Monday, June 10, 2024

House Hearing: A First-Hand Account Of How Repeated, Unlimited Road Dumping Of Oil & Gas Drilling Wastewater Is Tearing Apart Dirt Roads And Creating Multiple Environmental Hazards

Siri Lawson from Farmington Township, Warren County
submitted this written statement to the June 10 House Environmental Resources and Energy Committee for its hearing on House Bill 2384 (Vitali-D-Delaware) and road spreading oil and gas wastewater.

Farmington Township lies in Northwest Pennsylvania.  In 2017-18, the Township became ground zero in the debate over using public dirt roads for oil and gas wastewater disposal.

Our township roads became brine dumpsites, and the practice continues elsewhere.  The excessive, repetitive, sanctioned road spreading causes Township roads to physically, mechanically and chemically change and break down.

I took pictures.  [Click Here to see photos accompanying this testimony.]

Dirt roads in townships everywhere conventional oil and gas drilling occurs can be so heavily inundated with drilling wastewater-- brine-- they become “sodic”-- showing the classic cracking of the road riding surface from sodium overload caused by the oil and gas wastewater.

Experts say this means brine has destabilized the road.  Locals say the roads had “lost their base.”

Thousands of tons of existing and applied gravel sinks to the bottom of the roadbed over time on roads spread with oil and gas wastewater.  

Quicksand-like peach colored fines and sediments rise to the top leaving a changeable and erratic riding surface.

A hallmark of a “sodic” road is that dry weather will cause a thin crust on the surface of the road. 

Moisture, in any season, will cause vehicle tires to scramble for traction.  A lot of moisture will cause an over-brined road to become so immediately waterlogged it can become nearly impassable.

There are Township residents who complained the over-brined muck necessitated the use of 4-wheel drives to access their homes in the summer.

There were also reports that tow trucks had to dislodge vehicles that became mired in the brine mud.

Driving over a freshly brined road had the same effect.

A single pass of brine would immediately begin softening the road surface.  The typical road spreading operation involves making three or more passes on each section of the road.  

Road spreading would generate a massive accumulation of toxic mud on vehicles, Amish buggies, even bare feet.

The mucky brine accumulation would rapidly dry.

Amish and English alike reported that chisels were needed to remove the toxic caked muck.

Anti-brine petition signers in Farmington Township often said oil and gas wastewater made dusty dirt roads even dustier.

Before researchers began looking at sodic road dispersion properties, some locals said the excessive dust came from the salts in brine.

Others said oil and gas wastewater is dirty, filled with particulate that blew when it dried.

We residents knew dust would begin to blow again even before freshly spread brine was even dry.  Often in as little as an hour.

The fossil fuel industry as well as regulators used this evaporative phenomena as an excuse to dump more oil and gas wastewater.

It became a self-perpetuating cycle.

Through science we now know the ions in the road material and the ions in the oil and gas wastewater actually push each other apart and destabilize the road creating dust and more runoff into ditches and streams than would normally occur.

Not Just Salt

If you were Amish and riding in a buggy, or just needed to cross the road to get to your mailbox, a freshly brined road could “knock your socks off.”

Any brine from any geologic layer is not just metals and salts.  There is an alphabet soup of hazards in freshly spread brine.

Volatile organic compounds, benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene and xylene, Diesel Range organics, frac fluid, production chemicals, stimulation chemicals, biocides, well maintenance chemicals all find their way into conventional oil and gas drilling wastewater.  [Read more here]

Whatever goes down the well, comes up from the well, and can get put on a public road.

And it is significantly-- maybe dangerously radioactive.

Google says sea water is 220 times saltier than freshwater and the ancient seawater called brine is 7 to 10 times saltier than that.

Brine is a very toxic hazard the government and industry is externalizing to unsuspecting people and the environment.

Improper Road Maintenance

In addition to the brine, the way townships typically choose to maintain dirt roads adds to the problem.

Every year or so on my dirt road in Farmington Township, the Township uses a large road grader to drag dirt up from the ditches moving it to the center of the dirt road.

