Injection/Disposal Wells: New Bills Propose Better Regulations of Toxic Drilling Waste

by TXsharon on December 1, 2008

in oil and gas drilling. pollution, Texas Railroad Commission

Three bills, filed by Sen. Robert Nichols (R) and Rep Brandon Creighton (R) will place tougher restrictions on class II commercial injection wells to protect our precious groundwater from toxic oil and gas drilling waste.

Peggy Heinkel-Wolfe writes in her article, Bills outline gas drilling restrictions:

…Texas has nearly 78,000 injection wells, including about 50,000 of the nation’s 144,000 Class II wells used for “exempt” oil and gas wastewater.

NOTE: In 2005, at the urging of Dick Cheney, former Halliburton CEO, Congress exempt fracing from the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) as part of the Energy Policy Act of 2005. In 2001, Cheney’s energy task force report “touted” benefits and ignored consequences. His office was “involved in discussions about how fracturing should be portrayed in the [EPA] report.” Halliburton earns about $1.5 BILLION annually from hydraulic fracturing.

The wells are ”regulated” , poorly, by the Texas Railroad Commission with some regulation falling under the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality.

Heinkel-Wolfe explains the bills in her article:

HB 177 and SB 273
requires certain injection well operators to regularly test the soil and water and report the results to the TCEQ so that failures can be addressed more quickly.

HB 178 and SB 274
Requires a minimum half-mile distance between injection wells and established homes, child care centers, schools, churches, parks and public water supplies.

HB 179 and SB 275
Requires certain rules about surface facilities that would directly affect the controversial toxic waste well proposed for Montgomery County.

When the 81st session starts on 1/13/09, we need to get busy with letters and phone calls of support.

Last year I took the following photos (click to enlarge) 8 days after the injection/disposal well was “inspected” and found safe and clean by the Texas Railroad Commission.

Previous post:

Next post: