Fracking Update in So. County

By Steve Craig re upcoming LUAC meeting for Wednesday, 9/21, this update:

“This is not a surprise, the Chevron pipeline into Bakersfield proposal. They have been truck shipping and perhaps train shipping for years; now, with steam injection and fracking, it may become economic to pipeline.

This step will facilitate the construction of the Exxon plant similar to the Chevron one, and will connect any fracking drilling from Venoco, as well as transport the Chevron field’s outputs. On the positive side, it will prevent heavy truck transport and reduce the present level of transport for the Chevron plant.

This is a further step of creating a new and expanded south County oil field without ever going through a decision process about whether this is something acceptable to the people here or managing fracking processes. The question of the legal applicability of the citizen vote ordinance will be primary, as will the scientific question about field connectivity to the OCS and state tidelands.

This will be an important meeting.

Venoco is testing the capacity of the well along the river presently which was fracked (or at least had four separate rig operations) four times. Still no impoundment and no CDFG or Corps action on this site. Apparently Venoco pumping oil from what I can see of the pipeline size and type; on the positive, it does not look as if their fracking produced enough gas as there is no flare off system during the testing. This is a hopeful sign, unconfirmed, for the long run.

Have not heard the outcome of the date for a rescheduled appeal, whether that is going forward or not.”

For additional information, contact Steve Craig at:
Steve Craig
Restoration Landscape
PO Box 369
Lockwood, California 93932

office: (805) 472-2266
mobile: (818) 419-8229

Climate Change & Forest Fires

Yesterday, huffingtonpost covered the above subject from the report just released by scientists from Merced, California. Not surprisingly, there is a correlation between the two subjects in the title. Gee, ya think??

This report specifically targets the ecosystem of Yellowstone National Park, which has been the subject of many studies re: wildfires.

The article has a number of links to lead the read to additional information about this important subject.
huffingtonpost

To follow along with the “theme” of the last few days, I also highly recommend seeing the documentary 11th hour.

Tim DeChristopher

I hadn’t heard of Tim DeChristopher’s case until today, the day of his sentence to 2 years in federal prison for disrupting a BLM auction of gas/oil leases after his trial on the charges. Here is just one of the many great quotes, included in the text of his speech – “The reality is not that I lack respect for the law; it’s that I have greater respect for justice.” (Tim DeChristopher at his sentencing on 7/26/11.)

Mr. DeChristopher is articulate, informed, and involved. He stands as a pillar of nobility amidst a system wrought with corruption. He is the essence of civil disobedience, in my eyes, and is a voice I would love to give audience to, and so, I write about him here. I am not the only one. The LA Times article was releasee about an hour ago. I don’t have staff, so it will take me a little longer.

What does he have to do with Big Sur? I have been writing about the fracking BLM project out by Bradley/San Ardo. Also reporting on the actions of the local activist email campaign out of Lockwood, also home to Steve Craig, local activist, and HOLD-ON. Mr. DeChristopher’s speech is applicable to what I have written before and the concerns I have expressed over the fraking gas leases the BLM has over in Southern Monterey County. It is concerns like these, which Mr. DeChristopher expressed not just in words, but in actions – peaceful actions of telling truth to power. Now, he will be spending the next 2 years in federal prison.

In 2008, Mr. DeChristopher went to a public auction of BLM leases for oil/gas. He filled out the form that he was a bona fide bidder. The leases generally went for $12 an acre – except for the ones DeChristopher bid on. Those fetched $125 an acre. He was charged with disrupting this meeting.

Mr. DeChristopher is a climate activist on the board of peacefuluprising.org

His entire speech can be found there, on commondreams.org, as well as on americanswhotellthetruth.org I urge you to read it, and to show you why, here are just a FEW of my favorite quotes from today’s speech:

” … disagreement with the law should not be confused with disrespect for the law.”

“When a corrupted government is no longer willing to uphold the rule of law, I advocate that citizens step up to that responsibility.”

“The rule of law is dependent upon a government that is willing to abide by the law. Disrespect for the rule of law begins when the government believes itself and its corporate sponsors to be above the law.”

” My future, and the future of everyone I care about, is being traded for short term profits. I take that very personally. Until our leaders take seriously their responsibility to pass on a healthy and just world to the next generation, I will continue this fight.”

“But the speech [he gave on the day of his conviction, and which was only quoted to the extent of 1/2 of one sentence] was about empowerment. It was about recognizing our interconnectedness rather than viewing ourselves as isolated individuals. The message of the speech was that when people stand together, they no longer have to be exploited by powerful corporations. Alienation is perhaps the most effective tool of control in America, and every reminder of our real connectedness weakens that tool.”

“At this point of unimaginable threats on the horizon, this is what hope looks like. In these times of a morally bankrupt government that has sold out its principles, this is what patriotism looks like. With countless lives on the line, this is what love looks like, and it will only grow. The choice you are making today is what side are you on.”

Whew! I wish I could write like that, and I could go on for pages just pulling a few of my favorite quotes. I hope I chose the “right” quotes to get you interested in reading this speech given today.

Spread the word. Make sure his words are quoted wherever you have a voice.

The full and complete version can be found many places, three of which are: peacefuluprising.org, americanswhotellthetruth.org, or commondreams.org

I happened to find it here: Tim DeChristopher speech

Formulate your own opinion. Read the entire speech. I dare you!

CPOA & Sam Farr open meeting on Saturday

From CPOA:

“Dear Friends and Residents of Big Sur,

Notice of a Critical Public Meeting!

Who: Congressman Sam Farr and CPOA
What: Big Sur Management Unit Act of 2011
When: Saturday, June 18th from 10 AM to Noon
Where: Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park Conference Center
(please park in the lower parking lot)
Why: Understand the issues and participate in the Democratic process.

