Marcellus Shale Drilling: Protecting Water Resources
With limited oil supplies, natural gas formations like the Marcellus Shale formation in Southwestern Pennsylvania are seen as both tremendous opportunities and significant environmental challenges.
"The tragedy in the Gulf of Mexico is a reminder of the challenges we
face in our development of oil and gas reserves that are deep under the
earth," said Jeanne VanBriesen, professor of civil and environmental engineering at
Carnegie Mellon University. "Engineering innovations like horizontal
drilling and hydraulic fracturing have enabled us to access these
reserves, but innovations in environmental protection and restoration
have not always kept pace."
VanBriesen oversees a team of researchers taking a systems-approach
to water resources in the Pittsburgh region.
"The water in the Monongahela River is many things to many people: we
drink it, we play in it and on it, we use it for industry and for
cooling our power plants, and we use it to move goods to distant
markets. It is the home to fish and mussels and its banks are the home
to picnickers and bikers," said VanBriesen. "The environment is our
life-support system, and understanding how it works and how we can
protect it during industrial activities, including oil and gas
development, is critical to our future well-being."
VanBriesen says Marcellus Shale gas development requires lots of
water and generates a highly salty wastewater that must be managed to
prevent its discharge into our waterways.
"Salty water can kill fish and mussels, but it also affects our
ability to treat the water for drinking and other industrial uses," she
said. "Desalination is expensive, but if wastewater is not treated
before it reaches our waterways, we will have to increase the cost to
treat our drinking water."
Her team's research in this area underscores the need for companies
and policymakers to look critically at the link that exists between
drinking water and wastewater treatment.
One particular focus of their research is on bromide, which can be
found in a variety of sources but is known to be a component of shale
gas produced water.
"Bromide itself is not harmful, but when it enters a drinking water
treatment plant it can be transformed to brominated organics that are
harmful," she explained. "This transformation occurs during the
disinfection of the water, which is critical to kill harmful
microorganisms. So, the important disinfection process has an
unintended consequence if the river water has bromide."
The research includes investigating ways to reduce the transformation
in the drinking water plant as well as investigating the possible
sources of bromide in the region including Marcellus-generated
wastewater.
"It is important that while we develop domestic energy sources like
shale gas, we also think about the potential consequences for our
critical water resources, "said VanBriesen. "Anything we let go into
rivers is something we may later have to pay to have taken out of the
water. We need to start looking at the full cycle of water—everywhere
it moves and what it carries from industry to our rivers and then to our
drinking water."
Story originally published at: http://www.cmu.edu/homepage/environment/2010/summer/marcellus-shale-drilling.shtml.