Texas

Energy and Environment Reporting for Texas

Angry North Texans Demand State Shut Down Wells Linked to Earthquakes

Residents of the quake-stricken area called on state regulators to immediately suspend operations at the wells believed to be behind the tremors.

Photo by Sam Ortega/KUT

Residents of the quake-stricken area called on state regulators to immediately suspend operations at the wells believed to be behind the tremors.

Dozens of residents and local officials from the towns of Azle, Reno and Springtown outside of Fort Worth bused down to Austin Tuesday to speak before state regulators about a swarm of recent earthquakes believed to be tied to the oil and gas industry. They had plenty of questions for the Railroad Commission, the state’s oil and gas regulator, but the commission had few answers.

While the quakes have been relatively small, not big enough to cause major damage, there’s been a lot of them: more than thirty over the last few months. They’ve caused cracks in homes, sinkholes and more than a few rude awakenings.

“The quakes started recently, and I didn’t think much about it until I was asleep at midnight,” testified Springtown resident Phil Doss. “It woke me up. I thought a 747 had landed on my roof. It was that bad.”

Springtown is one of several towns in Texas that saw a sudden onset of quakes over the last few years as a drilling boom expanded throughout the state. No earthquakes struck the Dallas-Fort Worth region before 2007, according to records from the United States Geological Survey. There have been more than a hundred since. Continue Reading

As Oil Flows in the Keystone XL Pipeline, Opponents Vow Scrutiny

Julia Trigg Crawford has several hundred acres of land in northeast Texas. She lost her recent challenge to the Keystone XL pipeline.

Photo by Terrence Henry/StateImpact Texas

Julia Trigg Crawford has several hundred acres of land in northeast Texas. She lost her recent challenge to the Keystone XL pipeline.

Update: TransCanada has emailed a response to this report. You can read about that here.

The Keystone XL Pipeline runs under Julia Trigg Crawford’s North Texas farm. It’s been carrying crude for over a month. But today business is scheduled to open in earnest on the controversial pipeline, with oil flowing from Cushing, Oklahoma to refineries in Texas. That’s why she’s worried about an “unusual flurry of activity” she noticed over the weekend.

“Track hoes, skids, water trucks, electrical trucks and construction crews showed up,” Crawford tells StateImpact Texas. “They unearthed the pipeline, attached wires and sensors, wrapped it in something and then covered it up.”

She says TransCanada  — the company that owns the pipeline — later told her it was installing heat sensors. (Representatives from TransCanada did not respond to an interview request by deadline). But her interest in the activity goes beyond that isolated incident.

Crawford has long battled the pipeline company over its use of eminent domain, where the company has claimed private property to route the pipeline through Texas. Since she and other opponents of the project have failed to stop it, they now plan to keep it under intense scrutiny. The southern leg of the Keystone XL may become the most watched pipeline in the country.

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Houston’s Ozone Mystery: Pockets of Pollution Unlike Other Cities

Air pollution monitoring station at Croix Memorial Park in Manvel

Dave Fehling / StateImpact

Air pollution monitoring station at Croix Memorial Park in Manvel

At the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ), they’re very familiar with a park in Manvel, a small town 15 miles south of downtown Houston. It’s a place where prairie land is quickly being turned into subdivisions but it still retains a rural appearance.

In Croix Memorial Park, between a soccer field and a playground, is one of the TCEQ’s air pollution monitoring stations, one of over 20 spread across the Houston area.

For some reason, the monitor in Manvel shows that ozone levels here are among the worst in the metro area. Consistently. And they haven’t come down as they have over the past decade at other monitoring sites, some of them near areas with far more sources of pollution from vehicles or industries.

“So the question is why, what’s different about that site,” said David Brymer, director of air quality at the TCEQ. “It’s south of town. Houston’s not really known for consistent north winds that would blow the urban core emissions towards that monitor. “ Continue Reading

Climate Change Could Lead to More Massive Fish Kills in Texas

Dead fish washed ashore during a toxic bloom of golden alga in Canyon Lakes in Lubbock, Texas.

Photo by Michael Hooper courtesy of USGS.

