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Colorado oil and gas operator with long record of environmental violations loses right to do business in state

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Facing millions of dollars in fines, dozens of violations, legions of complaints from homeowners as well as local governments, oil and gas operator Prospect Energy on Wednesday had its right to do business in Colorado canceled.

The Energy and Carbon Management Commission endorsed a settlement agreement between the commission staff and the Highlands Ranch-based company. Prospect Energy also has an agreement with Larimer County and Fort Collins to clean up sites.

As part of the agreement, $1.7 million in ECMC fines will be waived, with what funds the company has going toward securing and cleaning up its sites. Prospect Energy was fined for illegal flaring, spills and failing to do well-integrity tests.

Prospect Energy’s 59 wells will end up in the ECMC Orphan Well program and will eventually be plugged and abandoned by the state.

Under the agreement, Prospect Energy’s owner, Ward Giltner, must obtain commission approval before owning or operating any future oil and gas properties in Colorado. Giltner did not reply to email and telephone requests for comments.

The company, however, still faces $337,000 in fines from the state Air Pollution Control Division for air emission violations. In 2022, the division ordered one of Prospect Energy’s sites closed until dangerous emissions could be curbed.

“This is an exceptional and rare course of action,” APCD director Michael Ogletree said at the time. “This is a unique situation that calls for extraordinary measures to ensure we are protecting public welfare.”

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Division inspectors found emissions of volatile organic chemicals and hydrogen sulfide, which smells like rotten eggs, on repeated visits to the company’s Krause facility tank battery.

“These issues have been going on for more than four years,” said Matt Lafferty, Larimer County principal planner. “The county and the city filed a formal complaint to push the ECMC.”

Prospect Energy operates mainly low-producing wells — 49 in Larimer County and 10 in Fort Collins — and several tank batteries for collecting produced water and oil. The wells date as far back as 1928.

“We have an old, outdated oil field that has seen the end of its life, and I am sure it is hard for owners to let go because they still make a little money,” Lafferty said.

Still, the passage in 2019 of Senate Bill 181, which made protection of public Health, safety and welfare as well as the environment the priority in regulating oil and gas operations, has put pressure on small operators and low-producing fields, Lafferty said.

For example, Lafferty said, in 2020 the state adopted rules severely limiting flaring, the practice of burning off gas from oil and gas wells, and it created another violation for Prospect Energy.

“Once that ball started rolling on Prospect Energy, it was clear it didn’t have the resources,” Lafferty said. “Everyone is starting to take action. The snowball got pretty big.”

“This isn’t an oil and gas thing,” Lafferty said “It is a Health and safety issue.”

A GIF from an infrared camera showing blue puffs of emissions leaking from one of two oil tanks in the frame.
In this clip from a forward-looking infrared, or FLIR, monitoring camera, blue puffs of emissions are visible coming from the top of the tank on the right, one of several at Prospect Energy’s Krause facility in Larimer County. (Image provided by Earthworks)

Andrew Klooster, the Colorado field advocate for the environmental group Earthworks, first documented emissions from Prospect Energy, using an infrared FLIR camera, in 2021. Klooster said exasperated residents had contacted his group.

“People were complaining of odors, headaches, nausea,” Klooster said. “Krause tanks had holes in them because they were so old and decrepit,” he said, adding that even when they were replaced, emissions from hatches continued.

“An operator that was not interested in complying”

Klooster said over the years he has made 29 visits to Prospect Energy facilities finding repeated violations, with a big point of concern the Fort Collins Meyer tank battery, where in recent years the Hearthfire development — with homes going for $1 million or more — has been built.

“The refrain the county has been hearing from us and the community is that this was an operator that was not interested in complying with the air quality regulations,” Klooster said.

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