angeles basin were being developed.
6:11 A lot of this population growth was related
6:14 to the booming oil field business in Los Angeles.
6:19 An oil field consists of many wells
6:22 drilled into that reservoir to extract the oil.
6:27 Generally, when we close an oil field,
6:29 that involves ensuring that all of those holes that we've poked
6:33 into the ground are sealed so that oil can't seep out on its own.
6:38 That involves pumping cement down all
6:41 of the wells to make sure they're tightly sealed.
6:48 This was the first field that was developed by Doheny.
6:51 Here's Dodger Stadium for reference.
6:54 The red color shows you roughly where the oil deposit is located,
6:59 and the black dots show you all
7:01 of the individual wells that have been drilled over time.
7:08 You're really struck by not only how many there are, but how dense they are.
7:13 It must have looked like a forest
7:14 of oil derricks back in the heyday of exploration.
7:18 Today, virtually all of those wells are closed.
7:22 Only a single well is still producing oil from the Los Angeles field,
7:26 that's shown here in the blue arrow.
7:31 -Working-class communities were initially supportive
7:33 of the industry because it promised jobs.
7:37 As they started to witness oil spills and explosions in their neighborhoods,
7:41 along with long-term damage to land, water,
7:44 and human health, they started to push back.
7:54 -In the early 1960s, the oil company demolished all the homes that were
7:58 here to make way for this oil drill site.
8:03 In 2000, the oil company went to the city of Los Angeles and said,
8:07 "We want to rehab these properties,
8:10 turn them into dense, multifamily housing." For decades,
8:15 the oil company would park tanker trucks here, less than 10 feet from homes.
8:22 These tanker trucks, they would deploy thousands of gallons of acid.
8:26 They'd pump it into the ground, dissolving the geology,
8:30 creating pathways to bring oil to the surface.
8:32 Meanwhile, those ambient fumes would kill plants right outside the drill site.
8:40 Residents lived here.
8:42 Their homes were sprayed with oil, and many times,
8:45 the oil company had to repaint their homes.
8:48 Neighbors on every side had toxic impacts from this facility.
8:53 -This drill site is wide open.
8:56 There's not monitoring here.
8:58 -Despite 250 complaints, many health-related to government agencies,
9:03 the oil site remained open until four EPA inspectors
9:07 felt ill and experienced severe headaches during an inspection.
9:12 That's where this story takes another turn.
9:15 It appears this site, and nearly all the other ones in LA,
9:19 haven't been subjected to an environmental impact report in nearly 30 years.
9:28 -We can think about the health effects from living
9:31 by urban oil wells in two big categories.
9:34 One is acute effects that you may experience.
9:37 This can be going outside and getting a headache,
9:41 feeling dizzy, or having an asthmatic episode.
9:44 Also, coughing and wheezing,
9:46 elevated blood pressure are different types of short-term health impacts
9:51 that communities have been experiencing that live near these sites.
9:55 Then we can also think about chronic impacts,
9:57 long-term increases in your risk for hypertension or heart disease,
10:02 more asthma hospitalizations.
10:05 Then we also have seen higher risk of cancer.
10:08 We see linkages between your proximity to oil and gas
10:13 wells and the risk that a child may develop cancer.
10:17 -The building here in the back is the apartment building that I grew up in.
10:20 It's an affordable housing building owned by Esperanza Community Housing.
10:23 I lived there for 10 years of my life.
10:25 It's a photo where you can see all the pipes and the tubes,
10:28 and the entire facility from the AllenCo oil site.
10:34 This is the photo of me underground inside of AllenCo Energy.
10:39 They have 21 underground wells,
10:42 and the worker gave us an entire tour of the facility.
10:45 I learned that the workers,
10:47 because they're exposed to the emissions themselves for so long,
10:50 that they often lose their sense of smell,
10:52 and that's a common symptom of being exposed
10:54 to hydrogen sulfide for long periods of time.
