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EPA Fracking Report On Wyoming Water Doesn't End Debate

By MEAD GRUVER   12/ 9/11 04:20 AM ET   AP

CHEYENNE, Wyo. -- A U.S. Environmental Protection Agency draft finding that it may have detected groundwater pollution resulting from a controversial technique that plays a huge role in modern oil and gas development isn't settled science yet.

Nor is it settled politics, especially where hydraulic fracturing has been opening up vast new oil and gas reserves and creating economic opportunities that might not otherwise exist.

And so the debate over fracking is likely to continue.

Environmentalists have been sounding the alarm about fracking in Pennsylvania, New York State and other places with new gas drilling. They lauded Thursday's announcement concerning pollution in a central Wyoming community as a long time coming.

"In Wyoming, EPA is recognizing what experts – along with families in fracking communities across the country – have known for some time," Kate Sinding, an attorney with the Natural Resources Defense Council in New York City, said in an e-mail Thursday. "Fracking poses serious threats to safe drinking water."

Jan Jarrett, president of the environmental group PennFuture, said the news underscores the need for more research and protections in Pennsylvania.

"It really highlights the importance of getting the best possible safeguards in place," he said, adding that the report also shows that hydraulic fracking is not foolproof, as some in the industry have claimed.

The EPA emphasized that its announcement that it had found chemicals likely associated with gas production practices, including fracking, was just the first step in a review of its science. The draft report opens up a 45-day public comment period and a 30-day peer review process by independent scientists.

Even so, the oil and gas industry and its allies blasted the announcement as premature.

"Unsubstantiated statements coming from the EPA today stretch the data and cause unwarranted alarm and concern about a proven technology that allows our industry to safely extract oil and natural gas. The EPA's announcement is irresponsible and leads us to call into question its motives," said Bruce Hinchey, president of the Petroleum Association of Wyoming.

The practice called hydraulic fracturing is aimed at improving the productivity of oil and gas wells. It involves pumping pressurized water, sand and chemicals underground to open fissures and improve the flow of oil or gas to the surface.

Sen. James Inhofe called the study "not based on sound science but rather on political science."

"Its findings are premature, given that the Agency has not gone through the necessary peer-review process, and there are still serious outstanding questions regarding EPA's data and methodology," the Oklahoma Republican said.

Residents of Pavillion long have said their drinking water stinks of chemicals and is giving them health problems. Health officials last year recommended that they not drink their water and ventilate their bathrooms while showering.

Industry officials pointed out that the EPA announcement didn't focus on those domestic water wells but two wells drilled somewhat deeper into the aquifer specifically to test for pollution.

Moreover, the compounds could have had other origins not related to gas development, said Doug Hock, spokesman for Calgary, Alberta-based Encana, owner of the Pavillion gas field.

"Those could just have likely been brought about by contamination in their sampling process or construction of their well," Hock said.

An announced $45 million sale of the Pavillion field to Midland, Texas-based Legacy Reserves fell through last month amid what Encana said were Legacy's concerns about the EPA investigation.

The EPA, which has been studying the groundwater in Pavillion for more than two years, also emphasized that the preliminary findings are specific to the Pavillion area, not necessarily anywhere else in the U.S. The agency said the fracking that occurred in Pavillion differed from fracking methods used in regions with different geological characteristics.

The fracking occurred below the level of the drinking water aquifer and close to water wells, the EPA said. Elsewhere, drilling is more remote and fracking occurs much deeper than the level of groundwater that would normally be used.

"EPA's highest priority remains ensuring that Pavillion residents have access to safe drinking water," said Jim Martin, EPA regional administrator in Denver. "We look forward to having these findings in the draft report informed by a transparent and public review process."

The draft EPA report and the upcoming critiques of it come as states and the federal government continue to ponder whether and how to regulate fracking.

Last year, Wyoming became one of the first states to require oil and gas companies to publicly disclose the chemicals used in fracking. Colorado regulators are considering doing the same.

The public and industry representatives packed an 11-hour hearing on the issue in Denver on Monday. They all generally supported the proposal but the sticking point is whether trade secrets would have to be disclosed and how quickly the information would have to be turned over.

______

Associated Press writers Colleen Slevin in Denver, Mary Esch in Albany, N.Y., and Kevin Begos in Pittsburgh contributed to this report.

