Maryland will sue in Susquehanna tributary “fracking” spill – baltimoresun.com

Maryland will sue in Susquehanna tributary “fracking” spill – baltimoresun.com.

Maryland‘s Attorney General has told a gas driller working in Pennsylvania that he plans to sue the company for violating federal anti-pollution laws after thousands of gallons of hydraulic fracturing fluid spilled into the Susquehanna River watershed last month.

In a “notice of intent to sue,” Attorney General Douglas F. Gansler said there was an equipment failure April 19 at a gas well being drilled by Chesapeake Energy Corp. in Leroy Township, in north central Pennsylvania. The failure resulted in “loss of control of the well.”

“Tens of thousands of gallons” of “fracking” fluid, used to fracture bedrock and release natural gas from the Marcellus Shale deep underground, leaked out and escaped the berm built to contain it, Gansler said. The fluid crossed neighboring farms, then flowed into Towanda Creek, a tributary of the Susquehanna River.

Gansler told the company the spill “may pose … an imminent and substantial endangerment to the health of the population adjacent to the well site, recreational users of Towanda Creek and the Susquehanna River and to the environment. …”

The fracking fluid contains hundreds of chemicals, some of them toxic, the attorney general argued, and the spill therefore constitutes a violation of the federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, and the Clean Water Act.

The Susquehanna provides 45 percent of the fresh water entering the Chesapeake Bay, and supplies drinking water to 6.2 million people. It is a backup source of water to Baltimore City in times of drought.

Brian Grove, senior director for corporate development at Chesapeake Energy Corp., said testing during the spill revealed “limited and very localized environmental impact, with no adverse affects [sic] on aquatic wildlife in Towanda Creek.”

Testing in the Susquehanna a short distance downstream found “no effect whatsoever,” he said. “We are confident there will be zero impact hundreds of miles away. The Susquehanna River and the Chesapeake Bay face many environmental threats; this event is not one of them.”

Frank.roylance@baltsun.com

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Chesapeake Energy – Frack Spill in Leroy, PA on Vimeo

Chesapeake Energy – Frack Spill in Leroy, PA on Vimeo on Vimeo

via Chesapeake Energy – Frack Spill in Leroy, PA on Vimeo.

Interactive Map: Fossil Fuel Accidents

Interactive Map: Fossil Fuel Accidents.

Ernst v. EnCana Corporation | Landowner Jessica Ernst sues EnCana and Alberta government regulators over water contamination

Ernst v. EnCana Corporation | Landowner Jessica Ernst sues EnCana and Alberta government regulators over water contamination.

Fracking Spill Response In Pennsylvania Took 13 Hours Despite State’s Quick-Action Plan

Fracking Spill Response In Pennsylvania Took 13 Hours Despite State’s Quick-Action Plan.

Gas industry problems taxing local firefighters – Opinion – Daily Review

Gas industry problems taxing local firefighters – Opinion – Daily Review.

Fraccidents Map – Google Maps

Fraccidents Map – Google Maps.  Earth Justice

Fraccidents Map | Marcellus Shale Protest

Fraccidents Map | Marcellus Shale Protest.  Earth Justice 4/11

Chesapeake gets DEP notice of violation after well incident – News – The Times-Tribune

Chesapeake gets DEP notice of violation after well incident – News – The Times-Tribune.

Natural Gas Well Blows Out In Bradford County, Pa. | ENR: Engineering News Record | McGraw-Hill Construction

Natural Gas Well Blows Out In Bradford County, Pa. | ENR: Engineering News Record | McGraw-Hill Construction.

Natural Gas Well Blows Out In Bradford County, Pa.

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Late on April 19, a natural gas well in Bradford County, Pa. blew out and spewed thousands of gallons of drilling waste fluids into local fields, streams and Towanda Creek.

The well blowout occurred during hydrofracking operations at a well operated by Oklahoma City­based Chesapeake Energy around 11:45 p.m. Tuesday evening.

Although the well emitted what Chesapeake is calling “limited amounts of gas,” gas plume modeling performed by both the Bradford County Emergency Management Agency and Chesapeake suggests that “any natural ­gas releases will not pose a risk to the area’s public safety,” says Brian Grove, senior director of corporate development at Chesapeake.

The blowout occurred at a time when the practice of hydrualic fracturing is under increased scrutiny, as local groups and environmental organizations cite environmental concerns.

Skip Roupp, deputy director of the Bradford County EMA, said on April 21, that the well “is stable, but not completely controlled.” He said crews were finishing repairs to the berm surrounding the well site, and that Chesapeake had brought in a firm specializing in well containment to kill the well.

The firm, Houston-based Boots and Coots, planned to pump first lost circulation materials such as pieces of plastic and ground-up tires into the well, then heavy mud, to staunch the leak. Another firm was using a vacuum truck and other containment equipment to collect the “very small amount of frac flowback fluid,” still leaking from the well, says Dan Spadoni, spokesman for the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, North Central Regional Office.

Officials say they don’t know what caused the breach in the well. However, the breach was located in a wellhead connection, and that is where investigators will focus initially, says Grove, adding, “There is no evidence of a downhole casing-failure of any type.

While officials are investigating, the incident, Chesapeake has voluntarily suspended all well-completion operations in Pennsylvania, Grove says.

The PA DEP has several personnel onsite overseeing the well containment operations, as well as individuals collecting environmental samples of water near the well and near home wells. The results of the sample tests are not available yet, Spadoni says.

Spadoni says that although well blowouts typically are a result of “multiple” violations that can result in civil penalties, “first and foremost the focus right now for all parties involved is on killing this well.”