iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Susan Buchanan

GET UPDATES FROM Susan Buchanan
 

Louisiana Sinkhole Spurs Evacuations, Lawsuits and a Resignation

Posted: 08/22/2012 12:43 pm

After a sinkhole formed in Assumption Parish early this month, hundreds of neighbors fled, lawsuits were filed and Louisiana Dept. of Natural Resources Secretary Scott Angelle resigned. A hole on the edge of a salt dome near Pierre Part, La. -- about 80 miles northwest of New Orleans -- has grown to 400 feet wide and over 400 feet deep in spots. The salt water or "slurry" within it contains diesel fuel.

Underground salt domes, used to mine brine, salt and sulphur, dot the area. Natural gas pipelines crisscross the region. And because caverns mined for brine are also used to store natural gas, propane and butane, residents are worried about possible fires and explosions. They fear the sinkhole may be radioactive.

A couple of companies and possibly more are involved. A well owned by Texas Brine Co., LLC, located at the sinkhole, began producing brine in the early 1980s, but was plugged and sealed with cement to a depth of 2,500 feet in mid-2011.

Authorities say they're also keeping an eye on a nearby cavern that's full of butane."The sinkhole is about 1,600 feet from a cavern containing over 900,000 barrels of liquid butane," operated by Crosstex Energy of Dallas, according to Assumption Parish Sheriff Mike Waguespack. Butane turns into a highly flammable vapor when it's released.

Last week, Sonny Cranch, spokesman for Texas Brine, said "the site is not radioactive. That's been confirmed by Louisiana Dept. of Environmental Quality tests and by the state Dept. of Natural Resources. There's no radioactive material there, beyond what might be naturally occurring. For instance, if you live in a brick and concrete house, you'll have some radioactivity."

Attorney Daniel Becnel Jr. in Reserve, who filed a class action suit on behalf of neighbors, said "the reason residents worry about radioactivity is because companies store radioactive material at the bottom of these caverns. All the companies around here inject pollution into deepwater wells, hoping it will never surface. Gas, however, has started bubbling up from this sinkhole."

Becnel's class action suit, filed in U.S. District Court in New Orleans on August 10, claims that Texas Brine knew the cavern's walls were vulnerable as early as January of last year but didn't warn the public. A Baton Rouge attorney and other lawyers in the area have also filed suits for property owners.

Last week, Rodney Mallet, spokesman for the Louisiana Dept. of Environmental Quality, said "we began our monitoring on July 13" of this year. "The Dept. of Natural Resources was involved with the bubbling before us," he said. "We tested before the sinkhole formed, and sampled air and bubbles before the slurry hole appeared." DEQ has taken radiation, water and air samples, and has examined nearly a hundred private properties.

Mallett said that DEQ's Mobile Air Monitoring Lab is testing air by the sinkhole, while Texas Brine removes diesel fuel. Texas Brine is ridding the sinkhole's slurry of diesel. "No samples to date have indicated any risks to human health from air pollution and water pollution," Mallett said. "All sampling data is available at DEQ."

Mallett said "rumors of explosions seem to be alarmist and unfounded. However, we have asked Crosstex, which owns the nearest cavern, to provide a risk-management plan and its worst-case scenario. We're operating out of an abundance of caution and making decisions based on sound science."

Within the area, 150 homes and 350 residents are under mandatory evacuation, Sheriff Waguespack said last week. "People are staying with relatives and friends," he said. "They'll remain evacuated for at least another thirty days until the source of the bubbling is determined."

Governor Bobby Jindal declared a state of emergency in the area on August 3. Five days later, DNR Secretary Scott Angelle suddenly resigned, and was replaced on an interim basis by Stephen Chustz, assistant secretary of the state's Office of Coastal Management. Jindal praised Angelle as the "state's point person on federal oil and gas permitting issues," without mentioning his oversight of the mess at the sinkhole.

Becnel said "Angelle always supports big business. He was at the DNR when more than 40,000 fish died in the Pearl River a year ago. He was going to let the paper mill polluter in that case off with a sIap on the hand until the media and attorneys made a big stink about it." A discharge from a Temple-Inland plant in Bogalusa, La. caused the August 2011 fishkill.

"Angelle was at the DNR when the sinkhole opened up," Becnel said.

This month, Jindal appointed Angelle to the Louisiana State University Board of Supervisors. Angelle is also running for a position on the state's Public Service Commission this fall.

But Becnel said "it's hard to believe there was an urgent need to fill that Board of Supervisors vacancy."