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CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) — A U.S. Environmental Protection Agency draft finding that it may have detected groundwater pollution resulting from a controversial technique that plays a huge role in modern oil...
CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) — A U.S. Environmental Protection Agency draft finding that it may have detected groundwater pollution resulting from a controversial technique that plays a huge role in modern oil...
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Zip Zinzel
If a Nation expects to be both Ignorant & Free . .
07:31 PM on 12/16/2011
I AM A PROGRESSIVE DEM.

FRACKING ISN'T DANGEROUS OR HARMFUL IN ITSELF.

FRACKING ON THE CHEAP IS.
I have absolutely no doubt that fracking can be done responsibly, but I also have no doubt that it won't be, unless some entity with a lot of power is constantly looking over the industry's shoulder.
THE LURE OF THE QUICK BUCK, and we're outta here, is too temping to all the wildcatters racing towards this 21st Century GoldRush.

THERE ARE 3 HUGE POTENTIAL PROBLEMS WITH FRACKING
1) DANGEROUS DRAWDOWN OF OF CLEAN WATER SUPPLIES- Hello! we have a huge water shortage in this country, and this industry uses enormous quantities of water.
MY BEST RECOMMENDATION WOULD BE= Force all these operations to use SeaWater, of which there is, and never will be a shortage.

2) CONTAMINATION OF GROUNDWATER- This is already well documented.
The industry must be made to pay the FEDERAL EPA, not the underfunded State agencies, to sample the groundwater all around the drilliing sites BEFORE, DURING, and AFTER the Fracking Operations.
Also, they need to put up insurance to pay off any damages, along with unlimited liability, against any of their problems

3) TREATMENT OF WASTE WATER- Right now, the dangerously polluted waste products are mostly just dumped back into the environment in one way or another. However this is managed, it cannot be left to any sort of self-policing
Zip Zinzel
If a Nation expects to be both Ignorant & Free . .
08:54 AM on 12/17/2011
Just found this EXCELLENT article from the Philly-Inquirer on Fracking a couple of hours after I posted this

Length=moderate
Reading Comprehension Level=Moderate

How come all these explosions haven't made it into the National News
. . while we a constantly updated on every move of Lindsay, Britney, & etc

http://www.philly.com/philly/news/special_packages/inquirer/marcellus-shale/20111208_Gas_lines_proliferating_in_Pa__are_lightly_regulated.html?viewAll=y
07:51 PM on 12/13/2011
can we please agree on the fact that if companies are having to use these kinds of processes to find the bits left over that it is coming to an end .it seems we never want to admit defeat.pouring more and more garbage into the earth it will, i know in my gut, bite us in the ass. i have seen people turning on the tap and are able to light it on fire isolated cases maybe?why must it just come down to politics with this kind of issue.we are the country of invention and are backing a soon dead horse.why have we not seriously gotten behind clean energy?we are being left behind.i dont care about the actor he has a camera and a mike- but we are way behind in the world of clean energy and our kids are going to pay the price literally!to someone else.
D-Driller
my micro-bio is empty
02:29 AM on 12/14/2011
It's the reverse situation - these new processes have opened up SO MUCH gas, all over the world, that it is startling. And not only in these "unconventional" gas plays - new fraccing technology is helping to extend the life of oil fields all over the world, as well as helping to make geothermal wells more productive. "Peak Oil" is still debatable, mainly due to the fact that the population of the world has nearly doubled since those theories were passed around, yet we have never had an oil shortage in that timespan due to an actual production decrease. "Peak Gas" isn't even in the cards - with new fields opening up all over the world, the volume potential is amazing. Plus, we have not even looked into hydrate production, an energy source that could last literally hundreds of years, even with our growing population and industrialization rates in the 3rd world.
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KarmaPatrol
Fair and balanced and sugar-free
01:05 PM on 12/12/2011
On the flip side, Wyoming real estate has gotten considerably cheaper on that side of the state.

Bad news if you are a resident or someone who depends on groundwater. Why not make the entire region a big national park connecting with Yellowstone so the grizz and wolves have a little space?

