Saturday, October 30, 2010
West Virginia A Geothermal Hotspot?
Any renewable resource that holds the promise for reliable, base load electrical supply is welcome. The wells would have to be fairly deep, but there's a great deal of knowledge of well drilling in the state, thanks to the presence of an innovative oil and gas industry. I'll look forward to hearing more about this.
Monday, October 18, 2010
ORSANCO Passses on TDS Criterion; Adopts Variance From Mixing Zone Prohibition
The Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Compact (ORSANCO) has approved changes to its Pollution Control Standards at a meeting held late last week. They include specification of design flows to be used for setting permit limits to protect human health criteria (the 7Q10 for noncarcinogens; the harmonic mean flow for carcinogens), and a provision to allow consideration of variances to mixing zone requirements. This latter was in response to requests by industry for relief from ORSANCO’s prohibition of mixing zones for bioaccumulatives, such as mercury, which resulted in discharge limits that were more stringent than could be met with current technology.
The proposed adoption of a total dissolved solids criterion of 500 ppm was deferred until additional information on occurrence and sources can be obtained. That matter will be reconsidered at the Commission’s February meeting.
You can see a press release from ORSANCO at http://www.orsanco.org/images/stories/files/pressreleases/2010standardsrelease.pdf
Monday, October 11, 2010
Environmental Groups File Citizen Suit Against Fola Coal
(Charleston, WV) –Prompted by stream pollution from the Fola Coal Company’s Surface Mine No. 3 in Nicholas and Clay counties, the Sierra Club and West Virginia Highlands Conservancy today filed an enforcement action against the company in federal court. Water quality tests conducted by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection, and the company itself have shown that the waters immediately below the mine are significantly degraded. These studies reveal that Twenty Mile Creek and Boardtree Branch, both of which receive waste discharges from the 1700-acre surface mine, are biologically impaired and toxic to aquatic life.
Judge Rules on Definition of Deep Well
Shallow wells are those that are drilled no further than 20 feet into the top of the Onondaga formation. (The 20 feet is needed to drill the "rat tail" and complete the well, but no gas can be produced in the Onondaga.) The dividing line between deep and shallow wells never was much of an issue until development of the Marcellus Shale, which lies directly on top of the Onondaga formation. Drilling of horizontal wells in the Marcellus is preceded by a vertical well and a rat tail that usually goes more than 20 feet into the Onondaga. The Onondaga isn't produced, and after the rat tail is logged out it can be filled with cement.
The question arose as to whether a well drilled more than 20 feet into the Onondaga is a deep well, and subject to deep well spacing, or a shallow well. The issue was originally taken to Supreme Court on a writ of prohibition, which sent it to Judge Murensky in McDowell County. Judge Murensky went with a strict interpretation of the statute and said that if a well went more than 20 feet into the Onondaga it is a deep well, even if only the formations above the Onondaga is produced. You can see his opinion here.
An effort was made during the last Legislative session to change the definition to allow drilling into the Onondaga without converting the well to a deep well. A similar effort may be made in 2011.
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
Manchin Announces Lawsuit Against EPA, Corps Over Coal Mining Policies
Gov. Manchin is in an unusual position. He remains very popular in West Virginia, where he has done an excellent job as governor. In fact, the Republicans are running ads praising his work as governor, suggesting he should stay in the state to continue that work. I've heard a number of people say the same thing - the state could keep a good governor, and send a vote against Pres. Obama to the Senate in the form of Manchin's opponent, John Raese. Who would have thought that a popular governor would be defeated because he was too good? This lawsuit may be part of the Manchin counterattack, to show he wouldn't be an Obama yes-man, but to be fair it can't be solely a political ploy, as it was being discussed in the state before Sen. Byrd even died.
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Secretary Huffman Appoints Task Force To Study Marcellus Drilling
Marcellus Shale is a hot topic in West Virginia, but not quite the battleground that it is in Pennsylvania. There they have had total dissolved solids problems in some state streams, somerimes as a result of drillling activities, but TDS from drilling activities hasn't been a problem in West Virginia, because discharges of produced water to state streams is generally forbidden.