Public Health Dimensions of Horizontal Hydraulic Fracturing: Knowledge, Obstacles, Tactics, and Opportunities–Seth B. Shonkoff

Shonkoff_Fracking Public Health_4_17_12

Public Health Dimensions of Horizontal Hydraulic Fracturing: Knowledge, Obstacles, Tactics, and Opportunities

Public Health Dimensions of Horizontal Hydraulic Fracturing:
Knowledge, Obstacles, Tactics, and Opportunities
A Report for the 11th Hour Project
Prepared By:
Seth B. Shonkoff, MPH*
University of California, Berkeley
April 17, 2012
*Author Contact Information:
sshonkoff@gmail.com
510.295.7969
6202 Telegraph Avenue, Oakland, CA 94609

Freedom, NY, Natural Gas Release: Homes Evacuated, Water Wells Polluted – YouTube

Freedom, NY, Natural Gas Release: Homes Evacuated, Water Wells Polluted – YouTube.

Shale Gas Regulation-Univ. of Texas study

Univ. of TX study de-bunked:

Fracking-Study Conflicts Prompt Head of Institute to Quit – Bloomberg.

 

Shale Gas Regulation.

Separating Fact from Fiction in Shale Gas Development

Shale Gas Regulation Press Release Shale Gas Regulation Booklet Shale Gas Regulation Report Summary Shale Gas Regulation Full Report Shale Gas Regulation Experts at UT Shale Gas Regulation Video Clips
Note: Click the above images to view exclusive Energy Institute documents on the subject of Shale Gas Development. These documents include include: (1) Press Release; (2) Booklet; (3) Report Summary; (4) Full Report; (5) List of Experts at UT; and (6) Links to Video Clips.

Assessing the Real and Perceived Consequences of Shale Gas Development

The astonishing surge in domestic natural gas production, brought on by the widespread use of hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling, has transformed the outlook for U.S. energy. Conservative estimates project the use of these techniques in shale gas development will all but assure a clean and affordable natural gas supply for generations to come, creating new jobs and enhancing our nation’s energy security.

That sanguine view has been tempered, however, by concerns that hydraulic fracturing may contaminate groundwater and pose other threats to public health. While little evidence exists directly linking the practice to environmental harm, such fears have ignited a controversy that has dominated public discourse on the issue. In fact, some areas have halted shale gas development altogether, at least temporarily.

Shale Gas Regulation Booklet

Click the above image to view the Shale Gas Regulation booklet.

In response, the Energy Institute at The University of Texas at Austin funded an independent study of hydraulic fracturing in shale gas development to inject science into a highly charged emotional debate.

For this study, the Energy Institute assembled an interdisciplinary team of university experts to examine a broad array of issues associated with hydraulic fracturing in three prominent shale plays — the Barnett Shale, in north Texas; the Marcellus Shale, in Pennsylvania, New York and portions of Appalachia; and the Haynesville Shale, in western Louisiana and northeast Texas.

The Energy Institute team investigated an array of issues related to shale gas development, including groundwater contamination, toxicity of hydraulic fracturing fluids, surface spills, atmospheric emissions, water use, drilling waste disposal, blowouts, and road traffic and noise.

The goal of this research is to provide policymakers a fact-based foundation upon which they can formulate rational regulatory policies that ensure responsible shale gas development.

Fact-Based Regulation for Environmental Protection in Shale Gas Development

For this study, the Energy Institute at The University of Texas at Austin assembled a team of experts with broad experience and expertise, from geology and environmental law to public affairs and communications. In addition to university faculty, the Environmental Defense Fund was actively involved in developing the scope of work and methodology for this study, and reviewed final work products.

Dr. Charles Groat

Dr. Charles Groat

Under the leadership of Institute Associate Director Dr. Charles “Chip” Groat, researchers examined three critical areas related to shale gas development:

  • Environmental and health effects related to all phases of shale gas development in the Barnett, Marcellus and Haynesville shale plays, including hydraulic fracturing, groundwater contamination and air emissions. Where problems were reported, researchers determined the actual cause of problems, based on a review of scientific and other literature.
  • Public perceptions of shale gas development and hydraulic fracturing, as well as the tone of popular media — positive, negative, or neutral.
  • State and federal regulations related to shale gas development, including an analysis of individual states’ capacity to enforce existing regulations.