Coast Property Owners Association (Coastal Community Stewards) and United States 17th Congressional District Representative Sam Farr are conducting an open discussion on Congressman Farrs pending legislation affecting Big Sur, known as the Big Sur Management Unit Act (BSMUA). This legislation has the potential to have a profound impact on the future viability of Big Sur, as a community.

Please make time to attend what will probably be your only chance to weigh in on policy that, if enacted, will change the way the Monterey District of the Los Padres National Forest is funded and managed. To more fully understand the issues arising from this new legislation, please visit http://www.farr.house.gov for a copy of the latest version of the Bill and visit http://www.cpoabigsur.org for a copy of CPOA’s open letter to Congressman Farr.

Thank You,
Butch Kronlund, President
Coast Property Owners Association”

If you would like some background reading material about this issue, particularly as it relates to the issues regarding wildland firefighting in our area should the bill pass, please visit the comprehensive website on the issue: Farr’s bill
This is the only website bigsurkate was able to find that addresses the issue from the perspective of those that live in and around the area that would be affected by the proposed bill. All the others are either news agencies, or groups that fight for the conservation and protection of wild lands in Big Sur and other areas. Some of those are listed below. I suggest if you are interested, you become informed, and attend the meeting, if possible.

And there are some additional sites from wilderness conservation groups in support of the bill: leave it wild.org

or: californiawild.org

or: ventana chapter, Sierra Club

B-SAGE Movie Night

As promised, finally, the announcement for B-SAGE: Big Sur Advocates for a Green Environment presents:

I haven’t checked the weather report, but last I heard we are expecting rain sometime today or tonight, although I must admit, it doesn’t much look like it, yet, up here. Lots of fog on the coast, some clouds drifting in from the north, but lots of blue here.

Redwood Revival

Before I got sidetracked with the iPhone, I was out and about, and took some photos to share with you … some just because I live in God’s country, or paradise, or one of the most beautiful places on the planet — and some specifically to show my readers something.

These first two should lift your spirits, all you lovers of Mother Nature, as depicted here. These are redwoods that were matchsticks two and 1/2 years ago. After the Basin Fire of 2008, came the Chalk Fire and Nacimiento-Fergusson Rd. was burned on both sides. Look at what they look life now! Life regenerates. Ah, yes it does.

These two shots depict the regeneration of the redwoods along Nacimiento-Fergusson Rd. — burned until there was nothing left but blackened sticks. Now look at them!

Redwood Revival

Redwood Revival Repeat

More Fracking information and links

I have a collection of informational emails sent by HOLD to post here, as my internet connection has decided to become problematic. Still haven’t figured out exactly what the problem(s) is/are. May be a combination of internet and computer issues, but I am fed up with it, that’s for sure!

These are only a few of them, others in my inbox and/or on other computer. I will add the newer ones when it all comes back together again.

a new report you may be interested in

Oil and Gas Bonds: BLM Needs a Comprehensive Strategy to Better Manage
Potential Oil and Gas Well Liability GAO-11-292 February 25, 2011
GAO Report on BLM well liability

BLM Must Improve Oil, Gas Well Risk Oversight: GAO

By Martin Bricketto

Law360, New York (February 28, 2011) — The U.S. Government
Accountability Office said in a report Friday that the Bureau of Land
Management has failed to consistently implement policies for
overseeing potential liabilities related to an increasing number of
oil and gas wells on leased federal land.

The GAO said the agency, within the U.S. Department of the Interior,
should tighten its handling of policies that cover reviews of the
bonds that oil and gas operators must provide before beginning
drilling operations and the management of idle and orphan wells.

The GAO said the number of oil and gas wells on leased federal land
has jumped dramatically in recent years.

About 19,000 of the 93,000 wells on federal land in fiscal year 2010
were drilled within the past five years, according to the report,
titled “Oil and Gas Bonds: BLM Needs a Comprehensive Strategy to
Better Manage Potential Oil and Gas Well Liability.”

During fiscal year 2010, 11 percent of the country’s natural gas
supply and five percent of its oil supply came from wells on federal
land, the report says.

Oil and gas operators are required to reclaim the land once operations are finished, returning it as close to its original condition as possible, the report says.

Such work can include plugging wells, removing structures, reshaping
land around the wells and installing vegetation, according to the
report, which adds that operators are supposed to provide a bond to
ensure they perform reclamation work and satisfy other lease terms and conditions.

Thirty-three of 48 BLM field offices manage the agency’s oil and
natural gas program and fall within the jurisdiction of 10 state
offices, the report says.

Under the BLM’s bond adequacy policy, field offices are supposed to
regularly review bonds when certain events occur, or periodically, and
increase the amount of the bond as necessary to reflect the
appropriate level of risk, according to the report.

The GAO said 13 of the 33 field offices reported that, for fiscal
years 2005 through 2009, they either did not conduct any reviews or
did not know the number of reviews conducted, with most blaming a lack of resources and more pressing priorities.

The GAO further found that BLM state offices didn’t consistently
follow policies on when to increase bond amounts, noting officials in
three state offices who generally required evidence of operator
noncompliance before raising a bond amount and another state office
that increased amounts for most operators because it viewed them as a potential risk.

The BLM’s policy covering idle wells, which haven’t produced for at
least seven years, and orphan wells, which typically aren’t tied to a
responsible party, is intended to ensure nonproducing wells are either
plugged or returned to production, the GAO said.

BLM offices under the policy are supposed to put together an inventory of such wells and rank them for reclamation based on environmental harm and other factors, according to the GAO.

However, 11 of 33 field offices had not conducted any reviews in one
or more years of the five-year period under review, the GAO said,
adding that the field offices blamed a shortage of resources.

The GAO also said two BLM state offices and 22 field offices don’t
have action plans for analyzing bond adequacy and idle and orphan
wells, as required by BLM policies.

