KEY POINTS
  • The Los Angeles City Council on Wednesday voted to ban new oil and gas wells in the country's second most populous city and phase out existing wells over a period of five years.
  • The measure follows decades of complaints by residents who've grappled with health problems from living near polluting drilling sites.
  • More than half a million people in LA live within a quarter-mile of active oil and gas wells that release air pollutants like benzene and hydrogen sulfide.
A view of the Marathon Petroleum Corp's Los Angeles Refinery in Carson, California, April 25, 2020.

The Los Angeles City Council on Wednesday voted to ban new oil and gas wells and to phase out existing wells over a period of five years, following decades of complaints by residents who have grappled with health problems from living near drilling sites.

The measure, introduced by Council members Nury Martinez and Paul Krekorian in December 2020, is part of a broader push by the county and the state of California to establish more distance between drilling and people and transition away from climate-changing fossil fuels.