SRBC Approves 31 Water Resources Projects at June Meeting – Most Related to Marcellus Drilling | Marcellus Drilling News

SRBC Approves 31 Water Resources Projects at June Meeting – Most Related to Marcellus Drilling | Marcellus Drilling News.

SRBC Approves 31 Water Resources Projects at June Meeting – Most Related to Marcellus Drilling

The Susquehanna River Basin Commission (SRBC) had a busy quarterly meeting on June 23,  held in North East, Maryland. Among the things they did, SRBC commissioners approved 31 water resources projects, the vast majority of which are related to drilling in the Marcellus Shale. The list of new projects approved, previous projects modified and into-basin diversions is detailed below.

 

The commissioners also approved the release and publication of a proposed rulemaking package to revise Project Review regulations. Among the key provisions of the proposed rulemaking, the changes would: (1) incorporate commission policy to allow for interbasin diversions of flowback from one drilling pad to another for re-use in hydrofacture operations to be handled under the Approval by Rule (ABR) program; (2) replace specific shale name references with a generic category of “unconventional natural gas development”; (3) add language to authorize the “renewal” of expiring approvals, including ABRs; (4) expanding the ABR program scope to include any hydrocarbon development projects that meet SRBC standard regulatory thresholds; (5) place into the regulations the current practice of requiring posthydrofracture reporting; and (6) restructure water source approvals under the ABR program.

The public comment period for the proposed rulemaking, which will begin immediately when they are posted on SRBC web site, will run through August 23, 2011. During the public comment period, SRBC will conduct public hearings on August 2, 10:00 a.m., Rachel Carson State Office Building, 400 Market
Street, Harrisburg, Pa., and August 4, 7:00 p.m., Holiday Inn Binghamton Downtown, 2-8 Hawley St, Binghamton, N.Y.

SRBC Approved Water Resources Projects – June 23 Meeting

1. Anadarko E&P Company LP (Pine Creek – Jersey Mills), McHenry Township, Lycoming County, Pa., for surface water withdrawal of up to 1.5 million gallons per day (gpd) to develop natural gas wells.

2. Aqua Pennsylvania, Inc. Project Facility: Monroe Manor Water System, Monroe Township, Snyder County, Pa., for groundwater withdrawal of up to 302,000 gpd public water supply.

3. Carrizo Marcellus, LLC (Meshoppen Creek), Washington Township, Wyoming County, Pa., for surface water withdrawal of up to 2.160 million gpd to develop natural gas wells.

4. Carrizo Marcellus, LLC (Middle Branch Wyalusing Creek), Forest Lake Township, Susquehanna County, Pa., for surface water withdrawal of up to 432,000 gpd to develop natural gas wells.

5. Carrizo Marcellus, LLC (Unnamed Tributary to Middle Branch Wyalusing Creek), Forest Lake Township, Susquehanna County, Pa., for surface water withdrawal of up to 720,000 gpd to develop natural gas wells.

6. Chesapeake Appalachia, LLC (Wappasening Creek), Windham Township, Bradford County, Pa., for surface water withdrawal of up to 900,000 gpd to develop natural gas wells.

7. Chesapeake Appalachia, LLC (Wyalusing Creek), Rush Township, Susquehanna County, Pa., for surface water withdrawal of up to 715,000 gpd to develop natural gas wells.

8. Chesapeake Appalachia, LLC (Wysox Creek), Rome Township, Bradford County, Pa., for surface water withdrawal of up to 504,000 gpd to develop natural gas wells.

9. Exelon Generation Company, LLC, Peach Bottom Atomic Power Station, Peach Bottom Township, York County, Pa., to increase consumptive water use from 32.49 million gpd up to 49 million gpd (Docket No. 20061209) to generate electric power.

10. Exelon Generation Company, LLC, Three Mile Island Generating Station, Londonderry Township, Dauphin County, Pa., for surface water withdrawal of up to 122.8 million gpd and consumptive water use of up to 19.2 million gpd to operate the plant and generate electric power.

11. Fox Road Waterworks, LLC (South Branch Tunkhannock Creek), Tunkhannock Township, Wyoming County, Pa., for surface water withdrawal of up to 157,000 gpd for bulk water sale for natural gas well development.

