House Hearing: Let’s Work Together To Make Conventional Oil & Gas Industry Practices Cleaner, Respect Property Rights, Protect Taxpayers And Prevent New Abandoned Wells
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The following testimony by David Hess, former Secretary of the Department of Environmental Protection, was delivered at the April 24 House Environmental Resources and Energy Committee hearing on abandoned conventional oil and gas wells.

It calls for industry, affected citizens, DEP, the General Assembly and the Governor to work together to make conventional oil and gas industry practices cleaner, respect private property rights and protect taxpayers.

The testimony addresses conventional industry practices that--

-- Abandon wells faster than federal/state programs can plug them

-- How abandoned wells are real health and safety threats to people

-- How conventional/unconventional drilling practices create new brownfields every day

-- How the practice of road-dumping wastewater impacts public health & the environment

-- How these practices do not respect the property rights of people next to or with the wells

-- How state taxpayers get stuck with the cost of cleaning up and plugging wells

DEP reported in December that between 2017 and 2021, current conventional oil/gas well operators were issued notices of violation for abandoning without plugging 2,246 wells-- 561 a year, on average.  At least these were the wells DEP found doing inspections.  Read more here.

The testimony suggests policymakers ask three questions about industry practices--

1. Are They Clean Or Dirty?

2. Do They Respect Property Rights?

3. Do They Protect State Taxpayers?

Other witness at the hearing included--

-- Kelsey Krepps, Sierra Club

-- Kurt Klapkowski, Acting DEP Deputy Secretary for Oil & Gas Management

-- Arthur Stewart, Cameron Energy

-- Adam Peltz, Environmental Defense Fund

Click Here to watch a video of the hearing.

Text Of Written Testimony

The text of the testimony follows--

Chairman Vitali, Chairman Causer and members of the Committee, thank you for the opportunity to offer comments to you today on the impacts of conventional oil and gas drilling and well abandonment in Pennsylvania.

I’ve been dealing with environmental issues related to the conventional industry for over 40 years -- and so have you-- without much success, let’s be honest.

But now, I think there is a real opportunity for leadership on the part of the industry, affected citizens, DEP, the General Assembly and the Governor, if we work together.

For too long, I believe the conventional industry has been held back by their own fundamental belief they can only do things one way to survive.

That is simply not true. 

Other industries have changed and prospered, and they can too.

To move to the next level, everyone has to work with the same goals in mind.

I suggest we ask three questions about the practices used by the industry--

1. Are They Clean Or Dirty?

2. Do They Respect Property Rights?

3. Do They Protect State Taxpayers?

New Abandoned Wells

A business practice based on abandoning hundreds of wells a year-- either by transferring them to financially impaired new owners or by just walking away-- is simply not sustainable.

It leaves taxpayers stuck with the bill for plugging and cleanup and no one responsible for operating the wells.

It is a financial problem, an environmental problem and the waste of a natural resource.

The Post-Gazette calculated DEP has about $15 per well on hand in well plugging bonds to plug all the active conventional wells-- somewhere over 90,545.

DEP reported in December that between 2017 and 2021, conventional operators abandoned without plugging 2,246 wells-- 561 a year, on average.   Read more here.

Under the new federally-funded conventional well plugging program, Pennsylvania is set to receive nearly $400 million over the next 15 years.   DEP said it would plug about 249 wells the first year.  Read more here.

You can do the math, we’ll never catch up.

By some calculations, state taxpayers are on the hook for over $5.1 billion in well plugging liabilities, between the fact pre-April 1985 wells are not required to have any plugging bonds and the inadequate bond amounts we have now.  Read more here.

State taxpayers should simply not have to carry the financial burden created by these practices.

Not Just Numbers

Laurie Barr has been working on the abandoned well problem for more than 20 years.  Read more here.

She told the conventional industry advisory group PA Grade Crude Development Advisory Council in February how residents in Bradford County have to live with the constant threat of leaking, abandoned natural gas wells located right next to their homes.

These wells are real threats to the real people who live near them.  We should never forget that.

The practice of abandoning wells shows no respect for the private property rights of those that live next to them or for the owners of land on which the wells sit.

New Brownfields

Conventional-- and unconventional-- operators are creating new brownfields every day in Pennsylvania with the practices they use.

