From
Kevin Hester -
I
believe this 'leak'could be on a scale similar to the Deep Water
Horizon especially considering the 40 to 100 times forcing of methane
in the short term compared to carbon. If that sounds extreme it needs
to be considered in the context of tipping points, events like this
can 'tip' us from one paradigm into another and they are all bad.
As
usual I hope I'm
wrong.
Porter
Ranch Gas Leak: No Fly-Zone Declared, Catastrophe Not Seen Since 2010
BP Oil Spill"Envoronmental concerns" are mentioned almost in parentheses
Two months in, Porter Ranch gas leak compared to BP Gulf oil spill
View
from above of the Porter Ranch neighborhood that has been affected by
the ongoing gas leak that started on Oct. 23. (Photo by Gene Blevins)
18
December, 2015
The
smell came from the canyons and drifted over their neighborhoods in
late October, but most residents who live in the gated communities of
Porter Ranch thought the northerly gusts of wind common to their area
would sweep the stench of rotten eggs away.
Instead,
the odor persisted.
It
became a phantom that haunted them during their twilight jogs and on
their morning walks on dusty horse trails. It was there in their dens
where they watched TV and in bedrooms where their children slept. It
was even there on the playgrounds of nearby elementary schools
“It
was smelling really bad,” said Susan Gorman-Chang, who along with
her husband, George, has lived in Porter Ranch for more than 20
years. Now, the couple has chosen to leave the area. “Our neighbor
called the fire department. It was that bad.”
The
Southern California Gas Co. knew what was happening a day before the
fire department was called. They knew methane was leaking from a
40-year-old well in Aliso Canyon above the Santa Susana Mountains,
that it was spewing tons of gas into the air. Several days later,
they informed residents through letters that the agency would plug
the leak as fast as possible.
DISPLACING
A COMMUNITY
Eight
weeks after that call was made, the leak continues. It has caused
massive disruption in the northwestern San Fernando Valley community
of Porter Ranch, an affluent community of nearly 31,000 residents
about 28 miles from downtown Los Angeles. More than 1,800 families
have been relocated by the gas company and more than 1,000 remain on
a waiting list. Some say they can’t remember a displacement of
residents this large since the Northridge earthquake in 1994, when
20,000 people were left homeless. Two local elementary schools have
been impacted, with nearly 2,000 schoolchildren and staff slated to
be moved to other schools in January.
Enough
methane gas is being released to fill the Empire State building each
day, state officials have said, and the concern has even reached the
Federal Aviation Administration, which issued temporary flight
restrictions over the area for small aircraft and helicopters.
The
gas company has apologized but has said the leak may take four months
to plug and to create a relief well.
“It’s
like the BP spill on land,” said environmental activist Erin
Brockovich, who was made famous by successfully battling Pacific Gas
and Electric Co. over groundwater contamination in the community of
Hinkley in the Inland Empire in 1996. “I’ve really never seen
anything like this. I think the magnitude is enormous. Its like a
volcano, and the gas is like the lava that can’t be shut off.”
LARGEST
GAS STORAGE IN NATION
An
abandoned oil field with 115 wells, the Aliso Canyon storage facility
became the second largest in the nation when it was repurposed in the
1970s, with a capacity to hold 86 billion cubic feet of natural gas.
Gas
continues to leak from a narrow pipe enclosed in a breached 7-inch
well casing. The affected well, known as SS 25, is 8,750 feet deep.
Aging
infrastructure may be to blame. In a report presented to California’s
Public Utilities Commission last year, concerns were raised by the
gas company regarding well casings that were “further amplified by
the age, length and location of wells,” according to the report.
“Some SoCalGas wells are more than 80 years old with an average age
of 52 years.”
The
number of wells that have needed repairs has increased, from three
repairs in 2008 when tracking of repairs began, to nine in 2013.
“Without
a robust program to inspect underground storage wells to identify
potential safety and/or integrity issues, problems may remain
undetected,” last year’s report stated.
The
affected well passed its pressure tests, including the latest one in
2014, according to the California Department of Conservation’s
Division of Oil, Gas and Geothermal Resources.
ENVIRONMENTAL
CONCERNS
The
1,200 tons of methane gas being released daily by the affected well
is adding 25 percent more greenhouse gas to the atmosphere per month
than normal, said Dave Clegern, spokesman for the California Air
Resources Board. Methane is about 9 percent of the total annual
greenhouse gas emissions in California, Clegern added.
“You
can figure that a million metric tons — which is about the
estimated monthly amount — is the equivalent of putting about
200,000 more cars on the road for a year.”
Methane
lives in the atmosphere for about 12 years, according to the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency. Unlike carbon dioxide, which can
live longer in the atmosphere, methane can be more devastating to the
climate because of how well it absorbs heat, according the
Environmental Defense Fund.
HEALTH
FEARS
That
may be bad for the environment, but families who live in Porter Ranch
are wondering what the gas leak is doing to their lungs, hearts and
the health of their children. Residents have reported headaches,
nausea and nosebleeds. Even their dogs and cats were getting sick.
The
nurse’s office at two nearby elementary schools reported increased
visits by children, up to 38 one week. The most common symptoms
reported by the students were headache and stomachache.
