PA Oil Gas Insurance Bonds Marcellus Utica Shale Guide

Pennsylvania Oil and Gas Insurance

Pennsylvania Oil Gas Insurance Bonds Marcellus Utica Shale Coverage Guide

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Pennsylvania Oil & Gas Insurance & Bonds: 2025 Coverage Guide | Marcellus Utica Shale

Pennsylvania Oil & Gas Insurance & Bonds: Complete 2025 Coverage Guide for Marcellus & Utica Shale Operations

A comprehensive guide to commercial insurance, surety bonds, and risk management for Pennsylvania’s natural gas industry

When a Routine Maintenance Check Turned Into a $4.7 Million Disaster

It was a cold February morning in 2014 in Greene County, Pennsylvania—the heart of Marcellus Shale country. A veteran well operator arrived for what should have been a routine maintenance check at an unconventional gas well site operated by a major energy company. The rig had been producing natural gas reliably for three years, generating millions in revenue and supporting dozens of local jobs.

At approximately 9:47 AM, as the operator approached the wellhead to check pressure gauges, a catastrophic failure occurred. A corroded valve that had gone undetected during previous inspections suddenly ruptured under the immense pressure of the formation thousands of feet below. The explosion was instant and devastating.

The force of the blast threw the 52-year-old operator backwards, engulfing him in flames. A second worker, a 28-year-old equipment technician who had been working nearby, rushed to help his colleague and was also severely burned. The explosion ignited nearby equipment, sending a massive fireball into the winter sky that could be seen for miles. Emergency responders from three counties rushed to the scene.

The human toll was staggering. The senior operator suffered third-degree burns over 60% of his body and spent eight months in intensive care, undergoing more than 20 surgeries. He would never return to work. The younger technician sustained second-degree burns requiring skin grafts and extensive rehabilitation. Both men faced years of physical therapy and psychological trauma.

But the financial catastrophe was just beginning to unfold. The company faced:

  • $2.1 million in workers’ compensation claims for medical expenses, lost wages, and permanent disability benefits
  • $1.4 million in third-party liability claims from neighboring property owners whose homes were damaged by the explosion and who claimed groundwater contamination
  • $380,000 in environmental cleanup costs after natural gas and drilling fluids contaminated soil and a nearby creek
  • $520,000 in equipment replacement for the destroyed wellhead, compressor, and associated infrastructure
  • $310,000 in OSHA penalties following an investigation that revealed multiple safety violations
  • $180,000 in legal fees from multiple lawsuits

The total cost exceeded $4.9 million—and that didn’t include the immeasurable human suffering or the company’s severely damaged reputation in the community.

Here’s where the insurance story becomes critical: The company carried what they believed was comprehensive coverage. They had workers’ compensation insurance, general liability, and even some environmental coverage. But when they filed their claims, they discovered devastating gaps:

  • Their general liability policy had a pollution exclusion that denied coverage for the groundwater contamination claims
  • Their workers’ comp coverage was adequate but couldn’t prevent third-party lawsuits from injured workers alleging gross negligence
  • They had no equipment breakdown insurance, leaving them to pay the full replacement cost out of pocket
  • Their environmental liability policy had a $500,000 aggregate limit—far less than the actual cleanup costs and third-party environmental claims
  • They carried no excess liability coverage to provide additional limits above their primary policies

Within 18 months, the mid-sized drilling company—which had been operating profitably in Pennsylvania for over a decade—filed for bankruptcy. Their inadequate insurance program, combined with a single catastrophic incident, destroyed a business that had survived the ups and downs of commodity prices, regulatory changes, and economic recessions.

This is the sobering reality facing Pennsylvania’s oil and gas operators. In an industry where a single moment can generate millions in liability, where environmental risks lurk beneath every well site, and where worker safety is constantly challenged by the inherent dangers of the job, proper commercial insurance isn’t optional—it’s existential.

At Crescenta Valley Insurance, we’ve spent over 55 years helping specialized industries navigate complex insurance challenges. We understand that Pennsylvania’s Marcellus and Utica Shale operations require insurance expertise that goes far beyond standard commercial policies. Whether you’re drilling your first unconventional well or managing hundreds of producing wells across multiple counties, we have the know-how to protect your business.


Understanding Pennsylvania’s Oil & Gas Insurance Landscape

Pennsylvania sits atop one of the world’s most valuable natural gas resources. The Marcellus Shale formation, combined with the deeper Utica Shale, has transformed the Commonwealth into the second-largest natural gas producing state in America—trailing only Texas. Annual production exceeds 5.36 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, supporting over 322,000 jobs and generating billions in economic activity.

