Natural and Human-made Disasters Portend Future of Toxic
Catastrophe
15
September, 2013
It
appears that an unknown number of underwater frack wells are leaking
into the flood waters tearing through Colorado. Although local
activists have sent emails with photographs documenting toppled
industrial tanks, there has been no response from media or
authorities.
According
to one activist,
“There has been no mention of the gas wells on the Denver newscasts
either last night or this evening although all stations have had
extensive and extended flood coverage. You can see underwater wells
in the background of some of the newscast videos, and yet the
reporters say absolutely nothing.”
Torrential
rains have led to days of flooding across the state, and 500 people
remain unaccounted for. At least 4 people have died.
According
to Brad Udall, director of the University of Colorado,
Boulder’s Getches-Wilkinson
Center for Natural Resources, Energy and the Environment,
the floods are likely resulting from a combination of
drought-hardened soil, wildfires that remove vegetation, and unusally
strong rains due to warmer air that more holds moisture in clouds.
“As the climate warms further, the hydrologic cycle is going to get
more intense,” he told National
Geographic, “Between
the fires last year and this year, the unprecedented and continuing
drought in the Colorado River, and now this shocking event,” he
continued, “climate change feels very real to me.”
As
climate change gets worse, disasters will increase. Fukushima may be
just the front end of what’s down the pipeline for Earth.
Boulder
County activists concerned about flooded oil, gas wells
Officials:
Drilling sites will be inspected once immediate danger passes
15
September, 2013
Inundated
along
with roads, bridges, houses and farms are thousands of oil and gas
wells and associated condensate tanks and ponds in northeast Boulder
County and southwest Weld County.
Anti-fracking
activists say the industry needs to account for what types of
chemicals may be contaminating soil and groundwater in the area
around these wells.
The
concentration of oil and gas wells in flood-prone areas speaks to
one more risk of what they see as a dangerous industry.
Regulators
say they agree these well sites could pose a contamination risk, and
they will get out to assess the damage as soon as it's feasible.
An
Encana Oil and Gas representative said many wells were "shut
in" in anticipation of the flood to minimize the risk.
Lafayette-based
anti-fracking activist Cliff Willmeng said he spent two days
"zig-zagging" across Weld and Boulder counties documenting
flooded drilling sites, mostly along the drainageway of the St.
Vrain River. He observed "hundreds" of wells that were
inundated. He also saw many condensate tanks that hold waste
material from fracking at odd angles or even overturned.
"It's
clear that the density of the oil and gas activity there did not
respect where the water would go," Willmeng said. "What we
immediately need to know is what is leaking and we need a full
detailed report of what that is. This is washing across agricultural
land and into the waterways. Now we have to discuss what type of
exposure the human population is going to have to suffer through."
Colorado
Oil and Gas Association President Tisha Schuller said in an email
that the industry prepares and drills for these types of natural
disasters and opened 24-hour incident command centers to monitor
wells and mitigate potential hazards.
"We
are working around the clock to monitor, prevent, and address the
effects of flooding," she said. "In cases where personnel
could be freed up, they have been made available to communities for
flood rescue and relief efforts."
A
spokesman for the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission said
the agency is aware of the potential for contamination from flooded
drilling sites, but there simply is no way to get to those sites
while flooding is ongoing and while resources are concentrated on
saving lives.
"COGCC
will be working with state and local authorities to assess risks
and, where necessary, provide environmental response and
remediation," said Todd Hartman, a spokesman for the Department
of Natural Resources.
Hartman
said many operators have added security to tanks, like chains to
make sure they don't float away, though aerial photographs have
shown floating and drifting tanks in some flooded areas.
Also,
many operators "shut in" or closed down well operations in
anticipation of flooding.
Wendy
Wiedenbeck, a spokeswoman for Encana, a major gas driller in the
region, said in a news release that the company shut-in production
at wells throughout the affected areas and has remote monitoring to
stop production at additional wells if they are affected by
flooding.
Crews
are conducting site-by-site visits as it becomes safe to do so, she
said.
Willmeng
said shutting-in does not isolate all the hydrocarbons in case of
flooding. He's also concerned that there simply aren't enough
inspectors to deal with all the wells.
Andrew
Barth, a city spokesman working with the Boulder Office of Emergency
Management during the disaster, said local officials are well aware
of potential problems from drilling wells, as well as from flooded
gas stations and industrial sites. However, inspections and
assessment will have to wait until the immediate threat to life and
safety has passed.
"We've
seen those same pictures, and we are concerned," he said. "We
are going to go out and look at those as once we're out of the
immediate search and rescue phase."
County
Line Road, north of Erie (Courtesy of Cliff Willmeng)
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