12. Hydro Recovery, LP, Blossburg Borough, Tioga County, Pa., for groundwater withdrawal of up to 216,000 gpd and for consumptive water use of up to 316,000 gpd to treat flowback water and for bulk water sale to natural gas exploration and production companies.

13. Keystone Clearwater Solutions, LLC (Driftwood Branch), Emporium Borough, Cameron County, Pa., for surface water withdrawal of up to 999,000 gpd for bulk water sale for natural gas well development.

14. Keystone Clearwater Solutions, LLC (Lycoming Creek), Lewis Township, Lycoming County, Pa., for surface water withdrawal of up to 1.292 million gpd for bulk water sale for natural gas well development.

15. LHP Management, LLC (Fishing Creek – Clinton Country Club), Bald Eagle Township, Clinton County, Pa., to modify conditions of the withdrawal approval (Docket No. 20090906) for bulk water sale for natural gas well development.

16. Mount Joy Borough Authority, Mount Joy Borough, Lancaster County, Pa., for total groundwater withdrawal of up to 2.6 million gpd to distribute in a public water supply system.

17. Nature’s Way Purewater Systems, Inc., Covington Township, Lackawanna County, Pa., for groundwater withdrawal of up to 57,000 gpd and consumptive use up to 257,000 gpd for bottled water. New Morgan Landfill Company, Inc., Conestoga Landfill, New Morgan Borough, Berks County, Pa., for groundwater withdrawal of up to 8,000 gpd to operate the landfill.

19. Talisman Energy USA Inc. (Wappasening Creek), Windham Township, Bradford County, Pa., for surface water withdrawal of up to 1 million gpd to develop natural gas wells.

20. Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company (Meshoppen Creek – Loop 319), Springville Township, Susquehanna County, Pa., for surface water withdrawal of up to 1.090 million gpd to hydrostatically test gas pipeline.

21. Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company (Susquehanna River – Loop 317), Asylum Township, Bradford County, Pa., for surface water withdrawal of up to 4.032 million gpd to hydrostatically test gas pipeline.

22. Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company (Tioga River – Loop 315), Richmond Township, Tioga County, Pa., for surface water withdrawal of up to 3.140 million gpd to hydrostatically test gas pipeline.

23. Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company (Towanda Creek – Loop 317), Monroe Township, Bradford County, Pa., for surface water withdrawal of up to 4.032 million gpd to hydrostatically test gas pipeline.

24. Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company (White Creek – Loop 319), Springville Township, Susquehanna County, Pa., for surface water withdrawal of up to 384,000 gpd to hydrostatically test gas pipeline.

25. Williamsport Municipal Water Authority, Williamsport City, Lycoming County, Pa., for groundwater withdrawal of up to 1.3 million gpd from Well 10 and up to 700,000 gpd from Well 11 for public water supply.

26. Chief Oil & Gas LLC, Borough of Ebensburg, Cambria Township, Cambria County, Pa., for an intobasin diversion of up to 249,000 gpd from the Ohio River Basin to develop natural gas wells.

27. Chief Oil & Gas LLC, Cambria Somerset Authority, Summerhill Township, Cambria County, Pa., for an into-basin diversion of up to 249,000 gpd from the Ohio River Basin to develop natural gas wells.

28. Chief Oil & Gas LLC, Highland Sewer and Water Authority, Portage Township, Cambria County, Pa., for an into-basin diversion of up to 249,000 gpd from the Ohio River Basin to develop natural gas wells.

29. Nature’s Way Purewater Systems, Inc., Nature’s Way Springs Borehole 1 (BH-1), Foster Township, Luzerne County, Pa., for an into-basin diversion of up to 99,000 gpd from the Delaware River Basin for water bottling.

30. Penn Virginia Oil & Gas Corporation. Project Facility: Port Allegany Borough, McKean County, Pa. Application for an into-basin diversion of up to 100,000 from the Ohio River Basin to develop natural gas wells.

31. Triana Energy, LLC, Johnson Quarry, Roulette Township, Potter County, Pa., for an into-basin diversion of up to 500,000 gpd from the Ohio River Basin to develop natural gas wells.

