Home » Archive » *UPDATE III* Durham Bull

*UPDATE III* Durham Bull

Tuesday, May 3rd, 2011 | 12 Comments

EID takes a closer look at the top five problems with Duke’s new paper on methane migration in Pennsylvania

You wouldn’t have known it by looking at all those headlines this morning, but spend some time wading through the report and (admittedly limited) data set issued by researchers at Duke University over the weekend, and you’ll come across a number of things that opponents of responsible natural gas development in the Marcellus aren’t likely to repeat. Or like. One bit.

For starters, the researchers basically admit that hydraulic fracturing itself is not responsible for methane migration into water wells, additionally conceding in their paper that neither brine nor fracturing fluids were detected in any of the water wells they sampled, even in areas where development operations are most active.

They were also forced to admit that methane is a natural, common constituent found in just about every water well across the entire region (85 percent of them, to be exact), with thermogenic methane – as opposed to the biogenic stuff – identified in the vast majority of those, even in areas where no development has taken place. How does thermogenic gas migrate to water wells in areas of zero Marcellus development? Geology, it turns out, has plenty of answers to offer on this question. But the authors of this report aren’t geologists, so they chose to ignore that question in its entirety.

Of course, neither a lack of expertise nor a frighteningly small data set had the effect of slowing down one bit the researchers’ aggressive campaign to generate as many hits as they could in the media – up to and including the placement of an op-ed by Duke’s Rob Jackson in this morning’s Philadelphia Inquirer.

In truth, it’s a campaign that started late last week, with a reporter in Quebec (of all places) sending us a media advisory from Mr. Jackson trumpeting the release of a new paper that “attributes contamination to gas extraction technologies.” As mentioned, the report itself doesn’t actually say that – in fact, Jackson says the exact opposite in an interview with Bloomberg TV today. But as it turns out, putting out a paper calling for updated state well-casing standards isn’t quite as sexy as putting out a paper calling for an EPA take-over of the fracturing process itself, is it?

Below, we take a closer look at the central “findings” of the Duke report, along the way identifying several errors, inconsistencies and problems that, taken together, raise serious doubts about the rigor, veracity and statistical significance of the project.

Problem #1: The data itself: Small data set, no random sampling, and no baseline information whatsoever.

Problem #2: Authors intentionally down-play the fact that thermogenic methane was found in nearly every well they sampled – even in wells in areas with no natural gas development to be found.

Problem #3: Authors concede that hydraulic fracturing likely had zero impact on water wells – but you’d never know by the paper’s title, or by the op-ed they ran in Tuesday’s Philadelphia Inquirer.

Problem #4: Authors blame methane migration on failures in well-casing (without any supporting evidence) – but don’t include anything about well-casing in their recommendations section.

Problem #5: Once again, politics plays a central role in guiding the direction and recommendations of the paper.

UPDATE (5/10/11, 2:55 p.m. EST): Former DEP secretary John Hanger weighs in on the Duke study with a must-read piece on his blog. Key excerpts:

– “Bradford and Susquehanna counties have had many more gas migration problems than counties in Southwest Pennsylvania.  Had Duke University done this study in Washington, Greene, and counties in the Southwest it would have reached different conclusions.  The reasons for the geographic difference in the incidence or rate of gas migration include geological differences in the counties, quality of gas drilling in the respective areas, or some of both.”

– “Gas migration has been a problem in Pennsylvania for decades, well before the first Marcellus well was drilled in 2005. The new, strong rules and the attention to this problem make this the time to reduce it sharply.”

Full item available here: http://johnhanger.blogspot.com/2011/05/comments-on-duke-university-study.html

UPDATE II (5/26/11; 7:45 a.m.): Following up on comments made earlier this month by the former head of PA DEP (see above), the current DEP secretary shared his views on the Duke study in a forum in Pittsburgh earlier this week. The trade pub Gas Business Briefing was on hand to report on what went down:

DEP Secretary Michael Krancer believes Duke University’s study, which found methane contamination in shallow drinking water wells near natural gas operations was, in a word, biased.

“The bottom line is it was biased science from biased researchers,” Krancer says, addressing a luncheon audience during this week’s Shale Play Tubulars conference in Pittsburgh.

Krancer notes the researchers were not geologists. “They went to a place with a known issue, and with a small sample size, then claim there’s some conclusion to be drawn,” Krancer says.

He adds the researchers failed to make recommendations on well casings, but instead focused on fracking.

“One of the editors is an outspoken enemy of fracking and lobbied for passage of the FRAC Act, which doesn’t have anything to do with the study,” Krancer says.

“He’s a defender of the Cornell University study, and I don’t know if you can find anyone these days that defends that study.”

Full article, for subscribers, is available at http://www.gasbb.com/

Update III (09/02/11 3:51p.m.): Criticism continues to be levied on the Duke study months after it was published as experts review its data and conclusions. Two letters were recently published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that call into question the results of the study and the data that supports its findings.  You can find the letters here and here. Some quotes below:

However, the Genessee data show that average methane concentrations in nonactive [areas without natural gas production] was 1.5mgl and the only sampled active area [areas with natural gas production] was 0.3mgl. -Saba, et al

Their report [Duke] does not fully appreciate the geologic history of this region and misrepresents potential risks of modern drilling and completion techniques used to develop shale gas resources. -Schon

Knowledge of significant methane as a natural constituent of groundwater in this region long predates the recent development of shale gas resources. -Schon

In close proximity to natural gas wells, many water samples showed low concentrations of methane.  This shows that elevated methane concentrations are not an inevitable effect of drilling. -Schon

The data presented simply do not support the interpretation put forth that shale-gas development is leading to methane migration from the Marcellus into shallow groundwater. -Schon

Full letters as published in the Proceedings of the National Academies of the Sciences available here and here.

READ MORE

 

Tags:

12 Responses

Leave a Reply


9 + 8 =