But with this tremendous opportunity comes equally tremendous risk. The oil and gas industry consistently ranks among the most dangerous occupations in America. Workers face exposure to high-pressure equipment, explosive materials, heavy machinery, confined spaces, extreme weather, and toxic chemicals. Environmental risks include groundwater contamination, air emissions, soil pollution, and habitat disruption. Financial risks range from commodity price volatility to regulatory changes to equipment failures.

Pennsylvania’s regulatory environment adds additional complexity. The state’s 2012 Oil and Gas Act imposed stringent requirements on operators, including mandatory bonding, environmental protections, and safety standards. The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) actively enforces these requirements, with violations carrying substantial penalties. Municipal ordinances add another layer of compliance challenges, particularly in areas where residential development encroaches on traditional drilling territories.

This is where specialized insurance and bonding expertise becomes invaluable. At Crescenta Valley Insurance, we don’t just sell policies—we understand your business. Whether you’re a conventional well operator in northwest Pennsylvania, an unconventional Marcellus producer in the southwest, or a midstream company operating gathering lines and compressor stations, we have the know-how to structure comprehensive protection tailored to your specific operations.


Required Surety Bonds for Pennsylvania Oil & Gas Operations

Before discussing insurance policies, it’s critical to understand that Pennsylvania oil and gas operations cannot legally begin without securing proper surety bonds. These aren’t optional—they’re mandatory requirements enforced by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection. Failure to secure proper bonding will prevent your operation from obtaining necessary permits.

Oil and Gas Well Operator Bonds

WELL PLUGGING AND RESTORATION BOND

Required By: Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection under Title 58, Chapter 32 of the Pennsylvania Oil and Gas Act

Purpose: Guarantees that oil and gas wells will be properly plugged and well sites restored when operations cease, protecting groundwater resources and preventing environmental contamination from abandoned wells.

Bond Amount Structure: Pennsylvania uses a tiered bonding system based on the number of wells operated:

  • Single Well Bond: $2,500 per conventional well or $4,000 per unconventional well
  • Blanket Bond Option: Operators with multiple wells may post blanket bonds:
    • Up to 10 wells: Minimum $25,000
    • 11-50 wells: Minimum $100,000
    • 51-100 wells: Minimum $200,000
    • 101-200 wells: Minimum $300,000
    • More than 200 wells: Full bonding required immediately
  • Phased Collateral Program: Small operators may participate in a phased collateral program with initial deposits and annual payments

Bond Requirements: Bonds must be executed by the operator and a corporate surety licensed to do business in Pennsylvania. Alternatively, operators may deposit cash, certificates of deposit, or U.S. government securities with the DEP.

Liability Duration: Bond liability continues until the well is properly plugged according to regulations AND for one full year after filing the certificate of plugging with the DEP.

Critical Consideration: Recent studies have shown that Pennsylvania’s average well plugging cost is approximately $15,100 per well—significantly higher than the required bond amounts. This creates a potential gap where inadequately bonded operators may abandon wells, leaving cleanup costs to the state. Well-capitalized companies often choose to post higher voluntary bonds or maintain additional financial assurances to demonstrate their commitment to proper well abandonment.

Additional Bonds for Variance Permits

VARIANCE PERMIT BONDS

When Required: When operators seek variances from standard setback requirements, such as drilling within restricted distances from water supplies, buildings, or other protected resources.

Additional Requirements: Variance applications often require operators to demonstrate additional protections including enhanced insurance coverage, bonding, indemnification agreements, and technical safeguards to ensure safety and environmental protection.

Coverage Scope: These bonds and insurance requirements vary based on the specific variance requested and the DEP’s assessment of additional risk posed by the variance.

Why Bonding Can Be Challenging

Securing surety bonds isn’t automatic. Surety companies carefully evaluate applicants based on financial strength, management experience, operational track record, and technical capabilities. New Pennsylvania oil and gas ventures often face bonding challenges because:

  • Limited Operating History: Startup companies lack the proven track record surety companies prefer
  • Capital Requirements: Blanket bonds for multi-well operations can require significant financial backing
  • Credit Quality: Surety companies evaluate personal and corporate credit extensively
  • Industry Volatility: Commodity price fluctuations create uncertainty about long-term financial viability
  • Environmental Concerns: Past environmental violations or poor compliance records can disqualify applicants

This is where experienced insurance advisors prove invaluable. At Crescenta Valley Insurance, we maintain relationships with surety carriers who understand oil and gas operations and can structure bonding programs for emerging ventures as well as established producers.


