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A Fracking Reality

syadasti

i heart mac
Apr 15, 2002
12,690
290
VT
As seen on TV:


Reality:

Gas company whistle-blower details spills, errors - News - The Times-Tribune

Gas company whistle-blower details spills, errors
By Laura Legere (Staff Writer)
Published: November 20, 2011

DIMOCK TWP. - On a bright fall day in 2008, Scott Ely arrived at the natural gas well a few hundred feet from his home to find work strangely stilled.

His fellow employees of Cabot Oil and Gas Corp.'s drilling subsidiary were watching the only thing moving: a huge plume of gas "like Niagara Falls going upwards" buffeting the drilling rig from below, he remembered.

The gas in the air was sickening.

"They told me they hit a methane pocket," he said. "We're waiting for Cabot to tell us what to do, whether we should try to punch through it or plug it."

They punched through it - a pocket of shallow gas about 1,500 feet down that pumped out the equivalent of 900,000 cubic feet of gas per day, according to a report later commissioned by Cabot.

When drilling was finished, muddy puddles on the pad bubbled with the gas seeping through the gravel.

"Right next to the wellhead it looked like 1,000 Alka-Seltzers going off," he said.

Mr. Ely, a GasSearch Drilling Services employee from spring 2008 until mid-2010, is one of more than a dozen Dimock residents suing the company because of what happened next: his family, including three small children, began to get cramps, rashes and headaches. Months after Mr. Ely noted something was not right with his water and first warned his employer to test it, a company representative asked his family to evacuate to a Tunkhannock hotel because dangerous levels of methane seeped into the home with every shower or load of laundry.

Now, state officials have found that Cabot met the obligations necessary for the driller to stop delivering replacement bottled and bulk water to 19 homes, including Mr. Ely's, where the methane tainting the water has been linked to Cabot's faulty wells.

Cabot, which says the water is safe to drink and use, plans to stop the deliveries in 10 days.

'We're the sacrifice'

Long silent about reckless practices, unreported spills and buried problems he said he witnessed on Cabot's well sites, Mr. Ely said the prospect of losing fresh water twice to drilling forced him to speak out.

"It's terrible that we're the sacrifice," he said. "We're the sludge that comes off and then we're just washed away."

In an interview with The Sunday Times, Mr. Ely outlined allegations he first shared with Cabot officials and state regulators in the month after his attorneys filed a lawsuit against the driller in November 2009.

In the two years since he led the officials on a tour of every failure he witnessed at Cabot's Dimock sites, he said he has received no answers from the company about what they found in the soil and streams.

Cabot officials told the newspaper that a report proving its operations had no negative environmental impact is ready to be released this month, but they would not disclose the findings until the final report is submitted to the Department of Environmental Protection.

According to Mr. Ely Cabot tried to hide, minimize or ignore at least five diesel spills or their impacts between 2008 and 2009. After an 800-gallon diesel spill in June 2008, a drilling supervisor instructed him to move a reference point hay bale away from a spot where lab tests showed persistently contaminated soil after treatment.

"I said, 'So you want them to test where there's no hot dirt?' " he recalled. "He said, 'That's the idea.' "

Company pits leaked or their plastic liners were carelessly torn before their contents were buried on 13 occasions. The earliest, haphazardly constructed pits were used to catch toxic fluids that flowed out of the wells, but the spray frequently missed the pits or blew out of them.

"In the beginning we would dig a hole and then we'd just throw plastic in it," he said. "That was more or less to make the homeowners feel comfortable about us drilling on their property."

On at least two occasions, Cabot employees scraped contaminated soil, sand or gravel from a drilling pad then pushed it over the pad's bank.

At one site, Mr. Ely watched a bulldozer operator clear a pad covered in a "big, goopy concoction" of sand and spilled gels and acids by pushing the mess over a bank, he said. State files for the second site show that an inspector from the Department of Environmental Protection discovered an unreported pile of diesel-soaked soil dumped at the edge of a farmer's field.

Cabot had well-control or casing problems on three wells other than the Gesford 3 site where Mr. Ely saw the plume of shallow gas. A "wild well" specialist from Texas was called to a site on Mr. Ely's father's property in late 2008 after a failed valve made it impossible to shut off the spewing well, forcing the family to evacuate overnight.

Something loose in the well jammed the flow, and workers resorted to dumping buckets of methanol on dry ice stacked around the wellhead to freeze it.

"That well could have let loose at any moment, at any time," he said. "We didn't know what was stopping it from blowing out of there but we knew the well was full of fluids."

Cabot files report

After Mr. Ely described what he saw to Cabot officials, the company contracted the environmental consulting firm URS Corp. to investigate any environmental impacts from the alleged incidents.

A final report of the investigation, which was initially outlined by URS in March 2010, will be submitted to the Department of Environmental Protection by Nov. 30, Cabot spokesman George Stark said.

"We have worked with the past administration and we're working with this administration to demonstrate soundly that none of the areas laid out in the accusations exceeded the cleanup standards or were outside the norms of protective health and safety," he said.

