Aera Energy LLC
Aera Energy LLC is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at Aera Energy LLC.
Aera Energy LLC is a company.
Key people at Aera Energy LLC.
Key people at Aera Energy LLC.
Aera Energy LLC is one of California's largest independent oil and natural gas producers, accounting for approximately 25% of the state's oil and gas output.[1][2] Headquartered in Bakersfield, the company focuses on exploration, extraction, and production primarily in the San Joaquin Valley, with operations in Ventura, Monterey, Fresno, and Santa Barbara counties, producing about 126,300 barrels of oil and 32 million cubic feet of natural gas daily from proved reserves equivalent to 536 million barrels of oil.[2][3] Employing around 1,100 people through Aera Energy Services Company and supported by hundreds of contractors, Aera emphasizes high-tech, lower-carbon production to align with California's carbon neutrality goals, including initiatives like the Belridge solar project for sustainable oil extraction.[2][3][4]
Aera Energy LLC was formed on June 1, 1997, as a joint venture combining California onshore and offshore exploration and production assets from Shell affiliate CalResources LLC, Mobil Exploration & Producing US Inc. (later ExxonMobil), and ARCO.[2] Operating as a standalone company with a board of managers, it has roots in major oil giants' divestitures, evolving from these legacy assets into a major regional player with 2015 revenues over $2 billion and recent estimates around $696 million.[2][3] A pivotal moment came in 2017 with the Belridge Project, partnering with GlassPoint Solar to build California's largest solar field (770 acres) to enhance sustainable oil recovery.[2] By late 2023 or early 2024, Aera was acquired by California Resources Corporation (CRC), doubling CRC's production and strengthening its carbon management position.[3]
Aera rides the wave of energy transition trends, blending traditional oil/gas extraction with renewable integration like solar-assisted recovery to meet California's stringent carbon neutrality mandates.[2][3] Timing aligns with rising demand for lower-emission fossil fuels amid global decarbonization, where market forces favor tech-enhanced producers over pure renewables in the near term.[3] By consolidating via CRC acquisition, Aera bolsters California's carbon capture and storage ecosystem, influencing regional energy policy and infrastructure for hybrid energy models.[3]
Post-CRC acquisition, Aera's trajectory points to expanded carbon management leadership, leveraging doubled production for scalable low-carbon tech deployment.[3] Trends like AI-optimized extraction, further solar/CCS hybrids, and policy-driven sequestration will shape growth, potentially evolving its influence from regional producer to national energy transition exemplar. This positions Aera as a bridge in California's energy shift, sustaining output while adapting to net-zero pressures.