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Swimming in Natural Gas: The Greenwashing of an Industry
There has never been a better moment for natural gas. It is the “other” fossil fuel, touted as a clean alternative to coal and oil. It may be non-renewable, proponents argue, but it is a bridge or transition fuel to a happier future. Not surprisingly, the industry has gone to great lengths to persuade local residents, members of congress, and the public at large that there’s nothing to worry about. Chesapeake Energy Corporation, one of the major players drilling for natural gas in the Marcellus Shale, which stretches from New York to Tennessee, has successfully billed itself as an environmentally friendly operation.
Natural gas has been championed by oil and gas executive T. Boone Pickens, who happens to own Cabot and Warren Buffett, the oracle himself. At the inauguration of the Congressional Natural Gas Caucus in October, Pickens, the keynote speaker, declared, “We are swimming in natural gas.” (photo by flickr user jurvetson) So when Cabot Oil and Gas, a Houston based energy company,
was fined for several hydraulic fracturing fluid spills in northeastern
Pennsylvania last year, Chesapeake took the opportunity to distance itself from
what had become an embarrassing situation. In addition to the frack fluid
spills, there were numerous reports of contaminated drinking water wells in
Dimock, PA. On New Year’s Day 2009, a resident’s drinking water well exploded,
ripping apart an eight by eight foot slab of concrete. The Dimock experience
had the potential to become an industry nightmare, perhaps even derailing
efforts to drill in New York State. "Certainly, when an operation isn't
meeting the regulations laid out by the state, it doesn't reflect well on the
industry," Chesapeake’s director of corporate development for the
company’s eastern division told a group of executives at an event in November.
The natural gas industry has had little trouble attracting powerful and influential boosters. It has been championed by oil and gas executive T. Boone Pickens, who happens to own Cabot and Warren Buffett, the oracle himself. At the inauguration of the Congressional Natural Gas Caucus in October, Pickens, the keynote speaker, declared, “We are swimming in natural gas.” Residents of Dimock, many of whom have sued Cabot for poisoning their water, may take a slightly different view of natural gas’s potential. In December, Pennsylvania’s Department of Environmental Protection issued a consent order requiring that the company provide clean water or filtration devices to 13 families within a nine-square -mile area. They also slapped them with a $120,000 fine.
More recently, according to the Wall Street Journal, Chesapeake’s chief executive, Aubrey McClendon, has been touring the country alongside the Sierra Club’s Carl Pope trumpeting the benefits of natural gas. Its biggest selling point is that it burns cleaner than coal and oil, though the impact of extracting it from deep shale formations is highly controversial. It also requires the use of large amounts of diesel fuel to keep compressors and other machinery operating 24/7. Responding to criticism from local affiliates, particularly in New York and Pennsylvania, Pope asked, “Will the 20% of the membership that happens to live in places where drilling is happening be unhappy? I'm sure that's true." So much for grassroots organizing.
In early December I drove through Bradford County, PA and stopped in Towanda, the county seat. The small town of about 3,000 people, located on the Susquehanna River, is humming with activity. The Towanda Motel, on the northern edge of town, has been entirely occupied by Chesapeake employees since April. No Vacancy signs hang from the office window and a security guard keeps watch over the premises. The company’s fleet of shiny white pick-ups and SUVs can be seen everywhere, harbingers of what seems to be a very important mission. Nearly everyone I met had leased their land, from the young man who owned the Victorian Charm Inn where I stayed to the woman who worked in the county clerk’s office (open late now on Tuesdays and Thursdays to accommodate “abstracters,” company reps who comb through deeds going back to the early 19th century to find out if there might be any obstacles to acquiring mineral rights from local landowners). When I asked the owner of a local diner if things had improved in Towanda since Chesapeake came to town she replied curtly, “Sometimes.” Meanwhile, Chesapeake has opened a regional office in what was once an Ames Department Store on the south side of town.
On my way through I picked up a copy of the local paper, The Daily Review. Chesapeake had taken out a full page ad on the subject of hydraulic fracturing, describing the process as one that “pumps a pressurized mixture of 99.5% sand and water with a small amount of special purpose additives,” into a well bore to shatter the rock and release the gas. The ad goes on to note that, “The additives…include compounds found in common household products.” They fail to acknowledge, however, that the fracking formula, which varies from well to well depending on the geology of the region, is considered proprietary and we still do not fully know what is being pumped underground. The industry, which has been exempt from the Safe Drinking Water Act, the Clean Water Act, Clean Air Act, and CERCLA since 2005, has never been forced to publicly disclose the contents of the fluids it uses to fracture wells. The so-called Halliburton Loophole, inserted into the 2005 energy bill, was a gift of the Bush-Cheney administration (Halliburton invented the process of hydraulic fracturing), and essentially said that the EPA no longer had the authority to regulate hydraulic fracturing.
