A
trifle too late?
State
shuts 33 wells injecting oil wastewater into aquifers
California
regulators on Thursday closed 33 oil company wells that had injected
wastewater into potentially drinkable aquifers protected by federal
law
16
October, 2015
The
new closures bring to 56 the number of oil-field wastewater injection
wells shut down by the state after officials realized they were
pumping oil-tainted water into aquifers that potentially could be
used for drinking or irrigation.
All
but two of the latest closures are in Kern County, in California’s
drought-stricken Central Valley. One lies in Ventura County, another
in northern Los Angeles County. Officials with California’s
Division of Oil, Gas and Geothermal Resources spent Friday verifying
that they had, in fact, closed. Of the 33, only 21 had been actively
injecting wastewater before Thursday.
“This
is part of our ongoing effort to ensure that California’s
groundwater resources are protected as oil and gas production take
place,” said Steven Bohlen, the division’s supervisor.
California’s
oil fields contain large amounts of salty water that comes to the
surface mixed with the oil. It must be separated from the petroleum
and disposed of, often by injecting it back underground. Much of the
water is pumped back into the same geologic formation it came from.
But enough left-over water remains that companies must find other
places to put it.
Fears
of contamination
The
division, part of California’s Department of Conservation, for
years issued oil companies permits to inject their left-over water
into aquifers that were supposed to be off-limits, protected by the
federal Safe Drinking Water Act.
The
problem, detailed in a Chronicle investigation earlier this year,
raised fears of water contamination in a state struggling through a
historic, four-year drought.
So
far, however, no drinking water supplies have been found to be
tainted by the injections.
Still,
some environmentalists expressed outrage that so few wells had been
closed.
The
division has identified 178 wells that were injecting into legally
protected aquifers with relatively high water quality, defined as
those with a maximum of 3,000 parts per million of total dissolved
solids. More than 2,000 other wells inject into aquifers that would
be harder to use for drinking water, either because they are too
salty or because they also contain oil.
“This
is too little, too late to protect our water,” said Kassie Siegel,
director of the Climate Law Institute at the Center for Biological
Diversity. “With each passing day the oil industry is polluting
more and more of our precious water.”
The
division reported Friday, however, that not all 178 wells required
closure. Some had already been shut down by their operators, while
others had been converted into wells for extracting oil — not
dumping wastewater.
June
18, 2015
HUMAN
activity is leading to the rapid draining of about one third of the
planet’s largest underground water reserves and it is unclear how
much fluid remains in them, two new studies have found.
Consequently,
huge sections of the population are using up groundwater without
knowing when it will run out, researchers said in findings that will
appear in the journal Water Resources Research and were posted online
Tuesday.
“Available
physical and chemical measurements are simply insufficient,”
University of California Irvine professor and principal investigator
Jay Famiglietti said in a statement.
“Given
how quickly we are consuming the world’s groundwater reserves, we
need a coordinated global effort to determine how much is left,”
added Famiglietti, who is also the senior water scientist at NASA’s
Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
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