GAS DRILLING THREATENS OUR
HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENT
BY DEBBIE DOSS
SPECIAL TO THE
DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE
Sunday, October 7, 2007
LITTLE ROCK — Arkansans are just now beginning to
realize that promises of wealth and prosperity from the production of
natural gas come with an unspoken cost. The promise of wealth is worth
nothing if the cost is one’s health or environment.
The Fayetteville Shale is a geologic formation that
extends through the central and much of the northern half of the state and
ranges from 3,000 to 6,000 feet deep. Potential gas well sites are located
by dynamiting or thumping the ground with large machines. Next, test sites
are drilled. Once a productive site is located, fluids are pumped into the
shale bed to fracture it and allow the gas to be pumped out, along with the
now contaminated water. The geology of the shale layer, which often includes
a honeycomb of caves in other nearby formations, makes it difficult for
drillers to remove the gas without the risk of contaminating fresh water
supplies with toxic water from the shale bed. Fracturing can also result in
loss of water in an area, causing water wells to sink or go dry. Water
produced from the gas well, along with various gasses, often contains
benzene, phenols, toluene, xylene, saltsand metals. In
Maryland, pits lined with fly ash intended to prevent loss of the toxic
water instead allow these toxins to leach into drinking water. Similar
construction techniques are being used or planned in Arkansas.
Citizens of Colorado and Wyoming, who, like
Arkansans, take pride in their state’s natural beauty and depend ontourist
dollars, are appalled by the devastation they are seeing as scenic vistas
are transformed into industrial zones.
In
Arkansas, just west of
Center Ridge, the destruction of our own state’s natural beauty has begun. A
small lake at Sunnyside became the focus of statewide media interest a few
years ago when more than 140 Bald Eagles were discovered to be wintering at
the lake, feeding on fish stocked by the landowner. For nearly a week there
was standing room only on the lake’s small earthen dam as people drove into
the area to see this amazing phenomenon.
Two years ago gas exploration began in the valley.
Last winter, a single pair of eagles soared over the now red muddy waters of
Sunnyside Lake. Roads cut across the
landscape leading to large pumps. A retention pit is being dug, casting up
mountains of red earth from which seeps red water into a nearby stream. Long
lines of semitrailers throw clouds of dust and rocks into the air, which
smells of diesel.
From the point at which exploration begins until
after production ends, damage is done to the environment. Blasting and
thumping rip holes in the land. Fresh roads cut across the surface. Deep
pits are dug to furnish gravel for the roads and to hold contaminated water.
Pads and pumping stations mar the landscape. These changes are occurring so
rapidly and without adherence to best management practices that they are
causing massive amounts of sediment to enter streams. Sediment chokes out
aquatic life, burying the delicate aquatic habitats that fish, crayfish and
mussels need to survive. Once in the water, the sediment travels downstream
for many miles damaging spawning beds, interfering with plant growth, food
sources and necessary habitat. Sediment-laden water is also more difficult
and expensive for water districts to treat.
During low water periods such as was experienced this
summer, the more than a million gallons of water that each well needs for
drilling puts a tremendous strain on a stream, which can leave fish and
other aquatic life exposed to die in the sun. Dewatering a stream at any
time of the year is damaging but pumping it dry, during the heat of the
summer, as Cadron Creek was this year, is overwhelming.
A few gas wells here and there over time won’t ruin
our water resources, but the cumulative effect of large numbers of gas wells
going in during a short time without sufficient environmental safeguards can
have a devastating impact on our streams. Once a stream is damaged, it may
never return to its original level of beauty and productivity.
GROUND WATER DAMAGE
Ground water is also at risk of contamination by silt
and toxic materials discharged or spilled during exploration and production.
In Booneville, water wells are already contaminated. Air is polluted by
heavy clouds of dust and escaped gasses while high decibel pumps and
compressors disturb the quiet peace of the countryside, similar to the
effect of having a new railroad track in your backyard.
For most, the economic side isn’t all that good
either. Money can be made in natural gas that benefits our economy, but we
need to factor in costs to our environment and communities. After the first
boom, property values actually drop. In addition,
Arkansas’ levy on natural gas production is the lowest in the nation, far
below surrounding gas producing states such as Louisiana, Texas and
Oklahoma.
‘FORCED POOLING’
Negotiating with gas companies can also be
treacherous. Most people believe that their rights as private property
owners are inviolable. However, landowner rights are routinely ignored and
even those who own the mineral rights under their land can be forced to
lease them. A number of states, including
Arkansas, have “forced pooling” laws, which compel landowners to lease
mineral rights if a majority of their neighbors have done so. Company
representatives frequently use threats of forced pooling to intimidate
landowners and force them to sign agreements. Many are discovering that
terms which designate where a company can drill, and identify plans for
mitigation of damages, must be spelled out explicitly or the landowner risks
permanent damage to property.
Landowners from Booneville talk about failure of
companies to remediate damage, failure to protect the environment,
misrepresentation of laws, and destruction of property. The large number of
contractors and subcontractors make it difficult for landowners to identify
those responsible for damage.
Compared to other gas producing states
Arkansas has a small amount of natural gas.
The true legacy of Arkansas should be beautiful,
healthy forests and pristine flowing rivers teaming with life, a true gift
to the nation, but as long as our federal government’s policy is to extract
new resources in order to meet increasing needs instead of supporting new
technologies and conservation to reduce those needs, we will be faced with
terrible choices affecting our land and water, at least until those
resources run out and we are left with nothing but polluted waters and scars
on the land.
A full tilt rush by the oil and gas industry is on to
extract as many resources as possible from the public before laws are made
to deal with the new industry. State agencies such as the Arkansas
Department of Environmental Quality and the Oil and Gas Commission, whose
duty it is to protect the quality of our air and water, find themselves
understaffed and overwhelmed.
New Mexico, with long experience in gas and
oil drilling, has crafted new laws and regulations that better protect land
owners and the environment. If we are to benefit from the experience of
other states, it is imperative that Arkansans contact their lawmakers. Best
management practices must be followed by gas companies and we must ensure
that agencies have the resources needed to enforce regulations.
Debbie Doss is Conservation Co-Chair of the Arkansas
Canoe Club.