Updated July 2017
Back in September 2013, I posting this explanation on one of the key potential problems with fracking. At that time, I did not have access to data regarding the failure of well bores in areas where there has been substantial horizontal drilling and multi-stage fracking on land. Thanks to researchers at Cornell, we now have some idea about where the potential problems with shale gas may lie.
Back in September 2013, I posting this explanation on one of the key potential problems with fracking. At that time, I did not have access to data regarding the failure of well bores in areas where there has been substantial horizontal drilling and multi-stage fracking on land. Thanks to researchers at Cornell, we now have some idea about where the potential problems with shale gas may lie.
First, let's review.
Here, quoting from my posting in September, is an explanation of how a
well is drilled, completed and where the problems with well bore integrity can
crop up.
When the oil industry
drills a borehole to depth, as you can imagine, the sides of the borehole are
very unstable and rock continually sloughs into the hole, causing all manner of
problems. To alleviate these problems, a long string of hollow steel production
casing of varying diameters is run into the hole to the total depth of the well
(or somewhere below or at the depth of the producing formation depending on the
type of well). The diameter of this casing is somewhat smaller than the
diameter of the borehole; the space between the walls of the borehole and the
outside of the production casing is known as the annulus. Once the
casing is in place, cement is pumped down the casing and flows back up the well
between the casing and the sides of the borehole through the annulus. The
cement is allowed to harden and tools are run to ensure that the "cement
job" is sound. The purpose of the cement is three-fold; it holds the
casing in place, it prevents the fluids used in the well completion operations
from flowing to the surface and it prevents fluids from inside the borehole
from flowing into the surrounding formations once the well is completed and on
production. For example, if there is a water-bearing formation above the
productive zone, the production casing and cement will seal off that formation,
preventing the formation water from flowing into the well bore.
Here is
a cross sectional diagram comparing a conventional well bore and an unconventional well bore:
One of the key issues
that can cause a completed well bore to fail is related to the cement that is
used to fix the production casing in place. In some cases, the when the
cement is pumped down the well bore, it fails to displace the drilling mud
in the annulus and in some cases, the cement fails after a period of time.
This failure allows the formation fluids including oil, natural gas or
water of varying salinity that are under higher pressure because of the weight
of the rock that lies on top of them to flow through the annulus to the surface
where the pressure is lower. It is this problem of well bore integrity
that results in contamination of near surface groundwater and the atmosphere.
There are two key differences
between conventional natural gas production and unconventional or shale gas
production:
1.) Shale gas wells
require much higher volume fracks than conventional gas wells.
2.) Shale gas wells
require far higher well density than conventional gas wells.
These two factors
help explain the potential magnitude of the problem with shale
gas production.
Let's switch gears for a minute and take a look at a map showing the extent of the Marcellus Shale play both inside and outside of Pennsylvania:
Please note the
concentration of Marcellus producing wells in the northeast part of
Pennsylvania.
Here is a more detailed map showing the
Marcellus shale producing gas wells (in red) in Pennsylvania, again,
noting the concentration of Marcellus producers in the northeast part of Pennsylvania:
Now that you have all of that
background information, let's look at the study by the Cornell-led research team.
The researchers, Anthony Ingraffea, Martin Wells, Renee Santoro and Seth
Shonkoff, examined compliance reports for 41,381 conventional and unconventional
(i.e. shale gas) wells in Pennsylvania that were drilled between January 1,
2000 and December 31, 2012. In total, 32,678 wells were inspected; of
these, 26,915 were conventional wells and 5,763 were unconventional. The
majority (92.6 percent) of the unconventional wells were drilled during or
after 2009. The objective of their examination was to get complete and accurate
statistics of casing and cement impairment, otherwise known as well bore
integrity. Previous studies noted the presence of thermogenic methane which is sourced in
deeply buried sediment (i.e as opposed to biogenic methane which is a
result of near-surface bacterial activity) in private water wells in Pennsylvania
and this study looked to identify the sources of this contaminant.
The authors of the study
note that there are many reasons why well bore integrity can fail:
1.) Failed cement
barriers because of inappropriate cement density, inadequately cleaned
boreholes, premature gelation of cement, excessive fluid loss in the cement,
cement shrinking, high permeability in the cement and normal age-related
deterioration.
2.) Failed casing
because of collapse and corrosion.
In these cases, fluids
can flow from the reservoir at depth to the surface or into aquifers.
In cases where there are
leaks that cannot be repaired, Pennsylvania regulations mandate that these
wells be permanently plugged and abandoned. Unfortunately, in many cases,
the flow of hydrocarbons and formation waters between zones may still occur,
resulting in continued contamination of aquifers and the atmosphere.
Now that we have the
necessary background to understand where the problems may lie, let's look at
the results of the study. The authors found the following:
Conventional wells
spudded before 2009 had a structural failure rate of between 0.73 percent and
2.08 percent after 2009 in non-northeastern counties of Pennsylvania.
Unconventional wells over the same time periods had a failure rate of 1.49
percent and 1.88 percent. The differences begin to show up in the
Northeast counties of Pennsylvania; in pre-2009 conventional wells, there was a
5.29 percent failure rate and a 2.27 percent failure rate after 2009.
Unconventional wells in the same area had far higher failure rates;
unconventional wells spudded before 2009 had a failure rate of 9.84 percent and
nonconventional wells spudded after 2009 (over 92 percent of the unconventional
wells as noted above) had a failure rate of 9.14 percent.
Wells spudded before 2009
make up 72 percent of the total wells in the study but only 31 percent of the
wells with casing/cement integrity problems. Of the wells drilled in
Northeast Pennsylvania after 2009, unconventional wells are four times more
likely to have integrity problems than their conventional counterparts.
The northeast counties (which includes Bradford, Cameron, Clinton,
Lycoming, Potter, Sullivan, Susquehana, Tioga, Wayne and Wyoming) make up only
11 percent of the 3030 wells spudded over the time frame of the study but make
up 54.7 percent of the state's unconventional wells and 88.8 percent of the
wells with cement and casing integrity issues.
The authors conclude
that there is a 1.6- to 2.7-fold increase in the risk of well integrity problems
in unconventional wells versus conventional well types. The study predicts that
in the Northeast counties of Pennsylvania, the cumulative hazard of well casing
or cement failure will exceed 40 percent over the next 25 years. Keeping in mind that cement and
casing integrity usually declines as a well ages, their estimates may not be
far from wrong. Given that over a 100 year period, methane is 21 times as potent as a greenhouse gas when compared to carbon dioxide, the impact of well integrity issues in
unconventional wells across the United States and around the world could be
very significant in the coming years.
Global warming is meh, but destroying the ground water is very serious. The people in charge of these companies know what is happening yet paper fiat is more important to them then the future destruction they are causing. These people are like the smoking executives knowing full well the health problems their cigarettes were causing but used money and influence to deny it for years.
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