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Field Notes


The Future of the Bighorn Basin


Photo by Russell Schnitzer.

Comment Deadline is July 20

The Bureau of Land Management is now accepting comments from the public on its Bighorn Basin draft 20-year resource management plan.

It’s hard to overstate the importance of this long-term plan.

When finalized it will guide how BLM lands in the Bighorn Basin, and its piece of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, are managed for the next 20 years.

And it will determine where energy development can occur, how wildlife habitat is managed and protected, and what areas will be prioritized for recreation, among many other important decisions.

The Wyoming Outdoor Council will be submitting in-depth comments on this proposed plan, and we encourage you to comment individually, as well.

Why Participate?

The plan still needs to be improved before it is finalized.

As written, it doesn’t do enough to protect the values of the Absaroka-Beartooth Front, the Bighorn Front, or the Fifteenmile Basin (see maps below).

Better planning will help maintain the crucial wildlife habitat, prized hiking spots, and scenic vistas that make the Bighorn Basin what it is.

Your input can help convince the BLM to modify its draft plan, perhaps significantly, before it becomes final. Public input is essential to ensuring a balanced plan that gives due weight to local values and uses, while allowing for both conservation and responsible energy development.

The deadline for submitting comments is July 20.

We are here to help you!

  • Take advantage of our Bighorn Basin planning webpage and explore the resources provided there. You will find maps, informational materials, commenting tips, and more.
  • Call or email Nathan Maxon. He can help you understand what the draft plan means for your favorite place and assist you in writing effective comments to ask the BLM to keep it the way it is.
  • Get the latest updates from our staff at our outings, meetings, and other events.
  • For background information, browse our 2010 Spring Frontline, which focused on ensuring good stewardship of the Bighorn Basin.

We can realize visionary long-term stewardship of the Bighorn Basin by working together.

How to participate

Dig into the draft plan online by clicking here.

OR

Send a letter or email to:
Caleb Hiner, planning project lead
BLM Worland Field Office
P.O. Box 119
Worland, WY 82401

BBRMP@blm.gov
307.347.5100

Commenting Tips

1. Learn what the BLM has planned for your favorite places.

2. Write a letter or email to the BLM:

  • Describe your connection to the specific places you are commenting on–you might live nearby, hunt, fish, camp, or hike in a certain area, or perhaps the wildlife you enjoy rely on these lands to survive the winter.
  • Tell the BLM whether you think the proposed plan will adequately preserve the places you care about most, and why.

Click on the image below for a PDF that includes a map and more information about the Absaroka-Beartooth Front.

Click on the image below for a PDF that includes a map and more information about the Bighorn Front.

 

Click on the image below for a PDF that includes a map and more information about the Fifteenmile Basin.

Field Notes


Fracking Linked to Water Contamination



Image courtesy of Gasland the movie. Click here to see the Gasland website.

Scientific Study Links Flammable Drinking Water to Fracking

by Abrahm Lustgarten ProPublica, May 9, 2011, 3 p.m.

For the first time, a scientific study has linked natural gas drilling and hydraulic fracturing with a pattern of drinking water contamination so severe that some faucets can be lit on fire.

The peer-reviewed study [1], published [yesterday] in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, stands to shape the contentious debate [2] over whether drilling is safe and begins to fill an information gap that has made it difficult for lawmakers and the public to understand the risks [3].

The research was conducted by four scientists at Duke University. They found that levels of flammable methane gas in drinking water wells increased to dangerous levels when those water supplies were close to natural gas wells. They also found that the type of gas detected at high levels in the water was the same type of gas that energy companies were extracting from thousands of feet underground, strongly implying that the gas may be seeping underground through natural or manmade faults and fractures, or coming from cracks in the well structure itself.

“Our results show evidence for methane contamination of shallow drinking water systems in at least three areas of the region and suggest important environmental risks accompanying shale gas exploration worldwide,” the article states.