Mr. Stark said the 20-month investigation involved close consultation with the DEP and required a year of groundwater monitoring at one of the suspect sites, but ultimately revealed that "there really wasn't anything there."

The company will not release any data from the report before it is submitted to the department, he said.

A DEP spokeswoman confirmed that the agency has been in "constant contact" with URS about the investigation and is anticipating "a report to see what steps they have taken as far as all of the violations."

"We expect a report shortly as to how they are complying with the recommendations we gave them," spokeswoman Colleen Connolly said.

Mr. Stark would not address many of Mr. Ely's specific allegations, since they are dealt with in the report, but said Cabot "takes environmental stewardship seriously and thoroughly investigates all environmental claims."

Asked if he disputes that the incidents alleged by Mr. Ely ever happened, Mr. Stark said, "Each of them has been investigated and the resulting analysis shows that either there was something to investigate further or nothing to investigate."

He said he would not dispute that shallow gas escaped from the Gesford 3 site, but he challenged Mr. Ely's "visual opinion" of the event.

"I'm not saying it didn't happen," he said. "But, if it did occur, we're not aware of any problems as a result of it."

Spills documented

Many of the spills described by Mr. Ely were also documented during state inspections of the well sites, often after Cabot reported the incidents to regulators. Some of the incidents described by Mr. Ely have already gone through state-reviewed remediation and been cleared, Mr. Stark said.

According to agency records, the DEP issued violations at Cabot sites for at least 51 separate incidents involving spills, seeps or releases between 2008 and 2010, including after a July 2009 inspection found stained sand on the well site where Mr. Ely said the "goopy" concoction was later pushed off site.

In a document compiled for the federal Environmental Protection Agency, Cabot reported 19 spills and releases of hazardous substances or wastewater at its Susquehanna County well sites and 14 additional spills "where Cabot does not have sufficient information to confirm that a release of a hazardous substance ... occurred" between June 2008 and May 2011.

The company explicitly did not include instances of methane migration into water supplies in its EPA report because "Cabot disputes the validity of these allegations," the company wrote.

Cabot claims elevated levels of methane reach Dimock water supplies through natural pathways. It has produced data showing detectable amounts of methane naturally occur in 80 percent of the water wells it has tested in Susquehanna County in a geological pattern that mirrors the occurrences in Dimock.

Cabot was forced by the DEP to plug three of its gas wells suspected of allowing methane to taint water supplies, including the Gesford 3 and 9, the twin wells where Mr. Ely saw the methane plume and where Cabot lost a drill bit in unconsolidated rock about 800 feet down.

In correspondence with the DEP in September 2010, Cabot called the three wells "safe, properly constructed and valuable" even though the company proposed earlier the same year to drill a relief water well at the Gesford pad "in an attempt to degas the aquifer," according to DEP documents.

"The department has many reservations concerning this course of action," a regional DEP oil and gas manager wrote.

The last three years in Dimock have been remarkably caustic, with the driller at times pitted against state regulators and neighbors who embrace the company at odds with those suing it.

Mr. Ely has stood at the heart of that division.

(continues below)
 
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syadasti

i heart mac
Apr 15, 2002
12,690
290
VT
A Dimock native whose grandparents' name was given to a creek that runs through town, he is building a new house and raising a family on his father's homestead.

With a speciality in spill prevention and response for gas stations and other petroleum services, he joined GasSearch as a heavy equipment operator and later helped set up the subsidiary's drilling rigs.

He found that the companies working on the drilling sites "had no care for what spilled anywhere. It was the most reckless industry I've ever seen in my life," he said. "I stood up because I couldn't see them just wrecking everybody's properties."

The roles he has been given in the last few years have forced him to split his loyalties: a leaseholder with tainted water, an employee of the company blamed for the contamination, a plaintiff in the case against his employer, a neighbor trying to protect his neighbors and, in return, being accused of blowing their best chance at financial comfort.

"I'm not against the oil industry," he said. "I am not against any of my neighbors extracting the gas from the land to achieve wealth, small or large. I am not here to deprive them at all of that."

In fact, he said, "I know they can do this in a safe manner" and in many ways he has seen that Cabot and others have improved: The driller no longer uses pits and now uses liners and other containments on its well pads to protect against spills reaching the ground.

"Things are different because of what happened at the beginning," he said. "Things are different because we spoke out."

He fears that the state will set a low bar for the Marcellus Shale industry if the DEP does not change course and require Cabot to continue water deliveries - something DEP Secretary Michael Krancer says he will not do because Cabot met the legal obligations outlined in an order drafted during the Rendell Administration.

According to the order, Cabot could stop the deliveries after it offered to install methane-removal systems and funded escrow accounts with twice the tax-assessed value of each affected home. The quality of the residents' drinking water was not a factor in that aspect of the agreement.

"How can they retract all that science?" Mr. Ely said of the DEP's record of Cabot's violations. "They can't go through and say that Cabot's findings clear them of all charges."

On a cold morning last week, he pulled the handle on a spout above his water well and let the water run for half an hour.

