Carnegie Mellon's Jeanne M. VanBriesen Leads Research Team on the Monongahela River
August 5, 2009
Contact: Chriss Swaney
Carnegie Mellon University
412.268.5776
PITTSBURGH-Carnegie Mellon University's Jeanne M. VanBriesen and Kelvin Gregory will use a $100,000 grant from the Pittsburgh-based Colcom Foundation to study water quality in the Monongahela River.
The
focus will be on the presence and effect of bromide associated with Marcellus
Shale gas produced water, and sulfate from acid mine drainage, according to
VanBriesen, a professor of civil and environmental engineering and faculty
director of the Center for Water Quality in Urban Environmental Systems
(WaterQUEST).
"The public has expressed increased concern about the produced
water that may result from ongoing development of the southwestern Pennsylvania
Marcellus Shale formation, which is reported to contain more than 300 trillion
cubic feet of natural gas," VanBriesen said.
Developers using hydraulic fracturing, which involves injecting water
and sand into major shale formations to help natural gas flow up a well, will
need millions of gallons of water to complete the process at well sites. Water
that returns to the surface, called flowback or produced water, is collected
for reuse or disposal. Disposal at wastewater treatment plants along the
Monongahela in 2008 is suspected as a contributing factor in high levels of
total dissolved solids (TDS) observed in the river.
Carnegie Mellon researchers will work with the River Alert Information
Network (RAIN), a regional association of drinking water suppliers that has
been selected by the state to monitor the river quality.
"We will essentially collect data from sensors that RAIN deploys at
various sites along the Monongahela River," said Gregory, an assistant
professor in Carnegie Mellon's Civil and Environmental Engineering Department.
The sensors will monitor for some aspects of water quality, and the Carnegie
Mellon team will take additional samples for bromide and sulfate.
Besides the fieldwork, Carnegie Mellon researchers will add data to
RAIN's Web-based public information system to promote additional education and
discussion among environmental groups about river water quality. WaterQUEST
will host a "State of the
Monongahela River" event to share data and research about the river.
"Carnegie Mellon's work to understand the water quality impacts
from shale gas production in Pennsylvania represents a thoughtful, farsighted
effort to avert a problem before it arises. Carnegie Mellon's research
resonates with the mission of the Colcom Foundation, which has a long history
of assessing and addressing the cause before it's necessary to respond to the
symptom. It's a privilege to support Carnegie Mellon's preventative
strategy," said Carol Zagrocki, program director of the Colcom Foundation,
established in 1996 by the late Cordelia S. May, a dedicated conservationist
who served as chairman until her death in 2005.
In addition to the Colcom Foundation, Carnegie Mellon's Steinbrenner
Institute for Environmental Education and Research provided seed funding for
this research through support of a graduate student researcher.