The GAO recommended increasing regulatory minimum bonding amounts over time to better ensure operator compliance, and revising the policy for bond adequacy reviews to better define terms and conditions that lead to an increase.

The agency also recommended improving the completeness and consistency of well records and better monitoring agency performance on reviewing bond adequacy and idle wells.

Representatives for the BLM and DOI did not immediately return
requests for comment on Monday.

–Editing by John Williams.
**********************************************************************

The below information and link to article were sent to us from concerned citizens

http://www.grist.org/article/2011-03-01-like-natural-gas-then-get-used-to-earthquakes
The following issue arose in Arkansas today after a strong quake. Given the Chemical and Radiation Injection drilling just beginning to get underway in our area, earthquake movement are a legitimate issue to require the county to work up in their EIR or MNDs on fracking wells.

The maximum credible quake on the San Andreas and other regional faults and the chance of techtonic shifts sufficient to release injection chemicals and radiation into ground and surface water should be calculated.

Thanks all……..

Note that Arkansas is now added to the lists of states with moratoriums in place on all forms of hydraulic fracking. And Arkansas is not typically in the forefront of environmental issues……..

Until studied by the EPA, this seems a reasonable position to take.

It also suggests full EIRs on all chemical-radiation hydraulic fracking injectiion wells are required.
*********************************************************************

Toxic Contamination From Natural Gas Wells

The New York Times collected data from more than 200 natural gas wells
in Pennsylvania. Many of them are tapping into the Marcellus Shale, a
vast underground rock formation. But a method being used to stimulate
wells, called hydraulic fracturing, produces wastewater containing
corrosive salts and radioactive and carcinogenic materials. In
Pennsylvania, this wastewater has been sent through sewage treatment
plants that cannot remove some of the contaminants before the water is
discharged into rivers and streams that provide drinking water. The
Times was able to map 149 of the wells.

Go to the below link to view the interactive map –

interactive map

RESOURCE:
(Could be time for a new computer. Lenovo coupon codes might come in handy.)

The Rape of Mother Earth – Fracking

By now, based on the number of people who have referred me to this article, many people are following this issue. My friend in France, who was a long-time Carmel Valley resident has signed the petition circulating around her adopted country to prevent this brutal rape of Mother Earth – and I really don’t think this is an overstatement. Visualize the drilling and pumping that the gas companies are engaging in, and you will see this is an apt description.

This information below is long, but valuable. We need to stop this rape. We cannot stand by and watch. We need to petition and appeal to BLM, Ft. Hunter Leggett and our Congressman, Sam Farr.

The first portion is from HOLD, and the second is the NY Times article.

1. Please forward this article widely, as this is an excellent summary of our precise concern along the Salinas River and Hames Valley (Scheid Vineyards and others) and Lockwood Valley (many vineyards and the San Antonio River) and ‘chemically injected radioactive haudraulic fracking drilling’ for deep wells in local shale formations. The BLM lease sale parcel that is of most concern is immediately adjacent to FHL’s tank road, the San Antonio River and the Reservoir, less than a mile or two distant, well within the directional drilling. It is basically within FHL’s sphere of influence. A print version is attached below for those with slow download. Serious problems could result for training if the San Antonio aquifer becomes contaminated and I hope that FHL staff is really taking a look at both the public lease sales and private ones as well in the FHL San Antonio aquifer. This article and link below should be posted on our Facebook site.

2. The Kanai Rig has left the two Venoco sites, and I have observed large trucks which seem to be oil haulers, coming out of the well drilling by Kanai–they could also be hauling off spoils, muds, or the “cocktail” recovered from fracking. Venoco would have to clarify. A new driller is now in place with a smaller rig at this location. Kenai does directional drilling and fracking. The radioactive portion of the cocktail is news. However, I am in touch with several wildcatters who live in this are and they said that in fracking wells, there is a period where the entire drill team must leave the site except for radiation personnel; this lasts by report about three days. The present rig installed on the Venoco upland wells has next to it large storage or containment containers. This rig is operated by “CWG”, which is I believe an India-Chinese consortium company according to Google Search. I could not find it as a listed company in Yahoo Finance. I don’t know if the County tracks the nationality or environmental safety of drillers. I will contact DOGGR, if one can ever locate anyone at work due to furloughs, and see what I can find out.

3. I signed HOLD onto the international fracking petition being coordinated out of France, sent yesterday to HOLD subscribers for general distribution. You will note that this petition has about 20 language options if you do not read french. We will be kept in the international loop in this manner.

4. The Venoco stock profile, is, like all the oil and gas exploration nationally, pushing new highs. The profile for the Company is below, after the fracking article. Venoco is now capitalized at about 1 billion dollars. (Volume spikes in the profile suggest institutional buyers are now supporting the stock up from 12 to about 18 in the last year or so. You can check the company and its posted news on Yahoo Finance under the symbol VQ.

5. Text of the NY Times article is below for people with slow download. It is easier to read if you click the link below:

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/27/us/27gas.html?ref=general&src=me&pagewanted=all

Regulation Lax as Gas Wells’ Tainted Water Hits Rivers

By IAN URBINA

The American landscape is dotted with hundreds of thousands of new wells and drilling rigs, as the country scrambles to tap into this century’s gold rush — for natural gas.

The gas has always been there, of course, trapped deep underground in countless tiny bubbles, like frozen spills of seltzer water between thin layers of shale rock. But drilling companies have only in recent years developed techniques to unlock the enormous reserves, thought to be enough to supply the country with gas for heating buildings, generating electricity and powering vehicles for up to a hundred years.

So energy companies are clamoring to drill. And they are getting rare support from their usual sparring partners. Environmentalists say using natural gas will help slow climate change because it burns more cleanly than coal and oil. Lawmakers hail the gas as a source of jobs. They also see it as a way to wean the United States from its dependency on other countries for oil.

