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Environment DEC


From the October 2009 issue

DEC Proposes New Safety Measures, Mitigation Strategies to Govern Potential Marcellus Shale Drilling

DEC recently released a draft of the supplemental generic environmental impact statement (SGEIS) governing potential natural gas drilling activities in the Marcellus shale formation. The SGEIS addresses the range of potential impacts of shale gas development using horizontal drilling and high-volume hydraulic fracturing. It also outlines safety measures, protection standards, and mitigation strategies that operators would have to follow to obtain permits. Natural gas drilling presents economic development and job creation opportunities, and can help achieve state energy policy goals. As there are also potential environmental impacts, Governor David A. Paterson directed DEC to prepare the SGEIS.

Highlights of Proposed Pre-drilling Measures

  • Disclosure of Fracturing Fluids: Every applicant must include disclosure of the "frac" fluid compositions and the percentages of chemicals to be used for each well.
  • Water Well Testing: Prior to drilling, private wells within 1,000 feet of the drill site will be tested to provide baseline information and allow for ongoing monitoring. If there are no wells within 1,000 feet, the survey area will extend to 2,000 feet.
  • A fenced impoundment holding a fresh water supply
    Impoundments that store water on-site for use during drilling are subject to existing dam safety regulations.
    Water Consumption: Companies will not only have to follow Susquehanna River Basin Commission and Delaware River Basin Commission protocols for water withdrawal where applicable, but also must complete a more stringent and protective streamflow analysis with regard to water withdrawal plans-whether inside or outside the Susquehanna or Delaware basins.
  • Technical Compliance: Prior to hydraulically fracturing a well, operators must complete a new "Pre-Frac Checklist and Certification Form" to ensure technical compliance with the permit and to provide information regarding final well-bore construction and hydraulic fracturing operations.
  • Mitigation Planning: All operators are required to prepare plans for mitigating greenhouse gas emissions, as well as visual and noise impacts prior to commencing operations. In addition, if a drilling company has not reached a road-use agreement with the local government, a trucking plan containing the estimated amount of trucking, approach for avoiding peak traffic hours, appropriate off-road parking/staging areas, and routes must be submitted.

Highlights of Proposed Drilling and Post-drilling Measures

  • In Primary and Principle Aquifer Areas: a) state inspectors must be present when operators commence cementing well-bore casings; b) more stringent drilling and casing requirements are applicable; c) special requirements are imposed to expeditiously remove fluids from onsite reserve pits or well pad tanks. This last requirement also applies in the New York City Watershed.
  • Orange and yellow steel holding tanks at a gas well drilling site
    Steel tanks store "flowback" (wastewater) on site.
    Flowback (Wastewater) Handling Onsite: Operators choosing to store flowback onsite must use steel tanks to protect the environment.
  • Centralized Flowback Storage: If an operator proposes using a centralized impoundment (centralized flowback storage) to serve multiple sites, it must use a double-liner system similar to those required for landfills, provide fencing and offsets to prevent public access, and employ measures to protect wildlife. In addition, state solid waste landfill requirements and dam safety regulations will apply to construction of any centralized storage impoundments.
  • Centralized flowback impoundments are prohibited within boundaries of public water supplies, including the New York City Watershed.
  • Tracking Flowback Disposal: Before a permit is issued, the operator must disclose plans for disposal of flowback. Further, a new "Drilling and Production Waste Tracking" process, similar to the process for medical waste, will be used to monitor disposal. Full analysis and approvals under state water laws and regulations will be required before a water treatment facility can accept flowback from drilling operations.
  • New York City (NYC) Watershed and Other Sensitive Areas: The SGEIS contains a number of mitigation measures aimed specifically at protecting the NYC Watershed. Among them, the SGEIS defines buffer zones around reservoirs and other waterbodies in the watershed. Wells proposed within a 1,000-foot corridor of water tunnels or aqueducts will require special approvals, including a site-specific Environmental Impact Statement and review by the NYC Department of Environmental Protection. Consistent with the requirements for primary and principle aquifers, fluids may not be kept onsite more than seven days. In addition, as in other sensitive areas, centralized flowback impoundments are prohibited.
  • Floodplains: Onsite reserve pits are banned in floodplains-closed-loop tank systems are required instead to protect against potential spills.
  • Stormwater Control: Drilling operations will be subject to a comprehensive, multi-sector general permit for industrial activities, as well as special permit conditions.

Review and Comment

The SGEIS expands on the comprehensive Generic Environmental Impact Statement adopted in 1992, which has prescribed the requirements for drilling of the thousands of existing oil and gas wells in New York State.

The public comment period on the draft will be open until November 30. DEC will accept written comments via e-mail, regular mail, direct online submissions, or delivered at public-information sessions. To review and comment on the draft, see the DEC web page Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement on the Oil, Gas and Solution Mining Regulatory Program for detailed instructions.

Public Meetings Coming

DEC will soon announce the times and locations for a series of public-information sessions. For additional information regarding the draft SGEIS and background material regarding the Marcellus shale formation and gas drilling in New York State, please visit the Marcellus Shale web page. For information about the long history of oil and gas drilling in New York, the more than 13,000 currently active wells, and production data, go to DEC's Oil and Gas web page.