11:00 -Crude oil, also known as petroleum,
11:02 is a complex mixture made up of tens of thousands of different compounds.
11:07 It forms from natural organic matter that's been
11:11 buried and heated under just the right conditions.
11:14 Once formed, that petroleum is buoyant,
11:17 rising up through the subsurface and moving through layers of rock.
11:21 If it's caught by impermeable rock formations along the way,
11:24 it gets trapped, forming a petroleum reservoir.
11:29 That's what we drill into, but if it's not trapped, it can leak out naturally,
11:34 creating surface seeps like what can be found at the La Brea Tar Pits.
11:39 -Oil starts as living organisms, phytoplankton living in the ocean, for example,
11:45 that get buried in sediments that eventually become sedimentary
11:48 rocks that get buried within the earth and heated.
11:51 As they're heated, the organic molecules that make up that life breaks down
11:57 and turns into other molecules that we call hydrocarbons that make up oil.
12:02 It's less dense than water,
12:04 so it will rise through the subsurface and eventually either reach the surface,
12:09 in which case it's an oil seep or a tar seep,
12:12 or it can be trapped by geologic structures that we would call reservoirs.
12:17 That then can accumulate a deposit
12:19 of oil that would be economically worth exploring.
12:25 The LA basin and the surrounding regions have
12:29 all three of those components of an oil system.
12:32 They have an excellent source rock that's known as the Monterey Formation.
12:37 It is widespread throughout Southern California and very organic-rich.
12:42 We have active plate tectonics.
12:45 This gives us our earthquakes that we know so much about.
12:49 This also has folded up basins and valleys
12:53 and pushed that Monterey Formation deep enough to be heated.
12:57 Then that same tectonics has generated a lot of traps,
13:01 so folds and faults in the geology where that oil can accumulate in reservoirs.
13:08 The LA basin is a really prolific oil field.
13:12 It has something like 68 named fields within it.
13:17 You could think of a field as a single deposit of oil that's all interconnected.
13:22 The amount of oil that it contains is really enormous.
13:27 Something like 15 billion barrels of oil have
13:30 been produced from the area over its lifetime,
13:33 with as much as perhaps 5 billion more yet to be produced.
13:38 That would put it in the top 20 worldwide oil-producing basins.
13:43 Many people know that LA has oil fields.
13:45 They don't, I think, often realize just how big it is.
13:50 [music] -Here we have our air quality sensors.
13:59 This is a pod that was designed
14:01 by the University of Colorado at Boulder to measure
14:04 a variety of pollutants that communities that are
14:07 living near oil and gas sites may be experiencing.
14:11 With these sensors, we work with community residents
14:14 to help us find locations for the sensors.
14:17 With it, we measure carbon dioxide, ozone,
14:21 nitric oxides, methane, and then non-methane hydrocarbons.
14:25 With this, we're able to get measurements that are more related to traffic
14:29 pollution as well as those more specific to oil and gas extraction.
14:34 These are placed up on posts about breathing height.
14:38 They also measure pollutants about every 30 seconds.
14:42 We place about 20 monitors throughout the neighborhoods
14:45 in South LA to continuously monitor for air pollutants.
14:50 We see adverse impacts to folks' lung function,
14:54 both when they're living near an active or an idle site.
14:57 However, we see the effect is worse when you're near an active site.
15:03 When we're considering how oil wells may impact local air quality,
15:09 we see that around a half a mile is where we see
15:13 the highest concentration of pollutants associated
15:16 with the oil well compared to farther away.
15:19 However, this reach may be farther than a half a mile,
15:22 but a lot of the evidence to date has
15:25 suggested that this is the really important zone of influence.
15:32 -My grandma developed asthma when she was 70 years old.
15:35 My mom developed it when she was 40.
15:38 My sister has thyroid issues.
15:39 My brother had asthma as well,
15:41 and so many of us were experiencing symptoms inside of our apartment.
15:47 My nosebleeds became so severe I couldn't sleep in my own bed anymore.
