2nd Annual
Orphan & Idle Wells California Conference
(Part of a North American Series)
March 24-25, 2026 | Bakersfield, CA
OVERVIEW:
Join us at the 2026 Orphan & Idle Wells California Conference in Bakersfield - a solutions-focused forum bringing together regulators, industry experts, technology innovators, and community stakeholders from across the state and beyond.
As California intensifies its focus on environmental protection and infrastructure resilience, this event creates space for collaboration to shape the next phase of well decommissioning across the state.
With thousands of orphaned and idle wells posing environmental, financial, and public health risks, a unified, strategic approach is more urgent than ever. For the second-consecutive year, we will gather leaders in Bakersfield to help find answers to these problems.
The 2026 conference will dive into evolving regulations, funding access, and AI-driven tools that are transforming how wells are identified, prioritized, and safely closed. Building on our national Orphan & Idle Wells series—launched in Texas in 2023 and continued through California in 2025—this event returns to Bakersfield to tackle region-specific challenges, highlight leading-edge remediation practices, and explore scalable solutions for onshore and offshore sites.
A LETTER FROM OUR 2025 CHAIRPERSON
California’s oil production had already peaked and begun to decline when my career began 30 years ago, and its production is now only 25% of that peak. Some people want the decline to continue more quickly, and some want it to decline more slowly. But either way the final chapter of California’s epic history of oil production has come into view.
This convocation does not intend to determine how fast or how slow production declines. Instead, it intends to examine how to finish strong—efficiently, effectively, and completely—as production does wind down.
We are bringing together diverse perspectives, from industry and academia to government and NGOs. So diverse, in fact, that some perspectives on other aspects of the oil industry are not entirely compatible among all the participants. But I think that we can agree across this spectrum that there is no moral case for venting and that there is no public good from orphaning wells to the public fisc. Whatever else we may disagree about, we can agree that California’s oil fields should be cleaned up whenever they do quit producing. Plus, we can probably agree that decommissioning will bring a great deal of employment and economic activity.
I find that the more complicated the problem, the more it benefits from diverse perspectives and open discussion. If you want to be part of writing the best possible version of this last chapter, then I encourage you to attend and to contribute your insight and your passion to this project.
I hope to see you there.
KEY TOPICS:
- Funding Access – Tapping into federal and state resources, including IIJA and state climate resilience funds, to accelerate well closure
- Regulatory Changes – Navigating California’s evolving methane, liability, and decommissioning requirements
- Water Security & Public Health – Preventing contamination and ensuring long-term protection of drinking water sources and ecosystems
- Seismic & Environmental Risks – Managing well closures in earthquake zones, wildfire areas, and fragile habitats
- AI & Data-Driven Solutions – Deploying advanced mapping, monitoring, and risk assessment tools to improve efficiency and cost control
- Offshore Well Decommissioning – Addressing the growing urgency and complexity of aging offshore infrastructure in California waters
The Orphan & Idle Wells California Conference is an interactive forum for regulators, operators, policymakers, technology providers, and community leaders. For more information on joining the program, please contact brandy.cormier@energyconferencenetwork.com
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