Windsor

Province spending $2M in southwestern Ontario this year to combat old oil, gas wells

Counties and municipalities across southwestern Ontario will receive a combined $2 million this year to help them manage risks posed by old and inactive oil and gas wells. 

The program will distribute up to $7.5M over 3 years

A blocked off section is seen beside a crumbling building.
Photo shows the corner where the explosion took place in downtown Wheatley, Ont., as seen in December 2022. (Chatham-Kent )

A handful of counties and municipalities across southwestern Ontario will receive a combined $2 million this year to help them manage risks posed by old and inactive oil and gas wells. 

The money will "enhance emergency preparedness … and prevent emergencies," the province said in a news release on Thursday. 

"We heard from municipalities across southern Ontario that they need help addressing the complex challenges related to inactive oil and gas wells in their communities," said Graydon Smith, Ontario's minister of natural resources and forestry.

In its first year, nine municipalities and counties will receive $2 million between them to improve emergency preparedness and risk prevention. 

The announcement was made in Norfolk County on Thursday morning. 

The complete list of municipalities receiving funding in the first year is:

  • Municipality of Chatham-Kent.
  • Lambton County.
  • Oxford County.
  • Brant County.
  • Elgin County.
  • Essex County.
  • Haldimand County.
  • Regional Municipality of Niagara and Norfolk County. 

The money is part of a three-year, $7.5-million provincial program to tackle the issue of old and inactive oil wells. 

An explosion in Wheatley in August 2021 after a hydrogen sulphide leak in the area injured people and destroyed and damaged multiple downtown buildings. Three wells were plugged in the aftermath of the explosion.