Louisiana
13-acre 'lake-like' sinkhole well pad collapses
The
Bayou Corne sinkhole, has cracked and collapsed an earthen well pad
on the southern part, according to state regulators
27
May, 2013
Following
heightened seismic activity last week, the Bayou Corne sinkhole, now
called Assumption
Parish lake-like sinkhole
after expanding to 13 acres, has cracked and collapsed an earthen
well pad on the southern part, according to state regulators.
Louisiana
Office of Conservation-contracted experts working on the disaster
response believe the "collapse and cracked well pad" link
to heightened seismic activity late last week, according to
officials' statement Tuesday.
The
seismic events from late last week have eased for now.
Thousands
of micro-quakes have occurred in the area over the past nine months,
according to USGS.
Last
week's seismic activity was more
shallow than over the past nine months
since the quakes began. Officials said that the environment caving
into the hole and water moving in it were causing more seismic
activity.
Agency
officials said the discovery of the collapsed well pad did not halt
work around the sinkhole and the area remains in emergency officials’
lowest “alert” status.
On
March 22, increased
seismic activity throughout the week caused all work in and around
Louisiana's giant sinkhole to stop
with the state Office of Conservation and Assumption Parish Incident
Command advising the public that Oxy 3/sinkhole monitoring alert
status had been raised to Code 3 alert.
The
latest collapse swallowed about 25 more trees. Some trees destroyed
in this disaster were over 100 years old.
The
unprecedented
oil and gas industry induced geological and human disaster,
an environmental
modification,
also called ENMOD,
began in May when locals reported methane bubbles and earthquakes.
On
August 3, the "sinkhole" was reported in the area of the
1-mile by 3-mile Napoleonville Salt Dome and a mandatory evacuation
was ordered.
Since
then, the salt dome has continued to collapse, swallowing acre after
acre into what is now a lake between Bayou Corne and Grand Bayou.
The
event is blamed on one of two Texas Brine LLC's storage caverns that
is collapsing inside the salt dome near its edge.
The
declared state of emergency has resulted in human
rights
violations of some 350 people. It has uprooted neighborhoods in Bayou
Corne that is under a mandatory evacuation order.
The
ENMOD growing lake between Bayou Corne and Grand Bayou communities
has been spewing crude oil and methane that have been traveling into
the Cajun-swampland environment and communities as far as two miles
away.
Predicted
Texas
Brine officials said in August that it had advised the state about
the predicted problem weeks before any actions were taken and that
the disaster could have been prevented.
As
Assumption Parish residents
experienced rights abuses early on in the disaster from their
leaders' betrayal,
parish leaders expressed
anger
in August about revelations that Louisiana Department of Natural
Resources (DNR) and Texas Brine Co. LLC officials knew since January
2011 about salt cavern problems but withheld
that information.
"Texas
Brine Co. Saltville LLC president Mark J. Cartwright informed DNR in
a January 21, 2011 letter about a failed integrity test of the cavern
and company officials’ suspicion that the cavern possibly breached
Napoleonville Dome’s outer wall, possibly explaining a loss of
pressure in the cavern during the test," as reported
by this author in early August.
“I’m
very disappointed in DNR not being up-front,” Assumption Parish
Sheriff Mike Waguespack had then said.
DNR
Secretary Scott Angelle, a state oil and gas point person, resigned
Wednesday without giving reason,
but Governor Jindal quickly appointed him to LSU's Board of
Supervisors.
Waguespack
and local Homeland Security director John Boudreaux had said that
then-DNR Secretary Scott Angelle did not tell them until a meeting
the day after the sinkhole was reported that the salt cavern may well
have had “problems” in 2010, but Angelle had still not disclosed
the failed integrity test.
DNR
Secretary Scott
Angelle then abrupt resigned
without giving a reason and Gov. Bobby Jindal quickly appointed him
to Louisiana State University Board of Supervisors.
Questions
remain about a possible
connection
between the 2010 BP Gulf oil catastrophe and the Assumption
Parish oil and gas disaster.
Explosive
methane gas migrating along fault lines from the Gulf of Mexico to
Lake Peigneur and Bayou
Corne sinkhole disaster
salt domes has been a
known oil and gas industry risk
since 2005, according to Dr. Sherwood Gagliano.
Gagliano,
president of Baton Rouge-based Coastal Environments, Inc., has spent
years researching fault lines in south Louisiana and the Gulf of
Mexico, as well as their connections to salt domes.
He
said about salt domes, “We have over 100 of those facilities on
faults in South Louisiana and Texas. They all need to be
reevaluated."
Sixty-one
of those salt dome facilities correlate with known subsurface faults,
according
to
a 2005 report by Gagliano.
In
2005, Gagliano led a comprehensive study of suspected relationships
between geological faults and subsidence in Southeastern Louisiana,
reporting findings in Effects
of Earthquakes, Fault Movements, and Subsidence on the South
Louisiana Landscape.
“When
oil, gas and produced water are removed, localized subsidence and
fault movement may occur,” he then reported. “Geological fault
movement, compaction and fluid withdrawal are inter-related processes
contributing to subsidence.
“Differential
movement between the low-density salt and adjacent sedimentary
deposits may have a wedging effect on the faults, initiating brine
water and gas movement up fault zones,” Gagliano reported. “The
water and gas in turn may lubricate the fault plane surfaces and
cause instability along fault segments.”
While
finding that faulting poses a natural hazard in Louisiana, according
to Gagliano, pumping water into the domes to dissolve salt for brine,
as Texas Brine and other companies do, allows methane to migrate
along faults and veins.
Like
nitrogen, methane is an asphyxiant, meaning it can kill people by
displacing oxygen. It can also be the source of explosions if a spark
ignites it, as Bayou Corne “sinkhole” area residents and
officials justifiably fear some 100 miles from Macondo and the
migrating gas.
Soon
after the criminal BP
Gulf oil catastrophe
began, the late Matt Simmons, oil guru, said people, especially in
Louisiana, needed to be evacuated due to the Gulf’s “open hole.”
Louisiana
Department of Natural Resources (LDNR) recently issued an order for
34 salt dome operators to show how close their oil and gas industry
storage caverns are to dome outer edges, and to prove that caverns
nearest dome edges are structurally sound.
That
was an admission of the state previously failing to ensure such
safety measures.
In
reference to the 2010 BP Gulf crime, Gary Byerly, Professor of
Geology at Louisiana State University, had predicted
possible inland sinkholes.
Byerly
said
methane and oil was leaking into the Gulf naturally and explained
that the weight of rock on the seabed usually restricts leaks to a
very slow rate.
Byerly
had said that he "could see something like this causing a
sinkhole to form” inland.
Over
two years later, methane gas has increasingly percolated in south
Louisiana's collapsing salt dome "sinkhole" area
swamplands.
Methane
has been detected in the aquifer above the 1-mile by 3-mile
Napoleonville Salt Dome farther east and deeper underground in the
dome’s hard cap rock.
LDNR
then ordered the Napoleonville Salt Dome’s seven operators to
locate and vent or flare the gas. The spewing methane and other
dangerous chemicals, however, continue to pose
a threat of an explosion.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.