By Marita Noon
Sunday, December 29, 2013
Hydraulic fracturing started out as an “exploding
torpedo” back in 1865. Today, nearly 150 years later, the actual process has
made giant technological strides, but now, it's the topic that’s explosive.
While the White House has been encouraging Christmas
dinner table conversation to center around Obamacare, in my experience, it is
fracking that came into the conversation—and when it did, the results had the
potential to be as explosive as the early practice.
Over the holidays two young adults came home for
Christmas. Somehow hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” came into the
conversation. Dad, a reader of my column whose employment is also peripherally
connected to the oil-and-gas industry, spoke up in support of the practice that
has unleashed America’s natural resources and made us the world leader in
energy production. His children, and their friends who had gathered in his
home, were shocked and spouted the usual claims of water contamination, harsh
chemicals, and flaming faucets. The topic became so explosive that his kids
packed up and left before the festivities even began.
I was in California for Christmas. I visited a cousin in
Napa Valley whose adult son is in the wine business. He was at her home when I
arrived. She told him what I do and stated that he had many friends in the oil-and-gas
business. I smiled and said: “I can talk oil, gas, coal, nuclear, fracking,
whatever…” My cousin quickly interrupted and stated: “We probably don’t want to
talk fracking.” I took the hint, and we moved on to another topic. Driving back
to my brother’s house, I wondered: “When did fracking become an explosive
topic.”
With the Christmas prime rib consumed, my family and
friends were still gathered around the table. Once again fracking came up. I
shared the previous two recent stories. One woman asserted that if her sister,
who was arriving in a few days from Boulder, Colorado, was there and we talked
fracking, the results would be explosive, too.
Because they are not in the industry, I found that the
group gathered around our table had misconceptions about the process that
they’d picked up from the media.
While I don’t have an exact date when the topic of
fracking became explosive, I do know, from my speaking and writing on the
topic, from radio interviews with listener call-ins, and private conversations,
that the explosive reactions are due to a lack of understanding about the
process—with the two biggest concerns being about water and chemicals.
Water
As I’ve written previously, there are accusations that
fracking is taking billions of gallons of water out of the hydrologic cycle.
Especially in the southwest where water is scarce and drought conditions
persist, this poses a problem.
The process of hydraulic fracturing has advanced from the
first nitroglycerin “torpedo” that was shot down a well hole on April 25, 1865,
and well acidizing that was used in the 1930s to enhance productivity, to the
modern mix of high pressure, water, and chemicals—and it continues to evolve
and become more economical.
In a piece addressing water used in fracking, The
Economist describes the process this way: “Water injected at high pressure into
rock deep underground during the process of hydraulic fracturing, or
'fracking,’ often returns to the surface as brine, having picked up a lot of
salt on its journey. It is also contaminated with chemicals from the fracking
process itself.”
Today, less and less freshwater is being used—especially
in the arid southwest where water for drinking and agriculture is at a premium.
A typical frack job can use as much as 5 million gallons of water and lasts
about 3 days. The procedure can result in decades of oil or gas production.
With the development of new technologies, the fracking
process can be done with brackish water that may be as much as ten times as
salty as seawater. A recent report from Reuters, titled “Fracking without
freshwater at a west Texas oil field,” documents some of the advancements.
Billions of gallons of brackish water are located far below the fresh water
aquifers. Producers in west Texas are fracking with the brackish water from the
Santa Rosa aquifer. They are then recycling the produced water—a byproduct of
oil and natural gas drilling, and the flowback water—the fluid pushed back out
of the well during fracking. Both forms of wastewater have historically been
trucked to underground disposal wells.
A couple of months ago, I participated in the Executive
Oil Conference in Midland, Texas where a panel of water experts addressed the
crowd of more than 800 attendees and discussed the new technologies.
Now, instead of trucking wastewater to a remote location,
mobile systems can treat the water onsite and condition it to meet almost any
specification the driller wants—resulting in a reduction of expensive truck
traffic. The portable systems can treat 20,000-30,000 barrels of water per day.
For bigger frack jobs, additional units can be added—making the system totally
flexible.
