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Contact: Megan Urban, 409-951-6700
KOUNTZE, Texas – Big Thicket National Preserve will receive $550,000 from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law this year to plug two orphaned wells in the ecologically significant landmark. Methane pollution from unplugged wells is a serious safety hazard and a significant driver of climate change. Last year, the preserve received funding from the same source to close seven other orphaned wells.
“We are excited to expand the work being done at Big Thicket to address legacy pollution and improve the environment, water quality, and economic revitalization in southeast Texas,” said Superintendent Wayne Prokopetz.
This additional funding will increase the preserve's capacity to remediate more orphaned wells. Oil and gas drilling and production were prevalent in the area prior to the establishment of the national preserve in 1974. In coordination with the Texas Railroad Commission, the National Park Service continues to address needed remediation work across a variety of habitats in the preserve.
The project is part of the Department of the Interior's investment of $63.8 million this year designed to put people to work plugging and remediating orphaned oil and gas well sites located in national parks, national wildlife refuges, and other public lands and waters. The allocation is from an overall $250 million provided by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to clean up legacy pollution on federal public lands.
In addition, Big Thicket will receive $200,000 this year from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law Ecosystem Restoration fund to increase efforts to restore the longleaf pine savannah ecosystem.
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Big Thicket National Preserve is in Southeast Texas, near the city of Beaumont and 75 miles northeast of Houston. It consists of nine separate and distinct tracts of land and six water corridors encompassing more than 113,000 acres. The preserve, often referred to as a “biological crossroads,” is a transition zone between four types of vegetation – the moist eastern hardwood forest, the southwestern desert, the southeastern swamp, and the central prairies – and attracts global interest due to its variety of flora and fauna.
Last updated: July 22, 2023