Fracking Documentarians Tour West Virginia, U.S. Without Using Gasoline

A cross-country tour dedicated to spreading awareness about fracking is making its way to West Virginia with an interesting bonus. Journalists Joshua…

A cross-country tour dedicated to spreading awareness about fracking is making its way to West Virginia with an interesting bonus.   

Journalists Joshua Pribanic and Melissa Troutman will continue to tour the country throughout the year to promote their film Triple Divide. The movie is an investigative documentary about fracking in the Marcellus Shale in Pennsylvania.

Here’s the interesting part: they are traveling the country using zero gasoline. Yes, you read that correctly. The two will be driving a Tesla Motors Model S, a long-range, all-electric sedan. They will test the nationwide Supercharger system, where electric cars can be recharged for free. They claim that the car will emit zero greenhouse gasses.

It is fitting with the movie’s core message. The film they’re promoting deals with how water and energy connect us. The filmmakers say that the movie will discuss the enforcement of state and federal regulations on fracking.

Here’s a list of their stops in West Virginia:

  • Buckhannon:  June 21 @ 7 p.m. West Virginia Wesleyan College
  • Clarksburg: June 25 @ 5:30 p.m. Caperton Center Fairmont State University
  • Charleston: June 27 @ 7:00 p.m. Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Charleston

Companies Beginning to Explore W.Va. Utica Shale

Oil and natural gas companies with Marcellus Shale operations in the Northern Panhandle are turning their attention more and more to the underlying Utica…

Oil and natural gas companies with Marcellus Shale operations in the Northern Panhandle are turning their attention more and more to the underlying Utica Shale.

The Utica underlies much of the Marcellus in Marshall, Wetzel and Ohio counties.
 
The Intelligencer and Wheeling News-Register reports Gastar Exploration is drilling an exploratory well in both the Utica and Point Pleasant formations in Marshall County.
 
Gastar president and CEO J. Russell Porter tells the newspaper the Houston- based company plans to move both its Marcellus and Utica drilling programs to Wetzel County later this year.
 
Stone Energy Corp. operates mostly in Wetzel County and plans to drill a Utica exploratory well in June. Fossil Creek of Ohio also is exploring the Utica Shale in the northern panhandle.

 

EPA Seeks Comment on Fracking Chemicals Disclosure

  The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is seeking public comment on ways to disclose information about the chemicals used in the oil and gas drilling process known as fracking.

The EPA says in a Friday release that it is also seeking input on incentives and programs that could help develop safer fracking chemicals.

The 90-day comment period is an advanced notice of proposed new rules, but is no guarantee that the regulations will become law. The EPA could also propose voluntary steps for energy companies to take. During the fracking process water, sand and chemicals are injected into such deep underground formations to free oil or gas.

The gas rich Marcellus Shale lies under large parts of Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio and New York. 

Report: W.Va. Taxes Natural Gas Drilling Four Times as Much as Pa.

A new report from a nonpartisan office of the Pennsylvania Legislature says its state’s taxes on the natural gas drilling boom are among the lowest in the nation.

The figures released Thursday by the Independent Fiscal Office found that Pennsylvania is the only state with significant production that doesn’t impose a severance tax based on the volume of gas produced.

 
The report found that a Pennsylvania well that began producing in 2014 will be taxed at an effective tax rate of no more than 1.6 percent, and perhaps less than half of that.

By comparison, a similar well in West Virginia will be taxed at over seven percent.

 
The Marcellus Shale Coalition, an industry group, says the analysis is flawed because it doesn’t include other factors, such as corporate taxes.

DEP Orders Fayette County Waste Pit Shutdown, Renews Well Permit

The West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection has renewed a permit for an underground injection well in Fayette County that accepts fracking water and other waste.

A public hearing in 2013 brought concerned residents and former workers of Danny Webb Construction, the owner of the site. Residents have been concerned about the site for years.

The DEP renewed the permit on February 6 for a class two UIC, or underground injection control disposal well owned by Danny Webb Construction. The permit allows the company to accept fluids from oil and gas exploration, development drilling, and production fluids for another five years, although during the renewal process, the company could accept the waste anyway.

The permit was granted with the condition that the company close a waste pit and no longer use it. The pit is located near the underground well and was used to help remove sediments from the waste before injecting underground.

The DEP ordered the pit closed after the operator failed to submit a plan to bring the pit up to code. Although the DEP did not find the pit to be leaking, officials say it needed to be upgraded.

Underground Injection Control Permit Reviewer for the DEP Office of Oil and Natural Gas James Peterson says the pit needs a leak detection system and a new liner.

DEP is asking DWC to submit an engineered plan to properly close the pit.

The renewal comes despite opposition letters from several national and local environmental groups.

This pit and the well have received waste from Pennsylvania, Virginia and other parts of West Virginia.

The DEP says there are 54 non-commercial and 17 commercial disposal wells in the state as of late last year.

Frackwater Pit at Risk of Leaking

A waste pit in Fayette County does not meet the minimum pit and impoundment standards. The pit is filled with fracking water and other waste from oil and gas drilling. The state Department of Environmental Protection asked Danny Webb Construction to come up with an acceptable plan for the pit.

Community members have been concerned about the waste site for years.

The pit is used to remove sediments from waste before being injected into the nearby underground injection well in Lochgelly. The permit for the well expired in October 2012 and remains in the renewal process.

James Peterson is the Underground Injection Control Permit Reviewer for the DEP Office of Oil and Gas. He says the UIC permit has not been accepted because the nearby sediment pond is not up to code. At a public meeting in June, community members shared concerns over the site. They worried the pit was leaking.

“We do not see that as leaking,” Peterson explained, “but it has been compromised on top just where folks have been walking around the pit. So we’re looking at bringing him up to current pit construction standards.”

Peterson says Danny Web Construction needs to fix the lining of the pit. Without it Peterson says the pit could leak. The DEP also wants the company to install a leak detection system. The DEP denied the first plan and is waiting on the company to submit another for review.

Peterson says the injection well itself wasn’t posing the regulatory problem, so the company can still accept waste.

Since the pond is used to remove solids from the waste, Peterson says Danny Webb Construction will need to use more filters at the site to avoid clogging the well itself. But  that’s not regulated so it’s up to the company to decide to use the filters. 

State lawmakers are considering other ways to dispose of fracking waste. Senate Majority Leader John Unger began the discussion during a meeting of a Joint Legislative Oversight Commission on state Water Resources last November.

You have to do something with those waste fluids and to date, that's the best answer; disposal wells. – James Peterson, WV DEP

Since water is mixed with various chemicals, pressurized, and pumped into wells to release the gas from the Marcellus shale rock formations during the fracking process, it’s a critical component in the process.  It’s estimated that in West Virginia, each horizontal well requires about 5 million gallons of fresh water.

About 10 percent of that comes back up during the process as “flowback” fluid. While new recycling practices adopted in the state are diverting about 75 percent of that flowback for reuse, Peterson points out that injection wells are still the best practice for disposing the remainder… at least for now.

“You have to do something with those waste fluids and to date, that’s the best answer; disposal wells,” Peterson said.

“You’re putting fluids in a sense back where it came from into deep formations. The whole goal of the UIC program is to protect underground sources of drinking water fresh water aquifers so there’s monitoring requirements and construction requirements to make sure that happens.”

Danny Web Construction did not immediately return our request for comment.

There are currently 17 permitted commercial disposal wells like the one owned by Danny Webb Construction. There are 54 non-commercial UIC disposal wells.

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