These new water solutions can reduce the total dissolved
solids in the water from as high as 200,000 to below 200. For reference, the
Environmental Protection Agency’s standard for drinking water is 500. The same
water can be recycled and used over and over again. Addressing the new
technologies, James Welch, Global Business Development Manager, Water
Solutions, with Halliburton, told the crowd: “Produced water is not a waste. It
is an opportunity. It is an offset to freshwater usage.” Halliburton is able to
fracture with water that's 280,000 TDS.
The result of these new procedures is, according to The
Economist: “Clean water …pure enough to be used for irrigation, or even
drinking water. …Alternatively, it can be re-injected into the ground during
the next frack.”
Rather than taking water out of the hydrologic cycle, the
oil-and-gas industry is actually often taking formerly unusable water, using it
in fracking and then cleaning it up to a level where it can be introduced into
the cycle as either irrigation or drinking water.
Stan Weiner, Chairman and CEO at STW Resources, was one
of the panelists. He summed up the new water solutions by saying: “Now we’ve
figured out a way to clean it up economically. There’s no reason not to use it.
Companies nationwide, worldwide, all want to do this. We get no resistance from
them. They want to see it work. It’s a go.”
GE (as addressed in The Economist), Apache Corp. (as
covered by Reuters), Halliburton, and STW Resources are just a handful of the
many companies, which are developing revolutionary water treatment processes
that neuter one of the biggest arguments against fracking.
Chemicals
In our Christmas conversation, someone asked: “Why do
they need chemicals? Why don’t they just frack with water?” She’d heard
stories.
I explained that the so-called chemicals are needed to
provide lubrication for the tiny particles of sand that hold open microscopic
cracks in the “fractured” rock that allow the oil or gas to escape. “As a
woman, I am sure you’ve had your fingers swell. That makes it hard to get your
rings off.” She nodded. “What do you do then?” I queried. “Soap my hands up,”
she replied.
Bingo!
That is the role the chemicals play in the fracking
process. But those chemicals are now mostly food-based and can be consumed with
no ill effects—both Governor Hickenlooper (D-CO) and CNBC’s Jim Cramer have had
a drink.
So, even if the chemicals did somehow defy geology and
migrate several miles from the fracked well through the layers of sedimentary
rock to the aquifer, they are not harmful.
To illustrate the point, I am in the process of
organizing what I am calling “the great New Mexico fracktail party.” I have
several state legislators lined up—and am looking for more. I need to find an
operator who is willing to invite us onsite when a frack job is being done. The
legislators, industry folks, and anyone else who wants to participate, will be
invited to the location with cocktail glass in hand (umbrella, fruit,
olive—whatever—included). With media cameras rolling we’ll pour the fracfluid
from the tank to our glasses and toast to American energy freedom.
My sister-in-law asked: “What about the flaming faucets?”
“Those are real,” I explained. “But they have nothing to do with fracking.”
Natural gas, or methane, was found in water wells long before any fracking was
done in the area. In fact, it was the gassy smell that often alerted explorers
to the potential oil and gas in the region. Oil-and-gas drilling didn’t cause
the flaming faucet phenomenon. Quite the contrary. The presence of gas near the
surface brought about the “don’t smoke in the shower” adage. While the water is
harmless to consume, a gas build up in the house could cause an explosion.
Lies about hydraulic fracturing are rampant. If fossil
fuel opponents can spread fear, uncertainty, and doubt about fracking—with the
goal of causing a federal fracking ban, they can virtually stop oil-and-gas development
in America, as it is estimated that 90 percent of producing wells have been
fracked. Without American ingenuity and increasing production, gasoline prices
and utility bills will skyrocket. Economic ruin will reign. America will, once
again be beholden to increasingly hostile foreign sources.
A fracking conversation shouldn’t be explosive. Today’s
hydraulic fracturing is really benign, American technology that is ecologically
sound and economically advantageous. Keep these facts in mind. As my stories
illustrate, not everyone will listen—but if more people, such as my brother and
sister-in-law, know the truth they can help de-fuse the explosive conversation.
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