Essential Commercial Insurance Policies for Pennsylvania Oil & Gas Operations

Beyond mandatory surety bonds, comprehensive commercial insurance protection forms the foundation of risk management for oil and gas operations. Here’s a detailed breakdown of coverage every Pennsylvania operator should consider:

Commercial General Liability Insurance

COMPREHENSIVE LIABILITY PROTECTION

What It Covers: General liability insurance protects oil and gas operations against claims of third-party bodily injury, property damage, and personal injury. This fundamental coverage requires careful customization for drilling operations.

Critical Coverage Components:

  • Premises Operations: Injuries to third parties visiting well sites, including landowners, contractors, investors, or government inspectors
  • Products/Completed Operations: Liability for injuries or damage resulting from your completed work, such as well completions or fracturing operations
  • Contractual Liability: Liability assumed in lease agreements, surface use agreements, or contractor relationships
  • Personal & Advertising Injury: Claims for libel, slander, or wrongful eviction

Pennsylvania-Specific Considerations:

  • Landowner Relations: Pennsylvania’s split estate system means surface rights and mineral rights are often owned separately, creating potential for disputes and liability claims from surface owners
  • Road Damage: Heavy truck traffic to and from well sites frequently damages rural roads, generating claims from municipalities or neighboring property owners
  • Water Supply Claims: Allegations of water well contamination are common and can be covered under general liability if caused by covered accidents (not pollution)

Recommended Coverage Limits: Most Pennsylvania operators should maintain minimum limits of $2-5 million per occurrence with $4-10 million aggregate. Operators in densely populated areas or those working near sensitive environmental features should consider higher limits.

Critical Exclusions to Address:

  • Pollution Exclusion: Standard CGL policies exclude pollution-related claims, requiring separate environmental liability coverage
  • Professional Liability: Engineering or consulting services require separate professional liability coverage
  • Employment Practices: Employee-related claims require employment practices liability insurance
  • Cyber Liability: Data breaches and cyber incidents require separate cyber coverage

Workers’ Compensation Insurance

MANDATORY EMPLOYEE PROTECTION

Legal Requirement: Pennsylvania law requires workers’ compensation coverage for virtually all employers. Failure to maintain coverage can result in criminal charges, substantial fines, personal liability for workplace injuries, and immediate work stoppage orders.

What It Covers: Medical expenses, rehabilitation costs, lost wages, permanent disability benefits, and death benefits for employees injured on the job, regardless of fault.

Why Oil & Gas Has Higher Premiums: Insurance carriers classify oil and gas operations among the highest-risk industries due to:

  • High-pressure equipment and wellhead operations
  • Exposure to hydrogen sulfide, methane, and other toxic gases
  • Heavy equipment operation including drilling rigs and frac equipment
  • Transportation risks on rural roads in all weather conditions
  • Working at heights on rigs and towers
  • Confined space entry for tank and vessel maintenance
  • Hydraulic fracturing operations involving high-pressure pumps and proppants
  • 24/7 operations often in remote locations with delayed emergency response

Classification Code Impact: Workers’ comp premiums are calculated based on classification codes and payroll. Common Pennsylvania oil and gas classifications include:

  • Code 6505: Oil or Gas Well Drilling or Redrilling (highest rates)
  • Code 6506: Oil or Gas Pipeline Construction
  • Code 6503: Oil or Gas Well Service, Cleaning, Maintenance (high rates)
  • Code 8742: Oil or Gas Production Operations (moderate rates)
  • Code 8810: Clerical office employees (lowest rates)

Cost Management Strategies:

  • Accurate Payroll Allocation: Properly separating office staff from field workers can significantly reduce premiums
  • Safety Programs: Documented safety training and protocols can qualify for premium discounts
  • Return-to-Work Programs: Modified duty programs reduce claim severity and improve experience modification factors
  • Experience Modification: Controlling claims directly impacts your experience mod, which can multiply your premiums
  • Drug-Free Workplace: Pennsylvania offers premium discounts for certified drug-free workplace programs

Third-Party Liability Concerns: While workers’ comp provides no-fault benefits to injured employees, Pennsylvania allows injured workers to file third-party lawsuits against negligent parties other than their employer—such as equipment manufacturers, contractors, or landowners. This creates additional liability exposure requiring careful insurance coordination.

Commercial Auto Insurance

MOBILE EQUIPMENT PROTECTION

Essential Coverage: Oil and gas operations rely on extensive vehicle fleets including service trucks, vacuum trucks, water haulers, chemical transporters, crew vehicles, and specialized equipment transporters. All require appropriate insurance.

Coverage Components:

  • Liability Coverage: Minimum $1 million per accident, with many operations carrying $5 million or more given the catastrophic potential of commercial vehicle accidents
  • Physical Damage: Comprehensive and collision coverage for vehicles, which can individually cost $100,000-$500,000 for specialized equipment
  • Hired & Non-Owned Auto: Covers liability when employees use personal vehicles or rental vehicles for company business
  • Motor Truck Cargo: Protects materials being transported, particularly important for chemical and proppant haulers
  • Downtime Coverage: Reimburses daily revenue loss when critical vehicles are out of service

Pennsylvania Considerations:

  • Municipal Road Agreements: Some Pennsylvania townships require proof of higher auto liability limits before allowing heavy truck traffic on local roads
  • Overweight Permits: Trucks exceeding weight limits need permits and often higher insurance limits
  • Hazmat Transportation: Chemical and wastewater haulers require hazmat endorsements and specialized coverage
  • Winter Driving: Pennsylvania’s winter weather creates elevated accident risks requiring year-round safety programs

Environmental Impairment Liability Insurance

CRITICAL COVERAGE GAP PROTECTION

The Pollution Exclusion Problem: Most standard general liability policies explicitly exclude pollution-related claims through the “absolute pollution exclusion.” This means environmental contamination—one of the most significant risks facing oil and gas operations—is completely uninsured unless you purchase specialized environmental liability coverage.

What Environmental Liability Insurance Covers:

  • Cleanup costs for soil, groundwater, surface water, or air contamination
  • Third-party claims for bodily injury or property damage caused by pollution events
  • Legal defense costs for environmental lawsuits (often the largest expense)
  • Regulatory compliance costs and some government penalties
  • Natural resource damage claims
  • Business interruption due to pollution-related shutdowns
  • Emergency response and crisis management costs

Pennsylvania-Specific Environmental Risks:

  • Groundwater Contamination: Pennsylvania’s karst geology in some areas creates direct pathways for contaminants to reach aquifers
  • Stream Contamination: The state’s extensive stream network means any spill can quickly impact surface water
  • Flowback and Produced Water: Millions of gallons of wastewater from hydraulic fracturing operations create storage and disposal risks
  • Methane Migration: Improperly cased or cemented wells can allow gas migration to water wells or surface seeps
  • Stray Gas: Allegations of stray gas contamination are common in drilling areas
  • Spills and Releases: Tank failures, pipeline ruptures, and truck accidents can release crude oil, condensate, or chemicals

Coverage Triggers: Environmental policies can be written on either:

  • Claims-Made Basis: Covers claims filed during the policy period (most common)
  • Occurrence Basis: Covers pollution events that occur during the policy period, regardless of when claims are filed

Recommended Limits: Pennsylvania operators should consider minimum environmental liability limits of $1-2 million per incident with $2-5 million aggregate. Operations near sensitive receptors (schools, hospitals, water supplies) or those with extensive hydraulic fracturing operations should maintain $5-10 million or higher.

Real-World Impact: A Marcellus operator in Washington County faced $3.2 million in cleanup costs and third-party claims after a tank battery leak contaminated a stream used by downstream farmers. Their environmental liability policy paid the entire claim. Without it, the company would have faced bankruptcy.

Equipment and Property Insurance

PROTECTING CAPITAL ASSETS

The Investment at Risk: A modern Marcellus well can cost $5-8 million to drill and complete. Drilling rigs cost $15-30 million. Hydraulic fracturing spreads involve 20+ high-pressure pumps worth millions. Compressor stations represent multi-million-dollar investments. Protecting these assets is non-negotiable.

