advertisement
About Energy Industry

Business in the energy industry is fast paced and ever-changing. BNET Energy provides daily news coverage for managers and executives in the energy sector, with coverage on the major utilities, energy companies, clean tech and renewable energy businesses. BNET Energy offers in depth analysis of green business, the very latest in energy research, alliances and partnerships, competitive intelligence and a host of other global energy industry issues.

One Big Fracking Problem for Oil and Gas Industry

By Kirsten Korosec | Jun 11, 2009

Legislation introduced this week that targets hydraulic fracturing — a technique used to access vast new fields for drilling – is pitting the oil and gas industry against environmentalists in a debate over public health, federal versus state regulation and the protection of industry trade secrets.

Here’s what the legislation also will do: deliver massive lobbying firepower to Capitol Hill. In the lead up to the long-anticipated bill, lobbying against the measure was already well underway. In the first quarter of 2009, the American Petroleum Institute spent $1.8 million lobbying for a variety of issues including hydraulic fracturing.

The concern is that underground water could be contaminated during hydraulic fracturing or fracking. In the process, drillers pump millions of gallons of water mixed with chemicals and sand under high pressure into horizontal wells. The pressure cracks shale deposits and releases the gas. Most of the  mixture is removed, although some remains. The mix is then put into open pits for evaporation and eventually trucked to a disposal site. The exact chemical mixture is considered a trade secret, although many including benzene are considered highly toxic.

It is a considerably valuable process for drillers because it allows them to reach more gas and oil than a conventional well. Environmentalists and public health officials believe it should be regulated because of concerns that water supplies could be threatened by the chemicals left underground or in the open pits. Water contamination has been documented near drilling sites, but a definitive link between drilling and contamination has never been made. Environmental Protection Agency officials investigated and ruled regulation was unnecessary. [Clarified thanks to reader input]. However, EPA scientists have said they can’t adequately investigate cases of pollution or determine whether fracturing might be to blame because it is exempt under the Safe Drinking Water Act.

What will the legislation actually do?

  • The standalone bills in the House and Senate for the Fracturing Responsibility and Awareness of Chemicals Act — deemed FRAC ACT — would end an exemption for hydraulic fracking within the Safe Drinking Water Act. This exemption known as the Halliburton loophole was provided under the Bush administration’s Energy Policy Act of 2005;
  • The EPA would regulate the high-tech drilling process. This authority currently falls to state governments;
  • The oil and gas industry would have to disclose the chemicals — which are considered trade secrets – used in the fracturing process.

The industry contends that U.S. oil and gas production would drop considerably – threatening the country’s goal of energy independence and economy — if the legislation becomes law.

Regardless of its merits, the bill will impact the oil and gas industry. I’d certainly don’t go as far as some gloom-and-doom predictions. But it’s reasonable to assume new restrictions and costs will be placed on the industry, which will affect their bottom line, to some degree.

Just take a look at the Marcellus formation, a massive deposit of gas-bearing shale that stretches from Ohio to New York. The U.S. Geological Survey estimates it contains 1.9 trillion cubic feet of gas. More recent estimates put the figure at 500 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. That means something like $1 trillion in natural gas is locked up in the formation. Fracking will have to be used to access the rich deposits of natural gas.

The oil and gas companies that own the wells won’t be the only ones impacted by the legislation.

Oil services companies Halliburton, Schlumberger and BJ Services, the three largest manufacturers of fracking fluids, earn millions doing fracturing jobs. 

Even private equity is involved.

Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. recently invested $350 million in East Resources, a major player in the Marcellus Shale with control of 900,000 acres.  Avista Capital Partners invested $150 million with Carrizo Oil & Gas to buy acreage in the Marcellus Shale.

The industry estimates complying with new federal regulations would cost $100,000 for each new natural gas well. Wells already cost a hefty sum to drill, so tacking on another $100,000 in an effort to protect water supplies doesn’t seem like a bad deal.

But the oil and gas industry doesn’t quite see it that way. They argue the legislation creates unnecessary duplication because they are already regulated by state governments.

That may be true. But how well can any agency regulate fracking when no one knows the exact combination of chemicals being used? It would be like regulating a prescription medication without knowing what it’s made of.

Kirsten Korosec has been a print and online journalist for more than 10 years covering education, politics and business.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Of Hydraulic Fracturing and Drinking Water

    New York Times - 144 days 21 hours 51 minutes ago

    A bill introduced earlier this month would bring federal oversight of hydraulic fracturing fluids  chemical mixtures pumped at high pressure into oil and gas wells in order to unlock deposits trapped deep underground. Environmentalists welcomed the bill, but representatives of the natural gas industry say the legislation could lead to...