*SRBC Press Release (Jun 24, 2011) – SRBC Met June 23, Approved 31 Water Use and Withdrawal Projects (PDF)

Related posts:

  1. SRBC Fines Southwestern Energy $50K for Lack of Proper Approvals
  2. 2011-06-23 Susquehanna River Basin Commission (SRBC) Public Hearing – North East, MD
  3. 2011-02-28 Regulating Water Used for Drilling in the Susquehanna River Basin – Laporte, PA

EPA Tells It Like It Is on HR 2018–the Dirty Water Bill | David Beckman’s Blog | Switchboard, from NRDC

EPA Tells It Like It Is on HR 2018–the Dirty Water Bill | David Beckman’s Blog | Switchboard, from NRDC.

tories:
Defending the Clean Air Act
Disaster in the Gulf

David Beckman, Senior Attorney & Director, Water Program, Los Angeles

David Beckman

In 1984, I left the cold Philly suburbs for college at U.C. Berkeley, and I have been in California ever since, save three years during law school. I spent three years at a big law firm before coming to NRDC, where I hoped I could combine legal practice with a subject I cared about, the environment. NRDC has enabled me to do that, and I have been here for nearly 14 years. NRDC just launched a new national water program, that integrates our advocacy efforts across the country. The focus of our work is ensuring safe and sufficient water for people and ecosystems. Water is one of the major environmental issues of the 21st Century—a natural resource that is in short supply in many regions and is likely to become even more scarce as population grows and climate changes. There’s a lot to do, and I am going to be focused on how we can make the biggest contribution to ensuring the water we have is clean and we use it as efficiently as we can.

Recent Posts

EPA Tells It Like It Is on HR 2018–the Dirty Water Bill

Posted June 23, 2011 by David Beckman in Curbing Pollution

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A number of my NRDC Water Program colleagues are blogging on HR 2018, reflecting its status as one of the worst dirty water bills any of us have seen.  NRDC’s Founding Director John Adams has now weighed in with a beautiful…continued

EPA Tells It Like It Is on HR 2018–the Dirty Water Bill

David BeckmanPosted June 23, 2011 in Curbing Pollution

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A number of my NRDC Water Program colleagues are blogging on HR 2018, reflecting its status as one of the worst dirty water bills any of us have seen.  NRDC’s Founding Director John Adams has now weighed in with a beautiful piece that underscores how nonsensical and destructive 2018 would be if passed.

The bill blasted out of the House Transportation & Infrastructure committee in record time yesterday, with no hearing. Even if you support repealing foundational elements of our nation’s clean water law, doing so without airing the issues is an indefensible process.  But trying to speed the bill along while folks are on summer vacation (many enjoying waters protected by the very Clean Water Act provisions the bill would gut) is, of course, the plan.

Now, the US EPA, in response to a request from Representative Tim Bishop of New York, has confirmed the analysis of many environmental advocates and others about the bill.  EPA, like many government agencies, doesn’t always use the most direct language in letters to members of Congress. But this is a destructive enough bill that EPA has quickly and commendably found a strong voice.  EPA’s words speak for themselves:

The first line of EPA’s “Technical Assessment H.R. 2018” gets right to the point:  “The bill would overturn almost 40 years of federal legislation by preventing EPA from protecting public health and water quality.”

EPA here is not overstating.  HR 2018, as EPA’s analysis notes, prevents EPA from assuring that upstream states don’t lower standards in a way that passes pollution to their downstream neighbors—a classic problem the Clean Water Act was designed in part to address.  And it prevents EPA from responding to the best science to improve water quality standards as we learn more about the impacts of pollution.

This is like preventing your doctor from updating a course of treatment based on new medical discoveries. It makes no sense.

But the perniciousness of 2018 means that even this isn’t the full story.  EPA then lists its other impacts, and you quickly get the sense that this bill is irredeemable:

  • “The bill would prevent EPA from providing its views on whether a proposed project that pollutes or even destroys lakes, streams, or wetlands would violate CWA standards.”
  • “The bill would remove EPA’s existing state coordination role and eliminate the careful Federal/State balance established in the current CWA.”
  • “The bill would prevent EPA from protecting communities from unacceptable adverse impacts to their water supplies and the environment caused by Federal permits.”
  • “The bill would substantively eliminate the opportunity for EPA, the federal government’s expert on water quality, to comment on Federal permits impacting water quality and public health.

HR 2018 is, at least in part, a direct reaction to positive actions the administration has taken to protect water quality—vetoing a particularly destructive mountain-top mining proposal; upgrading water quality standards in Florida; and proposing stronger action to clean up the Chesapeake Bay, to name three.