On August 9, Louisiana Office of Conservation Commissioner Jim Welsh ordered Texas Brine to drill a relief well to assess the integrity of the cavern. Texas Brine contracted Riceland Drilling of Lafayette to do the job.

Last Wednesday, Sheriff Waguespack said "Riceland will start bringing in equipment today and it will take three days to set it up. They will drill from a location that's about 500 feet from the suspect cavern location" on Texas Brine's 40-acre site south of La. 70 South.

Drilling was expected to begin on August 19, Waguespack said last week. "They have to drill down at least 3,000 feet and directly into the cavern to try to find the source of the bubbling," he said.

Cranch said "drilling will take 40 days, give or take a few days. The well will be used to relieve any natural gas pressure in the cavern, and then imaging equipment with a sonar device will examine whether the cavern's wall was breached." The well will not be used for brine or natural gas production.

Cranch also said that matted, vegetative matter is being pulled from the slurry now so that the diesel sheen on the sinkhole can be removed.

Before the sinkhole developed on August 3, residents of the Bayou Corne and Grand Bayou areas said they'd seen natural gas bubbles and felt tremors for over two months. Texas Brine officers met with DNR officials in late July, four days before the sinkhole formed. According to U.S. Geological Survey data, tremors appeared to center on the western edge of the Napoleonville Dome.

Waguespack said the last, similar incident occurred in late 2003 when Grand Bayou residents were evacuated because of a gas leak from the salt dome. The salt cavern that's being monitored now passed its last federally-required, mechanical integrity test or MIT in October 2010.

But this summer, "theories are that the salt dome below the surface may have been breached or that it collapsed," Waguespack said. "Recent tests taken by DEQ from the sinkhole at various depths showed high salinity, suggesting a breach and escape from the cavern."

As for diesel fuel odors, Cranch said diesel was used as a sealing agent, especially at the top of the dome when the well was closed last year. Waguespack said "diesel fuel is used as a pad in these wells to stop corrosion of the casing."

Cranch said the well is on land leased from Occidental Chemical Corp. in Dallas. "Oxy is one of our customers for brine, which is used in sodium chloride to make plastics found in consumer products, including CDs and DVDs," he said.

Meanwhile, Texas Brine has worked with state and local officials to set up a relief fund for evacuees. The company has agreed to pay for residents' expenses dating to the start of the evacuation and began issuing housing assistance checks last week.

"The sinkhole remains about 400 feet across and is still bubbling," Waguespack said last Wednesday. "We don't smell odors today, but on some past mornings we picked up the smell of diesel."

Waguespack said the salt dome at the site contains about fifty caverns. Louisiana has at least a hundred salt domes, and they're prevalent along the Gulf Coast.

Natural gas companies operating near the sinkhole were asked to depressurize pipelines this month after a section of pipeline in the slurry area became bent.

Attorney Becnel said, "state authorities typically say 'no one was injured, everything's okay' after an incident involving chemical or oil-and-gas companies. They say that, even when people were hurt and things are not fine."

This article was originally published in The Louisiana Weekly, Aug. 20, 2012.

 
FOLLOW GREEN
 
 
  • Comments
  • 24
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
12:01 PM on 10/14/2012
This article dated in August. This is a disaster. It is now 10/14/12. Why on earth haven't any major networks reported this atrocity?
09:48 PM on 08/31/2012
8/31/2012 Wow, no growth? Could you guys get us an aerial shot of early Aug and early Sept? I am just finding it hard to believe that there is no more erosion. Thanks
12:01 PM on 10/14/2012
Now it is October. Why no network news on this atrocity?
10:18 AM on 08/29/2012
I hope HufPo can expose this:
Louisiana wants to build MORE toxic salt domes next door the the sinkhole!!

see
http://www.iberianet.com/forum/bubbling--lake-peigneur---assumption-parish/article_b3c53a8e-f14d-11e1-ba69-001a4bcf887a.html

Please give it WIDE attention! These nutty governors need to be stopped!
11:47 PM on 08/28/2012
Lighting strikes and butane gas are a bad combination. And yet the radioactive water in this sinkhole being spread by a hurricane tops it.
11:50 AM on 08/27/2012
FYI -
There is a new blog devoted to the Louisiana sinkhole news -

