http://www.denverpost.com/environment/ci_24141077/colorado-confirms-more-oil-spills-flooded-weld-county
State regulators on Friday confirmed more oil and gas spills totaling at least 3,200 gallons in Colorado's flooded South Platte River valley and estimated that two dozen storage tanks toppled in the past week's rush of water and debris.
But it is uncertain whether all will be — or can be — cleaned up.
Five spills in and along the river in Weld County currently are deemed "notable," according to a Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission update Friday afternoon.
Two spills were confirmed Friday along the South Platte near Evans — 56 barrels, or about 2,400 gallons, from an Anadarko Petroleum Corp. site and 21 barrels, or about 800 gallons, from a Bayswater Exploration and Production facility.
Another new spill, reported by Anadarko, has not been measured, the commission update said.
The company PDC also reported production equipment largely washed away at an undetermined site. State authorities are working with PDC to determine the amount of material that was on site before flooding began on Sept. 12.
The latest spills were confirmed after aerial surveys, COGCC's update said. They bring the documented total amount released to more than 22,000 gallons.
Anadarko on Wednesday reported two spills in Weld County. About 125 barrels — or 5,225 gallons — spilled into the South Platte River near Milliken. A tank farm on the St. Vrain River released 323 barrels — or 13,500 gallons — near Platteville. Those two spills involved "condensate" — a mixture of oil and water.
"The COGCC is tracking these reports and full investigations will take place when access allows," state natural resources spokesman Todd Hartman said in the update that was released in response to media queries.
"Operators will be required to remediate environmental impacts where necessary," Hartman said.
Federal Environmental Protection Agency authorities also are assessing damage but are leaving it to COGCC to tally estimates of spilled material, EPA spokesman Matthew Allen said.
"We're primarily serving a role to assess and evaluate the sites that fall into our area of coverage, which are spills to the rivers," he said. "The state of Colorado and FEMA are the lead agencies on this response, and EPA will continue to work with them to coordinate any clean up and remediation efforts related to damages caused by the flooding as the water recedes and we're able to fully evaluate the situation."
Colorado law requires oil and gas equipment in the floodplain to be anchored to resist flotation.
Anadarko spokesman John Christiansen said Anadarko tank moorings held at the Milliken and Platteville
Anadarko placed two orange absorbent booms on surface water around one site near Milliken and used a vacuum truck to collect about 40 barrels' worth of the 165 barrels that had spilled, Christiansen said.
Floodwaters kept crews from reaching the tanks on the St. Vrain quickly, he said. "By the time we got there, they were empty."
Gov. John Hickenlooper, during a news conference Thursday, said the spills confirmed as of Wednesday "weren't excessively large."
"The several small spills we've had have been very small relative to the huge flow of water coming through," he said.
According to an oil and gas commission update Thursday, the state had six teams of inspectors and environmental-protection specialists looking for spills and damage and assessing environmental impact in the flood zone.
Anadarko, based in The Woodlands, Texas, is the second-largest operator in the oil-rich Denver-Julesburg Basin, which is centered in Weld County.
There 20,500 operating wells in Weld County, 321 wells in Boulder County, 97 wells in Broomfield County and 253 wells in Larimer County.
Larimer County emergency managers said Thursday they weren't aware of any spills. "We don't have the quantity of wells in Larimer County they do in Weld," sheriff's spokesman Nick Christensen said.
Anadarko said it has shut 250 tank batteries and 670 wells — about 10 percent of its operations — because of flooding.
The company has deployed about 150 people to check their sites, assess damage and make repairs.
The drilling rigs that the company could move have been transported to sites not affected by the flood. None of the sites where Anadarko is hydrofracturing — pumping large volumes of water, sand and trace chemicals into a well to crack rock and release oil and gas — are in flooded areas, Anadarko's Christiansen said.
Houston-based Noble Energy reported it has two wells that released natural gas before they were shut during the flood.
"There are no facilities operating under compromised or unknown conditions," said Tisha Schuller, president of the trade group Colorado Oil and Gas Association.
Wes Wilson, a former EPA environmental engineer who, through Be the Change, leads anti-drilling activists in Colorado, said some of the volatile material leaking into water materials from industry facilities will evaporate quickly.
But the sheens visible on surface water are "an indication of heavy crudes left behind," he said. Those materials "now will end up in the soil."
"We are going to have dozens, if not hundreds, of toxic sites," he said, "and they've got to be cleaned up."
Kevin O'Connor, who lives south of Milliken, said until now he was unaware of how much drilling has been done along the St. Vrain near his home. His main exposure to the industry is the oil- and gas-truck traffic that he encounters commuting to work in Denver.