Seems the park service can now pay pennies on the dollar thanks to the petro bizness.
D-Driller
my micro-bio is empty
02:30 AM on 12/14/2011
Pavillion is a small town. No other areas were effected by the bad cementing practices that the EPA or the state of Wy can find.
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KarmaPatrol
Fair and balanced and sugar-free
10:46 AM on 12/15/2011
@D-Driller, think the hydrocarbon areas are just east of the Wind River Range, though this may not correspond to the groundwater areas exactly.
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07:15 AM on 12/12/2011
Fracking also destabilizes geologic fractures that already exist, i.e., earthquake faults. Now there is a 136-well fracking project in Wyoming in close proximity to a dormant supervolcano. What could possibly go wrong?
06:56 PM on 12/12/2011
Puhleez
D-Driller
my micro-bio is empty
02:35 AM on 12/14/2011
That is an interesting point. I do think that an areas fault history should be taken into consideration when designing a fraccing program. Most importantly, we would need to know how far the fractures extend from the wellbore (usually 150' or less) then ensure that no fracking is done within 150' of known fault lines, since it is possible that the faults could allow for communication. As for the dormant supervolcano, well, it's dormant, first off, meaning the deep magma chamber has receded and there are no signs of expansion of the crust around the structure. Plus, unless the frac job can extend 40,000' or more down into the earth (we're lucky to get 40') then I think we're safe, though it would make for another great John Cusack flick.
03:44 AM on 12/14/2011
D Driller my reaction to this comment was the implication that fracking is going to cause volcanoes to erupt! I had not seen that one before.

Induced seismicity is an issue but not a very serious one, it's really more of a problem with disposal wells, less so with fracturing itself.
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05:05 AM on 12/12/2011
Does "ground water pollution from fracking" speak to pollution originating from any part of the process from rig transport, to drilling, to the actual fracturing, and waste water handling, or just to pollution coming from the actual formation fracture and fill? Its an important distinction because, obviously, ground water pollution coming from rig transport or waste water handling would not be unique to fracking operations. HP energy resource harvesting articles are not normally objective. This article seems like the typical indictment of the hydraulic fracturing process using a misdirection ploy associated with an unresolved issue at one location.
06:57 PM on 12/12/2011
In the Marcellus there are no incidents of groundwater contamination from fracking per se, they are all from drilling or surface water disposal, issues associated with all drilling, not fracking. This is largely hysteria.
D-Driller
my micro-bio is empty
02:40 AM on 12/14/2011
That has been the main issue concerning frac safety. layman contend that there is no difference - that if a well was fracced, and there was some type of contamination of the groundwater (methane, toxic chemicals, salt water, even a different pH freshwater) then it is due to fraccing et al. Industry, of which I am told I am a "hack", troll and other unpleasant terms of, brings up the point that poor drilling practices and cementing failure are the cause of the contamination, and the water wells would be contaminated whether or not they were fracced; although since fraccing increases production, yes, they would probably be contaminated faster without the process. It does not take away any of the legal ramifications of polluting a water well, does not justify it, does not let the oil company "off the hook"; it simply settles the science and points to the true reason behind the handful of contamination cases. Look for studies similar to Pavillion, WY run in Dimmock, Pa and Weld County, CO in the near future.
10:03 PM on 12/15/2011
It also suggests an appropriate regulatory pathway instead of one that addresses the wrong problem which is where a lack of understanding could lead.
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Andrew Harvey
Don't F with the Jesus
04:02 AM on 12/12/2011
So who has a copy of the report?

I find this a bit hard to believe. Oil and Nat gas are naturally part of the subterranean environment. If the EPA found oil or gas in well water, that does not prove that it came from the fracturing activity.
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angusmciver
Feels Empty
10:04 PM on 12/15/2011
I like Robert Kennedy but this and the NYT series was pretty shoddy work
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angusmciver
Feels Empty
08:59 PM on 12/16/2011
wow. Shoddy where, how?
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JoeTheProgrammer
I love dogs.
09:33 AM on 12/11/2011
Funny. The article is about the veracity of scientific findings by the EPA. Then you scroll down and see that there's a video of some actor telling us how bad fracking is.

He's an actor folks. Somebody by definition not to take seriously.
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angusmciver
Feels Empty
12:12 PM on 12/11/2011
Perhaps kinda like Ronald Reagan? No its called someone having passion and learning enough to speak up about something they feel strongly about. Many people should too learn something before posting here on HP
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JoeTheProgrammer
I love dogs.
05:39 PM on 12/11/2011
When Ruffalo wins the Governorship I'll take him seriously.
03:16 PM on 12/10/2011
Actually, fracking is a problem that, sooner or later, will come to haunt many homeowners. Thirty-nine states now have "compulsory integration" laws that make it impossible in many instances for homeowners to avoid leasing their lands to drillers.