  • Full Disclosure: Schlumberger, Hydraulic Fracking and the Public Access Debate

    BNET Energy - 52 days 20 hours 12 minutes ago

    Oilfield services giant Schlumberger is pushing its suppliers for permission to reveal the chemicals used in hydraulic fracturing, a technique

  • Cabot Learns The Dangers Of Fracking

    Forbes - 54 days 11 hours 39 minutes ago

    HOUSTON -- Last week the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection shut down some operations of natural gas driller Cabot Oil & Gas after 8,000 gallons of toxic chemicals were spilled on the ground and into a creek in Susquehanna County. Houston-based Cabot Oil & Gas ( COG - news - people ) says a hose ruptured during a process called...

  • Video - Drilling for Shale Gas

    Technology Review - 38 days 8 hours 9 minutes ago

    Economically recovering natural gas from shale deposits depends on advanced drilling techniques. This video illustrates how horizontal drilling allows gas producers to follow a shale deposit for up to a mile, greatly increasing the productivity of the well. It also illustrates the technique of â??fracturing,â?? in which large volumes of water...

  • Finance Committee asks hospital lobby to look for savings

    Modern Healthcare - 169 days 14 hours 9 minutes ago

    The Senate Finance Committee on Wednesday asked representatives from the hospital lobby to find Medicare and Medicaid savings that over the next decade could be used to offset the cost of health reform legislation now being drafted on Capitol Hill

Links from the Web Buzz:
 
Reply to Story

BNET TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic

Subscribe to this discussion via Email or RSS

  •  
    1

    rmcconnell

    06/11/09 | Report as spam

    RE: One Big Fracking Problem for Oil and Gas Industry

    Wow -- for a journalist with 10 years experience, I would think you would know that EPA has in fact investigated this issue and was unable to find even one case where fracing fluid had actually contaminated a water supply. The Groundwater Protection Council found the same thing. And the Department of Energy did too. EPA's ability to investigate an issue has nothing to do with this process falling under the Safe Drinking Water Act.

    In case everyone has forgotten, drilling does have federal oversight -- through groups like the Susquehanna River Basin Commission and the Delaware River Basin Commission.

    Please study up on the issues and the facts before you write on these issues. This kind of carelessness only increases the confusion that exists in the public.

  •  
    2

    kirsten korosec

    06/11/09 | Report as spam

    RE: One Big Fracking Problem for Oil and Gas Industry

    Thanks for the comment. I'm sure you're referring to the EPA's finding back in 1995 by Carol Browner -- now Obama's energy and climate czar -- that there was no evidence of contamination and therefore did not need to be regulated.
    It was worth including to provide the full picture and I've since added it. What it should have said was EPA scientists say they haven't been able to effectiively or adequately investigate pollution claims because of the exemption.
    That being said, I never stated there has been a definitive link between drilling and contamination. Simply fears that there is a link.

    Nor am I arguing for duplication in the regulatory process. In fact, aside from pointing out the impact on the industry and the lobbying battle that has already begun, my only strong argument in the regulation arena lies with knowing exactly which chemicals are used. I understand the argument of protecting industry secrets. It also seems logical to know exactly what chemicals are being used. If anything, it could help the oil and gas industry unequivocally prove there is not a link between water contamination and hydraulic fracking.

  •  
    3

    horizonadmin

    06/17/09 | Report as spam

    RE: One Big Fracking Problem for Oil and Gas Industry

    It would be helpful if you added a preface that this article is actually an editorial rather than a news story. You are clearly advocating a position (. . . "tacking on another $100,000 in an effort to protect water supplies doesn?t seem like a bad deal") and your discussion of the impact is far from even-handed. There is a plethora of information you could find about the significant impact this regulation would place on the industry and the increase in costs and energy prices that would result. Furthermore, the cost of complying with a proposed regulation is unknowable and $100,000 could be very optimistic (suppose, for example, environmentalists take the tack they use with nuclear plants: there is no acceptable level of safety). This is not a problem for the oil and gas industry, but a problem for all of America--the same problem we are facing on multiple fronts. The fantasy that is currently being proposed as "energy policy" is based in ignorance. Your article does nothing to contribute to a solution.

  •  
    4

    irish_one2@...

    10/27/09 | Report as spam

    RE: One Big Fracking Problem for Oil and Gas Industry

    It amazes me how people can argue with the journalist who wrote this story when it is clear to me and I am sure anyone who reads this that SAFETY & REGULATION is a must for the communities that could be effected by Fracking. People elect government officials to do what is right, so they can go on with there daily lives and can sleep at night. Elected officials should be doing whats right and not whats right for their pockets. RULES & REGULATIONS concerning SAFETY for the public should require Companies worrying about their trade secrets to tell the truth about what their hiding in their chemicals.

Please add your comment:

  1. You are currently: a Guest |
  2.  

Basic HTML tags that work in comments are: bold (<b></b>), italic (<i></i>), underline (<u></u>), and hyperlink (<a href></a)

advertisement
advertisement
advertisement
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
advertisement