Cabot’s Methodology Links Tainted Water Wells to Gas Fracking

Cabot’s Methodology Links Tainted Water Wells to Gas Fracking by Mark Drajem and Jim Efstat, October 2, 2012, Bloomberg
Methane in two Pennsylvania water wells has a chemical fingerprint that links it to natural gas produced by hydraulic fracturing, evidence that such drilling can pollute drinking water. The data, collected by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, are significant because the composition of the gas –its isotopic signature — falls into a range Cabot Oil & Gas Corp. (COG) had identified as that of the Marcellus Shale, which it tapped through hydraulic fracturing, or fracking. “The EPA data falls squarely in the Marcellus space” established by Cabot’s scientists, said Rob Jackson, an environmental scientist at Duke University. That evidence backs up his findings linking gas drilling and water problems in the town of Dimock, applying the very methodology that Cabot established to try to debunk it, he said. Cabot maintains that its operations haven’t contaminated homeowners’ wells, and its scientists say further analysis shows this gas isn’t from the Marcellus, a mile-deep formation running from New York to the southwestern tip of Virginia.

Industry groups say there hasn’t been proof of fracking contaminating water anywhere, and dispute research that suggests pumping millions of gallons of water, sand and chemicals underground to break apart rock and free trapped gas endangers the environment. The question of the provenance of the gas in the northeastern Pennsylvania town has taken on national importance after tainted wells there were featured in the film “Gasland.” Last year, the EPA stepped in to test the water, one of only a few cases nationwide where the federal agency intervened in a dispute over fracking and water woes.

“Dimock is so important because it’s so high profile,” Kate Sinding, a senior attorney at the Natural Resources Defense Council in New York, said in an interview. “It’s been a poster child for what can happen with fracking.” In a 2010 consent order, the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection found that 18 drinking-water wells in the area were “affected” by Cabot’s drilling. The company disagreed, and applauded when the EPA cleared the water in Dimock as safe this July. State regulators ruled last month that Cabot could begin fracking seven wells in the affected area of Dimock, ending a moratorium imposed in 2010. The latest data, which the EPA began to collect early this year, were posted on the agency’s website in response to Freedom of Information Act requests from Jackson, Cabot and others. The EPA submitted the results to its researchers conducting a broader nationwide study about the effects of fracking on drinking water, agency spokesman David Bloomgren said.

Still, the surge in fracking has been accompanied by a spurt in complaints from homeowners who say their water has been contaminated, resulting in sick children, dead livestock and flammable tap water. In Dimock, the EPA found that some residents had methane in their water at or more than 14 milligrams per liter — double the Pennsylvania state safety level — even as it issued a statement that the water was safe to drink. The U.S. doesn’t set a limit on the gas’s level, as the agency says methane doesn’t impair the smell or taste of water. It can be explosive.

Jackson was part of a four-person team from Durham, North Carolina-based Duke that first published research in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences last year that said water wells found closer to gas drilling had greater amounts of methane. The isotopic characteristics of some of the gas in those wells were consistent with that of the Marcellus, they concluded.

Jackson’s lab received $50,000 from the Park Foundation, which has funded groups critical of oil and gas drilling, to conduct baseline testing of water in New York, which is considering lifting a de facto ban on fracking. That funding came after the initial Dimock research was completed, he said.

In a paper its scientists co-published with Lisa Molofsky, an environmental geologist at GSI Environmental Inc., an environmental-engineering consulting firm in Houston, they concluded that pre-drilling data from more than 1,700 water wells in Pennsylvania showed methane was naturally “ubiquitous in shallow groundwater.” They identified the isotopic characteristics that would differentiate Marcellus Shale gas from other so-called thermogenic gases, which are fossil fuels formed by pressure and heat underground, and concluded that the water wells in Dimock didn’t have gas from the Marcellus, but from a shallower layer, the Middle and Upper Devonian. “The assertion by the Duke study that hydraulic fracturing of the Marcellus Shale is contributing thermogenic methane to local water wells and shallow regional groundwater is unsubstantiated given the lines of evidence,” Molofsky and her co-authors concluded in the December paper published in Oil & Gas Journal. To reach that finding, Molofsky established a range of isotopic values, or the ratio of heavier to lighter carbon, and heavier to lighter hydrogen molecules in the gas, which the researchers wrote provide “valuable geochemical fingerprinting tools.” In the recently published EPA samples from Dimock, two households had methane that fell within that range. Three others had values nearby.

Molofsky said that the structure of the molecules shows evidence of oxidation, which could allow a shallower-origin gas to appear to be from the Marcellus. She has now moved to analyze the isotopic signatures of the methane along with that of ethane, another component of natural gas. That evidence, which hasn’t been published yet, shows the gas in homeowner wells is not from the Marcellus formation, she said in an interview. “The vast array of data that we have analyzed does not show a match for Marcellus Shale gas” in Dimock, Cabot spokesman George Stark said in an interview.

If it is Marcellus gas, how did it get in the water wells? Jackson hypothesizes that the steel casings used to keep wells from leaking failed, allowing Marcellus gas to seep out. In the other wells that show evidence of shallower gas, cement lining the wells may not have been installed correctly, providing a pathway for gas to migrate, he said. The results could be an indication of more contamination to follow. “If it’s Marcellus, and a problem with casing or even hydraulic fracturing, is it only a matter of time before other things show up?” Jackson said in an e-mail, referring to the chemicals used in fracking. “That’s what I would worry about if I lived there.” Industry geologists counter that even if it’s Marcellus gas, it could have arrived in the aquifer via natural channels and not because of drilling. “This doesn’t tell us anything about the travel time,” John Conrad, a hydrogeologist at Conrad Geoscience Corp. in Poughkeepsie, New York, said in an interview. “More likely than not” the gas migrated “over millions of years.”

Fred Baldassare was a hydro-geologist at the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection who analyzed the isotopes of methane in Dimock when the state began investigating homeowners’ complaints in 2009.

He is neither convinced by the new EPA data, which he said is too limited to make a conclusion, nor the denials by Cabot. The methane the EPA sampled could have changed over time, and without earlier results from those same wells, they aren’t conclusive, he said. Still, he said, earlier evidence that he analyzed was conclusive. “The molecular and isotopic evidence I saw was that the gas in the water supply looked like the gas in the Cabot gas wells,” Baldassare, who now runs his own water testing firm calledEchelon Applied Geoscience Consulting in Murrysville, Pennsylvania, said in an interview. “It’s doing more damage than good to keep denying” that connection, he said: “Let’s get past that.”

Chart: EPA Data Shows Marcellus Gas in Water Wells

[Refer also to:

Dimock families sue natural gas driller

Private lab finds toxic chemicals in Dimock water

Judge denies gas driller’s motion to dismiss Dimock lawsuit

Dimock residents see “dirty tricks” in Cabot document

DEP cites persistent flaws in Cabot wells and keeps drilling on hold in parts of Dimock

With agreement in place for tainted water, residents wonder what is the fix?

DEP inspections show more shale well cement problems

DEP: Cabot OK to stop Dimock water deliveries

Federal environmental and health agencies collect data from Dimock families

EPA: Dimock water supplies ‘merit further investigation’

DEP: Cabot drilling caused methane in Lenox water wells

Dimock: water supplies tested by EPA

State investigating possible stray gas case near area of past problems in Dimock

Regulatory Agency Capture in Action, EPA to Fracking Victims: Drop Dead

EPA releases last Dimock water tests

Pa.drilling town agrees to settlement in fracking federal lawsuit, Documents indicate that residents of Dimock Township, Pa., who claim their water was poisoned by fracking, have reached a confidential settlement in a lawsuit that has been ongoing since 2009

Cabot, Dimock families near settlement on gas drilling contamination

Federal health officials to assess Dimock pollution risk Probe follows positive tests by EPA for hazards in aquifer

Cabot beats EPA to punch on well’s water

Are leaking wells letting methane get into Dimock’s water?

Water samples suggest Dimock’s methane problem hasn’t dried up ]

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