The group tested 68 drinking water wells in the Marcellus and Utica shale drilling areas in northeastern Pennsylvania and southern New York State. Sixty of those wells were tested for dissolved gas. While most of the wells had some methane, the water samples taken closest to the gas wells had on average 17 times the levels detected in wells further from active drilling. The group defined an active drilling area as within one kilometer, or about six tenths of a mile, from a gas well.

The average concentration of the methane detected in the water wells near drilling sites fell squarely within a range that the U.S Department of Interior says is dangerous and requires urgent “hazard mitigation” action, according to the study.

The researchers did not find evidence that the chemicals used in hydraulic fracturing had contaminated any of the wells they tested, allaying for the time being some of the greatest fears among environmentalists and drilling opponents.

But they were alarmed by what they described as a clear correlation between drilling activity and the seepage of gas contaminants underground, a danger in itself and evidence that pathways do exist for contaminants to migrate deep within the earth.

“We certainly didn’t expect to see such a strong relationship between the concentration of methane in water and the nearest gas wells. That was a real surprise,” said Robert Jackson, a biology professor at Duke and one of the report2019s authors.

Methane contamination of drinking water wells has been a common complaint among people living in gas drilling areas across the country. A 2009 investigation by ProPublica [4] revealed that methane contamination from drilling was widespread, including in Colorado [5], Ohio and Pennsylvania [6]. In several cases [7], homes blew up after gas seeped into their basements or water supplies. In Pennsylvania a 2004 accident killed three people, including a baby.

In Dimock, Pa. [4], where part of the Duke study was performed, some residents’ water wells exploded or their water could be lit on fire. In at least a dozen cases in Colorado, ProPublica’s investigation found, methane had infiltrated drinking water supplies that residents said were clean until hydraulic fracturing was performed nearby.

The drilling industry and some state regulators described some of these cases as “anecdotal” and said they were either unconnected to drilling activity or were an isolated problem. But the consistency of the Duke findings raises questions about how unusual and widespread such cases of methane contamination may be.

“It suggests that at least in the region we looked, this is a more general problem than people expected,” Jackson told ProPublica.

For those who live in the midst of this problem, the report serves as long-awaited vindication. “We weren’t just blowing smoke. What we were talking about was the truth,” said Ron Carter, a Dimock resident whose water went bad when drilling began there in 2008 [8] and was later tested as part of the study. “Now I’m happy that at least something helps prove out our theory.”

Methane is not regulated in drinking water, and while research is limited, it is not currently believed to be harmful to drink. But the methane is dangerous because as it collects in enclosed spaces it can asphyxiate people nearby, or lead to an explosion.

To determine where the methane in the wells they tested came from, the researchers ran it through a molecular fingerprinting process called an isotopic analysis. Water samples furthest from gas drilling showed traces of biogenic methane—a type of methane that can naturally appear in water from biological decay. But samples taken closer to drilling had high concentrations of thermogenic methane, which comes from the same hydrocarbon layers where gas drilling is targeted. That—plus the proximity to the gas wells—told the researchers that the contamination was linked to the drilling processes.

In addition to the methane, other types of gases were also detected, providing further evidence that the gas originated with the hydrocarbon deposits miles beneath the earth and that it was unique to the active gas drilling areas. Ethane, another component of natural gas, and other hydrocarbons were detected in 81 percent of water wells near active gas drilling, but in only 9 percent of water wells further away. Propane and butane were also detected in some drilling area wells.

The report noted that as much as a mile of rock separated the bottom of the shallow drinking water wells from the deep zones fractured for gas, and identified several ways in which fluids or the gas contaminants could move underground: The substances could be displaced by the pressures underground; could travel through new fractures or connections to faults created by the hydraulic fracturing process; or could leak from the well casing itself somewhere closer to the surface.

