Gavin Newsom calls for climate action. But even California is drilling more oil.

Every five years, this town built on oil throws a party like no other. 

It’s called Oildorado, and, over the course of 10 days, it celebrates the oil and gas that flow from the pumps that pockmark the hills and plains in this corner of Southern California. Organizers consider it an homage to the pioneers of the past and to the men and women who work in the industry today. 

Oildorado features oil-field workers competing for prizes for pipe welding and crane operating. Motorcycle riders roar around a dirt racetrack, vying to win the Black Gold Shoot Out. A sheriff’s posse, sporting cowboy hats and black waistcoats, cruises the streets in an open-sided truck with a jail cell.

Why We Wrote This

California Gov. Gavin Newsom is making headlines this week promoting clean energy at COP30, the United Nations’ climate gathering. But even the Golden State is reconsidering its oil reserves – and policies – as President Donald Trump doubles down on fossil fuels.

During the festival’s Grand Parade, the sheriff’s posse wages a mock gun battle with outlaws. “Cover your kids’ ears,” they warn families. 

But not everyone is feeling so festive. On a shaded corner, Travis Longley scans the parade through wraparound shades. He grew up in Taft and spent six years working on oil rigs, making $20 an hour, until he was laid off last year. 

Since then, he’s applied for more than 30 jobs in the industry. Some of his friends have moved to North Dakota or Texas to find jobs. “It’s hard to find work out here in the oil field,” he says. 

Students march down the street during the Oildorado Grand Parade in Taft, California, Oct. 18, 2025.

Taft, with a population of less than 9,000, has also not had much to celebrate, despite Oildorado’s staging. Dozens of brick-fronted stores are boarded up, and there’s only one drugstore left. Shrinking investment in oil and natural gas has meant fewer jobs for residents who used to finish high school and then walk into an oil-field job. 

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