On Thursday, as he walked over a damaged bridge to look at flood-wrecked vehicles, he said, "There's no way to plan for an event like this."
But, he said, the flood has shown that risks are high. "I think we've got better ways to create energy," he said.
Bruce Finley: 303-954-1700, bfinley@denverpost.com or twitter.com/finleybruce
This story has been updated to reflect revised spill data released by the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission.
and.....
http://hat4uk.wordpress.com/2013/09/20/fracking-the-damning-evidence-of-post-flood-colorado-for-all-to-see/
FRACKING: the damning evidence of post-flood Colorado for all to see
Following earlier confident statements about “no fracking arrangements having been affected by the floods in Colorado”, the shot below was taken by a Denver Telegraph snapper on Thursday:
“Yes we can” promised Presidential hopeful Barack Obama throughout much of 2008. It was without doubt the most empty, shallow and banal slogan in political history – and that’s really saying something. But as all those who foolishly placed their trust in this void of a man found out, no they wouldn’t….and neither would he.
Ironically, the slogan became an unspoken way of life for the very villains Obama obliquely promised to rein in: the media barons, the investment bankers, and the Treasury officers, politicians and central bankers…..all of whom were corrupt, denialist and pushing agendas they knew would enrich them – while pauperising the rest of us. “Yes we can,” they said, “because we’ve paid the cops and the pols to look the other way”. “Yes we can,” they said, “because the voters are asleep”. “Yes we can,” they said, “because there is no equality before the law any more, only privileged protection for us”.
The assertion that “we can” – in the sense that it’ll work in the end – has been expanded to included the ClubMed area of the EU suffering undeserved and idiotic austerity that was always bound to be an economic Angel of Death, QE in both the US and the UK, and stealing from bank depositors by belatedly declaring them to be investors rather than customers. In fact, some words and punctuation have been quietly added over time, such that the promise – no longer a slogan, but a cast-iron promise – has become “Yes, we can do anything we f**king well want”.
The bollocks about fracking has been pushed and propagated by the oil business and their useful idiots for some time now. The headless chickens looked like they were home and dry…..but when the weather turned wet in Colorado, the chickens came home to roost. Imagine a hyper-fracked Britain ten years ago and how it might deal with the sort of torrential rain we’ve had during the last four winters out of five.
I’m looking forward to seeing how the frackophiles handle this one. It may well turn out to be bullsh*t on a scale to make Fukushima look like the unvarnished truth.
Yes we can…but should we in the first place?
Flooded oil and gas wells spark fears of contamination in Colorado
- Topics:
- Environment
- Energy
- Fracking
As Colorado reels from a prolonged flooding disaster that has killed at least eight people and left hundreds unaccounted for, environmental groups warn of potential contamination by ruptured oil and gas industry infrastructure.
In Weld County, an area northwest of Denver and Boulder which has seen some of the worst of the rains, activists point to photos of destroyed wells, tanks and pipelines posted on social media sites. They claim years of “fracking” – the process of drilling for shale gas through hydraulic fracturing – has made the area vulnerable to contamination in the event of flooding.
"Weld County, where the South Platte River has been flooding uncontrollably, has almost 20,000 active oil and gas wells," Gary Wockner, Colorado program director for Clean Water Action, told Al Jazeera.
"It's the most heavily drilled county in the U.S., and it's seeing some of the worst flooding," he said, adding. "Oil and gas and chemicals associated with drilling are going to be spread across a wide swath of landscape."
Renewed fears of pollutants escaping into the environment resulted from the latest floods which began last Wednesday, triggered by unusually heavy late-summer storms that drenched the northeastern part of Colorado. Along with Weld, Boulder, Adams, Jefferson and Larimer have been the worst hit counties.
There are hundreds of active oil and gas wells built in the South Platte River flood plains alone that are at risk of contaminating the flood waters. Already, there have been reports of a ruptured natural gas pipeline and overflowing crude oil wells.
Industry representatives have attempted to downplay any risk, suggesting that the pictures of broken pipes and underwater wells amount to a “social media frenzy.”
Tisha Schuller, president of the Colorado Oil and Gas Association, testified before the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission regarding the industry's response to the historic floods, which have forced the evacuation of more than 10,000 people.
"All impacted wells have been shut in, which means the well has been closed off or shut and is not producing any oil and gas product," Schuller said in a release.
Schuller also responded to controversial photos Colorado residents have uploaded to social media showing floating tanks, blow-outs and flooded infrastructure.
"We have seen the social media frenzy regarding pictures of oil and gas facilities 'under water,'" she added. "While the pictures seem extraordinary, there is no data or specifics provided."