Coverage Categories:

1. Inland Marine Equipment Coverage:

  • Drilling rigs and associated equipment
  • Hydraulic fracturing pumps and blenders
  • Wireline units and coiled tubing equipment
  • Compressors and dehydration units
  • Tanks, separators, and processing equipment
  • Generators and power supply equipment

2. Fixed Property Coverage:

  • Compressor stations and processing facilities
  • Office buildings and field facilities
  • Warehouses and shop buildings
  • Pipeline infrastructure and gathering systems

3. Business Personal Property:

  • Computer systems and data acquisition equipment
  • Tools and hand equipment
  • Spare parts inventory
  • Office furniture and equipment

Critical Coverage Enhancements:

  • Equipment Breakdown: Covers mechanical and electrical failures—common causes of loss in oil and gas equipment. This is often excluded from standard property policies.
  • Control of Well Coverage: Specialized coverage for blowout control costs, well redrilling, pollution cleanup, and seepage and pollution liability arising from uncontrolled wells
  • Expediting Expenses: Pays premium costs for rush delivery of replacement equipment to minimize downtime
  • Extra Expense: Covers additional operating expenses incurred to minimize business interruption
  • Debris Removal: Pays for cleanup and removal of damaged equipment

Valuation Method Matters: Equipment should be insured at replacement cost, not actual cash value. When a $15 million drilling rig is destroyed, you need $15 million to replace it—not the $9 million depreciated value.

Oil & Gas Package Policies

COMPREHENSIVE INDUSTRY-SPECIFIC COVERAGE

Integrated Protection: Several insurance carriers offer package policies designed specifically for oil and gas operations, combining multiple coverages into one integrated program.

Typical Package Components:

  • Operator’s Extra Expense (OEE): Covers costs to control a well and restore it to production following a blowout or underground blowout
  • Well Control/Blowout: Reimburses costs to regain control of an out-of-control well
  • Redrilling Coverage: Pays to redrill wells damaged by covered perils
  • Seepage and Pollution: Environmental liability coverage specifically for well control incidents
  • Care, Custody, and Control: Covers damage to equipment you’re operating but don’t own

Additional Critical Coverage for Pennsylvania Oil & Gas Operations

Excess Liability / Umbrella Insurance

CATASTROPHIC LOSS PROTECTION

Excess and umbrella policies sit above primary liability coverages, providing additional limits when claims exceed underlying policies. Given the catastrophic potential of oil and gas accidents, excess coverage is essential—not optional.

Why Higher Limits Are Necessary: A multi-fatality incident at a well site can generate wrongful death claims exceeding $10-20 million. Environmental contamination affecting multiple properties can reach $25-50 million or more. Product defects or pipeline failures can create even larger exposures.

Recommended Structure: Pennsylvania operators should maintain total liability limits (primary plus excess) of at least $10 million, with many operations requiring $25 million or higher depending on operational scope and exposure.

Cyber Liability Insurance

DIGITAL AGE PROTECTION

Modern oil and gas operations depend heavily on technology including SCADA systems controlling wells and compressors, geological data valued at millions, employee records, financial systems, and increasingly automated drilling operations.

Cyber Threats: Ransomware attacks shutting down production systems, theft of proprietary seismic or geological data, employee data breaches triggering notification requirements, and industrial control system hacks.

Directors & Officers Liability

MANAGEMENT PROTECTION

Publicly traded oil and gas companies, private companies with outside investors, or operations considering future capital raises face significant exposure to shareholder lawsuits, SEC investigations, and claims alleging mismanagement of reserve values, production forecasts, or environmental liabilities.


Pennsylvania Oil & Gas Fun Facts

Birthplace of the American Oil Industry
The world’s first commercial oil well was drilled by Colonel Edwin Drake on August 27, 1859, in Titusville, Venango County, Pennsylvania. This historic well struck oil at a depth of 69.5 feet and launched the global petroleum industry that would transform human civilization.

Natural Gas Powerhouse
Pennsylvania is the second-largest natural gas producing state in the United States, trailing only Texas. In 2017, the Commonwealth produced over 5.36 trillion cubic feet of natural gas—the largest amount ever produced in state history. Pennsylvania has maintained its #2 position since 2013.

Economic Impact Beyond Measure
The oil and gas industry supported approximately 322,600 jobs in Pennsylvania as of 2015, either directly or indirectly linked to drilling and producing natural gas. The industry generates billions in economic activity annually and provides high-paying careers across rural Pennsylvania.

Massive Natural Gas Reserves
The U.S. Geological Survey estimates the Marcellus and Utica Shale formations contain a combined 214 trillion cubic feet of technically recoverable natural gas—a massive increase from previous estimates of 84 trillion cubic feet for Marcellus (2011) and 38 trillion cubic feet for Utica (2012). This represents one of the world’s largest natural gas fields.

