The Shreveport Times reports:

Recent incidents raise issues on drilling, environment

By Alisa Stingley
astingley@gannett.com

Blanche Jefferson lives in Shreveport, but her worries are all south of here.

Her granddaughter and five great-grandchildren live south of Spring Ridge and close to where 17 cows died after ingesting liquid that spilled from a nearby natural gas drilling rig site into a pasture.

“I’m mostly concerned … stuff might get in the water,” said Jefferson, 79, adding that the family depends on well water.

The environmental impact of drilling has her so concerned that she’s rethinking whether she wants to lease mineral rights from property she owns in that area to an energy company in the future.

“Money is nothing if something happened to them,” she says of the children.

. . . . . Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality is reviewing several area incidents:

April: Seventeen cows died in a south Caddo Parish pasture after ingesting a liquid found pooled in the pasture, a spill from a nearby Chesapeake Energy drilling site. No reports on what killed the cows have been made public.

May: Fifteen Naborton families evacuated when a Chesapeake well east of Mansfield began blowing natural gas into the air. The air quality was monitored, and a Chesapeake spokesman said there was no threat to public safety or the environment. According to DEQ files on the case, 50 million standard cubic feet of methane gas — the main component of natural gas — was discharged after a casing valve failed.

DEQ doesn’t require notification of the release of 1 million standard cubic feet but does require notification of more than 2.5 million in a planned release. The Naborton release, however, was unplanned. Otis Randle, manager of the DEQ regional office here, said 50 million is “a lot of gas.” But he said people would not suffer health problems unless they breathed in a concentrated amount.

The main risk to nearby residents is the potential for explosion, and methane causes an adverse impact on the planet’s ozone layer, since methane is a greenhouse gas. The DEQ report on the Naborton well said the release did not have an off-site environmental impact. (un-naturalgas.org note:  guess the atmosphere doesn’t count)

July: A natural gas well blowout occurred in north Sabine Parish, about six miles east of Converse. No residents were evacuated. The well was owned by Chesapeake, whose spokesman said there was no threat to the public or environment, and air quality was being monitored as a precaution. DEQ’s regional office in Shreveport investigated the blowout, finding it “pretty routine,” said Randle. No details on the amount released were available.

There are environmental concerns beyond reported incidents too:

Ground and surface water issues have arisen, particularly in south Caddo and DeSoto parishes, which heavily depend on the fragile Carrizo-Wilcox Aquifer. On the last day of June, about 1,000 customers of South DeSoto Water System had no water while workers replaced a pump. Officials wondered publicly if a natural gas drilling operation just 500 feet from their water well was making their equipment work harder to pump.

. . . . .

Many of the Web sites of the major competitors in the Haynesville Shale tout their dedication to preserving the environment.

Chesapeake’s page notes that it is a key contributor to The Nature Conservancy, and “our objective is to leave each site in as good, if not better, condition than when we started drilling.”

The U.S. Department of Interior recognized Devon Energy with a national award for its outstanding environmental and safety performance in the Gulf of Mexico.

And EnCana’s page notes: “We are looking at opportunities to recycle water and this option will become more viable as the play is further developed.”

While the proliferation of drilling in the Haynesville Shale is making environmental issues more visible and prominent, such concerns didn’t just arrive with the shale. Two cases from DEQ files:

In June, a Carthage, Texas, man pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor count of illegally discharging a pollutant into Louisiana waters after ordering a truck driver to discharge well treatment fluid into a Natchitoches Parish creek in April 2006. The man was sentenced to 24 months probation and agreed to pay a $5,000 criminal fine.

“Unfortunately, economic incentives drive environmental crime,” said Jeffrey T. Nolan, DEQ’s criminal investigations division manager.

In August 2006, DEQ responded to a landowner’s complaint that a well site where Winchester Energy was operating near Frierson had released at least four barrels of saltwater from a fracturing tank. According to DEQ files, the company had not contacted DEQ about the spill, which violates regulations. Also, the landowner said he asked Winchester to clean up the site but it refused. A few days later, DEQ noticed a cleanup in progress at the site, where vegetation had been killed in an area about 20 feet by 100 feet. DEQ in April this year deemed the site OK and did not take any action against Winchester.

For complete article, visit:

http://www.shreveporttimes.com/article/20090809/NEWS01/908090333/1060

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shopping-center-explosion

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http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=46&id=63728
FORESTVILLE, Md. – Five firefighters and one gas company employee were burned in an apparent natural gas explosion at a shopping center in Forestville. Some were seriously burned, but they have not said if any of the injuries were life threatening. All six have been transported to the Washington Hospital Center’s burn unit.