It is intended, at minimum, as a message:  EPA, watch out, if you use your authority, we will take it away.  Now that HR 2018 has been turned loose in Congress, we all need to send an equally clear message that we won’t stand for these sort of attacks on the nation’s bedrock water quality statute.

Time to Stop Attacks on the Clean Water Act and Protect Americans’ Top Environmental Priority

Posted June 21, 2011 by David Beckman in Curbing Pollution, U.S. Law and Policy

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To quote Yogi Berra, “It’s déjà vu all over again.”  After spending much of the spring attacking the Clean Air Act, several lawmakers in the House have now set their sights on the Clean Water Act.  This latest onslaught puts…continued

H.R. 2018 Un-doing the Clean Water Act

Action Alert

Please see this article by Steve Fleischi of the NRDC:

Not satisfied with merely trying to undo the Clean Air Act, the House
of Representatives has now decided to attack the federal Clean Water
Act with the introduction of H.R. 2018, which is slated for mark-up
tomorrow (Wednesday) in the House Transportation and Infrastructure
Committee.  The bill, sponsored by Congressman John Mica of Florida,
strips EPA of critical oversight authority that for decades has
resulted in improved water quality across the country.  And it’s not
just Republicans leading the charge.  Several Democrats, including
Representatives Nick Rahall (WV), Jason Altmire (PA) and Tim Holden
(PA), have co-sponsored the legislation.

The bill seems to be a reaction to EPA’s recent important efforts to
protect water quality in Florida, West Virginia, and on the Chesapeake
Bay.  But its impact is far broader than that.

Also called the “Clean Water Cooperative Federalism Act of 2011,” H.R
2018 takes “cooperation” to a whole new level by stripping EPA of its
ability to protect national water quality without state-by-state
approval.  Among other things, the bill:

* Limits EPA’s ability to effectively implement or make necessary
improvements to state water quality standards to deal with modern
pollution challenges.
* Prevents EPA from improving numeric criteria for pollutants that
have led to dead zones in the Chesapeake Bay and Gulf of Mexico.
* Restricts EPA from upgrading standards for toxic pollutants
where narrative standards only provide very limited protection (a
common example being state standards that prohibit the “discharge of
toxic pollutants in toxic amounts”).
* Prevents EPA from vetoing state-issued Clean Water Act permits
even if EPA concludes those permits are not protective of water
quality.
* Blocks EPA’s ability to withhold federal funding to states even
if EPA determines the state’s implementation of water quality
standards is not protective of water quality.

Basically, H.R. 2018 takes the “federal” out of the federal Clean
Water Act and highlights a new disdain for the federal government’s
role in environmental protection.  Yet it is this federal law and
EPA’s oversight that have resulted in so many improvements to water
quality across America since the Clean Water Act’s passage in 1972.

The federal Clean Water Act provides a safety net for waterways across
the country, where states must implement minimum provisions to protect
water quality.  States can always do more if they so choose, but the
law recognizes that Americans deserve a minimum standard of protection
no matter where they live, and the Clean Water Act is designed to
prevent a “race to the bottom” in places where the benefits of clean
water may be ignored for short term economic or political gain.

By hamstringing EPA, H.R. 2018 would remove the most critical piece of
the puzzle and would take away this safety net.

Indeed, sponsors of the bill seem intent on taking us back to the
“good old days” of limited federal involvement when rivers like the
Cuyahoga caught fire and Lake Erie was declared dead – and when states
sued other states because pollution flowing from an upstream state
ruined a neighboring state’s waterway.  Yet these past horrors and the
legislative history of the Clean Water Act reveal why the federal role
was and remains so important:  before 1972 many states lacked any
approved water quality standards and national efforts to abate and
control water pollution were “inadequate in every vital aspect.”

I say this is the worse attack on the Clean Water Act in at least 15
years because it is hard to compare which is worse, the Dirty Water
Bill of 1995 or today’s H.R. 2018.  Both contained provisions to
paralyze EPA’s Clean Water Act duties – the Dirty Water Act under the
guise of cost-benefit analysis, H.R. 2018 under the guise of state’s
rights.   But one thing that is easy to see is that H.R. 2018 will
undermine almost 40 years of progress in cleaning up America’s
waterways, and it will remove America’s most vital safety net for
protecting water quality across all 50 states.