But the relatively new drilling method — known as high-volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing, or hydrofracking — carries significant environmental risks. It involves injecting huge amounts of water, mixed with sand and chemicals, at high pressures to break up rock formations and release the gas.

With hydrofracking, a well can produce over a million gallons of wastewater that is often laced with highly corrosive salts, carcinogens like benzene and radioactive elements like radium, all of which can occur naturally thousands of feet underground. Other carcinogenic materials can be added to the wastewater by the chemicals used in the hydrofracking itself.

While the existence of the toxic wastes has been reported, thousands of internal documents obtained by The New York Times from the Environmental Protection Agency, state regulators and drillers show that the dangers to the environment and health are greater than previously understood.

The documents reveal that the wastewater, which is sometimes hauled to sewage plants not designed to treat it and then discharged into rivers that supply drinking water, contains radioactivity at levels higher than previously known, and far higher than the level that federal regulators say is safe for these treatment plants to handle.

Other documents and interviews show that many E.P.A. scientists are alarmed, warning that the drilling waste is a threat to drinking water in Pennsylvania. Their concern is based partly on a 2009 study, never made public, written by an E.P.A. consultant who concluded that some sewage treatment plants were incapable of removing certain drilling waste contaminants and were probably violating the law.

The Times also found never-reported studies by the E.P.A. and a confidential study by the drilling industry that all concluded that radioactivity in drilling waste cannot be fully diluted in rivers and other waterways.

But the E.P.A. has not intervened. In fact, federal and state regulators are allowing most sewage treatment plants that accept drilling waste not to test for radioactivity. And most drinking-water intake plants downstream from those sewage treatment plants in Pennsylvania, with the blessing of regulators, have not tested for radioactivity since before 2006, even though the drilling boom began in 2008.

In other words, there is no way of guaranteeing that the drinking water taken in by all these plants is safe.

That has experts worried.

“We’re burning the furniture to heat the house,” said John H. Quigley, who left last month as secretary of Pennsylvania’s Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. “In shifting away from coal and toward natural gas, we’re trying for cleaner air, but we’re producing massive amounts of toxic wastewater with salts and naturally occurring radioactive materials, and it’s not clear we have a plan for properly handling this waste.”

The risks are particularly severe in Pennsylvania, which has seen a sharp increase in drilling, with roughly 71,000 active gas wells, up from about 36,000 in 2000. The level of radioactivity in the wastewater has sometimes been hundreds or even thousands of times the maximum allowed by the federal standard for drinking water. While people clearly do not drink drilling wastewater, the reason to use the drinking-water standard for comparison is that there is no comprehensive federal standard for what constitutes safe levels of radioactivity in drilling wastewater.

Drillers trucked at least half of this waste to public sewage treatment plants in Pennsylvania in 2008 and 2009, according to state officials. Some of it has been sent to other states, including New York and West Virginia.

Yet sewage treatment plant operators say they are far less capable of removing radioactive contaminants than most other toxic substances. Indeed, most of these facilities cannot remove enough of the radioactive material to meet federal drinking-water standards before discharging the wastewater into rivers, sometimes just miles upstream from drinking-water intake plants.

In Pennsylvania, these treatment plants discharged waste into some of the state’s major river basins. Greater amounts of the wastewater went to the Monongahela River, which provides drinking water to more than 800,000 people in the western part of the state, including Pittsburgh, and to the Susquehanna River, which feeds into Chesapeake Bay and provides drinking water to more than six million people, including some in Harrisburg and Baltimore.

Lower amounts have been discharged into the Delaware River, which provides drinking water for more than 15 million people in Philadelphia and eastern Pennsylvania.

In New York, the wastewater was sent to two plants that discharge into Southern Cayuga Lake, near Ithaca, and Owasco Outlet, near Auburn. In West Virginia, a plant in Wheeling discharged gas-drilling wastewater into the Ohio River.

“Hydrofracking impacts associated with health problems as well as widespread air and water contamination have been reported in at least a dozen states,” said Walter Hang, president of Toxics Targeting, a business in Ithaca, N.Y., that compiles data on gas drilling.

Problems in Other Regions

While Pennsylvania is an extreme case, the risks posed by hydrofracking extend across the country.

There were more than 493,000 active natural-gas wells in the United States in 2009, almost double the number in 1990. Around 90 percent have used hydrofracking to get more gas flowing, according to the drilling industry.

Gas has seeped into underground drinking-water supplies in at least five states, including Colorado, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas and West Virginia, and residents blamed natural-gas drilling.

Air pollution caused by natural-gas drilling is a growing threat, too. Wyoming, for example, failed in 2009 to meet federal standards for air quality for the first time in its history partly because of the fumes containing benzene and toluene from roughly 27,000 wells, the vast majority drilled in the past five years.

In a sparsely populated Sublette County in Wyoming, which has some of the highest concentrations of wells, vapors reacting to sunlight have contributed to levels of ozone higher than those recorded in Houston and Los Angeles.

Industry officials say any dangerous waste from the wells is handled in compliance with state and federal laws, adding that drilling companies are recycling more wastewater now. They also say that hydrofracking is well regulated by the states and that it has been used safely for decades.

But hydrofracking technology has become more powerful and more widely used in recent years, producing far more wastewater. Some of the problems with this drilling, including its environmental impact and the challenge of disposing of waste, have been documented by ProPublica, The Associated Press and other news organizations, especially out West.

And recent incidents underscore the dangers. In late 2008, drilling and coal-mine waste released during a drought so overwhelmed the Monongahela that local officials advised people in the Pittsburgh area to drink bottled water. E.P.A. officials described the incident in an internal memorandum as “one of the largest failures in U.S. history to supply clean drinking water to the public.”

In Texas, which now has about 93,000 natural-gas wells, up from around 58,000 a dozen years ago, a hospital system in six counties with some of the heaviest drilling said in 2010 that it found a 25 percent asthma rate for young children, more than three times the state rate of about 7 percent.

