Amplify Energy to Pay $13M to Settle Charges over California Offshore Oil Spill

Monday, August 29, 2022

A Texas oil company agreed to plead guilty to criminal negligence charges and pay nearly $13 million for a crude oil spill that killed wildlife and fouled southern California beaches, federal prosecutors said on Friday. 

Amplify Energy Corp repeatedly turned off and on a 17-mile-long subsea pipeline when it could not determine the location of the leak, according to plea agreements filed in U.S. District Court, Central District of California. 

The Houston-based company and two subsidiaries each agreed to plead guilty to one count of negligently discharging oil during the October 2021, incident. The pipeline was struck by a ship's anchor. 

The three firms "are required to make significant improvements that will help prevent future oil spills,” Acting United States Attorney Stephanie S. Christensen said in a statement. 

The plea "reflects the commitments we made immediately following the incident to impacted parties and is in the best interest of Amplify and its stakeholders," said Chief Executive Martyn Willsher.

The spill released some 558 barrels (25,000 gallons) of crude oil into the Pacific Ocean, killing wildlife, blackening the coastline and forcing the closure of beaches south of Los Angeles. 

A judge must still accept the plea agreement. The companies will serve probation for four years, be required to conduct semiannual pipeline inspections, and revise and submit an oil spill plan to state wildlife officials, the court filing showed. 

Amplify has said it incurred $17.3 million in cleanup costs in the immediate aftermath of the spill. 

The company this week said it reached an agreement in principle with plaintiffs to resolve civil claims. 


 (Reuters - Reporting by Gary McWilliams; Editing by David Gregorio)


Categories: Energy Pipelines Industry News Activity North America Oil Spill

Related Stories

Europe’s Drilling Revival Tests US Energy Pledges and Import Boom

BP Hires Seatrium to Deliver Tiber FPU in Gulf of America

PacWave Inks ‘Historic’ US Wave Power Purchase Deal

Current News

Equinor’s First Hybrid Power Complex Starts Operations

Ocean Winds Hires Seaway7 for Offshore Wind Job in Poland

Oman’s Block 50 Offshore Drilling to Advance After $25M Funding Raise

Vissim to Provide Vessel Collision Avoidance System for Qatari Offshore Field

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News