Typical, non-negotiated gas drilling leases, in most instances, can be unilaterally transformed into an indefinite lease, with easements on the property's surface that extend in perpetuity. Your title insurance may be adversely affect, making it impossible to sell your house. And residential mortgages generally forbid actions such as those undertaken by gas drillers to preserve the ability of the mortgage holder to market your property in case of default. Thus, having a gas lease on your property without the consent of your mortgage holder is likely to be a default in and of itself.
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WESmith
Just say no to gasoline
11:45 PM on 12/10/2011
I have several properties in several States. On each deed it states that all mineral rights belongs to the Federal Government of the United States. This is true of most of the minerals in the US. We The People make more profit from oil and gas than all 14,000 oil & gas companies combined.
02:14 PM on 12/11/2011
Don't muddy the waters with irrelevancies. The controversy has to do with people who own their own homes on which the surface and subsurface rights of the owner have *not yet been separated* being forced to enter leases that could subject their property to mortgage default, force them into allowing as much heavy equipment onto their land as is desired by the drillers, and yet not require the drillers to make payment or even open their books for an accounting to the owners who are forced into granting the leases.

You probably own property that was once federal property and that was opened up to the public to encourage settling under the 1916 Stock Raising Homestead Act. You and the people who settled on that land were on notice as to what you were getting -- surface rights only. (If you check the Bureau of Land Management website, you will find a lovely PDF presentation of all this.)

You *knew* what you were getting. The people who are subject to these new fracking laws are being *forced* to enter leases on property they already own in fee simple.
D-Driller
my micro-bio is empty
02:56 PM on 12/10/2011
Thanks to intooleft and mhh310351 for sending me the links to the actual EPA study from 8 Dec. Much appreciated. I encourage everyone to read the study, because it seems to me that it is a clear-cut case of water well contamination due to poor casing and cementing practices. it is a lengthy report, but in every case where a test well was drilled to identify water contamination in the relatively shallow Wind River formation, there was a subsequent gas well in the area that either had no cement around the mainbore, or in one case had no casing all the way through the water-bearing zones. These are poor well design practices, as with the casing being set too shallow, or poor implementation of a relatively simple process, such as wellbore cementing. I believe the people of Pavillion, WY, have a case, in my opinion. I would take it to court with no worries. However, no where does this study, in part or in full, link the process of hydraulic fracturing to the contamination of water wells. In fact, it does just the opposite, by linking poorly cemented wells to water contamination. I have to say, I've been saying this for two years now, and am a bit gratified to see something like this come out. Now we know what we need to focus on - it is a simple fix to ensure casing and cement cover water-bearing zones adequately.
12:09 PM on 12/11/2011
Thank you for admitting that the drillers were negligent in the Pavillion case.

Hopefully you'll be as forthcoming and candid when the process of fracking contaminates an aquifer.
D-Driller
my micro-bio is empty
06:42 PM on 12/11/2011
If and when that happens, and there is actual proof through tracer or 4-D seismic that fluids have move up a thousands of feet to miles long fracture in the earth put there by three pumps truck, then I will be more than forthcoming - I will be astounded!
07:03 PM on 12/12/2011
There are no documented incidents of aquifer contamination from fracking in 20,000 wells drilled between 2005-2009. All instances of contamination (it's all shallow aquifer contamination) are associated with poor drilling practices, something that could happen with any drilling, not just for shale gas. It's not to say we shouldn't regulate these drilling practices, but it has nothing to do with fracking per se.
01:32 PM on 12/10/2011
I hope someone has the good sense to start monitoring water quality before and after fracking begins in a new area. Reports seem to be based on water samples "after fracking", which allows us to suggest (note the use of "may" and "likely" by the EPA) correlation between fracking and water contamination, but not causation. Good science, hopefully resulting in stronger environmental protection, requires before/after data-driven comparisons.
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mhh310351
Roosevelt Democrat
02:34 PM on 12/10/2011
Exactly what the Duke University Study Conclusion said!
11:14 AM on 12/10/2011
OK lets just say for a moment that it isn't harmful. Why go on producing a dirty inefficient fuel? Its also very dangerous as it has no natural smell and is well explosive. Seems to me being behind in green and affordable technology, the U.S needs to dumb this natural gas, oil, love it has. This fuels will one day run out just as oil is right now. Sure we have a lot of places where the natural gas exists in the rocks, but the process of taking the gas out of the rocks, that isn't the most poisonous thing of all. We have better appliances now, electric cooking appliances can heat up just as fast as gas ovens. We have solutions in front of us that are cleaner and safer. No I am not talking about solar or wind alone, those things shouldn't be used to power a grid but individual homes. There is a nuclear reactor that is safer, less harmful, doesn't produce that much nuclear waste, can even use today's nuclear waste as fuel, can't be turned into a bomb. But the because of the profits companies get from selling and storing spent fuel rods and selling the bomb material, its not even taught in nuclear science classes.
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Zariana
For SCIENCE!!!
10:40 AM on 12/10/2011
In many (but not all) areas that are being developed using fracturing of rock, the fears around "fracking" are nothing but a red herring. It is not the issue in the Catskills (the subject of the video).