“It’s ruining us,” said Kelly Gant, whose 14-year-old daughter and 11-year-old son have experienced severe asthma attacks, dizzy spells and headaches since a compressor station and a gas well were set up about two years ago near her house in Bartonville, Tex. The industry and state regulators have said it is not clear what role the gas industry has played in causing such problems, since the area has had high air pollution for a while.

“I’m not an activist, an alarmist, a Democrat, environmentalist or anything like that,” Ms. Gant said. “I’m just a person who isn’t able to manage the health of my family because of all this drilling.”

And yet, for all its problems, natural gas offers some clear environmental advantages over coal, which is used more than any other fuel to generate electricity in the United States. Coal-fired power plants without updated equipment to capture pollutants are a major source of radioactive pollution. Coal mines annually produce millions of tons of toxic waste.

But the hazards associated with natural-gas production and drilling are far less understood than those associated with other fossil fuels, and the regulations have not kept pace with the natural-gas industry’s expansion.

Pennsylvania, Ground Zero

Pennsylvania, which sits atop an enormous reserve called the Marcellus Shale, has been called the Saudi Arabia of natural gas.

This rock formation, roughly the size of Greece, lies more than a mile beneath the Appalachian landscape, from Virginia to the southern half of New York. It is believed to hold enough gas to supply the country’s energy needs for heat and electricity, at current consumption rates, for more than 15 years.

Drilling companies were issued roughly 3,300 Marcellus gas-well permits in Pennsylvania last year, up from just 117 in 2007.

This has brought thousands of jobs, five-figure windfalls for residents who lease their land to the drillers and revenue for a state that has struggled with budget deficits. It has also transformed the landscape of southwestern Pennsylvania and brought heavy burdens.

Drilling derricks tower over barns, lining rural roads like feed silos. Drilling sites bustle around the clock with workers, some in yellow hazardous material suits, and 18-wheelers haul equipment, water and waste along back roads.

The rigs announce their presence with the occasional boom and quiver of underground explosions. Smelling like raw sewage mixed with gasoline, drilling-waste pits, some as large as a football field, sit close to homes.

Anywhere from 10 percent to 40 percent of the water sent down the well during hydrofracking returns to the surface, carrying drilling chemicals, very high levels of salts and, at times, naturally occurring radioactive material.

While most states require drillers to dispose of this water in underground storage wells below impermeable rock layers, Pennsylvania has few such wells. It is the only state that has allowed drillers to discharge much of their waste through sewage treatment plants into rivers.

Regulators have theorized that passing drilling waste through the plants is safe because most toxic material will settle during the treatment process into a sludge that can be trucked to a landfill, and whatever toxic material remains in the wastewater will be diluted when mixed into rivers. But some plants were taking such large amounts of waste with high salt levels in 2008 that downstream utilities started complaining that the river water was eating away at their machines.

Regulators and drilling companies have said that these cases, and others, were isolated.

“The wastewater treatment plants are effective at what they’re designed to do — remove material from wastewater,” said Jamie Legenos, a spokeswoman for the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, adding that the radioactive material and the salts were being properly handled.

Overwhelmed, Underprepared

For proof that radioactive elements in drilling waste are not a concern, industry spokesmen and regulators often point to the results of wastewater tests from a 2009 draft report conducted by New York State and a 1995 report by Pennsylvania that found that radioactivity in drilling waste was not a threat. These two reports were based on samples from roughly 13 gas wells in New York and 29 in Pennsylvania.

But a review by The Times of more than 30,000 pages of federal, state and company records relating to more than 200 gas wells in Pennsylvania, 40 in West Virginia and 20 public and private wastewater treatment plants offers a fuller picture of the wastewater such wells produce and the threat it poses.

Most of the information was drawn from drilling reports from the last three years, obtained by visiting regional offices throughout Pennsylvania, and from documents or databases provided by state and federal regulators in response to records requests.

Among The Times’s findings:

¶More than 1.3 billion gallons of wastewater was produced by Pennsylvania wells over the past three years, far more than has been previously disclosed. Most of this water — enough to cover Manhattan in three inches — was sent to treatment plants not equipped to remove many of the toxic materials in drilling waste.

¶At least 12 sewage treatment plants in three states accepted gas industry wastewater and discharged waste that was only partly treated into rivers, lakes and streams.

¶Of more than 179 wells producing wastewater with high levels of radiation, at least 116 reported levels of radium or other radioactive materials 100 times as high as the levels set by federal drinking-water standards. At least 15 wells produced wastewater carrying more than 1,000 times the amount of radioactive elements considered acceptable.

Results came from field surveys conducted by state and federal regulators, year-end reports filed by drilling companies and state-ordered tests of some public treatment plants. Most of the tests measured drilling wastewater for radium or for “gross alpha” radiation, which typically comes from radium, uranium and other elements.

Industry officials say they are not concerned.

“These low levels of radioactivity pose no threat to the public or worker safety and are more a public perception issue than a real health threat,” said James E. Grey, chief operating officer of Triana Energy.

In interviews, industry trade groups like the Marcellus Shale Coalition and Energy in Depth, as well as representatives from energy companies like Shell and Chesapeake Energy, said they were producing far less wastewater because they were recycling much of it rather than disposing of it after each job.

But even with recycling, the amount of wastewater produced in Pennsylvania is expected to increase because, according to industry projections, more than 50,000 new wells are likely to be drilled over the next two decades.

The radioactivity in the wastewater is not necessarily dangerous to people who are near it. It can be blocked by thin barriers, including skin, so exposure is generally harmless.

Rather, E.P.A. and industry researchers say, the bigger danger of radioactive wastewater is its potential to contaminate drinking water or enter the food chain through fish or farming. Once radium enters a person’s body, by eating, drinking or breathing, it can cause cancer and other health problems, many federal studies show.