The photos and videos have not been independently verified by Al Jazeera.
Wockner, meanwhile, said he had seen "a number of photos online that show wells underwater and big tanks either floating or toppled," and that the risk of contamination is real.
"These containers have pipes attached to them and can hold 5,000 gallons or more," said Wockner. "If the tank is floating and tilted, then the pipes are probably breaking off."
Possible contaminants from fracking include toxic chemicals, including cancer-causing benzene, activists point out.
Risk of contamination
Meanwhile, oil and gas companies have been keen to stress the measures they have brought in to make safe their pipes and wells.
Colorado Interstate Gas Co., a Kinder Morgan company, declared "force majeure," an event that is the result of elements of nature, on two of their pipelines on Sept. 16 in an online statement.
Pipelines became unusable after exposure to "erosion and scouring caused by heavy flooding in the area," according to the statement.
Most industry companies with infrastructure in the affected areas have made statements saying they had "shut in" wells and pipelines before the worst of the flooding began, but they admit it will not be able to fully assess the damage until the waters have receded.
Anadarko, an oil and natural gas exploration and production company, said in a press release on Sept. 17 that they had shut in about 670 of their 5,800 wells and about 20 miles of their more than 3,200 mile-pipeline.
PDC energy, meanwhile, said in an online statement that they had suspended production from a "limited number of wells … Beginning last Friday due to wide-spread flooding and extensive road closures in Weld County."
Denver-based Xcel Energy said that approximately 50-60 feet of a natural gas pipeline was exposed in Boulder County and that crews were at the site to stabilize and support the line.
Gabriel Romero, media relations for Xcel, told Al Jazeera that thousands of customers were without power after the company shut in wells and pipelines ahead of the worst of the flooding in affected areas.
Romero said that the process of re-introducing natural gas to the lines will be a long one.
"Every inch of the lines must be checked for leaks," he said. "There isn't just a central switch we can turn on … crews must be sent out to each home to make sure it's safe to reintroduce gas."
But critics say all oil and gas wells in the flood plains should have been shut down before disaster struck, or that they never should have been constructed on flood plains in the first place.
Prior to the flooding, 158 of the 309 spills were in Weld County alone in 2013, according toColorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission records.
"There are very weak regulations in Colorado around drilling and fracking and having oil and gas operations in floodplains and around rivers," Wockner said. "Every year in Colorado there are a few hundred spills, when oil and gas and fracking chemicals are spilled onto the ground and into waterways."
Mark Salley, spokesman for the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, was unable to provide new information about the reported leaks or the risk of contamination from the hundreds of wells in the flood plains.
"I haven't heard that information, and I'm not going to speculate on those risks," Salley told Al Jazeera. "What I can tell you is that we have sent out advisories … about sewage treatment systems that have broken."
Al Jazeera
http://enenews.com/colorados-richest-oil-field-buried-in-flood-waters-official-scale-is-unprecedented-we-will-have-to-deal-with-environmental-contamination-chemist-its-new-territory-scientist
The Denver Post, Sept. 16, 2013 (h/t Anonymous tip): Colorado’s richest oil field — the Denver-Julesburg Basin — is buried in flood waters raising operational and environmental concerns [...] Thousands of wells and operating sites have been impacted [...] “The scale is unprecedented,” said Mike King, executive director of the Colorado Department of Natural Resources. “We will have to deal with environmental contamination from whatever source.” The basin, one of the most promising onshore oil plays [...] The major public health risks will come from contaminated water and sediments, said Miriam Rotkin-Ellman, a Natural Resources Defense Council staff scientist. [...] There are more than 20,000 wells in the DJ-Basin and surrounding areas and 3,200 permits for open pits in Weld County, according to state data. [...]
Irene Fortune, retired chemist who worked for British Petroleum now running Loveland City Council: “With the Texas gulf coast, they know in advance a hurricane is coming. To have something this inland, this level of flooding in an area with high oil and gas development, it’s new territory.”
Reuters, Sept. 16, 2013: The Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission said it was working with health authorities to assess environmental impacts. [...] Kyle Fredin, a meteorologist for the National Weather Service, said 21 inches (53 cm) of rain fell in parts of Boulder city, northwest of Denver, during the week-long deluge, nearly double the area’s average annual rainfall.
Is there a media blackout on the fracking flood disaster in Colorado?
I will update this post as residents send me pictures and video.
We need the national news stations to go cover the environmental disaster that’s happening in Colorado right now.
This picture taken by a resident is from yesterday.
From an email.