“Our mission is to alter the trajectory of public discourse in a positive manner, as exemplified in our credo — good policy based on good science.” – Dr. Raymond L. Orbach, Director, Energy Institute, The University of Texas at Austin.

Video Clips Featuring UT Experts

Dr. Raymond L. Orbach

Dr. Raymond L. Orbach

In these clips, Drs. Orbach and Groat discuss preliminary findings from the Energy Institute’s study on hydraulic fracturing: “Fact-­Based Regulation for Environmental Protection in Shale Gas Development.”

Click on the following video clips to view:


The following is an overview of key findings from the Energy Institute’s study.

Scientific Investigation into Groundwater Contamination and Other Environmental Impacts

The public debate over hydraulic fracturing in shale gas production has been marked by fears that the process will contaminate groundwater. Concerns also have been raised that underground methane releases are contaminating water wells.

Though little scientific evidence exists to support such claims, policymakers in some areas have banned the practice, and others have imposed moratoriums on shale gas development until additional research is conducted.

For this report, the Energy Institute research team focused on reports of groundwater contamination and other environmental impacts of shale gas exploration and production in states within the Barnett, Marcellus and Haynesville shales.

Key Findings:

  • Researchers found no evidence of aquifer contamination from hydraulic fracturing chemicals in the subsurface by fracturing operations, and observed no leakage from hydraulic fracturing at depth.
  • Many reports of groundwater contamination occur in conventional oil and gas operations (e.g., failure of well-bore casing and cementing) and are not unique to hydraulic fracturing.
  • Methane found in water wells within some shale gas areas (e.g., Marcellus) can most likely be traced to natural sources, and likely was present before the onset of shale gas operations.
  • Surface spills of fracturing fluids appear to pose greater risks to groundwater sources than from hydraulic fracturing itself.
  • Blowouts — uncontrolled fluid releases during construction or operation — are a rare occurrence, but subsurface blowouts appear to be under-reported.

Regulation of Shale Gas Development

Researchers surveyed federal and state laws and regulations related to shale gas development in 16 states that have or are expected to have shale gas production. This analysis covered all major phases of the shale gas lifecycle — exploration, well siting, drilling and fracturing, production, well plugging, and site closure.

The research team also examined several exemptions of shale gas development from federal environmental laws, including the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, the Comprehensive Environmental, Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, the Clean Water Act, and the Safe Drinking Water Act.

Key Findings:

  • Primary regulatory authority for shale gas is at the state level, and many federal requirements have been delegated to the states.
  • Most state oil and gas regulations were written well before shale gas development became widespread.
  • Some states have revised regulations specifically for shale gas development, with particular focus on three areas of concern:
    • Disclosure of hydraulic fracturing chemicals
    • Proper casing of wells to prevent aquifer contamination
    • Management of wastewater from flowback and produced water
  • Gaps remain in the regulation of well casing and cementing, water withdrawal and usage, and waste storage and disposal.
  • Regulations should focus on the most urgent issues, such as spill prevention — which may pose greater risk than hydraulic fracturing itself.

Enforcement of State Regulations

Shale Gas Extraction Illustration

Click the above image to view the illustration

Researchers also reviewed state agencies’ enforcement capabilities, including a review of staff responsible for conducting inspections and attorneys supporting enforcement. The review covered violations recorded, enforcement actions, field sampling, and monitoring.

Key Findings:

  • Enforcement capacity is highly variable among the states, particularly when measured by the ratio of staff to numbers of inspections conducted.
  • Most violations recorded are of the type associated with conventional gas drilling rather than being specific to hydraulic fracturing and shale gas production.
  • Enforcement actions tend to emphasize surface incidents more than subsurface contaminant releases, perhaps because they are easier to observe.

