Showing posts with label colorado fracking spills. Show all posts
Showing posts with label colorado fracking spills. Show all posts

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Science Lags As Health Problems Emerge Near Gas Fields

by Abrahm Lustgarten and Nicholas Kusnetz
ProPublica, Sep. 16, 2011, 5:35 p.m


Susan Wallace-Babb, wearing the oxygen mask she has to wear almost every day outside, walks with her dog at home in Winnsboro, Texas, on Sept. 12, 2011. (Erin Trieb for ProPublica)


On a summer evening in June 2005, Susan Wallace-Babb went out into a neighbor's field near her ranch in Western Colorado to close an irrigation ditch. She parked down the rutted double-track, stepped out of her truck into the low-slung sun, took a deep breath, and collapsed, unconscious.

A natural gas well and a pair of fuel storage tanks sat less than a half-mile away. Later, after Wallace-Babb came to and sought answers, a sheriff's deputy told her that a tank full of gas condensate -- liquid hydrocarbons gathered from the production process -- had overflowed into another tank. The fumes must have drifted toward the field where she was working, he suggested.

The next morning Wallace-Babb was so sick she could barely move. She vomited uncontrollably and suffered explosive diarrhea. A searing pain shot up her thigh. Within days she developed burning rashes that covered her exposed skin, then lesions. As weeks passed, any time she went outdoors, her symptoms worsened. Wallace-Babb's doctor began to suspect she had been poisoned.

"I took to wearing a respirator and swim goggles outside to tend to my animals," Wallace-Babb said. "I closed up my house and got an air conditioner that would just recycle the air and not let any fresh air in."

Wallace-Babb's symptoms mirror those reported by a handful of others living near her ranch in Parachute, Colo., and by dozens of residents of communities across the country that have seen the most extensive natural gas drilling. Hydraulic fracturing [1], along with other processes used to drill wells, generates emissions and millions of gallons of hazardous waste that are dumped into open-air pits. The pits have been shown to leak into groundwater and also give off chemical emissions as the fluids evaporate. Residents' most common complaints are respiratory infections, headaches, neurological impairment, nausea and skin rashes. More rarely, they have reported more serious effects, from miscarriages and tumors to benzene poisoning and cancer.

ProPublica examined government environmental reports and private lawsuits, and interviewed scores of residents, physicians and toxicologists in four states -- Colorado, Texas, Wyoming and Pennsylvania -- that are drilling hot spots. Our review showed that cases like Wallace-Babb's go back a decade in parts of Colorado and Wyoming, where drilling has taken place for years. They are just beginning to emerge in Pennsylvania, where the Marcellus Shale drilling boom began in earnest in 2008.


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Saturday, August 27, 2011

Las Animas County, CO - 16,800 Gallons Produced Water Spilled, Zero Recovered - Surface Water Impacted - Pioneer Natural Resources USA Inc.

LAS ANIMAS, COUNTY COLORADO


16,800 gallons of produced water was spilled and (zero gallons) were reportedly recovered.  On the FORM 19, it appears that the check box: 'Surface Water Impacted' was checked NO, but upon further review, and below in red text, Surface Water Impact? YES.

It appears that their is a fundamental lack of continuity in reporting.





Date Rec'd: 8/17/2011 Report taken by: PETER GINTAUTAS
DocNum: 200318446 API number: 05-071 -08510 Facility ID: 279627

Operator Information

Operator:PIONEER NATURAL RESOURCES USA INC Oper. No. 10084
Address: 1401 17TH ST STE 1200 ATTN: DAVE HOLMES DENVER , CO 80202
Phone: (303 )298-8100 Fax: (303 )298-7800
Operator Contact: DAVID CASTRO

Description of Spill:

Date of Incident: 8/14/2011
Type of Facility: WELL
Well Name/No. SCHWEITZER 22-30 Fac. Name/No.
County Name: LAS ANIMAS
qtrqtr: SENW section: 30 township: 32S range: 67W meridian: 6

Volumes spilled and recovered (bbls)

Oil spilled: 0

Recvrd:
Water spilled: 400 Recvrd: 0

Other spilled: 0

Recved:

GW Impact? N

Surface water impact? Y

Contained within berm? N

Area and vertical extent of spill: 930-FEET X 2 -FEET

Current land use: TIMBER

Weather conditions:
Soil/Geology description GULNARE ROCK OUTCROP
Distance in feet to nearest surface water: 2750
Depth to shallowest GW: 58

Wetlands:
Buildings:
Livestock: Water Wells: 1730

Cause of spill:
PIPELINE FAILURE

Immediate Response:
SOURCE WAS IMMEDIATELY TURNED OFF.

Emergency Pits:
NONE CONSTRUCTED.

How extent determined:
VISUAL INSPECTION BY FIELD PERSONNEL.

Further Remediation
NONE PROPOSED

Prevent Problem:
WATER LINE HAS BEEN REPAIRED.

Detailed Description:
WATER LINE BROKE ON THE WELL PAD ALLOWING APPROXIMATELY 400 BBLS OF PRODUCED WATER TO SPILL OUT DOWN THE HILLSIDE TO THE NORTH FOR 350 FT TO A DRY ARROYO, THEN EAST FOR 580 FT IN THE DRY ARROYO. ALL PRODUCED WATER WAS ABSORBED INTO THE SOIL. THIS WATER IS NORMALLY SURFACE DISCHARGE AT CDPHE PERMITTED OUTFALL 235A.


Other Notifications
Date Agency Contact Response
8/15/2011 COGCC PETER GINTAUTAS EMAIL NOTIFICATION
8/15/2011 CDPHE ANN NEDROW NOTIFICATION SPILL HOTLINE
8/15/2011 LANDOWNER SCHWEITZER PHONE
8/17/2011 COGCC GINTAUTAS FORM 19 VIA EMAIL
8/17/2011 CDPHE DAVE KNOPE FORM 19 VIA EMAIL












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