Public Comment Period
The Council meeting includes a public comment period where anyone can present comments to the group.
To sign up to present comments, contact Adam Walters by sending email to: adwalters@pa.gov or call 717-214-6548.
Attending The Meeting
The Council meeting is being held at the Technology Center, Room 243, 200 Innovation Blvd. in State College from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Click Here to join the meeting via Microsoft Teams. Meeting ID: 229 021 202 140 Passcode: mAqLup
To join by telephone, call +1 267 332 8737 Conference ID: 850 322 899#
Click Here for the latest information on attending the meeting.
Visit DCED’s PA Grade Crude [Oil] Development Advisory Council webpage for more information.
Abandoned Wells Data
Handouts for the meeting on the issue of DEP’s abandoned conventional oil and gas well list raise questions about the accuracy of the list and the confusion among the definitions for abandoned and orphaned wells.
The conventional industry maintains there is no increase in the number of wells they are abandoning, it is simply a data problem with DEP lists. Read more here.
Click Here for an industry chart on well status. Click Here for a list of industry questions on DEP well status.
DEP’s compliance database shows the number of violations issued by DEP for well abandonment is widespread across the industry.
There are more wells being given violations for abandoned than DEP is plugging with taxpayer money under the new taxpayer funded federal well plugging program.
In 2023, DEP issued violations to 271 conventional oil and gas wells for abandoning and not plugging those wells. Read more here.
So far in 2024, conventional well owners received 420 violations for abandoning and not plugging wells. Read more here.
Well owners also pass conventional wells off to other owners with less financial capacity to actually manage them, setting them on the path to abandonment. Read more here.
In 2023, DEP reported 89% of conventional oil and gas well owners failed to submit annual well integrity reports for 34,455 wells to ensure they aren’t leaking oil or venting gas. Read more here.
DEP issued a record 6,860 notices of violations to conventional well owners for breaking all kinds of regulations and laws in 2023. Read more here.
That’s 51.9% more than in 2021 and 569.9% more than in 2015.
Kurt Klapkowski, DEP Deputy Secretary for Oil and Gas Management, told the House Environmental Resources and Energy Committee in March--
“Unfortunately, reviewing inspection and compliance data developed since 2017, DEP has identified widespread non-compliance with laws and regulations in the conventional oil and gas industry, particularly regarding improper abandonment of oil and gas wells but also not reporting hydrocarbon and waste production and conducting mechanical integrity assessments.”
Change The Definition Of Abandoned
Comments by the industry are setting up an attempt by the conventional oil and gas well owners to change the law on legal responsibility for abandoned conventional wells.
DEP is enforcing current law which holds conventional well owners who own oil and gas wells responsible for their integrity and for meeting environmental standards in law and regulations.
The industry is looking at changing the law and not making conventional owners responsible for wells they own that are abandoned and not plugged before some date in the past.
Conventional oil and gas owners are already exempt from putting up any plugging bonds for any wells drilled before April 1985, but are still legally responsible for plugging.
This new change would put all the responsibility for plugging those wells on state taxpayers.
The conventional industry frequently gets Republican members to introduce last minute amendments to must-pass budget-related bills looking to gut Oil and Gas Act requirements.
Look for this to happen during this year’s budget discussions.
Conventional Wastewater Disposal
Several topics on the Council’s agenda deal with conventional oil and gas wastewater and what to do with it.
Dumping wastewater on public roads will be discussed as a disposal method.
A second item on the agenda proposes “In-Situ Remediation of Hydrocarbons And Sodium-based Contamination” -- in other words disposing of wastewater on conventional drilling sites.
NEW: This item will feature a presentation by the sodium and hydrocarbon remediation company Remediation & Applied Technology. Click Here for a copy of their presentation.
Conventional well owners have consistently pushed for legalizing the practice of disposing of their wastewater by dumping it on public roads.
Although illegal, but not banned, road dumping conventional wastewater on dirt and paved public roads is happening indiscriminately every day on conventional drilling areas, according to citizens monitoring this disposal practice. Read more here.
Road dumping was the subject of an April 17 Senate Democratic Policy Committee hearing where presenters recommended an immediate and total ban on road dumping to prevent millions of gallons of wastewater from polluting the environment. Read more here.
Here is a summary of testimony from the hearing--
-- Senate Hearing: The Case For An Immediate, Total Ban On Road Dumping Conventional Oil & Gas Wastewater [PaEN]
-- Senate Hearing: Penn State Expert: ‘No More Research That Needs To Be Done’ To Justify A Ban On Road Dumping Conventional Oil & Gas Wastewater [PaEN]
-- Senate Hearing: First-Hand Account Of Health, Environmental Impacts From Road Dumping Conventional Oil & Gas Wastewater - ‘Inhaling Oil & Gas Wastewater 24-Hours A Day’ [PaEN]
-- Senate Hearing: 3.5 Million Gallons Of Conventional Oil & Gas Wastewater Dumped On PA Public Roads Since DEP’s ‘Moratorium’ On Dumping Started 6 Years Ago [PaEN]
-- Senate Hearing: DEP Still Evaluating The Data On Road Dumping Conventional Oil & Gas Wastewater; Asks Public To Report Road Dumping [PaEN]
Treating Conventional Wastewater
Also on the agenda is a presentation by Titusville-based GCI Water Solutions on treating conventional oil and gas wastewater to remove pollutants to make it safer to apply to roads as a dust suppressant.
GCI has made presentations to the Council before to try to get conventional well owners interested in using their water treatment services to treat their wastewater.
The stumbling block has always been someone would have to pay for it.
