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Spills of drilling chemicals worry experts |
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Written by http://www.theithacajournal.com/article/20100223/NEWS01/2230375/Marcellus+Shale++Spills+of+drilling+
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Wednesday, 24 February 2010 |
Transport, disposal said to be greatest risks
By Krisy Gashler •
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• February 23, 2010, 10:30 pm
DRYDEN -- Two chemists and an endocrinologist spoke Tuesday night about the science and potential health effects of unconventional natural gas drilling to roughly 100 people at Tompkins Cortland Community College.
The lecture was sponsored by Shaleshock, a citizens' group that opposes hydraulic fracturing in the Marcellus Shale without greater study and more regulatory oversight.
Decisions about gas drilling will be guided by the state's experience with environmental cleanups such as Love Canal in Buffalo, but also by an understanding of how the country's current energy sources affect our foreign policy, said William Klepack, a Dryden physician and medical director for the Tompkins County Health Department.
Even with no additional chemicals added by gas companies, the water that flows back from hydro- fracked wells has enough heavy metals -- and often radioactivity -- to be classified as hazardous waste, said Ron Bishop, a biochemist at SUNY Oneonta who has also worked in construction with gas drillers.
But because of state and federal exemptions granted to the natural gas industry, the water does not have to be tested or handled as carefully as it would be if it were created by another industry, Bishop said. In some parts of the Marcellus Shale, radioactive materials occur naturally at levels 250 times the level normally regulated by environmental agencies -- but natural gas drillers aren't even required to test for radioactivity, he said.
"Call your legislators," he said.
The precautionary principle in science and medicine asserts that if an action could cause severe, irreversible harm, the burden of proof is on those who want to carry out the action, said
Thomas Shelley, a chemist and chemical safety and hazardous materials specialist. Based on this principle, the European Union has banned use of hundreds of chemicals that are used across the U.S., Shelley said.
The state Department of Environmental Conservation's draft regulations on gas drilling list 257 distinct chemicals that could be used in hydraulic fracturing; compound-specific toxicity data on many of those chemicals and their effects on human health and the environment are "very limited," he said.
"We're looking at a vast unknown," Shelley said. "Remember the precautionary principle? We don't see any of it here."
Of the fluid used to fracture a natural gas well to release the gas, 99.5 percent is water and sand, Shelley said. However, because one well can require 3 to 5 million gallons of water, that equates to 10 to 30 tons of chemicals, Bishop said.
The risk with chemical use is not from the actual hydrofracking process but from transport and disposal, Bishop said.
"Hydrofracturing is not the boogeyman under the bed; it is not going to hurt you," Bishop said. "You're more likely to have problems with transporting the 10 to 30 tons of chemicals to the drilling site."
That kind of accident has occurred, Shelley said, citing an incident last March when a tanker truck filled with hydrofluoric acid overturned in Pennsylvania, requiring emergency crews to close the road and evacuate 5,000 residents.
Even tiny amounts of some chemicals can act as endocrine disruptors, said Adam Law, a physician at Cayuga Medical Center who specializes in endocrinology.
One study on the chemical makeup of some fluids used in hydrofracking determined that more than 40 percent of the chemicals used are endocrine disruptors, which can cause things like birth defects, reproductive problems and cancer, he said. Tracing a cause of endocrine disruption is sometimes extremely difficult -- in the case of one medication frequently given to pregnant women a generation ago, the negative health effect appeared in their children, who developed extremely unusual tumors.
Companies should disclose not just what their fracking fluids are used for, but the actual chemical composition, so state regulators can assess risk and study future effects, Law said.
Part of the reason for non-disclosure is because the fracking formulas are proprietary, but the other part is that gas companies "don't want us to ask too many questions," Law said.
Most of the people he's known in the natural gas industry are careful, professional and "don't want to contaminate anybody's well," but accidents happen, Bishop said. Gas companies assert that there has never been a documented case of water contamination from hydro-fracking, and yet there are many documented cases of water contamination related to the natural gas industry, including in nearby Dimock, Pa., Bishop said.
"If you find contamination, they'll say, 'Oh, that was a spill' (or) 'Oh, that was a well-casing problem,'" Bishop said.