http://lasinkhole.wordpress.com
07:25 PM on 08/24/2012
so how about that hurricane coming directly where the salt domes are? i guess we will see..
10:25 PM on 08/23/2012
I have the answer..5000.00 penalty is pretty cheap, if luck Issac comes that way, it will be blamed on the hurricane. Maybe they can hold it together long enough for his arrival.....
07:35 PM on 08/24/2012
I was thinking the same thing.. that hurricane is heading straight toward that direction. I do not even live in LA, but I can only imagine the domino effect if this explodes.. We are screwed!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ikejj
05:09 PM on 08/23/2012
A disaster waiting to happen!! Just a matter of time before that butane goes!! Mass casualties will happen!! Because of budget cuts, this disaster in the making was not monitored!!!
10:00 PM on 08/22/2012
HuffPost, this needs to be front page news so many more people will read it. Many peoples lives are at risk in Louisiana and throughout the country. Here is another incident occurring to show Governor Cuomo he needs to say "NO". And states, like PA & OH need to halt operations. There needn't be any further delay to get things done for emergency preparedness, help people to safety and deal with this situation with the utmost safe resolve. Again, we are talking about human rights, and the potential devastation to our natural resources which affect everyone! Responsible journalism - make this visible! Educate the public. Hold people accountable.
08:43 PM on 08/22/2012
The Deepwater Horizon well was sunk 18,000 feet below the seafloor, 5000 ft below the surface and only 40 miles off the coast of Louisiana. In June of 2010, BP officials admitted to damage to the well bore, and casing, below the seafloor. Indeed BP had concerns about the casing prior to the explosion that caused the spill. During the Topkill attempt, Officials admitted that the well bore was compromised and the mud being used to cap the well was escaping through either new seeps or due to enlarged natural seeps as a result of the well blowout and methane explosion. No new casing was every placed in the well, it was simply "capped" in July 2010 and since then, oil sheens have been seen over the water. Is it possible that the sloppy attemps at capping the well and the admissions by BP that the well bore is compromised means that the pressure had been redirected and has been making its way to the surface through the fractured sandstone via the path of least resistance, a compromised salt dome adjacent to the coastline affected most affected by the spill? What other major geologic disaster has occurred 40 miles off the coast of Louisiana in the last 2 years? No one seems to want to explore this as a potential cause, because if they are connected the word catastrophic isn't sufficient.
06:57 AM on 08/23/2012
Thank you! And for all the NYers, politicians and the like, are they taking notice?!
01:02 AM on 08/28/2012
There is NO way that the DWH capping could effect this---It is in a SALT dome---it is an intrusion into the rock in the area.

There Have NOT been any oil sheens seen over the well--there was a report and when checked there was nothing there. The explosion was on TOP of the water, not in the well or on the seafloor. Over a mile of water insulated the seafloor from the explosion. There were no 'sloppy' attempts at killing the well.
08:35 PM on 08/22/2012
How does one move 1 million barrels of butane (lighter fluid) quickly?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fred Stender
10:43 AM on 08/23/2012
Sell a shitload of bic lighters! duh LOL
02:43 PM on 08/23/2012
Think about it. I was curious.

How much does liquids butane does it take to fill up 1 bic lighter?
- about 1 oz?

How much explosive power is contained in 1 gallon of butane (128 oz)?
- 93,000 btu

How many gallons are in 1 barrel?
- 31 (2,883,000 btu)

1,000,000 barrels
- 2.8 trillion btu

How many btu did Hiroshima release?
- 60 billion btu
06:40 PM on 08/22/2012
Crosstex avoided answering the question.......worse scenerio case? How come the people and Governor of Louisana are not raising holy hell? Does $875.00 shut you up?Wow, maybe the republicans and Obama can come visit your sinkhole. Well, they already have the body bags......
06:35 PM on 08/22/2012
Where is the ANSWER everyone deserves? Crosstex STILL is avoiding an answer. Why are the people not raising holy hell? $875.00 shuts you up???????? I can not believe that no one is demanding the worse scenario situation.Where is your Governor? Perhaps they should have the republican debate near the sinkhole? Then we'd hear the real truth? When is Obama coming over to see it?HAHA...
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
burgerandfries
Sheeple...Wake the Flock UP!
02:01 PM on 08/22/2012
"Mallett said 'rumors of explosions seem to be alarmist and unfounded.'"

That's not the way the FEMA director expressed it! In fact, he was quoted as saying it was potentially "catastrophic"! By and large, this story has remained in the corner by the media...and that's not by accident! There is HUGE danger brewing down there...and, unfortunately, corporate dollars can keep bad press at bay!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Crazyknightz
Henry A. Wallace, The Last Real Lib Betrayed by De
09:29 PM on 08/22/2012
one other thing they have found is cancer causing carcinogens in the sink hole and and in the gas bubbling up from the rivers. i noticed that was missing too.
09:55 PM on 08/22/2012
I agree! The danger that is brewing down there, WILL affect millions more people. Homeland Security needs to be involved. This is another environmental catastrophic event that will stretch across the country.