Presented by ProPublica

By Abrahm Lust­garten and Nicholas Kusnetz — ProPublica

In a first, federal envi­ronment offi­cials today scien­tif­i­cally linked under­ground water pollution with hydraulic frac­turing, concluding that cont­a­m­i­nants found in central Wyoming were likely caused by the gas drilling process.

The findings by the Envi­ron­mental Protection Agency come partway through a separate national study by the agency to determine whether fracking presents a risk to water

In the 121-page draft report released December 8, 2011, EPA offi­cials said that the cont­a­m­i­nation near the town of Pavillion, Wyo., had most likely seeped up from gas wells and contained at least 10 compounds known to be used in frack fluids.

The presence of synthetic compounds such as glycol ethers … and the assortment of other organic compo­nents is explained as the result of direct mixing of hydraulic frac­turing fluids with ground water in the Pavillion gas field,” the draft report states. “Alter­native expla­na­tions were care­fully considered.”

The agency’s findings could be a turning point in the heated national debate about whether cont­a­m­i­nation from fracking is happening, and are likely to shape how the country regu­lates and develops natural gas resources in the Marcellus Shale and across the Eastern Appalachian states.

Some of the findings in the report also directly contradict long­standing argu­ments by the drilling industry for why the fracking process is safe: that hydro­logic pressure would natu­rally force fluids down, not up; that deep geologic layers provide a water­tight barrier preventing the movement of chem­icals towards the surface; and that the problems with the cement and steel barriers around gas wells aren’t connected to fracking.


What Is Hydraulic Fracturing?

Hydraulic frac­turing is a process used in nine out of 10 natural gas wells in the United States, where millions of gallons of water, sand and chem­icals are pumped under­ground to break apart the rock and release the gas.

Scien­tists are worried that the chem­icals used in frac­turing may pose a threat either under­ground or when waste fluids are handled and some­times spilled on the surface.


Envi­ron­mental advo­cates greeted the report with a sense of vindi­cation and seized the oppor­tunity to argue for stronger federal regu­lation of fracking.

No one can accu­rately say that there is ‘no risk’ where fracking is concerned,” wrote Amy Mall, a senior policy analyst at the Natural Resources Defense Council, on her blog. “This draft report makes obvious that there are many factors at play, any one of which can go wrong. Much stronger rules are needed to ensure that well construction stan­dards are stronger and reduce threats to drinking water.”

A spokesman for EnCana, the gas company that owns the Pavillion wells, did not imme­di­ately respond to a request for comment. In an email exchange after the EPA released prelim­inary water test data two weeks ago, the spokesman, Doug Hock, denied that the company’s actions were to blame for the pollution and suggested it was natu­rally caused.

Nothing EPA presented suggests anything has changed since August of last year– the science remains incon­clusive in terms of data, impact, and source,” Hock wrote. “It is also important to recognize the impor­tance of hydrology and geology with regard to the sampling results in the Pavillion Field. The field consists of gas-bearing zones in the near subsurface, poor general water quality para­meters and discon­tinuous water-bearing zones.”

The EPA’s findings imme­di­ately trig­gered what is sure to become a heated political debate as members of Congress consider afresh proposals to regulate fracking. After a phone call with EPA chief Lisa Jackson this morning, Sen. James Inhofe, R-Okla., told a Senate panel that he found the agency’s report on the Pavillion-area cont­a­m­i­nation “offensive.” Inhofe’s office had chal­lenged the EPA’s inves­ti­gation in Wyoming last year, accusing the agency of bias.

Resi­dents began complaining of fouled water near Pavillion in the mid-1990s, and the problems appeared to get worse around 2004. Several resi­dents complained that their well water turned brown shortly after gas wells were fracked nearby, and, for a time, gas companies oper­ating in the area supplied replacement drinking water to residents.

Beginning in 2008, the EPA took water samples from resident’s drinking water wells, finding hydro­carbons and traces of cont­a­m­i­nants that seemed like they could be related to fracking. In 2010, another round of sampling confirmed the cont­a­m­i­nation, and the EPA, along with federal health offi­cials, cautioned resi­dents not to drink their water and to ventilate their homes when they bathed because the methane in the water could cause an explosion.

To confirm their findings, EPA inves­ti­gators drilled two water moni­toring wells to 1,000 feet. The agency released data from these test wells in November that confirmed high levels of carcino­genic chem­icals such as benzene, and a chemical compound called 2 Butoxyethanol, which is known to be used in fracking.

Still, the EPA had not drawn conclu­sions based on the tests and took pains to separate its ground­water inves­ti­gation in Wyoming from the national contro­versy around hydraulic frac­turing. Agri­culture, drilling, and old pollution from waste pits left by the oil and gas industry were all considered possible causes of the contamination.

In the report released today, the EPA said that pollution from 33 aban­doned oil and gas waste pits – which are the subject of a separate cleanup program – are indeed respon­sible for some degree of shallow ground­water pollution in the area. Those pits may be the source of cont­a­m­i­nation affecting at least 42 private water wells in Pavillion. But the pits could not be blamed for cont­a­m­i­nation detected in the water moni­toring wells 1,000 feet underground.

That cont­a­m­i­nation, the agency concluded, had to have been caused by fracking.

The EPA’s findings in Wyoming are specific to the region’s geology; the Pavillion-area gas wells were fracked at shal­lower depths than many of the wells in the Marcellus shale and elsewhere.

Inves­ti­gators tested the cement and casing of the gas wells and found what they described as “sporadic bonding” of the cement in areas imme­di­ately above where fracking took place. The cement barrier meant to protect the well bore and isolate the chem­icals in their intended zone had been weakened and sepa­rated from the well, the EPA concluded.

The report also found that hydro­logic pressure in the Pavillion area had pushed fluids from deeper geologic layers towards the surface. Those layers were not suffi­cient to provide a reliable barrier to cont­a­m­i­nants moving upward, the report says.

Throughout its inves­ti­gation in Wyoming, The EPA was hamstrung by a lack of disclosure about exactly what chem­icals had been used to frack the wells near Pavillion. EnCana declined to give federal offi­cials a detailed breakdown of every compound used under­ground. The agency relied instead on more general infor­mation supplied by the company to protect workers’ health.

Hock would not say whether EnCana had used 2 BE, one of the first chem­icals iden­tified in Pavillion and known to be used in fracking, at its wells in Pavillion. But he was dismissive of its impor­tance in the EPA’s findings. “There was a single detection of 2-BE among all the samples collected in the deep moni­toring wells. It was found in one sample by only one of three labs,” he wrote in his reply to ProP­ublica two weeks ago. “Incon­sis­tency in detection and non-repeatability shouldn’t be construed as fact.”

The EPA’s draft report will undergo a public review and peer review process, and is expected to be finalized by spring.

ProP­ublica

ProP­ublica is an inde­pendent, non-profit newsroom that produces inves­tigative jour­nalism in the public interest. Our work focuses exclu­sively on truly important stories, stories with “moral force.” We do this by producing jour­nalism that shines a light on exploitation of the weak by the strong and on the failures of those with power to vindicate the trust placed in them.

More PostsWebsiteTwitterFacebook