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Midway Sunset Oil Field Geologic Cross Section The Lakeview #2 gusher (not the more famous Lakeview #1 gusher), 20 May 1914. While the Midway-Sunset field is a large contiguous area covering more than 30 square miles (80 km 2), it comprises 22 identifiable and separately-named reservoirs in six geologic formations, ranging in age from the Pleistocene Tulare Formation (the most recent ...
1889: Oil wells drilled at Old Sunset (Maricopa) with a steam-powered rig mark discovery of Midway-Sunset field. 1890: Three oil companies merge to form The Union Oil Company of California in Santa Paula, California, by Lyman Stewart, Wallace Hardison, and Thomas Bard. 1890: Los Angeles City Oil Field is discovered
The permits are for 10 new wells to be drilled by Berry Petroleum in the region’s Midway Sunset oil extraction field. Their approval prompted outcry from climate advocates who say they were not ...
The super-giant Midway-Sunset field has produced nearly 4,000,000,000 barrels (640,000,000 m 3) of crude oil, most of it heavy gravity (13-14 degrees API). Enhanced oil recovery operations in the form of steam production and injection have been used on the thick viscous crude oil of the Midway-Sunset field since the mid-to-late-1960s.
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Annual oil production from the field was 70,000 bbd/d as of 2014. Wastewater from the field was once allowed to drain directly into the streams dissecting the region, and thence into the Kern River. This practice ended in the 1960s and 1970s when more stringent environmental regulations were enacted both on federal and state levels.
Jul. 23—A jury trial is about to begin in a years-long dispute between two Kern County oil companies accusing each other of damaging their property and limiting production on a scale of tens of ...
The Lakeview Gusher was an eruption of hydrocarbons from a pressurized oil well in the Midway-Sunset Oil Field in Kern County, California, in 1910.Caused by a blowout, it created the largest accidental oil spill in history, lasting 18 months and releasing an estimated 9 million barrels (1.4 × 10 ^ 6 m 3) of crude oil.