The geology in Pennsylvania and New York, they said, is tectonically active with faults and other pathways through the rock. They noted that leaky well casings were the most likely cause of the contamination, but couldn2019t rule out long-range underground migration, which they said “might be possible due to both the extensive fracture systems reported for these formations and the many older, uncased wells drilled and abandoned [9].”

The water was also analyzed for signs that dangerous fluids from inside the gas wells might have escaped into water supplies. The group tested for salts, radium and other chemicals that, if detected, would have signaled that the produced water or natural fluids in the well2019s target zone were making it to the aquifers. But those types of fluids were not found. The group did not test for fracking chemicals or hydrocarbons like benzene, relying instead on the saline or radioactive compounds like radium as indicators.

In an interview, Jackson said that gas was more likely to migrate underground than liquid chemicals. Based on his findings, he doesn’t believe the toxic chemicals pumped into the ground during fracturing are likely to end up in water supplies the same way the methane did. “I’m not ready to use the word impossible,” he said, “but unlikely.”

In a white paper [10] the group issued along with the journal article, Jackson and the others acknowledged the uncertainty and called for more research. “Contamination is often stated to be impossible due to the distance between the well and the drinking water,” they wrote. “Although this seems reasonable in most (and possibly all) cases, field and modeling studies should be undertaken to confirm this assumption [2] . . . Understanding any cases where this assumption is incorrect will be important—when, where, and why they occur—to limit problems with hydraulic fracturing operations.”

A hydrogeologist closely affiliated with the drilling industry raised questions about the study. “It’s possible, assuming their measurements are accurate, that all they have done is document the natural conditions of the aquifer,” said John Conrad, president of Conrad Geosciences in Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Conrad spoke with ProPublica at the suggestion of Energy In Depth, a drilling industry advocacy group, but said that he did not work for EID.

He said that the thermogenic methane—which many scientists say comes from the same deep gas layers where drilling occurs—could be naturally occurring. He also said the researchers didn’t test enough wells to support their conclusions, though he could not say how many wells would have been appropriate.

Conrad said the most likely cause for the contamination identified by the Duke researchers—that the gas was leaking out of faulty well casings—seemed implausible.

“For their assumptions to hold up there would have to be more than just the occasional bad cement job,” he said. “They are implying that where you see hydraulic fracturing you should expect to see elevated methane. We are aware of faulty cement jobs. But we don’t believe that it is common and we certainly don’t believe that it is universal.”

The Duke study precedes a national study by the Environmental Protection Agency into the dangers of hydraulic fracturing that is expected to be finished sometime next year. Last year the EPA found that [11] some chemicals known to be used in fracturing were among the contaminants detected in 11 residential drinking water wells in Pavillion, Wy.—where more than 200 natural gas wells have been drilled in recent years—but that investigation is continuing and the scientists haven2019t concluded that the contamination is linked with drilling or hydraulic fracturing.

The release of the Duke research could immediately shape the increasingly intense public debate over drilling and hydraulic fracturing, especially in some of the areas where the research was conducted. Pennsylvania, which holds drilling companies liable for drinking water contamination within 1,000 feet of a gas well, might consider the fact that the Duke researchers found the contamination extended to about 3,000 feet, Jackson said. New York State has a moratorium in place for hydraulic fracturing of horizontally-drilled wells—which cover more area and require more chemicals—through the end of June to allow for more consideration of the risks. “I would extend that at least temporarily,” Jackson said.

Congress, too, is taking note.

“This study provides eye-opening scientific evidence about methane contamination and the risks that irresponsible natural gas drilling poses for drinking water supplies,” said Congressman Maurice Hinchey, D-NY. “It provides yet another reason why more study of the environmental and health risks associated with hydraulic fracturing is needed.”

Hinchey is one of several Democratic members of Congress who recently re-introduced the FRAC Act [12], which calls for public disclosure of the chemicals used underground. The bill, which is currently languishing in the House, would remove an exemption in federal law that prohibits the EPA from regulating hydraulic fracturing.

