![]() What really separates modern unconventional shale gas wells from the supposedly traditional, conventional wells is more a matter of scale than anything else. This is a glimpse into the unsustainable resource demands of this industry and the decreasing energy returned on investment.Īs fracking proponents will eagerly remind you, hydraulic fracturing was invented decades ago – back in 1947 – so the practice has been in use for quite a while. By 2019, that figure had increased 145%, consuming more than 14.3 million gallons per well. In 2013, these wells used an average of 5.8 million gallons per well. The post Four Of 10 Fracked Wells In Pennsylvania Are Projected To Fail, Spewing Methane Into Air And Water appeared first on ThinkProgress.Unconventional wells in Pennsylvania were always resource-intensive, but the maps below show how the amount of water used per well has grown significantly in recent years. It is time for the industry to move from denial to action. There seems little doubt that fracked wells - those that are still producing and those that are abandoned - leak methane into the water and air creating serious health and climate problems. This study comes just two weeks after Princeton research found “Methane emissions from abandoned oil and gas wells appear to be a significant source of methane emissions to the atmosphere.” That research found up to 970,000 AOG wells in Pennsylvania! “These results, particularly in light of numerous contamination complaints and explosions nationally in areas with high concentrations of unconventional oil and gas development and the increased awareness of the role of methane in … climate change, should be cause for concern.” Writing this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the researchers explain: So the leaks in the natural gas production and delivery system that have now been observed are enough to gut the entire benefit of switching from coal-fired power to gas for many, many decades. ![]() The key point is that natural gas is mostly methane, (CH4), a super-potent greenhouse gas, which traps 86 times as much heat as CO2 over a 20-year period. ![]() Study after study has found consistently higher methane leakage rates from natural gas production and distribution than reported by either the industry or EPA (which uses industry self-reported data). This study shows up to a 2.7-fold higher risk for unconventional wells - relative to conventional wells - drilled since 2009. CREDIT: AP Photo/Pennsylvania Department of Environmental ProtectionĪ major new study finds that, as suspected, it is new, unconventional gas wells that are far more likely to leak heat-trapping - and tap-water igniting - methane than older, conventional wells.Īfter examining the publicly available compliance records of more than 41,000 wells in northeastern Pennsylvania, the Cornell-led researchers have dropped this bombshell:Ībout 40 percent of the oil and gas wells in parts of the Marcellus shale region will probably be leaking methane into the groundwater or into the atmosphere…. This undated handout frame grab taken from video, provided by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection shows bubbling due to impaired cementing in an unconventional gas well in Pennsylvania. ![]()
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