As many as a dozen were injured, the other six were hit by shrapnel from the explosion.

According to Prince George’s County Fire and EMS spokesperson Mark Brady, the fire department received a call around 12:30 p.m. Thursday for a report of a natural gas leak. They arrived at 3426 Donnell Drive and evacuated the building. Sometime after that, the explosion occurred.

Brady reports that a flash fire burned the firefighters and gas company employee. The building was heavily damaged, so no one has been able to go in and search to make sure everyone got out. Brady says they are hoping everyone was taken out in the initial evacuation.

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http://www.9wsyr.com/news/local/story/Town-official-concerned-over-gas-rig-fire/OT4K6t5CC0mHfSnh14bQJg.cspx

Lebanon, Madison County (WSYR-TV) – For the second time in just three months, a huge gas rig has caught fire in southern Madison County.

It happened in the town of Lebanon, near the Chenango County border.  Two workers suffered burns from the fire that lasted for hours Thursday.

Cleanup efforts have carried over into Friday, when crews had to go deep into the fields to reach that rig owned by Nornew, a subsidiary of Norse Energy.

The fire was so far in, there was no real danger to anyone living around there, but Lebanon town supervisor Jim Goldstein worries about what would happen if it were on a rig closer in.

“I think there should be a moratorium on drilling in this area until we get to the bottom of what’s causing these problems and what has to be done to remediate them,” Goldstein says.

…..

It is the second fire in three months, but Holbrook says his company makes safety a top priority.
Still,  Goldstein is worried this gas rush may come at too great a risk.

The DEC says about 100 to 200 gallons of diesel fuel were released from equipment at the rig.  A spokesperson says the spill is contained and most of the diesel has been padded up.

There are also barriers in place to prohibit it from reaching a nearby stream.

That part of southern Madison County may just be sitting on huge reserves of natural gas, which energy companies see as a potential gold mine.

“We are in an area that some people have estimated is the largest gas well plate in the history of the United States, and there’s a right way to do it and the wrong way to do it.  We have an industry that I think is moving far too fast that cannot be tracked,” Goldstein says.

A handful of companies have come and gone — especially now, as the state reviews regulations for companies wanting to drive through the Marcellus Shale in an attempt to find that natural gas.

But one company has stayed; Nornew says it sees a goldmine in the Herkimer sandstone formation in the area.

…..

In the town of Lebanon and the neighboring town of Smyrna, Nornew has about 100 gas wells already drilled.

“I have huge concerns about their ability to track when this Marcellus slate drilling starts where the water’s going to come from — where the waste is going to go,” says Goldstein.

Goldstein worries just what toll the search for the next big energy source will take on his area without proper controls.

Some geologists say there is enough recoverable natural gas in the Marcellus Shale to supply the entire United States for about two years.

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Another example of gas company drilling PR damage control.  Read between the lines:

Gas well explodes in nearby Lebanon

031909-gas-fire

Tyler Murphy, Sun Staff Writer
Published: March 20th, 2009

LEBANON – A gas well in the Town of Lebanon exploded early Thursday morning, less than five and a half miles from Chenango’s border with Madison County. The explosion injured two workers and jolted nearby residents from their beds.

“Two well operators that were on site were both treated for burns, one to his face and arms and one with burns to his face. They were treated for the burns and released within hours of the incident,” said Norse Energy spokesman Dennis Holbrook.

Norse Energy is the parent company of Nornew, which has an office located in The Eaton Center in Norwich.

The incident began at 5 a.m. Thursday when a fire was somehow ignited at the site, causing an explosion. The company flew in a response team and had the fire put out using foam and water by 2 p.m., explained Holbrook.

The cause of the fire is still being investigated, but the company said it ignited while operators were in the process of removing drill piping.

The closest residence to the explosion was a home along Lebanon Hill Road, approximately 300 to 400 yards away.

Don Johnson lives there with his family and was awakened by the sound Thursday morning.

“I was sleeping and the sound woke me up,” said Johnson, who described the noise as a loud concussion.

“It was one of those things you wake up and think ‘what the heck was that? Was I dreaming?’ I went back to bed and the next thing I hear is someone knocking on my door and that’s when you start to wonder ‘What is going on?’”

“They came knocking on the door, maybe 20 minutes after five (a.m.) and we were told by them that there was an ‘incident’ and to ‘pleased stay in your home and away from your windows for the time being,’” said Johnson, quoting Norse Energy personnel he recognized from the gas rigs down the road.