The Township then uses a York rake and makes multiple passes across this loosened dirt to smooth it out with no compaction.

The dirt is left to blow.

Sometimes gravel is added, but in the years of heavy brining, the gravel rapidly sank below the road riding surface.  

This is how townships with dirt roads tend to maintain them.  It is certainly not how the Penn State Center For Dirt and Gravel Road Studies has said it should be done to minimize dust and sediment runoff.  

Penn State Center also calls road spreading of drilling wastewater an environmentally unsound practice. [Read more here]

When You Stop Spreading

What happens when you stop spreading oil and gas wastewater on dirt roads like they did in my Farmington Township?

The roads lose the peach color-- the tell-tale sign of heavy road spreading-- and return to a more normal gray color.

On most roads the gravel no longer sinks to the bottom out-of-sight.  The road surface becomes firmer, and there’s no sodic crust on top.

If townships use close to proper road maintenance practices, the roads remain firm while dry or wet and they aren’t slimy like when they are spread with drilling wastewater.

And there is much less dust and mud on vehicles and Amish buggies.

In some areas, the difference has been dramatic.

Conclusion

Townships swear they need brine to suppress the dust they create and oil and gas operators are all too ready to oblige.

Disturbing a toxic, sodic road, leaving loose toxic dredged road dirt on the surface creating its own dust and then claiming a toxic, sodic fluid will suppress the manufactured dust plus prevent potholes defies logic.

Pennsylvania needs to halt this dangerous charade.  

Stop the road dumping of drilling wastewater.

Click Here for a copy of Siri Lawson’s written testimony.

Click Here to watch a video of the hearing.

Hearing Key Takeaways On Road Dumping

Here are a few of the key takeaways from the Committee’s June 10  hearing on road dumping--

-- Water Is Just As Effective: The Penn State Center for Dirt and Gravel Road Studies said studies show plain water is just as effective as oil and gas wastewater at dust suppression, without the negative environmental and health side effects.  What’s cheaper than water?

-- Dirt Road Construction/Maintenance Critical: Putting liquids on roads that dry out in a few hours will not solve the dust problem or do anything to protect residents.  Using proper road construction and maintenance techniques and the right materials will go a long way to significantly reduce dust and improve the traveling surface.  

The Penn State Center for Dirt and Gravel Road Studies has worked on these issues for decades and pioneered the use of techniques and materials that work effectively.  Call them, they can help!

-- Wastewater Dumping Has Moved To Paved Roads: Local citizens report oil and gas wastewater dumping has moved from dirt and gravel roads to paved roads because it’s faster to dump their loads with less evidence they are doing this illegal practice.  With this move, the justification for legalizing this disposal method for dust suppression has also evaporated.  It is simply disposal.

-- Wastewater Dumpers Wait For Rain: Local citizens report wastewater dumpers typically wait until there is rain in the forecast to start dumping to help hide their tracks.  As a result, the pretense the dumpers pay any attention to any guidelines for dumping wastewater also disappears.  It is simply disposal.

-- Filled With Harmful Contaminants: For nearly 30 years, studies have all shown the same thing-- oil and gas wastewater contains many harmful contaminants that exceed health and environmental standards.  Penn State research found 25 contaminants in conventional wastewater exceeded health and environmental standards.

-- Conventional Wastewater Fails Product Testing: The Penn State Center for Dirt and Gravel Road Studies reported conventional oil and gas wastewater fails to meet its environmental testing standards, including for sodium, chloride and radioactive radium.  Radioactive radium levels varied from 84 to 2,500 pCi/L, far above the 15 pCi/L standard.

-- Little Difference Between Conventional And Shale Gas Wastewater: Penn State reported there is very little difference between conventional and unconventional oil and gas wastewater, except the road dumping of unconventional shale gas wastewater was banned by DEP in 2016 regulations.

Rep. Greg Vitali (D-Delaware) serves as Majority Chair of the House Environmental Committee and can be contacted by calling 717-787-7647 or sending email to: gvitali@pahouse.net. Rep. Martin Causer (R-Cameron) serves as Minority Chair and can be contacted by calling 717-787-5075 or by sending email to: mcauser@pahousegop.com.

