Company: OXY-WT
Filing Date: 2025-02-18
Form Type: 10-K
Source: 0000797468-25-000029
Chunk: 132

Company: OCCIDENTAL PETROLEUM CORP /DE/
Filing Date: 2025-02-18
Form: 10-K
Item: Item 1A
Chunk 132
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 and the dunes sagebrush lizard, respectively, as endangered species under the ESA, which decisions are subject to pending litigation. While Occidental has entered into voluntary conservation agreements with respect to these and other species and their associated habitat in the Permian 

12 OXY 2024 FORM 10-K

table of contentsRISK FACTORS

Basin, listing of such species may impose significant operational requirements and costs and increase the potential for litigation and enforcement actions. 

Although the foregoing revisions to federal onshore and offshore leasing, royalties and permitting, the CEQ’s NEPA regulations, recent listing decisions under the ESA, and related lawsuits have not affected Occidental’s existing production or planned 2025 drilling and completions activity to date, restrictions, uncertainty, or litigation could impact the future ability to develop resources efficiently on federal lands or in projects that require federal actions on private or state lands.

Certain states where Occidental's subsidiaries conduct oil and gas operations have adopted or proposed significant land use and permitting laws and regulations that would impose siting requirements or “setbacks” on certain oil and gas drilling locations based on the distance of a proposed well pad to occupied structures, require additional permitting, notification and monitoring for various oil and gas drilling, completions, hydraulic fracturing and production operations or various types of wells and facilities, limit leasing or use of state lands or increase royalty rates, rental rates and fees for such use, increase bonding, plugging and abandonment, and reclamation requirements, and impose other operational restrictions. While, as of December 31, 2024, Occidental's subsidiaries maintained a significant inventory of permits and permit applications with applicable regulatory agencies for a substantial portion of their planned 2025 drilling and completions activity, any significant regulatory delays could result in changes to their development programs and ability to establish new proved undeveloped locations. 

In recent years, the EPA has significantly expanded its regulation of chemicals under the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA). In 2024, the EPA issued final regulations with respect to one chemical used in OxyChem’s manufacturing operations and three other chemicals that OxyChem produces and sells. These regulations phase out various uses over differing time periods and require certain workplace controls for ongoing uses, typically authorized in industrial settings. In December 2024, the EPA designated vinyl chloride and four other chemicals as high-priority substances for which it plans to begin risk evaluations, and certain petroleum derivatives that it will assess as potential high-priority substances for a subsequent round of risk evaluations. The