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Barnett Shale and benzene |
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Written by http://www.flowermoundleader.com/articles/2010/01/23/flower_mound_leader/news/22.txt
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Thursday, 04 February 2010 |
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“Benzene is hugely concerning,” Notley said. “And if you do something that puts something in the water table, you can’t ever fix it. So when we hear that there may be a cancer cluster in our zip code, who wants to hear that?” |
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Read more...
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Urban drilling in Pittsburgh area |
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Written by http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/10035/1033374-53.stm
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Thursday, 04 February 2010 |
Marcellus shale gas well planned for Lincoln Place Thursday, February 04, 2010 By Don Hopey and Rich Lord, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Marcellus shale gas wells, already dotting rural landscapes in northeastern and southwestern Pennsylvania, could soon sprout in Pittsburgh, but Jeanne McMullen said the city is unprepared to regulate the drilling. Ms. McMullen, a resident of Rodgers Street in Lincoln Place, told City Council Wednesday that Dale Property Services, a land agent for Chesapeake Energy, has been going through the neighborhood asking people to sign gas drilling leases for a planned deep gas well on property along Mifflin Road within two blocks of the Mifflin Elementary School and a playground. "Drilling will bring a decline in our property values, which will erode your tax base," Ms. McMullen told council, citing noise, deteriorating road conditions and water problems that could result. "The city is ill-prepared for the gas rush that is on us." She said the Lincoln Place drilling site in the 31st Ward is near a heavily wooded, steep embankment, could cause mudslides, and up to 200 tanker trucks a day will travel already bad neighborhood roads to supply the well drilling operation near the city's border with West Mifflin. "I understand we need the natural gas, but there's a responsible way to do it and an irresponsible way," said Ms. McMullen, who is one of the founders of the fledgling Lincoln Place Action Group, formed to inform residents and local and state officials about the issues of leasing and drilling in the Marcellus shale formation. "The roads, for example, are just going to fall apart because of the truck traffic and paying for their repair will fall on the taxpayers," Ms. McMullen said. It's been estimated that the Marcellus shale beds, 5,000 to 8,000 feet deep below three-quarters of Pennsylvania, including the city of Pittsburgh, could hold as much as 363 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, enough to supply U.S. gas demands for 10 to 15 years. Developing it could bring billions of dollars into the state and create thousands of jobs, according to the gas industry and some state officials. Approximately 2,500 Marcellus shale gas well drilling permits were issued from 2007 through 2009 by the state Department of Environmental Protection, which projects another 5,000 permits will be issued this year. More than 300 Marcellus shale wells have been drilled in Pennsylvania so far, but Neil Weaver, a DEP spokesman, said the department has no permit applications pending for Marcellus shale wells in Pittsburgh. Councilman Doug Shields, whose district includes Lincoln Place, said land leasing agents began working Lincoln Place in the fall, asking people to sign "standard leases" allowing access to their land for drilling in return for small up-front payments and royalties if drilling occurs. "They'll tell you anything and you'll sign on the bottom line," he said. Chesapeake Energy did not respond to multiple phone requests for comment. Chad Mackert, district land man for Dale Property Services, confirmed that the company has held several meetings in the Lincoln Place area, has surface lease agreements where a drill pad could be installed and "procured multiple leases to put together a drillable unit." He said a drilling company like Chesapeake would normally seek a state well permit only after enough leases are signed. Mr. Shields said he arranged a community meeting in the fall at Mifflin Elementary School at which attorney Kris Vanderman, who represents property owners in negotiations with drilling firms, told residents of their rights. Council, he said, will explore whether it can compel drillers and brokers to register with the city, "so we know who they are, we can collect payroll taxes from them, and we can tell people what's going on in their neighborhoods." He'd also like the city to weigh the environmental effects and potential revenue from selling drilling rights to the thousands of acres it owns, including parks. "This could be a lot better than a tuition tax," he said. Geologists have known about the 450 million-year-old bed of Devonian shale for decades but natural gas price spikes and recent advances in drilling technology, including horizontal drilling and hydrological "fracking" -- which uses millions of gallons of water per well to break up the shale and release the gas -- have caused gas companies to rush into Pennsylvania and begin drilling. |