15:51 I would sleep in a chair to prevent choking on my own blood.
15:54 I developed body spasms so severe my mom
15:57 would carry me from one place to the other.
15:59 I had headaches, stomach pains.
16:01 I had heart palpitations, and I wore a heart monitor.
16:04 I developed asthma.
16:05 That's something I'm always going to have to live with now.
16:11 -The body of research on this issue continues to grow,
16:14 and the scientific and health findings are clear.
16:18 While my district is disproportionately burdened by oil drilling, in fact,
16:23 over half of the oil wells in unincorporated
16:25 LA County are in the second district.
16:28 It truly is a countywide issue.
16:30 Collectively, these motions take initial steps to deal
16:33 with the impacts of oil drilling in unincorporated LA County
16:38 and get us the information we need to make
16:40 informed decisions about a long-term oil drilling phase-out plan.
16:45 -I think the health risk between these different
16:47 kinds of oil operations aren't fully explored yet.
16:51 By research, we have evidence from communities
16:55 living nearby of them still experiencing odors,
16:58 headaches, respiratory health issues when they're living near these idle sites.
17:03 That's because some of these air pollutants may still
17:07 be leaking or being released into the nearby environment.
17:11 Some of the work that we've done specifically in South LA,
17:15 we observe more reductions in lung function among people
17:20 living near an active site compared to an idle site,
17:23 but we observe it in both communities.
17:27 -Solutions lie in communities coming together and advocating for safer
17:31 spaces and a future that looks a little greener.
17:35 -Part of what we wanted to do today is
17:37 bring what's behind that wall out into the light
17:40 and work together to call the city
17:43 to ensure justice and just treatment for our community.
17:47 -Oversight over the oil industry is pretty complicated.
17:50 There are cities, there's the county, there's also the state.
17:54 Then, depending on what particular aspect of the industry we're talking about,
17:58 who oversees it can vary.
18:00 For instance, the state really has oversight over
18:04 drilling operations themselves as well as well closures.
18:07 On the other hand, if it is in an incorporated city,
18:09 it would have land use control.
18:11 They would be the ones that actually permit the drilling operations.
18:14 In LA County, when it's a public health
18:16 issue or something related to public health code,
18:18 our county public health department would have jurisdiction.
18:21 It's pretty variable depending on the specific issue that we're talking about.
18:28 We would expect that if a well is abandoned,
18:30 you really have a blank slate in terms of what you can do with that land.
18:34 We are a very urban area, and there are a lot of needs.
18:37 There's a lot of interest in developing more green space, more housing,
18:41 areas where we can have better transportation or jobs, and things like that.
18:46 In an ideal world, we are left with a site
18:49 where the community can really be part of making that decision.
18:56 -Residents worked together to shut down this oil drill site.
19:01 In 2019, we won the closure of the facility.
19:05 Where we're standing now is where the old oil well cellar used to be.
19:10 We figured that the oil company wasn't going
19:12 to be very excited to negotiate the acquisition with us.
19:16 We formed a partnership with the LA Neighborhood Land Trust.
19:20 Then we reached out to our local elective leaders.
19:23 We received a $10 million state grant
19:26 for the acquisition through Assembly Member Reggie Jones-Sawyer.
19:30 We gave those funds to the LA Neighborhood Land Trust,
19:33 and they took the lead in negotiating the acquisition of this drill site.
19:37 All the oil wells have been plugged, capped, cut off,
19:42 but we need to retain access to them
19:44 in the future in case they were to leak again.
19:48 What used to be the oil drill site will be a new community park.
19:52 Over here, we're going to build a community
19:55 center to house programs for our neighborhood.
19:59 On the opposite corner, we're going to build multifamily housing to create
20:03 new homes for families in our community.
20:08 [music] -As communities come together
20:16 to advocate for change in their neighborhoods,
20:18 the policy will take time, but the voices have been heard.
20:23 -I never thought my activism would lead me to where I am today.