Spills, leaks and releases of wastewater, oil, fracking chemicals and other contaminants from active and abandoned wells pollute these sites. 

[And conventional operators do routinely use fracking.]

Operators dispose of drill cuttings and wastewater right on their drill sites in ways that are contaminating soil and water.

The practice of “dusting” -- blowing drill cuttings into the air or along the ground around drill sites-- has been a common method of disposal for decades, particularly in the conventional industry.

But, plumes of dust drifting hundreds of feet away from drill sites can contaminate surrounding property.

All these practices create new brownfields which account for over half the contaminated sites now in DEP’s Land Recycling Program. Read more here

But most contaminated conventional drill sites never go through the Act 2 Program and meet those cleanup standards.  They frequently use “alternative” methods.  Read more here.

Farmers have been warned by conventional operators not to let their cattle graze on their drill sites after their rigs leave because of the waste contamination there.

These practices show no respect for the property rights of the landowners where these wells are located or their neighbors.

Landowners invite operators onto their land to extract a natural resource that is valuable to the operator and the landowner in a relationship that can last 60 years or more. 

Landowners have the right to expect it to be done safely and without harm to their health, the environment and their livestock and property.

Road Dumping Wastewater

My Mom taught me clean is better than dirty.  My Dad taught me to take responsibility for cleaning up my own messes and stick with a job until it’s done.

Practices used by conventional operators haven’t resulted in cleaning up their own messes.  These practices let others be responsible for paying for cleanup and suffering the consequences for decades.

No where is that more evident than with production wastewater.

Conventional operators produce over 200 million gallons of wastewater from their wells every year-- more or less.  We don’t really know.  Read more here.  

Wastewater is produced from the time a well is drilled through its entire lifecycle, which can be decades.  It can be a real problem with abandoned and orphan wells with no operator.

Because over half the conventional operators have a practice of failing to file production and waste generation reports-- 57% at last count covering 61,655 wells  [Read more here]-- we can’t really account for where as much as 118 million gallons goes for treatment, reuse or disposal.   Read more here.

We do know that millions of gallons were reported by operators themselves as being spread on dirt and gravel roads since records have been kept.  [Read more here]

That practice has not only been proven to break up dirt roads and cause more dust [Read more here], it affects the health of people who live along those dirt roads by spreading contaminated dust and running off the roads into gutters and streams after a rain.

Siri Lawson in Warren County knows this first-hand because she’s been raising concerns about road dumping on the road going by her home and in her county and the impact of oil and gas operations for 40 years and suffered significant health impacts personally from these practices.  Read more here.

A Penn State study-- one of several over the years-- released last May found the wastewater contains at least 32 chemicals and parameters which exceed health and environmental standards.  [Read more here]

The chemicals in the wastewater include lead, arsenic, barium, strontium, lithium, iron, manganese, radioactive radium and many more.

While this practice for the moment is illegal because it doesn’t meet DEP’s Residual Waste Regulations, it has not been banned.

There are continuing reports from the field that the practice is still going on.

In fact, DEP’s oil and gas waste database continues to show reports from conventional operators who said they road-dumped their wastewater in 2022-- in spite of the fact it is illegal.

Unfortunately, we don’t know the true scope of the problem because so many reports are missing and the waste reports filed by both conventional and unconventional operators have never been audited.

Wastewater from unconventional shale gas wells is prohibited from being dumped on roads. Conventional wastewater should be too, because it is essentially the same thing.

My Dad’s admonition should apply to this practice-- take responsibility for your mess!

Where We Go From Here

The practices outlined here and others have real impacts on real people--  their health, the environment and their property.  We need to remember that.

But these are just practices… practices that can change with the right leadership from industry, affected citizens, DEP, the General Assembly and the Governor all working together.

Making these changes isn’t about putting anyone out of business or demonizing them, or whether we want plastic medical equipment when we’re in the hospital.

It’s about adopting practices that do things the right way and that are better for everyone.

We need to have a real conversation between industry, DEP and citizens to develop clean, safe alternatives.

But everyone needs to be at the table.

We just need the leadership to do it and ask the right questions about industry practices--

1. Are They Clean Or Dirty?

2. Do They Respect Property Rights?

3. Do They Protect State Taxpayers?

Personal Note

I grew up professionally at a time when there was more bipartisanship on environmental issues.  I’d like to get back to that again.