May 9: This story has been updated to include information from John Conrad that was received after publication.

Field Notes


Our official comments on the “Son of Jonah” proposal

Air pollution is the dominant concern

THE WYOMING OUTDOOR COUNCIL believes the Bureau of Land Management must ensure that dangerous air pollution is addressed before it can approve a proposed 3,500-well natural gas field south of Pinedale.

The Wyoming Outdoor Council has submitted detailed comments on this proposal (available below), and we encourage your individual participation, as well.

Click here or on the image above for the scoping comments.

Click here for a map of the proposed project as well as details on how to participate.

Field Notes


Proposal would more than quadruple the size of the Jonah Field


Click on the map to see a larger version.

Agency needs to protect the residents of the Upper Green River Valley

By Bruce Pendery





 

THE FEDERAL BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT IS ASKING FOR PUBLIC COMMENT on a proposed 3,500-well natural gas field south of Pinedale.

The Wyoming Outdoor Council is submitting detailed comments on this proposal, and we encourage your individual participation, as well.

This new project, designed and proposed by Encana, is called, officially, the “Normally Pressured Lance” natural gas field. Some people refer to it as the “Son of Jonah.”

Since Encana has leased the area in question, this proposed new industrial zone would be huge—it would dwarf the existing Jonah Field by more than doubling the number of wells drilled and more than quadrupling the amount of land included in the project area.

It would effectively expand the Jonah Field outward into an additional 140,000 acres of undeveloped country, currently home to good hunting areas, mule deer habitat, sage-grouse core areas, pronghorn and mule deer migration routes, as well as an elk herd.

The current Jonah Field is approximately 30,500 acres.

We encourage members of the public to ask the BLM to do everything in its power to protect the health of Upper Green River Valley residents, including Pinedale residents, before permitting new large-scale projects such as this proposed development.

First Things First: Pinedale-area Air Pollution is Dangerous and Must Be Addressed

Given the ongoing and unhealthy wintertime air pollution that is already threatening the people of Sublette County, it is an open question as to whether the Bureau of Land Management should be permitting new drilling of this kind until the agency can be sure the residents are being protected from the activities that are already underway.

The Pinedale area saw dangerous spikes in ozone pollution on several days again this past winter.

Ozone is an invisible air pollutant that, at the concentrations that have been recorded around Pinedale and Boulder, can cause permanent and irreversible damage to human lungs.

Ozone pollution is especially harmful to children and those with respiratory conditions.

Some of the spikes that were documented this winter were far higher even than anything that has been recorded in Los Angeles in the previous year, even on its worst days.

The source for this pollution is the existing and already ongoing, large-scale oil and gas drilling in the Pinedale area, which includes the enormous Jonah, Pinedale Anticline, and LaBarge fields.

Please let the Bureau of Land Management know that you want the people of Pinedale protected from dangerous air pollution.

The Wyoming Outdoor Council believes that the BLM cannot continue to permit these large-scale industrial activities in Sublette County—which are the overwhelming cause of the existing air pollution problems—until Pinedale-area residents can breathe healthy air again throughout the year.

Please tell the BLM that you believe it is incumbent on the agency to work with the state and energy companies to secure reductions in emissions of volatile organic compounds and nitrogen oxides—from the existing Pinedale-area energy development activities—before it can permit new projects.

But not only must reductions in emissions be achieved, the reductions must be shown to be sufficient to prevent future violations of the ozone standard.

Emissions reductions that do not prevent future violations are not enough.

How to comment

The Bureau of Land Management is accepting comments until close-of-business on May 12, 2011.

You can mail or deliver written comments to Kellie Roadifer, Pinedale Field Office, 1625 W. Pine Street, P.O. Box 768, Pinedale, WY 82941.