Dr. Theo Coburn of the Endocrine Disruption Exchange (TEDX) has compiled what is probably the most comprehensive list of both drilling and fracturing chemicals based in part on samples from a well in Park County, Wyoming where a breach in surface casing released drilling fluids in 2006. They have uncovered 435 fracturing products that contain 344 chemicals including ammonium nitrate, ethanol, methane, and diesel. According to the TEDX Web site, “As natural gas production rapidly increases across the U.S., its associated pollution has reached the stage where it is contaminating essential life support systems - water, air, and soil - and causing harm to the health of humans, wildlife, domestic animals, and vegetation.”
Chesapeake has done a pretty good job of maintaining its environmentally friendly image, though two recent infractions reveal that accidents are perhaps inevitable and that Cabot Oil and Gas is not necessarily the exception.
On New Year’s Eve, evidence of a spill or contaminate release at a drilling site in Wayne County, PA was reported after aerial photos taken by an environmental watchdog group, Damascus Citizens for Sustainability, uncovered damage to trees near a well pad. The photos show a row of dead, leafless trees extending from the drill pad. Chesapeake had not reported the spill, which would be a violation of state law if indeed they were aware that it happened. According to the Times Tribune, a “weathered petroleum product” was discharged into a forested area and soil samples show that it contained elevated concentrations of barium and chloride.
Perhaps more damaging were reports in early December of a large hydrochloric acid spill in Asylum Township not far from Towanda. The spill was said to have released 295 gallons of acid into the surrounding soil. According to the DEP’s consent assessment the acid contaminated soil was neutralized with soda ash and hydrated lime, 126 tons of impacted soil was excavated, and approximately 13,817 gallons of hydrochloric acid/water mixture were removed from the well site. According to a DEP spokesman, the contaminated soil was taken to a landfill in New Springfield, Ohio. Although Chesapeake reported the spill to the DEP in February when it occurred the clean up and investigation was only publicized in December after the company was fined a civil penalty of just over $15,500.
When I reached Asylum Township supervisor Kevin Barrett, who happens to grow corn just below the drill site, he said the company dealt with the spill responsibly. It was in a remote area of the township about a half-mile from a major water source or residence on land owned by a family that does not live there. Asked if he was worried that his corn might be contaminated with hydrochloric acid, he said the spill was small and posed no threat to humans, wetlands, or wildlife.
However, according to the DEP report, the estimated leakage rate was 7.5 gallons per hour, though “Chesapeake personnel did not know how long the tank had been leaking.” Chesapeake notified the DEP on February 9, 2009 that a leak had been discovered at around 9 a.m. A DEP representative arrived at 1 p.m. and Chesapeake’s emergency contractor six hours later. If we take the company’s figure of 295 gallons of spilled acid that means the tank was leaking for close to 42 hours. Presumably the tank was leaking hydrochloric acid for nearly 30 hours before anyone knew anything about it or bothered to report it to the DEP. So was all of the contaminated soil contained and removed?
Accidents do happen, Barrett told me. It’s part of the price of doing business. Something McClendon and the Sierra Club’s Pope might like to acknowledge as they make the case for an industry whose green credentials are far from certain.
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15 Comments so far
Show AllHydrochloric Acid.
Another way to dissolve the formation and release gas.
Once they drill, they have to create a cavity, that's what fracking and acidizing does.
It is bad enough for toxins to leach into the groundwater. It is insane to pump toxins directly into the ground.
The same companies that expolit natural gas also provide clean-up services for the contamination...at a very steep cost to taxpayers, of course.
Its called privatizing profits and socializing liabilities and losses.
This new source of natural gas is so tempting because gas substituted for coal in existing power plants would produce the same amount of power with 40-50% less production of CO2. Instant Kyoto emissions reductions!
I might have pointed out fracking chemical problems one too many times on the Climatge Progress blog, and now I'm in perpetual comment moderation (or spam if the moderators aren't there).
The fracking chemicals seem relatively simple and short lasting. No phenylbromides, MTBE, dioxin, radionuclides..., but who really knows, and the work should be done right, and should be regulated by EPA instead of uneven state regulations and resources.
Another article that borders on deliberate disinformation.
For a list of those "secret" ingredients in fracking fluid provided by Chesapeake Energy go here:
http://bit.ly/6ND19j
Average shale wells are 9,000 to 12,000 feet deep which is thousands of feet below the water table so any migration of chemicals or natural gas into the water supply is a very infrequent occurrence (considering that there are 500,000 operating gas wells in the US right now)and caused either by faulty well casings or unusual geological conditions.
These possible outcomes can be anticipated and dealt with via legislation or by the landowners themselves when they negotiate their leases. An involved public is crucial to the development of the green energy economy and ensuring water and environmental standards is part of this job.
Fracturing fluid that is brought to the surface after the well is drilled is held in plastic lined pools until it is taken away to be recycled and most of the accounts of animal deaths or groundwater pollution stem from a problem with such pools. Procedures for any such spills along with penalties in the case that such spills are caused by actual negligence are already in place.
In short, there are a handful of such events on record and the benefits of natural gas as part of our switch to a green economy are huge, large enough to outweigh the fearmongering tone of this article.