Little Testing for Radioactivity

Under federal law, testing for radioactivity in drinking water is required only at drinking-water plants. But federal and state regulators have given nearly all drinking-water intake facilities in Pennsylvania permission to test only once every six or nine years.

The Times reviewed data from more than 65 intake plants downstream from some of the busiest drilling regions in the state. Not one has tested for radioactivity since 2008, and most have not tested since at least 2005, before most of the drilling waste was being produced.

And in 2009 and 2010, public sewage treatment plants directly upstream from some of these drinking-water intake facilities accepted wastewater that contained radioactivity levels as high as 2,122 times the drinking-water standard. But most sewage plants are not required to monitor for radioactive elements in the water they discharge. So there is virtually no data on such contaminants as water leaves these plants. Regulators and gas producers have repeatedly said that the waste is not a threat because it is so diluted in rivers or by treatment plants. But industry and federal research cast doubt on those statements.

A confidential industry study from 1990, conducted for the American Petroleum Institute, concluded that “using conservative assumptions,” radium in drilling wastewater dumped off the Louisiana coast posed “potentially significant risks” of cancer for people who eat fish from those waters regularly.

The industry study focused on drilling industry wastewater being dumped into the Gulf of Mexico, where it would be far more diluted than in rivers. It also used estimates of radium levels far below those found in Pennsylvania’s drilling waste, according to the study’s lead author, Anne F. Meinhold, an environmental risk expert now at NASA.

Other federal, state and academic studies have also found dilution problems with radioactive drilling waste.

In December 2009, these very risks led E.P.A. scientists to advise in a letter to New York that sewage treatment plants not accept drilling waste with radium levels 12 or more times as high as the drinking-water standard. The Times found wastewater containing radium levels that were hundreds of times this standard. The scientists also said that the plants should never discharge radioactive contaminants at levels higher than the drinking-water standard.

In 2009, E.P.A. scientists studied the matter and also determined that certain Pennsylvania rivers were ineffective at sufficiently diluting the radium-laced drilling wastewater being discharged into them.

Asked about the studies, Pennsylvania regulators said they were not aware of them.

“Concerned? I’m always concerned,” said Dave Allard, director of the Bureau of Radiation Protection. But he added that the threat of this waste is reduced because “the dilutions are so huge going through those treatment plants.”

Three months after The Times began asking questions about radioactive and other toxic material being discharged into specific rivers, state regulators placed monitors for radioactivity near where drilling waste is discharged. Data will not be available until next month, state officials said.

But the monitor in the Monongahela is placed upstream from the two public sewage treatment plants that the state says are still discharging large amounts of drilling waste into the river, leaving the discharges from these plants unchecked and Pittsburgh exposed.

Plant Operators in the Dark

In interviews, five treatment plant operators said they did not believe that the drilling wastewater posed risks to the public. Several also said they were not sure of the waste’s contents because the limited information drillers provide usually goes to state officials.

“We count on state regulators to make sure that that’s properly done,” said Paul McCurdy, environmental specialist at Ridgway Borough’s public sewage treatment plant, in Elk County, Pa., in the northwest part of the state.

Mr. McCurdy, whose plant discharges into the Clarion River, which flows into the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers, said his plant was taking about 20,000 gallons of drilling waste per day.

Like most of the sewage treatment plant operators interviewed, Mr. McCurdy said his plant was not equipped to remove radioactive material and was not required to test for it.

Documents filed by drillers with the state, though, show that in 2009 his facility was sent water from wells whose wastewater was laced with radium at 275 times the drinking-water standard and with other types of radiation at more than 780 times the standard.

Part of the problem is that industry has outpaced regulators. “We simply can’t keep up,” said one inspector with the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection who was not authorized to speak to reporters. “There’s just too much of the waste.”

“If we’re too hard on them,” the inspector added, “the companies might just stop reporting their mistakes.”

Recently, Pennsylvania has tried to increase its oversight, doubling the number of regulators, improving well-design requirements and sharply decreasing how much drilling waste many treatment plants can accept or release. The state is considering whether to require treatment plants to begin monitoring for radioactivity in wastewater.

Even so, as of last November, 31 inspectors were keeping tabs on more than 125,000 oil and gas wells. The new regulations also allowed at least 18 plants to continue accepting the higher amounts set by their original permits.

Furthermore, environmental researchers from the University of Pittsburgh tested wastewater late last year that had been discharged by two treatment plants. They say these tests will show, when the results are publicly released in March, that salt levels were far above the legal limit.

Lax Oversight

Drilling contamination is entering the environment in Pennsylvania through spills, too. In the past three years, at least 16 wells whose records showed high levels of radioactivity in their wastewater also reported spills, leaks or failures of pits where hydrofracking fluid or waste is stored, according to state records.

Gas producers are generally left to police themselves when it comes to spills. In Pennsylvania, regulators do not perform unannounced inspections to check for signs of spills. Gas producers report their own spills, write their own spill response plans and lead their own cleanup efforts.

A review of response plans for drilling projects at four Pennsylvania sites where there have been accidents in the past year found that these state-approved plans often appear to be in violation of the law.

At one well site where several spills occurred within a week, including one that flowed into a creek, the well’s operator filed a revised spill plan saying there was little chance that waste would ever enter a waterway.

“There are business pressures” on companies to “cut corners,” John Hanger, who stepped down as secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection in January, has said. “It’s cheaper to dump wastewater than to treat it.”

Records back up that assertion.

From October 2008 through October 2010, regulators were more than twice as likely to issue a written warning than to levy a fine for environmental and safety violations, according to state data. During this period, 15 companies were fined for drilling-related violations in 2008 and 2009, and the companies paid an average of about $44,000 each year, according to state data.

This average was less than half of what some of the companies earned in profits in a day and a tiny fraction of the more than $2 million that some of them paid annually to haul and treat the waste.