Please see the below link for original article:

http://switchboard.nrdc.org/blogs/sfleischli/another_clean_water_act_

EPA Hydraulic Fracturing Study Plan 6/11

Hydraulic Fracturing | Hydraulic Fracturing | US EPA.

Case Study Location announced.

Judge declines to dismiss EPA order against Range Resources | Barnett Shale | Dallas Bus…

Judge declines to dismiss EPA order against Range Resources | Barnett Shale | Dallas Bus….  6/11

Critics Find Gaps in State Laws to Disclose Hydrofracking Chemicals – ProPublica

Critics Find Gaps in State Laws to Disclose Hydrofracking Chemicals – ProPublica.

Critics Find Gaps in State Laws to Disclose Hydrofracking Chemicals

In this April 23, 2010 photo, a Chesapeake Energy natural gas well site is seen near Burlington, Pa. (AP Photo/Ralph Wilson)

Over the past year, five states have begun requiring energy companies to disclose some of the chemicals they pump into the ground to extract oil and gas using the process of hydraulic fracturing.

While state regulators and the drilling industry say the rules should help resolve concerns about the safety of drilling, critics and some toxicologists say the requirements fall short of what’s needed to fully understand the risks to public health and the environment.

The regulations allow companies to keep proprietary chemicals secret from the public and, in some states, from regulators. Though most of the states require companies to report the volume and concentration of different drilling products, no state asks for the amounts of all the ingredients, a gap that some say is disturbing.

“It’s a shell game,” said Theo Colborn, a toxicologist who has testified before Congress about the dangers of drilling chemicals. Colborn and her organization, TEDX, examine the long-term health risks of chemicals and have opposed the expansion of drilling in Colorado and elsewhere. “They’re not telling you everything that there is to know.”

Others say the regulations, despite some flaws, are moving in the right direction. “It’s just a step in the process,” said the Sierra Club’s Cyrus Reed, who worked on a bill signed into law in Texas on Friday.

Most drillers have supported the measures. Some say more complete disclosure isn’t necessary because the information that remains secret involves only nonhazardous chemicals or trade secrets that are a small fraction of products they inject. Energy companies recently have begun voluntarily disclosing some of the chemicals they use on FracFocus, a web site run by two groups representing state regulators.

“While we support disclosing our ingredients, it is critical to our business that we protect our recipe,” Tara Mullee Agard, a spokeswoman for Halliburton, one of the world’s largest oil and gas service companies, told ProPublica in an email.

Gas drilling has surged across the country over the past few years due to technological advances that include hydraulic fracturing, in which drillers pump millions of gallons of water, sand and chemicals underground to free up trapped deposits of natural gas. Energy companies are increasingly using the technique, dubbed “fracking,” in oil recovery, particularly in Texas and North Dakota.

ProPublica first began reporting on health and environmental concerns surrounding fracking three years ago. Gas companies are exempt from federal laws protecting water supplies, leaving it up to states to decide what sort of regulations are needed to protect ground and surface water.

Wyoming takes the lead

Wyoming’s rules are the strongest in place, although it’s unclear how thoroughly they are being enforced. The rules require public disclosure of all the chemicals except for trade secrets, which drillers must submit for regulators’ eyes only. The only thing the rule lacks, critics say, is a requirement to report the concentration of the individual chemicals.

Three reports that were selected at random and reviewed by ProPublica appeared to leave out some of the chemicals used. Tom Doll, the state’s oil and gas supervisor, said his agency has two staff members reviewing each of the reports.

“They’ve obviously missed some of these,” he said.

In Arkansas, manufacturers are not required to disclose proprietary fracking chemicals to regulators. Rules in Texas, Michigan and Pennsylvania have similar exemptions. (See a summary of the state rules.)

Some environmentalists and toxicologists say the state rules give energy companies too much discretion.

Companies can get trade secret protection, for instance, simply by asserting that disclosure would hurt their business and showing that details about a chemical are not otherwise public. More than 100 such exemptions have been granted in Wyoming, though most of the exempt products haven’t been used, Doll said.

Advocates of disclosure say that, at a minimum, proprietary information should be on file with state regulators, as in Wyoming, so it can be accessed quickly in an emergency.

