Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

That Other Blowout...

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • That Other Blowout...

    ...proving once again that in the oil and gas industry shzt happens....:p


    Gas spews for hours from out-of-control Pa. well

    By MARC LEVY (AP) – 7 hours ago [Friday, June 4, 2010]

    HARRISBURG, Pa. — Natural gas and polluted drilling water from an out-of-control well shot 75 feet into the air in a remote area of Pennsylvania before crews were able to tame the flow of explosive gas more than half a day later, officials said Friday.

    The well was brought under control just after noon Friday, about 16 hours after it started spewing gas and brine, said Elizabeth Ivers, a spokeswoman for driller EOG Resources Inc. She said she could not immediately respond to questions about how the accident happened.

    The well never caught fire and no injuries were reported, but state officials had worried the gas might explode before the well could be controlled.

    State environmental authorities promised an aggressive investigation of the circumstances surrounding the blowout, which they said shot gas and water 75 feet into the air.

    "The event at the well site could have been a catastrophic incident that endangered life and property," Department of Environmental Protection Secretary John Hanger said in a statement. "This was not a minor accident, but a serious incident that will be fully investigated by this agency with the appropriate and necessary actions taken quickly."...

    ...Houston-based EOG was drilling into the Marcellus Shale reserve, a hotly pursued gas formation primarily under Pennsylvania, West Virginia, New York and Ohio that some geologists believe could become the nation's most productive natural gas field.
    Spadoni said details about the accident were still sketchy, but the agency was told that unexpectedly high gas pressure in the new well prevented the crew from containing it.

    The crew had just finished a process called hydraulic fracturing — in which millions of gallons of water, sand and chemicals are blasted underground to shatter tightly compacted shale and release trapped natural gas — and were clearing out debris from the well when gas shot out of it, he said...

  • #2
    Re: That Other Blowout...

    So who has to pay for the massive GHG emissions from this blowout? And from all the other blowouts from 'shale natural gas' and what not?

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: That Other Blowout...

      Originally posted by c1ue View Post
      So who has to pay for the massive GHG emissions from this blowout? And from all the other blowouts from 'shale natural gas' and what not?

      Even if there had not been a blowout, the stuff would have been produced, stored, sold and piped to a customer, and then burnt and turned into GHG emissions...

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: That Other Blowout...

        ...proving once again that in the oil and gas industry shzt happens...and tragically this time there were again fatalities. My understanding is this line was struck during an excavation operation.

        Natural gas pipeline blast kills three in Texas: report

        (AFP) – 4 hours ago

        WASHINGTON — A natural gas facility exploded Monday in the US state of Texas, killing three people and leaving 10 others missing, local media reported.

        The blast left three people dead and 10 missing, Cleburne city manager Chester Nolen told WFAA Dallas/Ft. Worth television.

        Many people were transported to hospital with burn injuries, the television report said. It did not give a figure for the total number of injured.

        "There's not a whole lot they can do, until they get that line turned off," Nolen said as television aired images of a massive plume of smoke from the still raging fire at the site.

        "A lot is going to depend on where the main valves are that control that section of line. Obviously, what's in the line is going to have to burn off before they can get it shut off. So it may be late into this evening when they get the fire controlled," Nolen told WFAA.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: That Other Blowout...

          Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
          ...proving once again that in the oil and gas industry shzt happens..
          GRG55 -

          There is no doubt that drilling for oil/gas is a dangerous and complex operation and there are trade-offs which we must make in order to live life the way that we do right now. However, the crucial difference between these blow-outs and the Macondo disaster is that we have the technology and ability to handle these blowouts whereas we just do not seem to have the technology to do the same when we are a mile under the ocean.

          Deepwater Horizon might just have been a serious of unfortunate coincidences which led to a complete breakdown. However, until we have the ability to handle these disasters effectively, we should not be drilling deep offshore wells, especially considering the potentially huge effects it has on our ecosystem. Just my, possibly uninformed, opinion.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: That Other Blowout...

            Originally posted by ViC78 View Post
            GRG55 -

            There is no doubt that drilling for oil/gas is a dangerous and complex operation and there are trade-offs which we must make in order to live life the way that we do right now. However, the crucial difference between these blow-outs and the Macondo disaster is that we have the technology and ability to handle these blowouts whereas we just do not seem to have the technology to do the same when we are a mile under the ocean.

            Deepwater Horizon might just have been a serious of unfortunate coincidences which led to a complete breakdown. However, until we have the ability to handle these disasters effectively, we should not be drilling deep offshore wells, especially considering the potentially huge effects it has on our ecosystem. Just my, possibly uninformed, opinion.
            The valid point you raise is that we have to make choices. Choices based on trade-offs - not expectations of a cost-free or risk-free alternatives as some of our politicians and business leaders would like us to believe when it suits their purposes. Even now there are comments that the government should "do something" to make sure there is never another offshore well blowouts. That is only possible if there is no more offshore drilling - a valid choice, but one with trade-offs.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: That Other Blowout...

              ...proving once again...well you know the rest...
              Two Killed in Second Deadly Texas Gas Pipeline Blast

              June 08, 2010, 11:04 PM EDT

              June 8 (Bloomberg) -- Two people were killed and three injured after a natural gas pipeline exploded in the Texas Panhandle, the second deadly blast in the state in as many days.

              A dirt contracting company was hauling rock from a pit about two miles (3 kilometers) northeast of the town of Darrouzett when a bulldozer struck the DCP Midstream Partners LP-owned pipeline, sparking the explosion, the Lipscomb County Sheriff’s Department said in a statement.

              Two men were killed at the scene, and two others were treated for non-life-threatening injuries, according to the sheriff’s office. A fifth man was taken by helicopter to a burns unit in Oklahoma City...

              Comment

              Working...
              X