(Photos: Examples of illegal road dumping that happened in April and May in 2024.)

NewsClips:

-- PA Environmental Council Supports Bill To Ban Road Dumping Oil & Gas Wastewater  [PaEN]

-- The Center Square - Anthony Hennen: Road Dumping Oil & Gas Wastewater For Dust Suppression Called Into Question

House Action/Hearing On Road Dumping:

-- House Committee Reports Out Bills To Ban Road Dumping Conventional Oil & Gas Wastewater; Prohibit Use Of PFAS 'Forever Chemicals’ In Consumer Products  [PaEN]

-- House Hearing: Shapiro Administration Supports Bill Banning Road Dumping Oil & Gas Wastewater, Prohibiting Its Use As Coproduct Under Residual Waste Regulations  [PaEN] 

-- House Hearing: Penn State Expert Says ‘Pennsylvania Should Ban Road Spreading Of Oil & Gas Wastewater;’  Contaminants Exceed Health, Environmental Standards  [PaEN] 

-- House Hearing: Penn State Center For Dirt & Gravel Road Studies Says Road Spreading Oil & Gas Wastewater Is Not An Effective Dust Suppressant, Does Not Meet Environmental Testing Standards  [PaEN] 

-- House Hearing: A First-Hand Account Of How Repeated, Unlimited Road Dumping Of Oil & Gas Drilling Wastewater Is Tearing Apart Dirt Roads And Creating Multiple Environmental Hazards  [PaEN]

-- House Hearing: Protect PT - Road Dumping Oil & Gas Wastewater ‘Is Disproportionately Responsible For Negative Impacts On Human Health,’ Especially From Radioactive Radium  [PaEN]  

-- House Hearing: On Road Dumping Oil & Gas Wastewater - ‘We Studied This For Nearly 30 Years And The Conclusions Are The Same - The Wastewater Contains Harmful Contaminants’  [PaEN]  

-- House Hearing: PA State Assn. Of Township Supervisors Opposes Ban On Road Dumping Conventional Oil & Gas Wastewater Saying It’s Only Affordable Option For Dust Suppression [Plain Water Works Just As Well]  [PaEN] 

-- House Hearing: Conventional Oil & Gas Industry Trade Groups Oppose Bill Banning The Road Dumping Their Wastewater Saying It’s ‘Effective And Safe’  [PaEN] 

Road Dumping Intimidation:

-- Week 10: Illegal Dumping Of Conventional Oil & Gas Wastewater Continues Unabated On Paved, Dirt Roads, Before It Rains, It Doesn’t Matter In Warren County  [PaEN - 5.30.24]   

-- Illegal Wastewater Dumping Continues, Even On Mothers Day, Conventional Oil & Gas Well Owners’ Campaign Of Intimidation Of Senate Witness; Now Dumping Before It Rains, On Paved Roads [PaEN - 5.14.24] 

-- Two Months: Road Dumping Conventional Oil & Gas Wastewater Continues To Surround The Home Of A Senate Witness Who Opposes The Illegal Practice  [PaEN - 5.7.24]

-- Road Dumping Continues At Will As Conventional Oil & Gas Well Owners Get Rid Of Their Wastewater  [PaEN - 4.5.24]

-- Spring Road Dumping Season Underway As Conventional Oil & Gas Operators Get Rid Of Their Wastewater   [PaEN - 3.19.24] 

Resource Links - Senate Hearing On Road Dumping:

-- 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]

-- Do You Live In An Oil & Gas Wastewater Disposal Facility? Public Roads In 84 Municipalities In PA, One County In NY Are Being Used As Disposal Areas For Wastewater  [PaEN]

-- DEP: 86% Of Conventional Oil & Gas Well Owners Did Not Comply With Waste Disposal, Production Reporting For 33,505 Wells In 2023  [PaEN - 3.29.24]

[Posted: June 10, 2024]  PA Environment Digest

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