20:27 The Los Angeles Times wrote a story about my community,
20:30 and that story captured the attention of former US Senator Barbara Boxer.
20:34 She came out and had a press conference with us
20:36 where she pled AllenCo Energy to cease operations, and they did.
20:41 Shortly after, they temporarily closed in 2013,
20:44 which was made permanent in 2020.
20:47 I'm very proud to say that AllenCo Energy
20:49 has been temporarily shut down for six years, going on seven this November.
20:52 [applause] -We then noticed we weren't
20:57 the only community being affected by oil extraction,
21:00 so came the birth of STAND-LA,
21:02 Stand Together Against Neighborhood Drilling Los Angeles.
21:06 STAND-LA fights tirelessly to pass an ordinance to establish a 2,500-foot health
21:10 and safety buffer zone between oil extraction and sensitive land for our health,
21:15 our safety, and our environment.
21:18 This photo is a historic day.
21:21 This is when Mayor Eric Garcetti signed the ordinance
21:25 of the Los Angeles City Council and County Board of Supervisors,
21:28 voting unanimously to ban all new oil
21:31 and gas exploration in the city and county,
21:33 and also phase out the existing sites over 20 years,
21:36 which is historic because Los Angeles is
21:39 the largest urban oil field in the nation.
21:42 I tirelessly fight for my community because I believe everyone
21:45 has the right to breathe clean air despite their age,
21:48 gender, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, zip code.
21:51 -We have such a strong advocacy community
21:54 that's been working on this issue for years.
21:57 As those neighborhoods and the residents in them
22:00 were really understanding the impact that they're having,
22:03 seeing them around them, they were able to organize their specific coalitions,
22:07 like the STAND-LA Coalition,
22:09 that is very adept and savvy at figuring out the levers that they can pull.
22:15 They've done a lot of work to develop
22:17 policy statements and coalesce around specific pushes,
22:21 and then reach out to decision makers to move policy forward.
22:25 They've been very successful with that over the past few years.
22:30 -I became an activist out of survival.
22:33 We would organize community meetings within our own community and apartment,
22:37 and we were constantly finding ways to mobilize and organize ourselves and make
22:42 noise about this toxic monster that was 30 feet from our homes.
22:49 -More and more, climate is just becoming the overriding crisis of our time,
22:54 as well as biodiversity loss.
22:58 A lot of my office's goals and my goals are really focused
23:01 on what do we do to make Los Angeles a model for climate resilience?
23:06 That means addressing the suite of hazards that we have.
23:09 I think a lot of that comes through more
23:12 greening and getting reconnected to the nature that's in LA,
23:16 and so to the extent that we can increase parks and open
23:20 space and green spaces while also balancing those other needs of housing,
23:24 and jobs, and transportation.
23:26 When I think about a future Los Angeles,
23:29 I want to see one where communities are thriving.
23:33 I think less pollution, more greening are key to that vision.
23:40 -In the acquisition of the Jefferson Drill Site now for redevelopment,
23:45 it's amazing the kind of dreaming that you can do,
23:49 and that's what we're beginning to see here.
23:51 We've created a model for how communities can
23:54 take on these multi-billion-dollar toxic polluters and prevail.
23:59 I can't wait to see that vision take root in this place.
24:05 I hope that we're creating a model by which other drill sites
24:09 will be repurposed for the blessing of the communities in which they're located.
24:15 -Nalleli and her leadership inspired the enactment of SB 1137,
24:20 banning all new oil wells within 3,200 feet of communities in California.
24:27 Richard and his neighborhood shut down the Jefferson Drill Site.
24:32 Even with this hopeful activism,
24:34 there's still work to do as multiple other sites like Wilmington,
24:39 Long Beach, Los Angeles City, and other fields continue to operate.
24:44 [music] -If you enjoy stories like this, you can support them by liking,
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25:28 Thanks, and stick around for the next one.
25:31 I think you're going to love it.