Geographic Reach
The Marcellus Shale formation underlies approximately 60% of Pennsylvania, covering more than 95,000 square miles across parts of Pennsylvania, New York, Ohio, and West Virginia. The formation sits between 4,000 and 8,500 feet below the surface and ranges from 50-200 feet thick.

Production Powerhouses
Susquehanna County in northeast Pennsylvania leads all Pennsylvania counties in natural gas production from the Marcellus Shale, followed by Washington County in the southwest. Bradford, Greene, and Tioga counties round out the top five producing counties.

Premium Pennsylvania Grade Crude
While Pennsylvania is now primarily known for natural gas, the state still produces approximately 6.5 million barrels annually of Pennsylvania Grade crude oil—a superior quality, paraffin-based crude refined primarily into premium lubricating oils. Pennsylvania Grade crude has been the choice of equipment manufacturers for over 100 years.

Operating Well Count
Pennsylvania operators maintained over 67,200 producing natural gas wells in 2017, with the vast majority being unconventional wells drilled into the Marcellus and Utica Shale formations. Additionally, over 7,100 conventional oil wells continue to operate, primarily in northwest Pennsylvania.

Historical Boomtowns
The 1860s Pennsylvania oil rush created instant boomtowns including Titusville, Oil City, and Pithole. By 1866, the Oil Creek Valley was so densely populated that observers couldn’t distinguish where one town ended and another began. Pennsylvania oil production peaked in 1891 at 31 million barrels—representing 58% of the nation’s oil that year.

Underground Riches
The Utica Shale formation lies several thousand feet below the Marcellus Shale—more than 10,500 feet below surface in western Pennsylvania and 12,000 feet deep in eastern portions. Wells targeting the Utica generally show stronger performance than Marcellus wells in the same area due to greater reservoir thickness and higher pressure.


Protect Your Investment in Pennsylvania’s Energy Future

Pennsylvania’s Marcellus and Utica Shale formations represent one of America’s most valuable energy resources. Natural gas from these formations powers homes and businesses, generates electricity for millions, fuels industrial manufacturing, and positions the United States as a global energy leader. The economic impact on Pennsylvania communities has been transformational, creating jobs, generating tax revenue, and revitalizing rural economies.

But success in this industry requires more than geological knowledge, drilling expertise, or operational excellence. It requires comprehensive insurance and bonding protection that truly understands the unique risks facing Pennsylvania oil and gas operators.

The companies that thrive will be those who recognize that insurance isn’t an expense—it’s an investment in long-term sustainability.

How Crescenta Valley Insurance Supports Pennsylvania Oil & Gas Operations

For over 55 years, Crescenta Valley Insurance has specialized in understanding complex industries and structuring insurance programs that provide real protection. We don’t just sell policies—we become partners in your success.

Our approach to oil and gas insurance includes:

  • Industry Expertise: We understand Pennsylvania’s regulatory environment, operational risks, and insurance market
  • Specialized Markets: We maintain relationships with carriers who actively write oil and gas business and understand shale operations
  • Comprehensive Coverage Analysis: We identify gaps before they become denied claims
  • Competitive Pricing: Our market relationships enable favorable terms and pricing
  • Claims Advocacy: When losses occur, we fight to maximize your recovery
  • Bonding Solutions: We help companies navigate Pennsylvania’s DEP bonding requirements
  • Multi-State Coordination: For operators working across Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West Virginia, we coordinate coverage across all jurisdictions

Whether you’re a conventional well operator in Venango County, a Marcellus producer in Washington County, a Utica driller in Tioga County, or a midstream company operating across the Commonwealth, we have the know-how to protect your business.

READY TO PROTECT YOUR OIL & GAS OPERATION?

Don’t let inadequate insurance destroy your Pennsylvania oil and gas operation. Our team at Crescenta Valley Insurance specializes in complex commercial insurance for high-risk industries, and we’re ready to structure a comprehensive protection plan tailored to your operation.

Contact us today for a comprehensive coverage review:

  • Email: steve@cvins.com
  • Phone: 818-248-4500
  • Visit: 3156 Foothill Blvd., Suite A, La Crescenta, CA 91214

CA License #0G58010 | Serving oil and gas operations nationwide with over 55 years of commercial insurance expertise

Pennsylvania sits atop one of the world’s most valuable natural gas resources. Make sure your insurance program is built to protect that opportunity.


This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or professional insurance advice. Insurance and bonding requirements vary by operation type, location, and specific circumstances. Consult with licensed insurance professionals to determine appropriate coverage for your specific oil and gas operation.

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