The Council’s draft Annual Report to be discussed at this meeting includes this reference to GCI--
“GCI of Titusville reported to CDAC that a threat of a lawsuit from the Pennsylvania’s Attorney General Office was adversely affecting their ability to expand their oil and gas produced water treatment facility at Titusville and to open new produced water treatment facilities in other parts of the oil and gas fields of Pennsylvania.
“As GCI is one of the few remaining produced water treatment facilities in Pennsylvania CDAC sent a letter[to] the Attorney General’s Office requesting information on the nature of their concern with GCI and if any actions could be taken by the Attorney General to alleviate this situation.
“To date no response has been received by CDAC.”
Taxpayer Funded Well Plugging
On the agenda are updates on taxpayer funded grant programs to conventional well owners to plug active wells venting methane and a second program to give taxpayer money to well owners to plug abandoned wells they do not own.
Financial Assurance
A recurring topic at Council meetings is a discussion of initiatives to get conventional oil and gas well owners to put aside adequate amounts of money to plug wells when they walk away from them so taxpayers don’t have to pay the bill like they do now.
NEW: Ben Lorah, Executive Director of the state’s Underground Storage Tank Indemnification Fund that provides cleanup insurance to owners of underground tanks, will make a presentation to the Council on the program.
Click Here for a copy of the presentation.
At the October Council meeting, DEP discussed the innovative concept of having a “life insurance” program for conventional wells to pay for well plugging. Read more here.
An attempt to raise bonding amounts for conventional well owners was cut short in 2022 when the conventional industry got a law passed prohibiting DEP from increasing bonding amounts for 10 years. Read more here.
Methane Reduction Regs
DEP adopted regulations in December 2022 limiting methane emissions from conventional oil and gas wells and a separate regulation for unconventional shale gas operations.
Both regulations have the same emission reduction requirements as required by the US. Environmental Protection Agency.
Conventional oil and gas facilities account for 80% of methane emissions from the oil and gas industry in Pennsylvania because they have done little or nothing to control them, according to DEP. Read more here.
On December 6, Marcellus Drilling News reported three industry groups representing the conventional oil and gas industry filed a lawsuit in Commonwealth Court December 5 in an attempt to block implementation. Read more here.
That lawsuit is still pending so it is unclear how much DEP will be able to discuss the regulation.
Other Topics?
At the October Council meeting, DEP discussed the concept of establishing a certified well inspector program for the Oil and Gas Program modeled on the certified storage tank inspector program DEP already operates. Read more here.
The 1989 state Storage Tank and Spill Prevention Act created a whole new private industry with the certified inspector program that has worked very well.
Tank owners pay the inspectors to do inspections and work with them, rather than a state inspector, to correct problems.
Conventional operators were cool to the idea of paying anyone for inspections saying it was an “unnecessary cost.” Read more here.
DEP estimated conventional well owners now pay only $46,100 of the $10.6 million cost of regulating their industry through the payment of permit application fees in FY 2020-21, so they aren’t even paying enough to support one DEP inspector. Read more here.
Permit fee income from conventional well owners is down dramatically this year and last as the industry pulls back from drilling new wells.
Other Handouts
These other handouts were made available to Council members--
-- Draft 2023 Council Annual Report - NEW: 2nd Draft Of 2023 Council Annual Report
-- Draft Minutes from October 12 Council meeting
For more information, visit DCED’s PA Grade Crude [Oil] Development Advisory Council webpage. Questions should be directed to Adam Walters at adwalters@pa.gov or 717-214-6548.
(Photos of fresh conventional oil and gas wastewater road dumping in March and April.)
PA Oil & Gas Industry Public Notice Dashboards:
-- PA Oil & Gas Industrial Facilities: Permit Notices, Opportunities To Comment - April 27 [PaEN]
-- DEP Posted 93 Pages Of Permit-Related Notices In April 27 PA Bulletin [PaEN]
Related Articles This Week - Gas:
-- Witness At Senate Hearing On Oil & Gas Wastewater Road Dumping Reports Her Home Has Been Surrounded By Dumping; Dumping Again On The Upswing In 2024 [PaEN]
-- Clean Air Council/Sierra Club: PA Falling Behind In Conventional Oil & Gas Well Plugging Bonding; Burden Falls On Taxpayers [PaEN]
NewsClips:
-- Inquirer Guest Essay: You Don’t Need To ‘Sacrifice’ Chester For Europe’s LNG Gas Security - By Lisa Badum, Member Of German Bundestag Since 2017
-- Williamsport Sun Guest Essay: Lift The LNG Gas Permit Ban [On New Gas Export Facilities] - By David Callahan, Marcellus Shale Gas Coalition [Coalition Wants To Ship PA Gas To Our Competitor China ]
-- Beaver County Times: Shell Charged For Falcon Pipeline Spills During Plant Construction
-- Penn State Researchers Estimate Methane Emissions Potential Of Decommissioned Shale Gas Wells
-- Public Source: EQT Says Fracked Gas Is A Climate Solutions, But Scientists Call That Deceptive Greenwashing
-- NorthcentralPA.com: EQT Gas Invites Applications For PA Qrew Camps For Students Grades 9-11 To Teach about Natural Gas Industry, Careers
-- Marcellus Drilling News: Ohio Oil & Gas Commission Votes To Shut Down 3 Athens Wastewater Injection Wells
-- Cleveland.com: Ohio Oil & Gas Wastewater Injection Well Leaked Waste For Years Before State Finally Stopped It
[Posted: April 24, 2024] PA Environment Digest
No comments:
Post a Comment