Infrared
Video Exposes Exxon Mobil Methane Disaster at Exploded Oil & Gas
Site in Ohio
Experts
are comparing the magnitude of the disaster to California’s Aliso
Canyon
6
March, 2018
Captina
Creek, Ohio —
Today, Earthworks released new
optical gas imaging video that exposes massive methane pollution at
an exploded XTO oil and gas site in Belmont County, Ohio.
The pollution has been rapidly spilling into the air un-contained
since February 15, 2018.
“Similar
to the Aliso Canyon disaster in California in 2015, XTO has been
unable to fix the problem,” said Pete Dronkers, Earthworks
certified optical gas imaging thermographer who also filmed Aliso
Canyon. “Our video provides evidence of just how bad the problem is
so that nearby communities can make informed decisions about the
health and safety of their families before returning to their homes.”
The
video was captured as part of Earthworks’ Community Empowerment
Project (CEP) as a result of a request from local community members
who could see the explosion from their home two miles away. CEP helps
protect communities and the climate by making visible normally
invisible air pollution from oil and gas production, pressuring
regulators and companies to reduce that pollution. In the past four
years, CEP has documented and made publicly available over 500
incidents of oil and gas related air pollution in 16 states, Mexico
and Canada.
Following
the explosion at the Schnegg pad, Exxon Mobil-owned XTO ordered an
evacuation for 30 homes within a mile of the site. The outer
half-mile has since been approved to return, but some have elected to
stay clear until the well pad is capped.
“Disasters
like this are difficult to predict and to regulate. If we really want
to keep our communities safe we need to keep oil and gas in the
ground,” said Jennifer Krill, Earthworks’ Executive Director.
A U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency report estimates pollution from the
still out-of-control site at 100 million cubic feet per day.
This pollution includes methane, produced water, brine, unknown
condensate components, and volatile organic compounds — all being
released into the surrounding environment untreated and unfiltered.
California’s Air Resources Board estimates that the Aliso Canyon
disaster in Porter Ranch, California in 2015 released an average
of 49
million cubic feet of methane daily for
more than three months. Methane is 86 times worse for the climate
than carbon dioxide over 20 years according to the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
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