And prospects for drillers in Pennsylvania are looking brighter.

In December, the Republican governor-elect, Tom Corbett, who during his campaign took more gas industry contributions than all his competitors combined, said he would reopen state land to new drilling, reversing a decision made by his predecessor, Edward G. Rendell. The change clears the way for as many as 10,000 wells on public land, up from about 25 active wells today.

In arguing against a proposed gas-extraction tax on the industry, Mr. Corbett said regulation of the industry had been too aggressive.

“I will direct the Department of Environmental Protection to serve as a partner with Pennsylvania businesses, communities and local governments,” Mr. Corbett says on his Web site. “It should return to its core mission protecting the environment based on sound science.”

Here one can find the NYTimes interactive map: Map

Fracking Meeting in Lockwood, 2/5/11

For those of you who were not able to attend the meeting on Feb 5th:

Citizen Participation in South Monterey County,

By Susan Raycraft

On Saturday, February 5, Monterey County Supervisor Simon Salinas, County Planning Staff, BLM staff, a Western States Petroleum Association representative, citizen groups, and Planning Commissioner Chair Jay Brown, addressed a public meeting at Lockwood’s Community Center at Harden Square, responding to citizen concerns about the expanding oil and gas development in the Third District of Monterey County. The use of chemically injected deep formation hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking” of the Monterey Shale in Lockwood, Jolon, Old Jolon, San Antonio, Bryson-Hesperia, San Antonio Lake, and Hames Valley, was just one of many issues on which the Supervisor Salinas and Planning Director Mike Novo focused on in leading the discussion.

The citizens and public officials gathered are not opposed to drilling, per se; they are concerned about new methods which may be unregulated and potentially destructive over the long term. What citizens really want is for their elected officials to be good managers of the public good, and participating in meetings like Saturday’s is one way to help them do that. The approximately 75 attendees asked questions for over an hour, following presentations by the county and BLM Field Office Manager, Rick Cooper. Mr. Cooper revealed the location of pending lease sales in Hames and Lockwood and provided detailed information about owner-oil company relations on “split estate” parcels (those where one owner controls surface rights and the federal government controls mineral rights).

BLM is planning a lease sale of approximately 2600 acres in the Hames Valley, where Venoco has already been issued permits for exploratory wells using the chemically injected hydraulic fracking technique, a process that is distinct from the steam injected shallow well drilling common in San Ardo. Though BLM has never inquired of its lessees what kind of drilling is planned, as the wells are to be over 8,000 feet deep, they will of necessity use the deep well chemical injected fracking technology. In the past, the wells in Monterey County, especially in San Ardo, have all been what are considered shallow wells, utilizing conventional methods.

There was a great deal of discussion as to whose responsibility protecting water below the surface around any of the new wells actually is, and both agencies represented are working on clarification. Citizen concerns that the exemption of natural gas and oil drilling chemical injection fracking from provisions of the Federal Clean Water act and Safe Water Drinking Act, and hence oversight by the Environmental Protection Agency by the Bush-Cheney Energy Act of 2005 (called the Halliburton loophole), insures that no federal or state agency is authorized to monitor the water quality effects of chemical pressure fracking. The attending agencies conceded the situation was confused though efforts are being made to work around the loopholes to protect local water quality. Testing of local wellwater prior to expansion of fracking techniques was also of concern. At this point, the county is certain that at least one chemically injected fracking well is being drilled by Venoco, and nine more are on appeal by local groups in an appeal that will be heard in late March before the Planning Commission.

Many sides of the complex issues were discussed, including the reliance of Americans on oil to fuel their cars and homes, and the political expediency of reducing U.S. reliance back on imported oil. Concerns about use of large quantities of ground water depleting local aquifers, unknown mixtures of chemicals being injected deep into the shale underlying agriculture lands adjacent to our rivers and lakes, and how contaminated water is recycled and disposed of were all expressed. Unfortunately, a representative of Fort Hunter Liggett was not present and so how such drilling may or may not be done on Base lands was not clarified, though citizen groups are pursuing a clarification this month from the Base. At this time, all oil drilling is prohibited on the Monterey District of the US Forest Service.

A representative of major oil companies presented the industry viewpoint that fracking is safe for our type of deep shale, which differs from some of the areas of Colorado, Wyoming, Delaware, New York and Pennsylvania experiencing groundwater contamination from the process, as documented in the film, “Gasland.” All conceded that it is in the public interest to switch from reliance on foreign oil to other forms of fossil fuel, to enhance CAFE (fuel efficiency standards by an act of Congress) and to move toward use of more natural gas rather than coal or nuclear power. However, whether such gas can be withdrawn from the formations in our area safely without depleting or contaminating ground water aquifers, based on the very limited available science so far disclosed to the public, is unclear. A citizen asked why there wasn’t more attention to cleaner, non carbon releasing alternative energy sources, like solar and wind power, and to conservation, and to her question, Planner Novo responded that the county has some permits pending for alternative energy development.

All speakers answered the many questions that came from the floor in a round-robin that balanced opinion from industry experts and representatives and the planning staff and BLM. Everyone left with a clearer understanding of both the issues and the processes in place (or not) to address them. There are a number of undecided issues about regulation, such as whether pending BLM land leased for wells will include County permitting of well operations. The BLM Environmental Assessment of their upcoming sale, which is of parcels right above and upgradient from San Antonio Reservoir, should be available around April 1st. The BLM representative made it clear that Congressional action could be taken to protect at least parts of southern County from any future BLM related oil and gas development (such as the Pinnacles, lands near the Forest Service Monterey District, and Fort Hunter Liggett).