Federal law already requires chemical manufacturers to share trade secrets with health care providers in emergency situations, but getting the information into the public domain can be a slow process, said Daniel Teitelbaum, an adjunct professor of toxicology at the Colorado School of Mines.

“If you call someone on Saturday … it may be Tuesday before you can find someone who has the actual formula,” said Teitelbaum, who has worked for environmental groups on disclosure and chemical safety. “It is not a straightforward process by any means.”

On April 19, fracking fluids spilled during a blowout at a Chesapeake Energy well in Pennsylvania. While no one was directly injured, Brian Grove, a company spokesman, said a full ingredient list was provided to state regulators the following day and to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency a week after the spill. Chesapeake voluntarily posted the list to FracFocus on May 13.

The mixture of fluids used to fracture a well generally contains several different products, which themselves can contain multiple chemical ingredients. While the industry has used hundreds of chemicals to frack wells across the country, the mixture regularly includes ingredients such as hydrochloric acid, methanol, a disinfectant called glutaraldehyde and petroleum distillates.

These chemicals usually comprise a tiny fraction of the overall mix, but since wells are injected with millions of gallons of fluid, the mix can include thousands of gallons of a chemical that can be toxic at low doses.

Deciding what’s hazardous

Colborn and other toxicologists say one area of concern involves how “nonhazardous” chemicals are treated. Pennsylvania, Michigan and the FracFocus web site only disclose hazardous substances as determined by a product’s Material Safety Data Sheet.

Chemical manufacturers are required to list health hazards and ingredients that contribute to those hazards on these sheets, which are filed with the U.S. Occupational Safety & Health Administration.

The sheets don’t have to list ingredients that are not considered hazardous, however, or chemicals that may damage the environment but haven’t been shown to harm humans. In determining what to report, manufacturers are not required to do their own testing and may rely on existing research that many toxicologists consider inadequate.

“We have just extraordinarily poor information on the whole portfolio of health effects that are possible from industrial chemicals,” said Michael Wilson, director of the Labor Occupational Health Program at the University of California, Berkeley. “In the great majority of cases, that information is not going to appear on a [Material Safety Data Sheet], in most cases because it’s not known.”

OSHA acknowledged as much in a 2004 report on chemical hazard communication. “Even the best available evidence may not provide sufficient information about the hazardous effects or the way to protect someone from experiencing them,” the report said. The report noted in particular a lack of research on chronic health effects.

Chris Tucker, a spokesman for Energy in Depth, a drilling industry group, said chemical suppliers evaluate every product, so if an ingredient doesn’t make it onto an safety data sheet, it doesn’t pose a threat to human health. ”That’s why it’s nonhazardous,” he said.

There are more than 80,000 chemicals registered for commercial use with the EPA, and Wilson said there is enough research to identify potential hazards for less than 2 percent of them.

Researchers with TEDX, Colborn’s organization, have reviewed Material Safety Data Sheets for 980 products used in natural gas production and found that for more than 400 of them, manufacturers listed less than 1 percent of the product’s total composition.

“What’s there is what the product manufacturer wants you to know,” Colborn said. Without knowing all the ingredients, she said, it’s impossible to anticipate the chemical reactions that can occur as the products mix and react not only with each other but with whatever is present underground.

Volume, concentration are keys

Colborn and others say that knowing the concentration or volume of the individual components is also important to measure toxicity, and because various concentrations may behave differently as chemicals break down and react with others underground.

Texas, Arkansas and Wyoming, while requiring disclosure of all chemicals used, do not require companies to provide the concentrations.

The federal government regulates oil and gas drilling only on federal lands, and Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said in November that he was considering requiring disclosure of fracking fluids for wells under federal jurisdiction. No action has been taken so far.

Some environmental groups and members of Congress have pushed for a nationwide database. Currently, drillers are not required to report fracking chemicals to the federal government unless they contain diesel, but the proposed FRAC Act would require disclosure across the country.

So far, more than 40 oil and gas companies are voluntarily disclosing some of their chemicals on the FracFocus website. Using the site, anyone can identify individual wells and find out the hazardous chemicals that were injected into them, including the maximum concentration at which they were used.

Mike Paque, executive director of the Ground Water Protection Council, an association of state regulators that is overseeing the site, said the organization is discussing whether to expand the disclosures to include nonhazardous chemicals. The site does not list proprietary chemicals, although it notes when they are used. (See our annotated fracking disclosure form for a closer look.)