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Pennsylvania’s Gas Wells Booming—But So Are Spills |
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Written by http://www.propublica.org/site/author/sabrina_shankman
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Thursday, 28 January 2010 |
 A gas drilling site on the Marcellus Shale is seen in Hickory, Pa., on Feb. 24, 2009. (Jason Cohn/Reuters) As more gas wells are drilled in Pennsylvania's Marcellus Shale, more cases of toxic spills are being reported. Earlier this month, Pennsylvania's environmental officials fined Pennsylvania-based Atlas Resources after a series of violations at 13 wells, including spills of fracturing fluids and other contaminants onto the ground around the sites. And just last week the agency fined M.R. Dirt, a company that removes waste from drilling sites, $6,000 for spilling more than 7 tons of drilling dirt along a public road. The reports come on the heels of a string of other incidents that have killed fish in one of the state's most prized recreational lakes and released toxic chemicals into the environment. The Atlas spills are significant because they are among the latest and because they happened repeatedly during the routine transfer of fluids. Pennsylvania's Environmental Protection Agency fined [1] Atlas Resources $85,000 for the offenses, which took place between May and December of 2009. Many of the spills were discovered by DEP inspectors. The violations [2] (PDF) cited by the DEP include spills of fluids from the hydraulic fracturing [3] process at seven sites, and failure to report a spill at one of those sites. One spill was the result of a faulty pit liner, which is supposed to insulate the ground from hydraulic fracturing fluids after they are pumped out of a well. Atlas Resources [4] controls more than half a million acres within the Marcellus Shale, the massive gas deposit that stretches from Tennessee to New York. The company, whose total revenue was $787.4 million in 2008, issued a statement acknowledging that it had entered a voluntary settlement with the DEP and saying that each of the incidents had been corrected. An Atlas spokesman declined a request to answer additional questions about the violations, or about the company's operations in Pennsylvania. "If you look at this series of violations -- it's not only that there are multiple violations," said DEP spokeswoman Helen Humphreys, pointing to the fact that the same three violations were turning up at each site. "This is a pattern, and it's a problem." The pattern -- and the problem -- extends beyond Atlas. In December the DEP fined [5] Chesapeake and Schlumberger, two of the biggest operators in the Marcellus Shale and in gas development nationally, for spilling hydrochloric acid, which is used for hydraulic fracturing and is corrosive. Cabot Oil and Gas, the Houston-based energy company that lists T. Boone Pickens as one of its stockholders, was fined in November [6] for a series of spills, including a fracturing fluid spill by its contractor Halliburton. In October Pennsylvania fined [7] (PDF) Texas-based Range Resources $23,500 for spilling nearly 5,000 gallons of wastewater, including hydraulic fracturing fluids, into a tributary of Cross Creek Lake, a protected watershed near Pittsburgh that contains some of the state's most robust fish populations. A DEP report [8] (PDF) on that spill said, "The creek was impacted by sediments all the way down to the lake and there was also evidence of a fish kill as invertebrates and fish were observed lying dead in the creek.” The Range Resources spill occurred on May 26, when the company was pumping fluids from the hydraulic fracturing of three wells through a six-inch pipe to a DEP-approved impoundment. Along the way, two screws along the pipe came loose, according to the Range Resources report [9] on the incident, allowing thousands of gallons to spill onto the ground before the company was able to shut it down. Range Resources spokesman Matt Pitzarella said the loosened screws were a result of vandalism and that the company responded by increasing security at its sites. The fish killed in Cross Creek amounted to less than a pound of minnows, he said. Just three weeks before the fines were announced, Range was penalized by the DEP for another accident -- this time for spilling more than 10,000 gallons of flowback water, which again resulted in a fish kill and a substantial cleanup effort. A DEP spokesman said he could not comment on that spill, because a settlement is still being decided. "We find both of these to be unfortunate and unacceptable," said Pitzarella, who said that neither spill had any negative impacts on health or property. Unlike previous spills -- including the recent Atlas spills -- the DEP has not issued press releases for either of the Range Resources spills, and a spokesman has not explained why. |
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