California governor decides state need oil wells after all
Following 25 years of what oil and gas executives categorize as hostility to the industry, the state is now making a play to keep those companies from leaving.
Concerned with the exodus of oil and gas companies, refinery closures and the expensive price of gasoline in the state, California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed legislation last week that fast tracks the approval of 2,000 new wells per year over the next 10 years in Kern County, a significant oil-producing region.
Andy Walz, Chevron's president of Americas products, said during an appearance on FOX Business, "I think it's been a tyranny of about 25 years to get the refining business to leave California."
Walz told reporters last summer about Chevron's move from California to Texas, saying the company has "been doing that because California is a tough place to do business."
"It's a tough place to recruit people," he said. "It's a tough place to move employees – a lot of our employees move up through the company, they gain experience in different geographies, different locations, and we have a lot of people who will not move to California. That makes it difficult."
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The forces of Big Green have made California a tough place to use automobiles. I can remember when Californians embraced the car culture. The states' opposition to automobiles is one reason why the state is losing population to states like Arizona and Texas.
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