Public Perception of Shale Gas Development

Public Perception of Shale Gas DevelopmentEnergy Institute researchers analyzed print, broadcast and online news media coverage of shale gas development in the Marcellus, Haynesville, and Barnett shale areas. They found that the tone of media coverage has been overwhelmingly negative in all forms of media. Roughly two-thirds of the articles and stories examined were deemed negative, a finding that was consistent nationally and at local levels.

Researchers also found that less than 20% of newspaper articles on hydraulic fracturing mention scientific research related to the issue. Similarly, only 25% of broadcast news stories examined made reference to scientific studies, and about 33% of online news coverage mentioned scientific research on the issue.

Area wells tested for contamination » Local News » The Daily Star, Oneonta, NY – otsego county news, delaware county news, oneonta news, oneonta sports

Area wells tested for contamination » Local News » The Daily Star, Oneonta, NY – otsego county news, delaware county news, oneonta news, oneonta sports.

EPA releases 20 new Dimock water test results – News – The Times-Tribune

EPA releases 20 new Dimock water test results – News – The Times-Tribune.

My quick scan shows 6/31 water wells above the absolutely critical/dangerous level of 28 mg/L for methane. This is 20%,  well above the expected baseline prevalence of about 1%. What will haunt this community situation is the lack of baseline water well testing. – because the driller never got baseline tests.

There are lotta other data at the link.  View the Data HERE

——————————

Stanley R Scobie, Ph.D., Binghamton, NY, US
NYSESS

Senior Fellow. Physicians, Scientists, and Engineers for healthy energy

==========

EPA releases 20 new Dimock water test results

By Laura Legere (Staff Writer)
Published: April 6, 2012

Federal regulators have released the second set of sampling results from their investigation in Dimock Twp.

The Environmental Protection Agency found that the 20 new results – like the first 11 released three weeks ago – “did not show levels of contaminants that would give EPA reason to take immediate action,” spokesman Roy Seneca said in a statement Friday.

A spreadsheet of the results from all 31 wells can be found at http://www.epa.gov/aboutepa/states/pa.html under “Dimock, PA activities.”

The agency has now released about half of the data collected between Jan. 23 and Feb. 15 during sampling in an area of Dimock where the agency is investigating the potential impact of nearby natural gas drilling on water supplies. The EPA took samples from 61 homes.

View the Data HERE

The Capitol Pressroom for April 3, 2012 | WCNY Blogs

The Capitol Pressroom for April 3, 2012 | WCNY Blogs.

The Capitol Pressroom for April 3, 2012

April 4th, 2012 | Posted by WCNY Staff | No Comments

Half of today’s show is devoted to pro-fracking interests and half is devoted to anti-fracking interests.

 

Tom West of the West Law Firm

is best known as an oil and gas attorney & lobbyist, and one of the lawyers who argued against home rule in both the Middlefield & Dryden cases.  Today he joins us to talk about why he is appealing, as well as a “newly discovered” Encon memorandum that he claims will shed light on the state’s oil and gas laws.

Then taking a very different view of hydrofracking, Josh Fox, producer of Gasland, says communities in Pennsylvania are taking a cue from New York and fighting back against the state on drilling.

Plus, Claire Sandberg of Water Defense updates us on water issues in Dimock in light of the EPA’s report.  And representing a contingent of anti-drillers from all over the state, Rochester’s Harry Davis previews a rally & protest on the issue taking place this afternoon at the Capitol.

 

Posted in : Capitol Pressroom

Environmental Outlook: Water & Global Security | The Diane Rehm Show from WAMU and NPR

Environmental Outlook: Water & Global Security | The Diane Rehm Show from WAMU and NPR.

Paul Gallay: Gas Industry Spin Can’t Cover Up Air, Water Problems Caused by Fracking

Paul Gallay: Gas Industry Spin Can’t Cover Up Air, Water Problems Caused by Fracking.

Colorado farms planning for dry spell losing auction bids for water to fracking projects – The Denver Post

Colorado farms planning for dry spell losing auction bids for water to fracking projects – The Denver Post.

Water Withdrawal for Bath: Geology, Law, Local Actions [Part 2] – YouTube

Water Withdrawal for Bath: Geology, Law, Local Actions [Part 2] – YouTube.