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Oil and gas industry regulations examined

October 16, 2012
By SAM SHAWER , Marietta Times

MARIETTA - Ohio could do a better job of regulating the oil and gas industry, according to a panel of speakers who participated in a forum titled "Ohio's Laws and the Oil and Gas Boom" at Marietta College Monday night.

The speakers included Ohio 92nd District Rep. Debbie Phillips, D-Athens; Pavenne Pettigrew, retired from the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection and owner of P.L. Pettigrew Consulting LLC; and Nathan Johnson, staff attorney for the Buckeye Forest Council.

Phillips kicked off the discussion with a summary of the three pieces of legislation that govern oil and gas activity in Ohio.

Article Photos

Ohio Rep. Debbie Phillips, D-Athens, left, West Virginia geologist Pavenne Pettigrew, center, and Nathan Johnson, staff attorney for the Buckeye Forest Council, formed the panel of speakers during Monday’s forum on Ohio’s Laws and the Oil and Gas Boom at the McDonough auditorium on the Marietta College campus. (Photo by Sam Shawver)

"Senate Bill 165 was passed during the previous administration in preparation for the coming oil and gas industry in Ohio," she said. "There were conflicts, especially in some suburban areas, where some landowners who did not sign leases with oil and gas companies were being included with other property owners who did have signed leases."

Phillips said SB 165 addressed those and other issues, but it was a lengthy process that took a couple of years to develop.

The bill levies an oil and gas recovery tax on well owners, sets rules for minimum acreage required for drilling, requires that the state Division of Mineral Resources Management review sites before granting drilling permits, and requires standards for well construction to be included in the permits.

Phillips opposed House Bill 133, which created an Oil and Gas Leasing Commission to control leasing of state-owned land for exploration and drilling.

"Private landowners can negotiate anything with oil and gas companies, but state agencies have to deal through this commission when deciding if the land they're responsible for should be leased for oil and gas development," Phillips said, adding that state parks and university lands are not the right place for drilling activity.

She also disagreed with parts of Senate Bill 315-Gov. John Kasich's energy bill-that revises requirements for oil and gas drilling permits.

"This sets a number of new requirements for drilling, as well as requirements for information and notification from oil and gas companies," Phillips said. "But I disagreed with a portion of the bill on 'trade secrets' which doesn't require companies to release the names of the chemicals they're using in hydraulic fracturing wells."

Pettigrew said Ohio does not conduct enough mechanical integrity testing of the state's 170-plus injection wells to make sure the facilities are constructed and working properly.

The injection wells are used by oil and gas companies from within and from outside Ohio to store waste water, or brine, used in shale hydraulic fracturing operations.

West Virginia has only a handful of injection wells, compared to Ohio.

Pettigrew said that's because the Mountain State requires testing for a two-page list of chemicals before a hauler can inject brine into the ground in that state, while Ohio does not require such extensive testing.

"If the injectate (brine) cannot meet federal safe drinking water standards, the injection well permit should be denied," she said. "I'm not against oil and gas extraction, but Ohio is on a ragged edge right now. You have to get control in the beginning of this activity, because once an aquifer is contaminated, you'll never get it cleaned up."

Johnson said Ohio's oil and gas statutes are inadequate.

"Ohio is essentially becoming the dumping ground for wastewater from oil and gas operations," he said, noting that some hydraulic fracturing waste includes radioactive materials like radium, strontium and cadmium.

"Contamination happens," Johnson said. "The oil and gas industry reports show routine leaks in oil and gas wells that allow these chemicals to bubble to the surface."

He said between 2007 and 2010 one in seven injection wells inspected showed integrity violations in the state.

"And more than 90 percent, or 58,000 wells go uninspected every year in Ohio," Johnson added. "And companies found in violation are rarely penalized."

 
 

 

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