Earlier
this month, county health officials said the gas leak did not pose
any long-term health risks but then changed course after as the leak
entered its sixth week and gas company officials said it might take
four months to plug the well.
Prolonged
exposure to trace chemicals, county health officials later said, some
of which are known carcinogens, can cause long-term health effects.
However,
they cautioned that levels examined so far in Porter Ranch are not
believed to be associated with long-term health problems.
“As
the duration of exposure increases, these trace levels can produce
significant long-term health effects,” county Department of Public
Health Interim Director Cynthia Harding wrote in a memo sent to the
Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors. “As this incident has
moved from a short-term exposure event resolved within days, to now a
long-term event potentially lasting months, supplemental monitoring
of potentially harmful trace chemicals is warranted.”
What
is less understood is mercaptan, or what’s been described as a
harmless chemical that contains sulphur that is added to natural gas
to make it smell like rotten eggs and so that it can be detected.
But
very little is known about the health effects of methyl mercaptan,
according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
“The
only information available is about a worker exposed to very high
levels of this compound when he opened and emptied tanks of this
compound,” according to the CDC. “He developed anemia, went into
a coma and died about a month later.”
The
last report on mercaptan offered by the Agency for Toxic Substance
and Disease Registry, a division of the CDC, was presented in 1992.
“We
do not know whether long-term exposure of humans to low levels of
methyl mercaptan can result in harmful health effects such as cancer,
birth defects, or problems with reproduction.”
Guidelines
released by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration to
workers say that long-term exposure of mercaptan can cause
dermatitis.
There
also is little information about whether mercaptan causes cancer in
people or animals. Methyl mercaptan has not been classified a
carcinogen by the Department of Health and Human Services, the
International Agency for Research on Cancer or the Environmental
Protection Agency.
The
gas began leaking Oct. 23. One day later residents began calling in
complaints to the Air Quality Management District. Since then, there
have been more than 1,400 complaints.
“We
have received a large number of complaints, not unprecedented, but a
large amount,” said Sam Atwood, a spokesman for the AQMD. “This
is a large number of complaints over a couple of months.”
The
delay in communication by the Gas Co. to residents is what has raised
distrust and anger in the community, said Alexandra Nagy of Food &
Water Watch. The environmental nonprofit has helped Porter Ranch
residents organize protests and rallies.
“This
is an extreme health crisis and it is an extreme environmental
crisis,” Nagy said. “These are real health symptoms. Residents
are so fed up.”
THOUSANDS
DISPLACED
Susan
Gorman-Chang and her husband, George, said they moved into Porter
Ranch in 1991 when new homes were being built. They had weathered the
Northridge earthquake and even evacuated their home during wildfires
that swept into the canyons above them. Last year, residents formed
Save Porter Ranch to discourage Termo Co. of Long Beach, which now
operates 18 wells in Aliso Canyon, from drilling 12 more within the
next six years — a move that could potentially tap up to 200,000
more barrels of oil.
But
the smell that was affecting them from the gas leak was too much.
Gorman-Chang said she had trouble breathing after jogs. George Chang
said he felt dizzy after morning walks. They were among the first
families to relocate after the gas company agreed to reimburse
residents who wanted to leave. Since mid-November, the Changs have
lived in a two-bedroom hotel room in Chatsworth.
“We’re
lucky,” Gorman-Chang said. “There are families that had to
relocate down as far as Marina del Rey. And now many can’t find
places to stay.”
But
they miss their routine. George Chang said he still goes to his
Porter Ranch home to pick up newspapers and mail. Gorman-Chang said
she went back to their home about 4 miles away to make the
Thanksgiving turkey because there is no stove in the hotel room.
Inside
their room, there is a small Charlie Brown Christmas tree that George
Chang ordered because he said it was important to keep spirits up.
Their son, who attends Cal State Northridge, lives with them
“It’s
been a struggle,” Gorman-Chang said. “You have this delicate
balance of life, and then all of a sudden it’s gone.”
‘A
DISASTER AREA’
Meanwhile,
the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday declared the
leak in Porter Ranch an emergency to pave the way for state and
federal assistance.
“This
is a disaster area,” Los Angeles County Supervisor Michael
Antonovich said that day. “The financial liability of Southern
California Gas Co. has to be to the neighbors who have lost
residential properties, the ability to sell. The home valuation has
gone in the toilet.”
Los
Angeles City Attorney Mike Feuer filed a civil lawsuit against
SoCalGas alleging the Aliso Canyon leak has threatened residents’
health and hurt the environment. The lawsuit also alleges a public
nuisance and violation of the California Unfair Competition Law from
the leak
“It
is the most significant event and potentially biggest health
emergency in the history of Los Angeles,” Feuer said. “There’s
a huge spectrum of concern out there.”
Brockovich,
who is working on behalf of the law firm Weitz & Luxenberg which
filed a lawsuit on behalf of residents, said monetary compensation
won’t be enough for the residents. She said the gas company should
have had a contingency plan in place, in case of such leaks.
“There
has to be a new plan moving forward,” Brockovich said. “As we
move forward, lawsuits are not going to work anymore. There needs to
be measures to change what has happened, to prevent it from happening
again and to assure total safety to those people. This is, I think, a
huge wake-up call.”
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