A new study has raised fresh concerns about the safety of gas
drilling in the Marcellus Shale, concluding that fracking chemicals
injected into the ground could migrate toward drinking water supplies
far more quickly than experts have previously predicted.
More than 5,000 wells were drilled in the Marcellus between mid-2009
and mid-2010, according to the study, which was published in the journal
Ground Water
two weeks ago. Operators inject up to 4 million gallons of fluid, under
more than 10,000 pounds of pressure, to drill and frack each well.
Scientists have theorized that impermeable layers of rock would keep
the fluid, which contains benzene and other dangerous chemicals, safely
locked nearly a mile below water supplies. This view of the earth's
underground geology is a cornerstone of the industry's argument that
fracking poses minimal threats to the environment.
But the study, using computer modeling, concluded that natural faults
and fractures in the Marcellus, exacerbated by the effects of fracking
itself, could allow chemicals to reach the surface in as little as "just
a few years."
"Simply put, [the rock layers] are not impermeable," said the study's author, Tom Myers, an independent hydrogeologist whose clients include the federal government and environmental groups.
"The Marcellus shale is being fracked into a very high permeability,"
he said. "Fluids could move from most any injection process."
The
research for the study was paid for by Catskill Mountainkeeper and the
Park Foundation, two upstate New York organizations that have opposed
gas drilling and fracking in the Marcellus.
Much of the debate about the environmental risks
of gas drilling has centered on the risk that spills could pollute
surface water or that structural failures would cause wells to leak.
Though some scientists believed it was possible for fracking to
contaminate underground water supplies, those risks have been considered
secondary. The study in Ground Water is the first peer-reviewed
research evaluating this possibility.
The study did not use sampling or case histories to assess
contamination risks. Rather, it used software and computer modeling to
predict how fracking fluids would move over time.
The simulations sought
to account for the natural fractures and faults in the underground rock
formations and the effects of fracking.
The models predict that fracking will dramatically speed up the
movement of chemicals injected into the ground. Fluids traveled
distances within 100 years that would take tens of thousands of years
under natural conditions. And when the models factored in the Marcellus'
natural faults and fractures, fluids could move 10 times as fast as
that.
Where man-made fractures intersect with natural faults, or break out
of the Marcellus layer into the stone layer above it, the study found,
"contaminants could reach the surface areas in tens of years, or less."
The study also concluded that the force that fracking exerts does not
immediately let up when the process ends. It can take nearly a year to
ease.
As a result, chemicals left underground are still being pushed away
from the drill site long after drilling is finished. It can take five or
six years before the natural balance of pressure in the underground
system is fully restored, the study found.
Myers' research focused exclusively on the Marcellus, but he said his
findings may have broader relevance. Many regions where oil and gas is
being drilled have more permeable underground environments than the one
he analyzed, he said.
"One would have to say that the possible travel times for a similar
thing in Arkansas or Northeast Texas is probably faster than what I've
come up with," Myers said.
Ground Water is the journal of the National Ground Water Association, a non-profit group that represents scientists, engineers and businesses in the groundwater industry.
Several scientists called Myers' approach unsophisticated and said
that the assumptions he used for his models didn't reflect what they
knew about the geology of the Marcellus Shale. If fluids could flow as
quickly as Myers asserts, said Terry Engelder, a professor of
geosciences at Penn State University who has been a proponent of shale
development, fracking wouldn't be necessary to open up the gas deposits.
"This would be a huge fracture porosity," Engelder said. "So I read
this and I say, 'Golly, does this guy really understand anything about
what these shales look like?' The concern then arises from using a model
rather than observations."
Myers likened the shale to a cracked window, saying that samples
showing it didn't contain fractures were small in size and were akin to
only examining an intact section of glass, while a broader, scaled out
view would capture the faults and fractures that could leak.
Both scientists agreed that direct evidence of fluid migration is
needed, but little sampling has been done to analyze where fracking
fluids go after being injected underground.
Myers says monitoring systems could be installed around gas well
sites to measure for changes in water quality, a measure required for
some gold mines, for example. Until that happens, Myers said,
theoretical modeling has to substitute for hard data.
"We were trying to use the basic concepts of groundwater and
hydrology and geology and say can this happen?" he said. "And that had
basically never been done."
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