The Delaware Gazette

Ohio renews injection-well permitting

JULIE CARR SMYTH

AP State­house Correspondent

COLUMBUS — Ohio began issu­ing its first new per­mits Tues­day for deep injec­tion of chemically-laced waste­water from oil and gas drilling since a New Year’s Eve quake in Youngstown prompted an unof­fi­cial statewide moratorium.

Rick Sim­mers, head of the state’s Divi­sion of Oil and Gas Resources, said the first four new per­mits went out Tues­day to sites in Athens, Portage and Wash­ing­ton coun­ties. He said another 28 sites will be per­mit­ted in small batches of five or under in com­ing months.

“We never had an offi­cial mora­to­rium on issu­ing the per­mits, but we’ve asked the com­pa­nies to work coop­er­a­tively with us as we upgrade our statutes and rules to make them even more strin­gent, and the com­pa­nies have,” Sim­mer said in an inter­view with The Asso­ci­ated Press.

He said state nat­ural resources offi­cials now believe new reg­u­la­tions include ample safe­guards — includ­ing the abil­ity to order or con­duct seis­mic test­ing before, dur­ing and after drilling — to pro­tect against future quakes.

Mil­lions of gal­lons of waste­water from the drilling tech­nique hydraulic frac­tur­ing, or frack­ing, are injected deep into the earth at such wells. The prac­tice has been ridiculed and protested by envi­ron­men­tal groups, and defended by well oper­a­tors as safe and responsible.

Gov. John Kasich imposed a mora­to­rium within a seven-mile radius of a Youngstown deep-injection site after a series of a dozen quakes that included a 4.0 mag­ni­tude tremor later linked to activ­ity there. Sim­mers said Tues­day would mark an end to for­mal restric­tions in the area, but that the offend­ing well and those in the vicin­ity have no fore­see­able plans to operate.

D&L Energy in Youngstown, the well’s oper­a­tor in north­east Ohio, sought state per­mis­sion in Feb­ru­ary to re-open the shut­tered well to con­duct inde­pen­dent research to prove the well didn’t cause the quakes. But Sim­mers said the com­pany hasn’t yet pre­sented ade­quate infor­ma­tion needed to be re-opened.

Kasich also issued an exec­u­tive order this sum­mer giv­ing Sim­mers author­ity to order pre­lim­i­nary tests at pro­posed well sites, to pre­vent drilling where tests fail, and to restrict injec­tion pres­sure. The state also can order instal­la­tion of auto­matic shut-off valves and mon­i­tor for leakage.

Sim­mers said the EPA turned well over­sight over to Ohio years ago because the state’s reg­u­la­tions sur­pass those of the fed­eral government.

The first round of new wells per­mit­ted Tues­day included one in Athens County’s Troy Town­ship, one in Portage County’s Deer­field Town­ship and two in Wash­ing­ton County’s New­port Town­ship. One of the Wash­ing­ton County wells was pre­vi­ously oper­ated as an oil and gas pro­duc­tion well.

AP News Posted by on Nov 13 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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