Some examples of other "dangerous" energy sources:
Biofuel:
Ethanol Plant Incidents
http://homepage.mac.com/oscura/ctd/incidents.html
Solar:
Rooftop solar is several times more dangerous than nuclear power and wind power
http://nextbigfuture.com/2008/03/deaths-per-twh-for-all-energy-sources.html
Wind:
A Summary of Fatal Accidents In Wind Energy
http://www.wind-works.org/articles/ASummaryofFatalAccidentsinWindEnergy.html
If the Fracking chemicals are so benign why do families with poisoned wells slowly die?
Diesel in water stays deadly in water for a very long time.
Possibly gas and oil are poisoning the water tables in order to add value to remaining commoditized water tables.
enki09, 'Another post that borders on deliberate disinformation.'
The energy controversy is God's way of teaching us ecology.
When listing spills and releases for Chesapeake, don't forget their infamous Cow-Kill next to a drilling location in Caddo Parish Louisiana in early 2009. One eyewitness described it this way:
"120 CHICKENS DIED, A BABY CALF (1 WEEK OLD) DIED, AND 15 CATS, THE SAME DAY ALL THE COWS DIED. AND IT WAS 30+ COWS AND ALL OF THEM WERE PREGNANT. WE HAVE PICTURES OF THE VET CUTTING THE CALVES OUT, AND CARVING UP THE MOMMA'S. THE COWS THAT WERE CONTAMINATED, JUST BEFORE THEY DIED, STOOD BELLOWING, HEAD AND STOMACH SWELLING AND FINALLY THEIR TONGUE SWELLED SO BIG IT CUT OFF THE AIR SUPPLY AND THEIR EYES EXPLODED IN THEIR SOCKETS, AND BLOOD RAN OUT OF EYES, NOSE, MOUTH, AND THEIR BACK END. THEIR STOMACHS WERE IMMEDIATELY HUGE, SO BIG IT WAS A WONDER THE STOMACHS DID NOT EXPLODE. THE CHEMICAL ATE THE INSIDES OF THEIR GUTS UP."
"CHESAPEAKE IS TRYING THEIR BEST TO KEEP THIS HUSH HUSH AND ALOT OF OUR OFFICIALS HAVE BEEN BOUGHT OUT. WE HAVE 65 LAWSUITS PENDING WITH MORE TO COME. PEOPLE ARE GETTING SICK. THEY DID NOT WANT US TO KNOW, THEY WERE TRYING TO HIDE IT, BUT THEY BURIED THE CONTAMINATED COWS ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE PROPERTY WITH THE SHERIFF'S DEPT GUARDING THEM, SO THAT AS THE COWS ROT AND DECAY, THE CONTAMINANTS CAN LEAK STRAIGHT INTO OUR WATER SUPPLY."
Here's a news story on the same event:
http://www.propublica.org/article/16-cattle-drop-dead-near-mysterious-fluid-at-gas-drilling-site-430
the small PA community i live in lacks clean drinking water because of the coal power plants that ring us. there is very little public outcry about the pollution here, the energy industry has experience putting down communities that are dealing with the environmental impacts.
RE: Marcellus January 5th, 2010 9:51 am
I just sent a message to the Harrisburg Patriot-News passing along the second paragraph of the story and the link with a suggestion the paper send some reporters to the Marcellus Shale to find out more about "fracking" and the possibly/probably dangerous chemicals in use, and whether there have been any spills there. They will ignore me.
pope is the inside guy that cong has been waiting for for years
he has lost his clearly and needs to be replaced. no money from this source. i just got an envelope yesterday and its going right into the shredder post haste!
The very name "natural gas" is a form of greenwashing. The true name of the gas at issue is methane, a greenhouse gas. When used to generate electricity, methane emits 443 grams of CO2 per kilowatt hour of electricity produced (See Table 8, "Lifecycle estimates for electricity generators" in "Valuing the greenhouse gas emissions from nuclear power" http://www.nirs.org/climate/background/sovacool_nuclear_ghg.pdf). Methane is cleaner than coal (1050 gCO2e/kWh) but far dirtier than solar thermal (13 gCO2e/kWh).
It is good that there are so many interested commenters in response to this article. If you are in NY you might want to go to damascuscitizens.org for a local grassroots response. For an overview try propublica.org for a history of the tug of war over drilling in the NYC Watershed and in the Southern Tier of NY state. We want to ban gas drilling first because we need to develop low CO2 green energy technologies instead; and second, because gas drilling is not regulated to protect the environment in the 2005 Energy Act; and third because gas drilling pollutes groundwater and air and hydraulic fracturing contains toxic chemicals. The New York Southern Tier used to grow vegetables and food for the entire NorthEast and contains significant fertile soil for future farming. This soil and water will be compromised if gas drilling is allowed to take hold here as intensively as proposed. These guys are talking about having four wellheads at a hub in forty acres, going down and then horizontally. The potential for large swathes of polluted water and soil as a result is significant. Do not think you can sit this one out if you live in NY or PA. Sierra Atlantic is even going to fight this one. Get busy.