For most people, the easiest way to submit comments will be via email at: NPL_EIS_WY@blm.gov

Media Contact: Bruce Pendery, program director, Wyoming Outdoor Council, bruce@wyomingoutdoorcouncil.org; 435-752-2111

Field Notes


Suspend Fracking, Former Gas Exec Urges

What is fracking?

What is hydraulic fracturing? Click on the image above for an interactive flash presentation.

Read the full story from UALR Public Radio here.

Sheffield Nelson asks Arkansas to ‘halt’ hydraulic fracturing

By Michael Hibblen

Excerpt:

Former gas company executive Sheffield Nelson is calling on the Arkansas Oil and Gas Commission to halt all hydraulic fracturing of wells near lakes, rivers and streams after the blowout of a Chesapeake Energy well in Pennsylvania.

The accident spilled thousands of gallons of chemical-laced water into a stream, prompting the company to suspend all hydraulic fracturing there until it determines the cause.

Nelson said at a Friday afternoon news conference that a similar blowout could easily happen in Arkansas causing an environmental disaster.

Read the full story from UALR Public Radio here.

Field Notes


Study finds solar panels increase home values

Photo courtesy Creative Energies
Photo courtesy Creative Energies

THE WYOMING OUTDOOR COUNCIL BELIEVES THAT some of our most difficult environmental challenges can be addressed through better energy efficiency and more home-based—or what is often referred to as “distributed”—energy generation.

So this new study, as reported by the New York Times, seems to be good news for the environment:

Study Finds Solar Panels Increase Home Values

By FELICITY BARRINGER

Read the full story from the New York Times here.

All those homeowners who have been installing residential solar panels over the last decade may find it was a more practical decision than they thought. The electricity generated may have cost more than that coming from the local power company (half of which, nationwide, comes from burning coal), but if they choose to sell their homes, the price premium they will get for the solar system should let them recoup much of their original capital investment.

That is the conclusion of three researchers at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, who looked at home sales — both homes with photovoltaic systems and homes without — in California over an eight-and-a-half-year period ending in mid-2009. The abstract of their study states, “the analysis finds strong evidence that California homes with PV systems have sold for a premium over comparable homes without PV systems.”

Read the full story from the New York Times here.

Scott Kane, co-owner of Creative Energies, a Wyoming-based renewable energy company, said this new study reflects a recent change:

“Historically, the value of an on-site generation system wasn’t considered by home buyers to be a substantial asset,” Kane said. “So this represents an increasing acceptance that a solar power system brings lasting value to a home.”

Field Notes


Enter the Wyoming Outdoor Council photo contest

Wyoming Outdoor Council Photo Contest

Send us your best shots!

Submission deadline is September 15, 2011



DO YOU HAVE GREAT SHOTS OF WYOMING’S spectacular landscapes, wildlife, and people enjoying the great outdoors?

If so, get them published in the Wyoming Outdoor Council’s annual calendar.

Previous calendars have included photographs by some of Wyoming’s best professional photographers, as well as some of its most gifted amateur shooters.

Contest Rules

 

  • Photographs must be taken in Wyoming and can include landscapes, lifestyles, wildlife, and people.
  • All photos must be submitted in digital form by email or online file sharing tool, mailed on a CD or DVD, or hand delivered on a CD, DVD, or flash drive.
  • Photos can only be published if available in a high-quality, relatively high-resolution, digital format.
  • Photograph entries constitute permission to use the images with credit to the photographer without monetary compensation.
  • Please include your name, address, city, state, zip code, daytime phone number, email address, and description of your photo including where the photo was taken.

 

TO SUBMIT PHOTOS, PLEASE EMAIL OR MAIL TO CHRIS MERRILL:

chris@wyomingoutdoorcouncil.org

Wyoming Outdoor Council
121 Grand Avenue, Suite 200
Laramie, WY 82070

Field Notes


Bleizeffer: Ozone spikes aren’t Mother Nature’s fault

Excerpts below. Read entire report here.

by Dustin Bleizeffer on April 15, 2011

Excerpt I:

Metropolitan-type smog pollution spiked past federal thresholds 13 times this winter and triggered 10 state-issued advisories, warning people in the Pinedale area to avoid going outdoors — in Wyoming.

