Abstract

Concerns have arisen among the public regarding the potential for drinking-water contamination from the migration of methane gas and hazardous chemicals associated with hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling. However, little attention has been paid to the potential for groundwater contamination resulting from surface spills from storage and production facilities at active well sites. We performed a search for publically available data regarding groundwater contamination from spills at U.S. drilling sites. The Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission (COGCC) database was selected for further analysis because it was the most detailed. The majority of spills were in Weld County, Colorado, which has the highest density of wells that used hydraulic fracturing for completion, many producing both methane gas and crude oil. We analyzed publically available data reported by operators to the COGCC regarding surface spills that impacted groundwater. From July 2010 to July 2011, we noted 77 reported surface spills impacting the groundwater in Weld County, which resulted in surface spills associated with less than 0.5% of the active wells. The reported data included groundwater samples that were analyzed for benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and xylene (BTEX) components of crude oil. For groundwater samples taken both within the spill excavation area and on the first reported date of sampling, the BTEX measurements exceeded National Drinking Water maximum contaminant levels (MCLs) in 90, 30, 12, and 8% of the samples, respectively. However, actions taken to remediate the spills were effective at reducing BTEX levels, with at least 84% of the spills reportedly achieving remediation as of May 2012. Our analysis demonstrates that surface spills are an important route of potential groundwater contamination from hydraulic fracturing activities and should be a focus of programs to protect groundwater. Implications: While benzene can occur naturally in groundwater sources, spills and migration of chemicals used for hydraulic fracturing activities have recently been thought to be a main source of benzene contamination in groundwater. However, there is little scientific literature to support that claim. Therefore, we accessed a publically available database and tracked the number of reported surface spills with potential groundwater impact over a 1-year period. Although the number of surface spills was minimal, our analysis provides scientific evidence that benzene can contaminate groundwater sources following surface spills at active well sites. Supplemental Materials: Supplemental materials are available for this paper. Go to the publisher's online edition of the Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association for an illustration of the average concentration of each BTEX chemical from pooled sample measurements, and various metrics from all 77 spills analyzed in this study.

Highlights

  • Increases in the global demand for energy are driving advances in natural gas extraction techniques such as hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling (Kennedy, 2007)

  • To evaluate the potential impact to groundwater from BTEX in surface spills reported during our study period, (COGCC, 2011e), we focused on initial measurements taken before or early in the remediation process so that we could characterize the high end of BTEX contamination that may have occurred during the course of these spills

  • Our analysis indicates that surface spills of produced water from the fracturing process or crude oil from fractured wells could pose the potential for release of BTEX chemicals in excess of the national maximum contaminant level (MCL) for each compound

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Summary

Introduction

Increases in the global demand for energy are driving advances in natural gas extraction techniques such as hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling (Kennedy, 2007). These two technologies make it economically feasible to recover unconventional oil and gas resources from coal beds, shale formations, and tight sand reservoirs. Hydraulic fracturing has received recent attention, the technology has been in commercial use in the United States for exploration and extraction of crude oil since the 1940s (STRONGER, 2011). Hydraulic fracturing is a technology that relies on the high-pressure injection of water mixed with a combination of chemicals and sand formulated to physically fracture subsurface reservoirs for the purpose of extracting oil and gas.

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