As meeting Chair Susan Raycraft expressed in her Introduction, “It is only through thoughtful consideration of options that we can prepare for responsible action.” Many people, including the spokespersons for the county, BLM and the oil industry thanked the meeting’s organizers, a loose coalition of concerned local people linked mainly by email who came together as HOLD (Halt Oil Lease Drilling) to organize the gathering and create a forum for education and discussion on issues that affect us all. The group now plans to seek citizen involvement in formation of a South Monterey County Citizen’s Planning Association, modeled after the every effective CPA in Santa Barbara County. The goal will be to broaden public participation in ALL issues affecting the public.

Lockwood Fracking Meeting Panel
[/caption
CAPTION FOR PHOTO: The serious looks on the faces of BLM Hollister Field Office Mgr. Rick Cooper, Monterey County Supervisor Simon Salinas, Planning Director Mike Novo, Planning Commissioner Jay Brown, HOLD spokesperson Steve Craig, Dave Smyser of Western States Petroleum Association, and Panel Moderator Fred Kenyon (standing) suggest the gravity of the issues, and the depth of the discussion held at Saturday’s meeting in Lockwood.

NYTimes Article on Fracking & Earthquates published yesterday!

Monterey County Frac’ing & the Salinas Aquifer

Below, I have reproduced an article about fracking in Monterey County in the current issue of the Oil & Gas Journal that a member of HOLD sent out. I also have a map of the Salinas Valley Aquifer that a concerned bigsurkate reader sent me. Should we be worried? Should all those who eat from the Salad Bowl of the World be worried? I think so.

Here is an article in the current issue of Gas & Oil Journal, which can be found online here: Oil & Gas Journal

“Jan 24, 2011

Alan Petzet
Chief Editor-Exploration

The under explored Miocene Monterey formation is easily the largest
shale oil play in the US with more than 3 billion bbl proved so far,
said Timothy Marquez, chairman and chief executive officer, Venoco
Inc., Denver.

Venoco doesn’t expect the Miocene to be as good onshore as it has been
offshore in the Santa Barbara Channel South Ellwood field, for
example, where estimated ultimate recoveries range as high as 12
million bbl/well and average 5 million bbl/well. About 11,000 wells
have tested the Monterey onshore in the last 50 years, Marquez said.

The undeserved reputation of California as a difficult place to do
business may have kept many exploration and production companies from
entering the state, but that appears to be changing, Marquez said.
Most drilling has been to shallower zones, more than 200,000 wells
have been drilled, and major oil companies control 78% of the
production in California, he added.

Characteristics of the naturally fractured Monterey formation compare
favorably with those of most other US shale plays, he noted. Even in
North Shafter field in the San Joaquin basin, where Monterey quality
isn’t as good, Venoco drew encouragement because numerous wells have
cumulative production of 400,000 bbl of oil 20 years after completion
with older technology.

Venoco drilled 11 Monterey wells last year. It plans to drill 22
development and 11 evaluation wells in 2011, focusing on the San
Joaquin and Santa Maria basins and the Salinas Valley, and 50 wells in
2012.

Venoco and Occidental Petroleum Corp. should receive final data in the
third quarter of 2011 from a 520,000-acre 3D seismic survey shot last
year in the San Joaquin basin, the state’s largest 3D shoot ever. The
data will help in planning horizontal wells, Marquez said.

The company has drilled its first two Monterey horizontal wells in the
Santa Maria basin and awaits four-stage fracs expected in a few weeks
to test that technology vs. acid treatments that have worked well in
the Monterey elsewhere. It is also drilling a horizontal Monterey well
in the Salinas Valley. Most of the company’s leases have 10-year
primary terms.

Marquez urged the industry to focus on EURs rather than initial
potential flow rates in reporting Monterey results.

Venoco, without an announcement, sold its small interest in Cat Canyon
field in the Santa Maria basin in the 2010 fourth quarter as being
fairly depleted in the Monterey, Marquez said.”

And here is the link for the aquifer map and discussion about the geological properties of the Salinas Valley: Salinas Valley Aquifer

Finally, here is the position of the BLM on the drilling on their land, courtesy of Steve Craig of the Ventana Trust:

“BLM appears not to be in the position to take responsibility for any
hydraulic fracking decsion-making at all. Their discretion is
superficial only, quite literally. The issue moves to the Division of
Gas and Geothermal Resources (DOGGR). DOGGR is a state agency
(website: http://www.conservation.ca.gov/dog/Pages/index.aspx). We will see how the state and federal regs are interpreted. Fracking may in essence be unregulated as to water and air quality impacts if a
federal pre-emption of state rules is invoked by the drillers.

DOGGR only works a few days a week due to furlough requirements, soon to be increased, and I think we will find they cannot enforce Clean Water Act, Safe Water Drinking Act, and Clean Air Act due to
exemptions in the Bush-Cheney-Halliburton 2005 energy bill. I should have an answer on that issue within a week.
Steve [Craig, Ventana Trust]

From the BLM:

Steve,

As noted earlier, I’m not the minerals specialist, but it is my job to help the public understand how oil and gas is regulated by BLM and the State of California.

Of course, the many layers of government can be confusing, but generally BLM is only responsible for the effects of energy development on the surface; whereas the State of California Department of Conservation’s Division of Oil and Gas is responsible for regulating all the activities that take place underground (i.e. subsurface).

In other words, the California Division of Oil and Gas (CDOG) has strict regulations for oil and gas drilling in California (including the use of hydraulic fracturing technology) that are not within the jurisdiction of BLM, so we can only analyze the associated issues/concerns (i.e. water quality) based on information that’s available at the leasing stage.

Anyway, here’s a link to the CDOG website that describes rules and
regulations for oil and gas drilling in California (which happen to be much more strict than the federal standards!):

Department of Oil & Gas regulations

regards,

Sky Painter Murphy
BLM Hollister Field Office

And there you have it – or at least some of it. I will continue to keep all of us as informed and aware as I can, but contributions always appreciated. Don’t forget the meeting on Feb. 5th. I will post a reminder closer to the date.