It’s a source of major frustration and embarrassment for the state.

“From my perspective as governor, you know, I do not like hearing, in Pinedale Wyoming, an advisory that says keep your young kids in the house. If we lived in Los Angeles, maybe that’s an everyday occurrence. But if you live in Pinedale Wyoming — or frankly, anywhere in Wyoming where we tout our air quality — you don’t want to hear that,” Gov. Matt Mead said during a press conference on Tuesday.

Here’s how the ozone spikes occur; When the wind doesn’t blow, and the sun reflects off the wide, snow-covered landscape in the upper Green River Basin, it causes a photochemical reaction with nitrogen oxides and volatile organic compounds creating ozone. Officials say the main source of nitrogen oxides and volatile organic compounds are engines powering the Pinedale Anticline natural gas field.

Excerpt II:

“Mother Nature comes about and we have these sort of perfect snow days with the great snow, the sun and no wind, and all of sudden we find out we’ve got a lot more work to do because we still have these alerts out there. So I’m not sure it’s a problem of rules and regulations,” said Mead.

It can be said that before major drilling operations began, the state and Pinedale Anticline operators had little indication that the upper Green River Basin would be prone to ozone spikes by adding tailpipe emissions. But state and industry officials risk stoking frustrations among area residents if they appear to blame the weather.

One thing is clear to people who live in the area; There was no ozone problem before the natural gas industry came, and it’s not a trade-off they’re willing to accept.

“Anybody who used to be here in the 70s knew we had the best air in the country,” Rita Donham, of Cora, said during a public meeting with state and industry officials in March. “Everyone is getting sick of this.”

Excerpt III:

The temptation among state and industry officials to blame the weather is strong.

When the coal industry logged several exceedences of the particulate matter 10 (PM 10) 24-hour standard in the Powder River Basin, Wyoming DEQ responded by implementing a “Natural Events Action Plan.” The plan requires the mines to implement response plans to reduce dust during high wind events, and it also meant that PM 10 24-hour exceedences no longer puts the industry at risk of non-attainment status under federal air quality laws.

Without the Natural Events Action Plan the industry may have been forced to reduce the amount of surface disturbance, possibly resulting in limiting coal production.

Corra said this week that the Natural Events Action Plan was one of the first things that came to mind when the ozone issue came up in Pinedale.

“Unfortunately, (the Environmental Protection Agency) specifically excludes in that policy the kind of things that are happening in Sublette County,” said Corra.

Read entire report here.

Field Notes


Tribune Eagle: Will fracking contaminate water here?


Click on the image above for an interactive flash presentation on the Gasland website about hydraulic fracturing.

Possible EPA study might have answer

By Josh Mitchell
jmitchell@wyomingnews.com

Excerpt from the Wyoming Tribune Eagle

Read the full story here.

CHEYENNE — The Environmental Protection Agency may conduct a study in Laramie County on the potential dangers to groundwater of hydraulic fracturing.

“Fracking” involves the pressurized injection of water and chemicals into geologic formations to increase the volume of natural gas and/or oil that can be extracted.

“To help ensure that energy production does not come at the expense of public health, EPA scientists are undertaking a study of this practice to better understand any potential impacts it may have on drinking water resources,” an EPA statement says.

EPA has not made a final decision on whether the study will be conducted in Laramie County, which is poised to see significant oil development from the Niobrara shale formation.

Laramie County resident Barry Bruns said he thinks hydraulic fracturing is safe as long as it is done properly.

Bruns, who owns the surface rights on his property but not the mineral rights, said his property values would be devastated if his well became contaminated.

He added that it is “worthwhile” for EPA to conduct the study.

Read the full story here.