I remember Maurice Goddard, who served five Governors, saying “sh__t” -- wastewater-- “isn’t Republican or Democrat” (he was rather plain spoken).

You worked the problem until you found a solution.

I was blessed to work with people like Senators Mike Fisher, Ray Musto, Chip Brightbill and Mary Jo White;  Reps. Art Hershey, Bob Reber and Bud George; and DER/DEP/DCNR Secretaries Cliff Jones, Nick DeBenedictis, Art Davis, Pete Duncan, Jim Seif, John Oliver and Governors Bob Casey, Tom Ridge, Mark Schweiker and many others at DEP and beyond who taught me how to find solutions by talking to people.

As a result, I was involved with the passage of every major piece of environmental legislation in Pennsylvania for 19 years (1983 through 2002).

As Secretary of DEP I visited every county in Pennsylvania nearly three times meeting hundreds of people-- businesses, farms, students, watershed groups, local governments all doing great things to restore and protect the environment.

People like Ed Wytovich-- a high school biology teacher-- and Margaret Dunn-- a professional geologist-- who taught me the power of building local partnerships to restore abandoned mine lands and treat mine drainage.

I met people who never thought they would be taking their grandchildren fishing in a stream that ran orange with mine drainage for 125 years-- cleaned up thanks to programs like Growing Greener.

During the Quecreek Mine Rescue in Somerset County, I experienced first-hand how drill rig operators, mine rescue teams, my colleagues at DEP and federal agencies, local first responders, the U.S. Navy, Gov. Schweiker and many others worked together to perform the miracle that rescued nine coal miners and gave them a second chance.

And, I saw the horror of the Flight 93 crash site the day after and how people pulled together to respond to that terrible tragedy.

I helped respond to the Three Mile Island Nuclear Power Plant accident, to severe floods, the worst tornadoes Pennsylvania ever experienced and the million gallon Ashland Oil spill.

I spent a month in Erie working with a team cleaning out and plugging a circa 1910 conventional natural gas well on Beach 7 at Presque Isle State Park.  Read more here.

When people tell me they can’t do things differently or there is no other way, I remember the last 47 years and say-- why not? 

We did it before.

Click Here for a PDF of this written testimony.

Click Here to watch a video of the hearing.

Rep. Greg Vitali (D-Delaware) serves as Majority Chair of the House Environmental Committee and can be contacted by calling 717-787-7647 or sending email to: gvitali@pahouse.net. Rep. Martin Causer (R-Cameron) serves as Minority Chair and can be contacted by calling 717-787-5075 or by sending email to: mcauser@pahousegop.com.

(Written by David Hess, former Secretary, PA Department of Environmental Protection.  Send comments to: PaEnviroDigest@gmail.com.)

Resource Links:

-- Oil & Gas Industrial Facility Impacts

-- PA Environment Digest

NewsClips:

-- The Center Square - Anthony Hennen: House Committee Warned Of Lurking Taxpayer Cost For Plugging Conventional Oil & Gas Wells

-- Bradford Era/The Center Square: Committee Warned Of Lurking Taxpayer Cost For Plugging Conventional Oil/Gas Wells

-- Bradford Era: Rep. Causer Applauds Conventional Oil/Gas Well Owner Art Stewart For Testimony On Orphan Wells [Actually They’re Confused-- Current Conventional Operators Abandon 561 Wells A Year, On Average; 55,000 More At High Risk Of Abandonment]

Related Articles - Hearing:

-- EDF: Pennsylvania Has 55,000 Oil/Gas Wells At High Risk Of Being Abandoned; 51,000 Wells At Risk Of Being Transferred To Low Solvency Owners; Current Conventional Well Owners Abandon 561 Wells A Year, On Average  [PaEN]

-- Guest Essay: Conventional vs Unconventional Oil & Gas Wells - Not As Different As You Might Think - By Laurie Barr, Save Our Streams PA  [PaEN]

-- House Committee Meets May 2 On Bill To Restore Authority To Review Conventional Oil/Gas Well Plugging Bonding Amounts; Help Prevent Routine Abandonment Of An Average Of 561 Wells A Year  [PaEN]

PA Oil & Gas Public Notice Dashboards:

-- Pennsylvania Oil & Gas Weekly Compliance Dashboard - April 22 - 28; Conventional Wells Venting Gas; Shale Gas Well Pad Spills  [PaEN]

-- Citizen Complaint Results In Finding 2 Abandoned Conventional Wells Owned By Prosperity Oil Co. Continuing To Vent Natural Gas In Washington County  [PaEN] 

-- Chesapeake Appalachia: DEP Inspections Find Violations For Spills, Releases, Continuing Defective Casing/Cementing At Shale Gas Well Pads In Bradford, Susquehanna Counties  [PaEN]

-- PA Oil & Gas Industrial Facilities: Permit Notices/Opportunities To Comment - April 29  [PaEN]  

-- DEP Posts 61 Pages Of Permit-Related Notices In April 29 PA Bulletin  [PaEN]

PA Oil & Gas Compliance Reports

-- Feature: 60 Years Of Fracking, 20 Years Of Shale Gas: Pennsylvania’s Oil & Gas Industrial Infrastructure Is Hiding In Plain Sight [PaEN]

-- Conventional Oil & Gas Well Owners Failed To File Annual Production/Waste Generation Reports For 61,655 Wells; Attorney General Continues Investigation Of Road Dumping Wastewater  [PaEN]

-- DEP Issued 754 Notices Of Violation For Defective Oil & Gas Well Casing, Cementing, The Fundamental Protection Needed To Prevent Gas Migration, Groundwater & Air Contamination, Explosions  [PaEN]

-- DEP Report Finds: Conventional Oil & Gas Drillers Routinely Abandon Wells; Fail To Report How Millions Of Gallons Of Waste Is Disposed; And Non-Compliance Is An ‘Acceptable Norm’  [PaEN]

-- DEP 2021 Oil & Gas Program Annual Report Shows Conventional Oil & Gas Operators Received A Record 610 Notices Of Violation For Abandoning Wells Without Plugging Them  [PaEN]

-- PA Oil & Gas Industry Has Record Year: Cost, Criminal Convictions Up; $3.1 Million In Penalties Collected; Record Number Of Violations Issued; Major Compliance Issues Uncovered; Evidence Of Health Impacts Mounts  [PaEN]

Related Articles This Week:

-- House Committee Meets May 2 On Bill To Restore Authority To Review Conventional Oil/Gas Well Plugging Bonding Amounts; Help Prevent Routine Abandonment Of An Average Of 561 Wells A Year  [PaEN]

-- House Environmental Committee Sets May 1 Hearing On Cryptocurrency And Climate Change; Background Brief  [PaEN]

-- EDF: Pennsylvania Has 55,000 Oil/Gas Wells At High Risk Of Being Abandoned; 51,000 Wells At Risk Of Being Transferred To Low Solvency Owners; Current Conventional Well Owners Abandon 561 Wells A Year, On Average  [PaEN]

-- House Hearing: Let’s Work Together To Make Conventional Oil & Gas Industry Practices Cleaner, Respect Property Rights, Protect Taxpayers And Prevent New Abandoned Wells  [PaEN]

-- Guest Essay: Conventional vs Unconventional Oil & Gas Wells - Not As Different As You Might Think - By Laurie Barr, Save Our Streams PA  [PaEN]

-- DEP Tentatively Sets May 18 Online Public Conference On Proposed Roulette Oil & Gas Waste Injection Well In Clara Twp., Potter County; Opponents Again Call For Robust Public Participation Process  [PaEN]

-- Delaware River Basin Commission Clarifies New Regulations On Oil/Gas Fracking Wastewater Ban Road Spreading, Disposal From Conventional Wells  [PaEN]

-- NRDC: U.S. Dept. Of Transportation Denies Special Permit For Shipping LNG Natural Gas By Rail From A Proposed Bradford County LNG Plant; Shipping By Truck Still Allowed  [PaEN]

-- Eyes On Shell Reports Shell Petrochemical Plant Fenceline Monitors Found Benzene Emissions Above Toxic Substances Limits; No Timeline For Restarting Plant; DEP Issued Another NOV For Air Violations  [PaEN]

-- Senate Environmental Committee Holds May 1 Hearing On Electric Grid Reliability Looking At Natural Gas, Other Generation Failures During Winter Storm Elliot In December [PaEN]

[Posted: April 24, 2023]


5/1/2023

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