August 9, 2009

Field & Stream PA Natural Gas Drilling Article

Last month Troutrageous! posted about the Natural Gas Drilling that is going on in Pennsylvania, and the negative impact it could potentially have on our fisheries (& trout). Field & Stream has finally posted the article referenced to it's website, a bit of it is below:

Natural Gas Drilling Threatens Trout in Pennsylvania (and Other Appalachian States)

Natural gas extraction in the Marcellus Shale Formation of New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, West Virgiana, and Ohio threatens coldwater fish like trout.
Article by
Anthony Licata. Uploaded on July 24, 2009

Western sportsmen have been dealing with the ramifications of natural gas extraction for years, but now Eastern sportsmen need to brace for impact. Widespread gas drilling is hitting Appalachia, and unless environmental regulations and enforcement catch up with the drilling, there could be major damage to world-class trout water, from small mountain streams to the Delaware River.

Gas and Cash The gas lies in what is called the Marcellus Shale Formation, a 600-mile sheet of sedimentary rock (see sidebar). Until recently, extraction wasn’t cost effective, but advances in technology and higher gas prices have made it lucrative. Extremely lucrative. Gas companies have been offering landowners as much as $2,500 an acre just for lease rights; royalties are paid on top of that, and sums can be huge. Suddenly a small farmer or modest hunting club might be looking at a million-dollar windfall. The states are also leasing public hunting land, licking their chops at the prospect of an industry that could fill coffers and balance budgets for decades.

There is no stopping Marcellus shale drilling. There is too much money to be made. But it has exploded so suddenly that state natural resource departments have been caught flat-footed and are struggling to get adequate regulations and compliance staff in place.

Water and Trout In a process called hydro-fracturing, first, a well is drilled thousands of feet down and, by way of directional drilling technology, turned horizontal. The gas is released when the shale is “fracked,” basically broken up by a mixture of water, sand, and chemicals that is forced down the well. As much as 3 million to 9 million gallons of water are used per well. A well may need to be fracked a few times during its life.

Where this fracking water comes from is one of the major threats to fisheries. Trucking water in is expensive; it’s cheaper to run a fire hose to a local source. Because well sites are often in undeveloped highlands, these sources are often small trout streams. Regulations for drawing water vary among the states, and there are questions about how well current regulations protect waterways. There is also a question of enforcement. Four gas companies have already been caught withdrawing water from Pennsylvania trout streams without permission.

After the fracking mixture does its job, it is pumped out and must be disposed of. It contains toxic chemicals such as arsenic and hydrogen sulfide. Before being discharged, it must be trucked away to a plant for treatment.

Read the full article on Field & Stream.com:
http://tinyurl.com/fandspagas

2 comments:

  1. 4 "water companies" have poached water from the streams, not gas companies. There is a difference. The water companies are local, the gas companies are national.

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  2. Michael:

    ProPublica, the national "journalism in the public interest" organization of which The Limerick (PA) Post is a member, has been reporting on Marcellus Shale drilling and its environmental impacts for more than a year. Its package of stories, titled "Buried Secrets: Gas Drilling's Environmental Threat," can be found here:

    http://www.propublica.org/series/buried-secrets-gas-drillings-environmental-threat

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