Dead fish washed ashore during a toxic bloom of golden algae in Canyon Lakes in Lubbock, Texas.

From the Asian Carp to the Zebra Mussel, Texas has its fair share of invasive species. Some of them get a lot of attention (I’m looking at you, voracious feral hog). Others tend to sneak under the radar even when they damage ecosystems.

Take Golden Algae. Originally from Europe, the microscopic plant was discovered on the Pecos River in 1985 when an algae bloom killed hundreds of thousands of fish. Since then, it has colonized other Texas river basins and killed millions more fish. Unlike deadly algae blooms in the Gulf of Mexico that kill fish by taking all the oxygen, golden algae is, itself, toxic. Under the right circumstances, it produces a poison that kills fish, bivalves (and probably any other animal with gills) in the affected waters.

So, it’s no surprise that scientists are trying to learn about it.

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After Latest Texas Earthquake Swarm, State Lawmakers Vow to Investigate

Azle Mayor Alan Brunrett has been disappointed by the Railroad Commissions refusal to provide answers or acknowledge that disposal wells have caused earthquakes elsewhere.

Azle Mayor Alan Brundrett has been disappointed by the Railroad Commission's refusal to provide answers or acknowledge that disposal wells have caused earthquakes elsewhere.

After dozens of quakes have rattled a small community outside of Fort Worth over the last few months, the Texas Legislature is creating a committee to look into the issue and allegations that the quakes are linked to oil and gas drilling activity.

State Representative Jim Keffer, R-Eastland, chairman of the House Energy Resources Committee, announced today the creation of a ‘Subcommittee on Seismic Activity.’ The subcommittee will be chaired by state Rep. Myra Crownover, R-Denton, and also include Representatives Phil King (R-Weatherford ), Terry Canales (D-Edinburg), and Chris Paddie (R-Marshall).

Rep. Crownover tells StateImpact Texas the subcommittee will meet this year, likely more than once, before the full legislature convenes next year. “Texans deserve answers,” Crownover says, “We are going to be very, very careful to make sure that we follow the science and ask all the questions we need to ask. I think people have questions and no one has the answer.”

The link between manmade quakes and disposal wells in Texas and other parts of the county is well established, with several peer-reviewed studies showing that waste water from oil and gas drilling injected underground for disposal can cause faults to slip. That was the culprit behind other swarms of quakes nearby in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, as well as other manmade quakes in Oklahoma, Arkansas and Ohio.

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5 Predictions for the Year Ahead in Energy and the Environment

Oil being shipped by rail in West Texas.

Terrence Henry/StateImpact Texas

Oil being shipped by rail in West Texas.

There’s an old saying that it’s difficult to make predictions, especially about the future. But for the near future, University of Texas at Austin professor Michael Webber recently put together what he thinks will be the big stories in the year ahead for energy and the environment. At the annual Webber Energy Group research symposium earlier this month, Webber, Deputy Director of UT’s Energy Institute, noted that “predictions are often wrong,” like the current domestic drilling boom few saw coming, but there are some developing trends we may see more of this year.

Among his predictions:

  1. Exploding Trains: As more and more oil and gas is being produced in the U.S. and Canada, infrastructure for moving that fuel around is lagging behind. While pipelines take time to be built (or face political and environmental hurdles, like the Keystone XL pipeline), the oil and gas still has to get to the market. Shipping it by rail has become the preferred Plan B of the drilling companies until pipelines come on line. But moving fuels by rail can bring considerable risk when those trains go through towns and cities, like the July crude train derailment in Quebec that killed 47 people. Webber predicts more pipelines will alleviate some of the infrastructure strain pushing fuels onto rail, but it will take time. “In the meantime, we’ll use trains,” Webber said. “And those trains will derail, crash, and explode.”
  2. Less Flaring: More pipelines will mean less flaring, or burning off of gas, from oil wells, Webber said. Right now the Bakken Shale in North Dakota flares off 30 percent of the natural gas it produces. “There is no way the Bakken Shale gets to keep flaring” at that level, Webber said. (Texas, by comparison, flares about one percent of its natural gas.)  With more pipelines, that gas could be captured and sold. Webber predicts that will happen as regulatory and political pressure increase on the industry to stop wasting gas. Continue Reading

As More Earthquakes Strike Azle, Residents Have More Questions

An Azle resident signs up to receive more information from environmentalists.

