‘Pro-taxpayer’ law requires operators to clean up abandoned Illinois oil wells
(The Center Square) – A state lawmaker says recently-signed legislation will ensure that Illinois taxpayers don’t foot the bill for cleaning up abandoned oil wells.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed Senate Bill 2463 earlier this month. The bill sponsor, state Sen. Erica Harriss, R-Glen Carbon, said the measure addresses a costly problem.
“So the law would ensure that oil well operators, not taxpayers, are financially responsible for closing and remediating sites once the drilling operations have ceased,” Harriss explained.
According to the Environmental Defense Fund, more than 150,000 oil, gas, and injection wells have been drilled in Illinois since 1853. EDF mapped locations for the state’s 4,050 “orphan” oil wells, most of which are in Southern Illinois.
The EDF website states that oil and gas wells, after they are done producing, must be properly closed to prevent air and water pollution, protect the health of the surrounding communities and restore the property values of the landowner.
When the abandoned wells have no solvent owner of record, cleanup liability falls on the state or on funding from federal grants. The average cost to close one well is estimated to be around $20,000, with remediation costing tens of thousands more.
SB 2463 provides for a third-party-backed bond instead of cash deposits for future oil rigs, sparing the Illinois Department of Natural Resources from cleanup costs.
“This bill is about accountability, that taxpayers shouldn’t be footing that bills when operators walk away from obligations,” Harris told The Center Square.
Harriss said she worked with the Illinois DNR and the oil and gas industry on the legislation.
“They were most certainly included in the conversation and this is not anti-oil and gas at all. This is pro-taxpayer,” Harriss said.
Senate Bill 2463 passed both chambers of the General Assembly with no opposition last spring.
The new law takes effect Jan. 1, 2026.
Latest News Stories
IL House speaker signals insurance regulation described as ‘ill-advised’
Logan County native urges oversight of proposed $5B IL data center
Flint Man Charged with 1988 Murder of Wife Joan Bernal Following Cold Case Breakthrough
State leaders slam $10 billion child care freeze, promise action
‘Implicit bias’ training mandate among new health care-related laws in Illinois
WATCH: Child care funding freeze; Trump rebuts Jan. 6 testimony from Kinzinger, Pelosi
Illinois quick hits: Pritzker reacts to HHS funding freeze; Chicago crime dashboard released
Convicted murderer can’t use IL juvy reform law to win chance at parole
Homer Glen Man Charged with Reckless Discharge, Battery to Deputy Following Standoff
Beecher bids farewell to Chief Lemming following retirement
Peotone Survives Defensive Struggle, Pulls Away Late to Beat Beecher
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Lincoln-Way Community High School District 210 for December 18, 2025