Educate yourselves on well construction and the geology of the area and you will see that there are real risks and issues to address, getting a good cement job in the aquifer interval to isolate it being an important one, for example.

It doesn't help to stoke fears using the "Fracking! Fracking is coming! RUN!" mantra...it distracts from real issues.
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IPredictARiot
02:32 PM on 12/10/2011
"Fracking! Fracking is coming! RUN!" is just as stupid as "Fracking fears are nothing but red herrings".

Methane is never perfectly contained under caprock and migrates in sills and strikes, as well as along well casings. A study by two Duke researchers found thermogenic (geological) methane in groundwater in PA, and found it mostly in wells close to fracking operations. It isn't just a case of well casing.

Even if it were, in many states, drillers are fighting even casing standards tooth and nail. They are fighting using tracers in their fracking fluids, fighting disclosure of fracking fluid contents, fighting surety bond requirements for drilling, fighting restrictions on what they can do with water after it's pulled back out, fighting reporting requirements and penalties for well accidents....the list goes on and on.
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mhh310351
Roosevelt Democrat
02:40 PM on 12/10/2011
The Duke Study was very careful not to say that! Yes they found Thermogenic methane but the are where they did there studies had thousands of conventional oil & gas wells also!

That's why the Conclusion said testing before fracking to establish a base line, testing during fracking, and testing after fracking!

In life you get what you inspect not what you expect!

Here's the actual report:

http://www.propublica.org/documents/item/methane-contamination-of-drinking-water-accompanying-gas-well-drilling
07:05 PM on 12/12/2011
The Duke study found methane but no frack fluids in the water, a curious result.
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12:48 AM on 12/10/2011
This link has some real facts.

http://www.vancouversun.com/business/Lamphier+Fracking+test+results+likely+change+energy+game/5839359/story.html

It's a vertical well, without casings, fracking in shallow ground.

The natural gas boom is based around horizontal wells in deep ground with solid casings.

Saying the Wyoming contanimation indicts fracking is like seeing Evil Kenievels broken bones indicts motorycling.

Sure, ban shallow fracking - seems fair. No fracking unless you're 3000 feet down or more.
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DatelessNerd
Have your Blue Dogs spayed or neutered.
11:46 PM on 12/09/2011
Now you know why the Baggers want to eliminate the EPA. After all, it was started by that commie-pinko-socialist Richard Nixon.
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CanadaStan
Cogito ergo spud, I think, therefore I yam
12:19 PM on 12/10/2011
Too bad tinfoil hat loons don't comprehend geology or physics.
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Robert Lee Harrington
There's still time to change the road you're on...
08:52 PM on 12/10/2011
Covert Operations
The billionaire brothers who are waging a war against Obama.

...As their fortunes grew, Charles and David Koch became the primary underwriters of hard-line libertarian politics in America. Charles’s goal, as Doherty described it, was to tear the government “out at the root.†The brothers’ first major public step came in 1979, when Charles persuaded David, then thirty-nine, to run for public office. They had become supporters of the Libertarian Party, and were backing its Presidential candidate, Ed Clark, who was running against Ronald Reagan from the right...
...Many of the ideas propounded in the 1980 campaign presaged the Tea Party movement. Ed Clark told The Nation that libertarians were getting ready to stage “a very big tea party,†because people were “sick to death†of taxes. The Libertarian Party platform called for the abolition of the F.B.I. and the C.I.A., as well as of federal regulatory agencies, such as the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Department of Energy. The Party wanted to end Social Security, minimum-wage laws, gun control, and all personal and corporate income taxes; it proposed the legalization of prostitution, recreational drugs, and suicide. Government should be reduced to only one function: the protection of individual rights. William F. Buckley, Jr., a more traditional conservative, called the movement “Anarcho-Totalitarianism.â€...

http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/08/30/100830fa_fact_mayer?currentPage=all
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angusmciver
Feels Empty
08:31 PM on 12/11/2011
Nice find Robert. Thanks for that post. F&F