DOUALY XAYKAOTHAO, KERA NEWS

An Azle resident signs up to receive more information from environmentalists.

Just 10 days after a contentious public hearing with state officials, residents in Reno and Azle gathered Monday night to try and make sense of the swarm of earthquakes that keep rocking their part of North Texas. The latest quake hit just hours before the public meeting.

Several hundred people listened to a panel of speakers that included the former mayor of Dish, Calvin Tillman.

“I’m not some rocket scientist,” Tillman told the crowd. “Just a normal guy, who moved to the country, who got pissed off by the oil and gas industry, just like you.”

Tillman is working with environmental groups like Earthworks Action and the North Central Texas Communities Alliance to seek tougher restrictions and regulations on the oil and gas industry. Some point to gas drilling wastewater injection wells as the culprit of the quakes. No industry representatives spoke Monday night. Continue Reading

Call Before You Dig: Does Texas Put Pipelines at Risk?

Temporary sign marks where gas pipeline is buried along road in Harris County

Dave Fehling / StateImpact

Temporary sign marks where gas pipeline is buried along road under construction in Harris County

The U.S. Department of Transportation gave grants totaling $1.5 million last year to states for safety programs aimed at reducing damage to pipelines.

Twenty states qualified. But not Texas.

Texas has by far the most miles of natural gas pipelines and is the state with the most accidents. But according to federal pipeline regulators, Texas also grants the most exemptions (along with Florida) regarding who must notify a pipeline or utility company before digging.

Federal data show that in the past decade, 11 percent of serious pipeline accidents in Texas were caused by work crews doing excavations. According to CenterPoint Energy, a Houston comnpany that distributes natural gas to over 3 million customers in Texas and other states, over half the damage to its pipelines last year was “caused by an excavator failing to Call 811.” Continue Reading

North Texas Earthquake Swarm More Centralized Than Previously Thought


View Earthquakes Near Azle, Texas in a larger map
Map created by Andrew Weber for KUT News and StateImpact Texas. Orange circles represent earthquakes, wavy blue lines represent active wastewater disposal wells.

Another minor earthquake shook the North Texas community of Azle on Monday. It’s one of dozens to hit the region over the last few months that have residents on edge and complaining of property damage.

Many see a link between the quakes and increased oil and gas activity. But challenges confront scientists researching the quakes for the U.S. Geological Survey and Southern Methodist University. For one, they’ve needed to more accurately pinpoint the epicenters of the Azle quakes.

“The closest seismograph station used by the National Earthquake Information Center to locate the Azle earthquakes is over 60 miles to the south, the next closest is 125 miles to the West,” USGS Seismologist Williams Ellsworth explained in a letter to Azle Mayor Alan Brundrett in a December letter obtained by StateImpact Texas (embedded below).

In that same letter, Ellsworth explains how he has produced a more accurate map of the quakes, one that shows them clustered in a more concentrated location than previously thought.

“To date, it looks like the earthquakes are all in one very localized zone,” Ellsworth confirmed to StateImpact Texas over the phone.

Continue Reading

Border Towns Struggle to Protect Water Infrastructure

Photo illustration by: Todd Wiseman via Texas Tribune.

Photo illustration by: Todd Wiseman via Texas Tribune.

This article originally appeard in the Texas Tribune.

More than 600 children in a South Texas border town may be prevented from returning to school on Monday because of a long-standing dispute over water rates, which have skyrocketed in recent years amid attempts to make badly needed upgrades to the town’s water infrastructure.

Several attempts at negotiation between the city of La Villa and the La Villa Independent School District have failed, after the district refused to pay more than $50,000 in overdue water bills and the city cut off its water service. School officials say they are being charged too much for water from a mismanaged utility, while the city contends that it needs money to cover millions of dollars in needed repairs to water and sewer treatment systems.

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