I see you’ve noticed the underwater wells in Weld County, Colorado. Amazing; we’ve emailed the Denver TV stations, other media, and state and local politicians. We’ve sent pictures that our members have taken. It’s like the media and politicians have been TOLD not to say anything about it. There has been no mention of the gas wells on the Denver newscasts either last night or this evening although all stations have had extensive and extended flood coverage. You can see underwater wells in the background of some of the newscast videos, and yet the reporters say absolutely nothing.
From an email.I see you’ve noticed the underwater wells in Weld County, Colorado. Amazing; we’ve emailed the Denver TV stations, other media, and state and local politicians. We’ve sent pictures that our members have taken. It’s like the media and politicians have been TOLD not to say anything about it. There has been no mention of the gas wells on the Denver newscasts either last night or this evening although all stations have had extensive and extended flood coverage. You can see underwater wells in the background of some of the newscast videos, and yet the reporters say absolutely nothing.Here’s a picture one of our members took yesterday in Weld County, Colorado. We’ve got tons more on our website. Check it out. The tanks are tipping and, in some cases, have fallen over. They have to be leaking toxins into the flood waters. There have to be hundreds if not thousands of underwater well pads in Weld County as a result of the flooding.Please publicize this in Texas since our media people and politicians have gone silent!East Boulder County UnitedLafayette, ColoradoUPDATE: The locals are very busy right now taking calls from the media. So far no calls from the local media though. Last I heard it is continuing to rain.They reported to EPA emergency under report number 1060249.UPDATE: You can see more photos HERE. Another tank overturned and a fracking chemical warehouse that was flooded. I did not take the photos.UPDATE: From the Daily Camera:Regulators say they agree these well sites could pose a contamination risk, and they will get out to assess the damage as soon as it’s feasible.[...]Lafayette-based anti-fracking activist Cliff Willmeng said he spent two days “zig-zagging” across Weld and Boulder counties documenting flooded drilling sites, mostly along the drainageway of the St. Vrain River. He observed “hundreds” of wells that were inundated. He also saw many condensate tanks that hold waste material from fracking at odd angles or even overturned.“It’s clear that the density of the oil and gas activity there did not respect where the water would go,” Willmeng said. “What we immediately need to know is what is leaking and we need a full detailed report of what that is. This is washing across agricultural land and into the waterways. Now we have to discuss what type of exposure the human population is going to have to suffer through.”A spokesman for the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission said the agency is aware of the potential for contamination from flooded drilling sites, but there simply is no way to get to those sites while flooding is ongoing and while resources are concentrated on saving lives.Apparently all sides agree that there is a contamination risk. So I hope the industry apologists will, at least, stop using my bandwidth trying to convince us otherwise.UPDATE REGARDING COMMENTS:
From here on out, if your comment doesn’t add something to the conversation, it won’t be posted. There are plenty of comments already saying the same ignorant things so we don’t need any more repeats.Edit: I couldn’t do it. As far as I know I have allowed all the comments even those calling me names but they are coming in very fast and I do have other things to do. Please keep your comment clean because there are children who read this blog. I don’t think the industry is doing itself any favors here in the comments.
- We already know that some people love the oil and gas industry, cancer and all, because the jobs pay well and you need to put “food on your families.”
- We already know that some people see no other way to power their lives than to use oil and gas.
- We already know that many of you think I am
- misguided
- need educating by the oil & gas industry
- meddling (despite the fact I was asked to post this)
- don’t know what a question mark means
But here’s the deal, people: I pay for this bandwidth and I spent most of my day yesterday allowing your crazy comments. Enough is enough. I’m not wasting my bandwidth for you to place, essentially the same comments over and over.ThanksUPDATE: From an email:There are several members of the Vermont Governor’s administration flying to Colorado as we speak to help in the rebuilding of infrasturcture after flooding as we had to do after Irene. Being a mountainous state as Colorado is and being a victim of severe and isolating flooding as Colorado is, the Colorado Governor requested our help. If the Colorado people ask for their help in ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES, perhaps they might have better luck with people from one of the most ENVIRONMENTALLY SAFE STATES in the country. Hopefully, they will not shy away also from the issue because of money, politics and fearUPDATE: An email from Weld County residents:Hi Sharon,To circle back, activists here have been contacted by Bloomberg, the Weather Channel, NPR, the BBC and Al Jazeera….so far. Thanks so much for your help. The pictures are all over the web and getting picked up by all sorts of media, and we’re being contacted by more and more people.I think the local CBS affiliate in Denver finally did some filming this morning with one of our members—very late to the party. Others have totally avoided the issue like they’ve been told not to report on it. Meanwhile, more and more pictures are coming in of damaged well pads and floating tanks
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