Study: Faulty gas wells, not fracking, pollute water
Faulty
wells, not deep underground fracking, is the main reason that natural
gas extraction from shale rock has contaminated drinking water in parts of Texas and Pennsylvania, says a study Monday by researchers from five universities.
As
natural gas production increases in the United States, so, too, have
reports of well water contaminated with methane. Now a study, the first
to make comprehensive use of "stray gas forensics," not only found
pollution in multiple wells but also identifies the culprit.
"Our
data clearly show that the contamination in these clusters stems from
well-integrity problems such as poor casing and cementing," says
co-author Thomas Darrah, assistant professor of earth science at
Ohio State. While a scientist at Duke University, he led the research
team, which includes experts from Duke, Stanford, Dartmouth and the
University of Rochester.
Over a two-year period, the researchers took samples from 130 drinking water wells where contamination had been suspected in the two states. They found contamination in eight clusters of wells —
seven in Pennsylvania and one in Texas — from deep underground in the
Marcellus shale and from shallower, intermediate levels in both states.
Then
they did detective work. They used a novel combination of noble gas and
hydrocarbon tracers to look at the methane's chemical signature and
determine its source. These tracers indicated the methane was neither
naturally occurring nor the result of hydraulic fracturing, or fracking,
in which a water mixture is blasted underground to break apart shale
rock and extract natural gas from its pores.
"These results
appear to rule out the possibility that methane has migrated up into
drinking water aquifers because of horizontal drilling or hydraulic
fracturing, as some people feared," says Avner Vengosh, Duke professor
of geochemistry and water quality.
In four of
the contaminated clusters, methane occurred because of insufficient
rings of cement around a gas well's shaft, the study says. In three
clusters, it leaked through faulty well casings, and in one, it was
linked to an underground well failure.
"We caught contamination happening" in Parker County, Texas,
says co-author Rob Jackson, Stanford professor of environmental and
earth sciences. He says two homes there switched from having clean to
contaminated water during the 2012-13 sampling period.
"Well integrity is the most important issue for maintaining drinking water quality," Jackson says. While
companies can retrofit many gas wells to ensure proper sealing, he says
such measures can be expensive and not all existing wells can be fixed.
An industry group raised questions about the study, published in the Proceedings of the National of Sciences and funded by the National Science Foundation as well as Duke's Nicholas School for the Environment.
Well
integrity failures are "exceedingly rare," occurring in a fraction of
1% of wells, says Katie Brown, spokeswoman of Energy In Depth, a program
of the Independent Petroleum Association of America. The IPAA
represents natural gas and oil producers.
"They (researchers) have
no evidence the wells violated state rules," Brown says, noting the
Texas Railroad Commission has done studies that found the methane in
Parker County's well water was naturally occurring and that the wells
met its requirements.
She says other studies, including a
peer-reviewed one by Echelon Consulting, found that the methane in well
water overlying the Marcellus shale in Pennsylvania was also naturally
occurring.
Fracking, combined with horizontal drilling, has spurred not only a U.S. energy boom but also a slew of controversy. The
oil and gas industry says it's a safe way to bolster the U.S. economy
and lessen the nation's dependence on foreign sources of energy.
Yet
peer-reviewed studies have linked it to possible birth defects, higher
lung disease risks, and elevated endocrine-disrupting chemical activity
in groundwater. A Yale University-led study last week found that people
living near natural-gas wells were more than twice as likely to report
upper-respiratory and skin problems than those farther away.
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