Lebanon Hill Road has three gas wells along it and two of them are within sight of the family’s farmhouse home.

Johnson said he’s used to having Norse Energy as a neighbor. “Nothing surprises me up here anymore,” said Johnson. “It’s just constant traffic,” he added.

Norse Energy flew in a response team to review the fire as it burned to evaluate how to terminate the blaze safely.

“We flew in our senior operations people. Vice President of Operations Daniel Steffy, who is located in Norwich most of the week but was in Pittsburgh for a meeting – and we flew in his boss, Senior Vice President Mark Williams, who works in Pittsburgh,” said Holbrook.

The company’s head of safety operations, Doug Stebbins, was also on site. “He was already in the area since most our activities right now are focused right here,” said Holbrook.

While the company scrambled a response, Madison County fire departments responded to the blaze within minutes of the initial explosion.

“We had a fire at a gas well and we’re standing by waiting for the company to decide how it want to extinguish the fire,” said Eaton Fire Chief Rick Stoddard Thursday morning.

“We’re not specifically trained to put out these kinds of gas fires and the company is bringing in its own response team. We are here to give them a hand if they need it,” he added.

“The property damage was limited to the rig and the property around it. We try to locate these wells a sufficient distance away from people and we anticipate the possibility of these sorts of things happening and have a plan in place,” said Holbrook.

He said that part of that plan was working closely with emergency services and notifying them whenever an incident took place.

The company is also in the process of trying to inform appropriate public officials in the region to help educate elected leaders and the public, explained Holbrook.

The Department of Environmental Conservation was also on site to address environmental concerns, which Holbrook said was contained to a diesel spill from one of the vehicles there.

“We have a contract with an environment cleanup agency for these things,” he said.

In a statement released Thursday, the company wrote that “minimal environmental impact is anticipated.”

“Obviously when anything like this occurs, we want to step back and make sure we are operating in the safest manner possible,” said Holbrook. The company also closed a nearby rig for inspection as a precaution.

“The most important is thing is the people, making sure we address public safety and then the environment and securing the location and putting out the fire. After that, we look at the cause – what occurred, why it occurred, and minimizing it from occurring again,” he said.

————

If any of that last paragraph was true, they just wouldn’t drill in the first place.

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For Immediate Release: March 19th, 2009

For More Information:
Jennifer Goldman, Public Health & Toxics Campaign Director , 406-587-4473
Bonnie Gestring, Circuit Rider, 406-549-7361
Deb Thomas, Clark, WY, 307-645-3236

TRI highlights need for regulation of nation’s largest mercury polluter

Metal mining maintains position as nation’s #1 toxic polluter

Mar 19, Washington, D.C. — Today the Environmental Protection Agency published the most recent Toxics Release Inventory. Once again the nation’s largest polluter is the metal mining industry: of 4.09 billion pounds of toxics reported, 1.15 billion pounds were released by mining — more than 28% by just one industry.

Unfortunately, one of the most serious threats to our nation’s drinking water supply is left unknown. Oil & gas producers do not have to report under the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to- Know Act (EPCRA), the legislation authorizing TRI.

“Due to increasing energy demand, drilling for oil & gas now occurs in 34 states including New York and Pennsylvania,” said Jennifer Goldman, Public health and toxics director of EARTHWORKS’ Oil & Gas Accountability Project. She continued, “communities nationwide are impacted, yet they’re in the dark because drillers don’t have to report the toxics they release.”

“My community’s drinking water is supplied by wells, some of which are now polluted by a gas well underground explosion,” said Deb Thomas, a community organizer from Clark, Wyoming. She continued, “at least twenty-five wells are in the path of a toxic groundwater plume as a result. It’s very challenging to address the contamination without any forewarning — what TRI provides — about the drilling toxics that we now know threaten our drinking water.”

The power of the Toxics Release Inventory has revealed the extent of the threat of mercury mining pollution. According the TRI, metal mining accounted for 90% of all reported mercury releases, 6.22 million pounds.

Although the mining industry is a significant source of mercury air pollution, there are no federal regulations that require mines to reduce mercury air emissions. A recent court decision requires the EPA to initiate a rule-making by August 15, 2009.

“It makes no sense that the mining industry gets a pass, when there are federal regulations requiring the other major industries to cut emissions to deal with the nation’s mercury problem,” said Bonnie Gestring, EARTHWORKS’ Northwest Circuit Rider.