Clear and effervescent for more than 20 minutes, the spray of water then turned a milky brown. He caught it in a glass.

"All we want is water," he said, standing outside his soaring, half-finished home that is waiting for its brick walls.

"We are pleading for help. We are on our last straw."
 

Pesqueeb

bicycle in airplane hangar
Feb 2, 2007
40,400
16,908
Riding the baggage carousel.
There are major discussions about this here. I'd have to look it up but some company just purchased a HUGE parcel of land just east of here. By just east I mean < 5 miles. Thank god were on city water, but still, just one more thing on the list of reasons to GTFO of this god forsaken town.
 

stevew

resident influencer
Sep 21, 2001
40,623
9,625
There are major discussions about this here. I'd have to look it up but some company just purchased a HUGE parcel of land just east of here. By just east I mean < 5 miles. Thank god were on city water, but still, just one more thing on the list of reasons to GTFO of this god forsaken town.
i feel this is more insidious...
 

syadasti

i heart mac
Apr 15, 2002
12,690
290
VT
Wow. I hadn't heard about that. Props to Dreampower, they are a great group. Still,not as creepy as the whole "injecting poison into the water table" thing IMHO.
They were doing diesel too which isn't even legal under the haliburton loophole/fraud GWB passed.
 

stevew

resident influencer
Sep 21, 2001
40,623
9,625
Wow. I hadn't heard about that. Props to Dreampower, they are a great group. Still,not as creepy as the whole "injecting poison into the water table" thing IMHO.
little white rabbits with pink bloodshot eyes....do you need to be reminded of monty python?
 
This story isn't really about fracking, is it? The Dimock clusterfvck occurred when a faulty cement job allowed naturally occurring methane (quite common in that area and frequently encountered at much shallower depths by water well drillers also) to migrate around the outside of the well casing to the surface. PA DEP subsequently tightened regulations to prevent this sort of thing in the future.
 

syadasti

i heart mac
Apr 15, 2002
12,690
290
VT
This story isn't really about fracking, is it? The Dimock clusterfvck occurred when a faulty cement job allowed naturally occurring methane (quite common in that area and frequently encountered at much shallower depths by water well drillers also) to migrate around the outside of the well casing to the surface. PA DEP subsequently tightened regulations to prevent this sort of thing in the future.
It certainly is about fracking. You can say that about any drilling or pipeline accident the oil and gas industry routinely has, the end result is the same. They can do all the PR they want but when it comes down to it, they cut corners and everyone else pays for their mistakes.

Also it is about fracking when companies are free to violate pollution laws via the Halliburton Loophole for no reason other than to help the former VP's industry friends - everyone must follow the law, extra profits at the expense of others is no excuse. They couldn't even keep within those bounds and put 10s of millions of gallons of diesel into the ground (and the story above they also spilled diesel):

Fracking for Natural Gas With Diesel Violated Law, EPA Says - NYTimes.com

There is little independent research to show fracking natural gas is any cleaner than oil or coal. Not even a medical company can put a product on the market without extensive testing and their products are only applicable to a small subset. Why should oil and gas companies get more leeway when their mistakes can affect entire regions?

http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/April11/GasDrillingDirtier.html

"The take-home message of our study is that if you do an integration of 20 years following the development of the gas, shale gas is worse than conventional gas and is, in fact, worse than coal and worse than oil," Howarth said. "We are not advocating for more coal or oil, but rather to move to a truly green, renewable future as quickly as possible. We need to look at the true environmental consequences of shale gas."
 
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jsg04

Monkey
Aug 29, 2006
564
0
Oh boy... living in the heart of marcellus shale country here in southwestern Pennsylvania this is certainly a gigantic mess. Being employed in a industry that is sometimes directly involved with drilling you get to see both sides of the story. In just a 15 mile radius there are 5 active wells and a handful already pumping to gas lines.

I personally don't like it but that is just my opinion. In all these areas it's a battle between gas companies, land owners, lease owners, townships, DEP, and all the other government agencies. It's really sad to see these situations were land owners are pitted against board members of the local township, land owners against land owners, people getting brainwashed and the environment taking a backseat. In the end it all comes down to money, money, and money. Weather it's cutting corners to save money, money paid to land owners, the threat of pulling money out townships, universities, local events and local government.

I think we will have a lot of environmental issues from fracking in these areas down the road because they don't know all the facts or want to know and we are being lied to but it won't be anything new to us. I really don't see anything changing for awhile with how intertwined gas companies and government currently are in PA. It's just another chapter in American's energy sacrificial lamb. It's the same story that has gone on for the last how many decades in this area. Our natural environment has been sh!t on repeatedly for our energy resources. I get to see things all time that remind me how our land has been destroyed in order to power America. Weather it be streams and rivers completely taken over by acid mine drainage, strip mine land that looks like it should be from another planet or mountain top removal right down the road in West Virginia.

I don't know what you do.
 

Jm_

sled dog's bollocks
Jan 14, 2002
19,041
9,701
AK
Felt a good one last month in Oklahoma when I was there. Thank god for oil.