Chart: States With Drilling Disclosure Rules

Five states have passed laws or administrative rules requiring drilling companies to reveal some of the chemicals they use when injecting fluids to free natural gas and oil from underground rock formations.

State What’s reported Volume or
concentration used
Proprietary
chemicals
Posted online
Wyoming* All chemicals used in fracking. Volume and concentration of the products are disclosed, but not of individual ingredients in chemical mixtures. Disclosed to regulators; secret to the public. Yes, via state website.
Arkansas All chemicals used in fracking. No. Exempt. Yes, via state website.
Pennsylvania All hazardous chemicals used at an individual well after fracking is complete. For hazardous chemicals only. Unclear.** No; available by request.
Michigan Must submit Material Safety Data Sheets for hazardous chemicals. For hazardous chemicals only. Exempt. Yes, via state website.
Texas*** All chemicals used in fracking. For hazardous chemicals only. To be determined. Yes, via state website and FracFocus, an industry website.

* Wyoming was the first state to require disclosure of fracking fluids.
** Pennsylvania officials did not return calls or e-mails seeking clarification.
*** The Texas legislature passed the law in May 2011, but state regulators have until 2013 to complete the actual rules.

Source: Reporting by Nicholas Kusnetz/ProPublica

N.Y. problematic for gas drilling – Times Union

N.Y. problematic for gas drilling – Times Union.

N.Y. problematic for gas drilling

Published 12:01 a.m., Monday, June 20, 2011

The article, “Gas drilling pays big benefits,” (June 15), may be misread, since it implies that what works in Texas will work more or less the same in New York.

Gas drilling in New York may indeed pay big benefits to Texas and Oklahoma gas companies. It may not be so rosy for New Yorkers.

The lack of groundwater contamination in the Fort Worth Basin is due to the fact that there are few groundwater wells in the Fort Worth Basin. There are no shallow wells to pollute because the water sources are deep aquifers.

There have been instances of shallow wells polluted in Palo Pinto County by Range Resources, since the wells draw from the Brazos River.

That is not the case in upstate New York, where all the water wells — including the municipal and commercial wells — are tapping groundwater that is uniquely vulnerable to pollution from the surface and from gas wells via methane migration into the water.

As for jobs, almost all of the suppliers and contractors in Texas are either based in Texas or have major manufacturing facilities there. So any drilling activity will be almost 100 percent local hires. That is simply not the case in New York, which has no major oil and gas manufacturing or service companies. Few such companies are likely to relocate to New York from Texas. Nor will many of the crews be local hires. Many of the new jobs associated with increased activity will in fact go to out-of-state residents and contractors.

The economics are different for many reasons. There is a production tax in Texas, but none in New York. The ad valorem tax on wells in New York will be offset in some towns by lower property values. If a town is suburban or has a high tax base, it may see a net decrease in property taxes from shale gas industrialization.

James Northrup

New York City

Read more: http://www.timesunion.com/opinion/article/N-Y-problematic-for-gas-drilling-1431244.php#ixzz1PsCDJbnF

 

 

What Keeps Your Utility Company Up At Night | Fast Company

What Keeps Your Utility Company Up At Night | Fast Company.

Bradford Co. PA Map of Compromised Water & Gas Wells

I created an earlier draft of this map in Dec ’10 because when I called the DEP Williamsport office, they said they did not keep systematic records of this data; indeed, at the time (the regs have since been changed, in part due to the story Laura Legere of Scranton TimesTrib did when I explained the situation to her), the gas companies did not even have to report if they could resolve the complaint privately with the landowner. So, as of this date, none of the data is from the DEP.

I suspect that there are many more than I have here whose silence has been bought, who don’t know, or who don’t want to know, in addition to the ones I just don’t yet know about but are known to some, and I would like to ask everyone in Bradford County to help me keep this map as accurate and up-to-date as possible by writing to me at this address with any information they may have.

I will be updating the map approximately every two weeks.

Thank you,

Michael Lebron
NYSESS | DCS

5 water wells, stream contaminated by methane – SunGazette.com | News, Sports, Jobs, Community Information – Williamsport-Sun Gazette

5 water wells, stream contaminated by methane – SunGazette.com | News, Sports, Jobs, Community Information – Williamsport-Sun Gazette.