EARTHWORKS is a non-profit organization dedicated to protecting communities and the environment from the destructive impacts of mineral development, in the U.S. and worldwide.


1612 K ST. N.W. / SUITE 808 / WASHINGTON, D.C. 20006 / P 202 887 1872 F 202 887 1875 / WWW.EARTHWORKSACTION.ORG

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http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/18/us/18blast.html?_r=1&hp

Fatal Blast Wounds a City to Its Core

bozemanblastnyt_600

BOZEMAN, Mont. – In the struggle to keep its historic core viable, this city, with throngs of college students, Yellowstone-bound tourists and wealthy second-home owners, has defied the trend of declining downtowns.  Main Street is a bustling place.

But a natural gas explosion nearly two weeks ago ripped a hole in the heart of Bozeman’s downtown, killing a woman, leveling five historic buildings that contained thriving businesses and damaging several more whose condition will not be known for some time. Dozens of plate glass windows on Main Street were blown out.

Concern about the future of the historic downtown, a five-block stretch of Main Street and a block on either side, grew last week when investigators said the cause of the explosion was a leak in a gas line to one of the destroyed businesses, Montana Trails Gallery. The line was more than 70 years old. The woman who died, Tara Bowman, the gallery director, was working when the explosion occurred. City officials say that no estimate of damages has been released.

Beyond the obvious destruction, the blast delivered a deep psychic blow to the business district, which was already going through some difficulty because of the declining economy.

“The explosion has significantly rocked this community,” said Chris Pope, a commercial real estate agent and the owner of a severely damaged building.  “People are holding their breath. The stark realities of doing business in 2009 is in the front of everybody’s mind. There will be businesses that leave downtown.”

The accident comes as the economy here, as in so many other places across the country, has been hit hard. Bozeman though, with the likes of the media mogul Ted Turner and Tim Blixseth, developer of the super-rich Yellowstone
Club, has seen more of a boom than other parts of the state and so is feeling the impact more deeply.

“We’re not immune to the recession,” said Chris Kukulski, the city manager.  “And to have a hole in the ground and all the businesses that brought people downtown gone is going to be felt.”
…..

All of that affects Bozeman’s downtown business district. “Since last fall we’ve seen planned projects come to a halt,” said Mark Hufstetler, chairman of the city’s Historic Preservation Advisory Board.  “I don’t think we’ll see a parking lot in the middle of downtown Bozeman,” he said, but a replacement building “won’t be constructed as readily because of the economy.”

The explosion has taken an emotional toll, as well.

“People have a lump in their throat,” said Laura Ryan, an owner of Barrel Mountaineering, across the street from the blast site. “I didn’t cry for me or for my store, but I cried for the buildings that are gone and for downtown. Here’s where I based my life, and it’s gone and it hurts.”

Ms. Ryan’s store survived, but two of its large plate glass windows were blown out and much of the inventory ruined.

Residents worry about the potential for other gas line problems. A leak a year and half ago closed part of downtown for one day. The fire department is fielding four to six calls a day from worried residents; most are false alarms, but three more gas leaks have been found.

Still, some downtown business owners insist Bozeman will recover. “It’s going to be long and hard, but this town will not let downtown die,” Ms. Ryan said. “It’s a gorgeous little downtown.”

For now, people still seem to be coming to grips with what happened.  “It’s still a very fresh wound for a lot of people,” Ms. Ryan said.

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The victims of Atmos Energy’s negligence lingered for over 2 and 5 months, respectively.

May 16, 2008 7:10 pm US/Central
Set of Explosions Destroy 3 Homes in McKinney
http://cbs11tv.com/local/mckinney.house.explosion.2.726162.html

May 18, 2008
McKinney explosion witnesses, victims’ families criticize Atmos Energy’s response

http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/latestnews/stories/051808dnmetexplosionfolo.34729ab.html

May 19, 2008 5:10 pm US/Central
McKinney FD Chief Reveals New Details on Explosion

http://cbs11tv.com/local/mckinney.explosion.family.2.727862.html

Related stories:

Monday, June 9, 2008
Family of McKinney gas explosion victim speaks out
http://www.pegasusnews.com/news/2008/jun/09/family-mckinney-gas-explosion-victim-speaks-out/

Monday, July 28, 2008
McKinney gas explosion victim dies

http://www.pegasusnews.com/news/2008/jul/28/mckinney-gas-explosion-victim-dies/

Thursday, October 30, 2008
Blast Victim Dead

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