Texas

Energy and Environment Reporting for Texas

Texas May Outlaw the “Gassing” of Rattlesnakes

An Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake.

This photo courtesy of Tad Arensmeier via Creative Commons http://www.flickr.com/photos/11304433@N00/446771802/sizes/l/

An Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake.

Update, Jan. 23: The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department announced this week that they will delay consideration of the proposed rule outlawing the gassing of rattlesnakes. A revised rule will be proposed and considered by the department in March.

Original Story: Pouring gasoline or other noxious chemicals into the earth to force rattlesnakes and other animals from their underground homes has been a tactic of some hunters and snake wranglers for years. But it has a harmful effect on the environment and wildlife. Now, Texas Parks and Wildlife (TPWD) is considering following in the path of 30 other states and banning the practice in most circumstances.

The technique, known as “gassing” is used to capture and/or kill many different types of animals, including prairie dogs. But its greatest defenders appear to be those involved in “rattlesnake roundups” that are a tradition in parts of the state.

On the other side, scientists, animal welfare advocates and state regulators say that the time for a ban has come. When a similar ban was considered in Alabama, professionals in the snake venom collection business supported it as well, saying snakes that had been captured through “gassing” generally died before they could produce much venom, reports Outdoor Alabama.

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How Hill Country Grazing Led to Cedar Fever in Texas

Photo courtesy of Flickr/flickr.com/23959586@N00/

Looking for someone to blame for cedar fever? Try your ancestors.

This story originally ran in 2013, but judging from the tickle in our throats, it seems appropriate to post again for your perusal. 

Your Grandpa’s Cheeseburger Might Be Making You Sneeze

For many Texans, ‘Cedar Fever’ has its own place in the region’s pantheon of demons, alongside the likes of the Chupacabra, Yolanda Saldivar, and chili with beans. If you’re one of those Texans, the onset of winter, when male mountain cedar plants release their pollen and set the world a-sneezin’, is cause for dread.

It is not unheard of for mountain cedar pollen to amass in the air and create a haze in the Hill Country sky. We’ve been conditioned to look upon a cloud of pollen with unease, but this does little to explain the link between pollen and ‘Cedar Fever.’ Just what is it about this speck of plant material that brings misery to some people? More importantly, how did it become so problematic in Central Texas?

Dr. Edward Brooks researches allergy at the UT Health Science Center in San Antonio. While admitting that establishing true causality for cedar pollen allergy is “scientifically tricky,” he reveals that scientists have identified certain correlations that suggest some explanation. So far, it appears that incidence of allergy is determined by several factors coming together: an individual’s genetics, the structure of the pollen grain, and how much of that pollen is around. And one of the key factors for that last one is the result of specific land use and management practices by Texans in the late 19th century. If you want to blame someone for cedar fever, you could start with them.  Continue Reading

Tracing Traffic Pollution as Texas Port Expands

A pickup truck equipped to detect pollution is a project of Rice University and the University of Houston

Courtesy Rice University

A pickup truck equipped to detect pollution is a project of Rice University and the University of Houston

At Rice University in Houston, environmental engineer Rob Griffin is working on a project that uses a pollution detection device as big as a pickup truck. Actually, it is a pickup truck.

The mobile pollution lab has been roaming the streets and highways of Houston since this fall. The project won’t be done for at least another year.

“We are going to have a lot of data. This is going to be an incredibly massive project,” Griffin told StateImpact. Continue Reading

Amid a Surge of Texas Earthquakes, Oil and Gas Regulators to Hire a Seismologist

Railroad Comissioner David J. Porter.

Photo by Mose Buchele

Railroad Comissioner David J. Porter.

In today’s meeting of the Railroad Commission of Texas, the state Agency that regulates the Texas oil and gas industry, Commissioner David Porter announced the search for a staff seismologist in response to the rash of small earthquakes that have sprung up throughout the state along with the boom in oil and gas production.

The hire “will allow the commission to be able to study seismic activity in Texas based on proven science and facts which the commission rules and regulations must be based on,” Porter said as he instructed Milton Rister, Commission Executive Director, to begin the search.

The announcement comes after a “listening session” Commissioner Porter and Commission Staff attended with residents of Azle, Texas. The town is home to numerous waste water disposal wells and has experienced dozens of quakes in recent months. The link between waste water disposal and earthquakes has been proven in other regions and the townspeople were disappointed when Porter and others repeated Railroad Commission assertions that a link was something that remains unanswered by science.

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Earthquake “Swarms” Shaking Oklahoma As Well

After 20 earthquakes in a month, will state regulators respond?

Photo: OLIVER BERG DPA/LANDOV

After 20 earthquakes in a month, will state regulators respond?

Last week we reported from the Texas town of Azle, where a swarm of low-intensity earthquakes has frightened townspeople, damaged property, and put state regulators on the defensive.

Azle had never experienced earthquakes like this before the arrival of waste water disposal wells, related to oil and gas drilling. Science has shown how those wells can cause earthquakes, so the people of the region were hoping for some answers when the Railroad Commission of Texas, the Agency that regulates the state’s oil and gas sector, came to town for a public forum.

The mood soured when Commissioner David Porter announced that he would not be answering questions.

The same day that event was taking place in Texas, our colleagues at StateImpact Oklahoma were filing their own report on the sudden uptick in earthquakes there.

StateImpact Oklahoma’s Joe Wertz reports for NPR:

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Two Texas Power Plants Went Offline This Morning, Adding to Energy Emergency

ERCOT controls the power grid for about 23 million customers in Texas.

Photo by ERCOT

ERCOT controls the power grid for about 23 million customers in Texas.

At the heart of the energy emergency that brought Texas to the brink of rolling blackouts this morning was the failure of power plants to provide electricity when the state needed it, says the state grid operator. That included two plants in North Central Texas that suffered equipment failure caused by freezing weather.

In fact, the state saw higher electric demand during a cold spell last month, without going into an “energy emergency,” ERCOT Spokesperson Robbie Searcy said in a telephone news conference today.

The difference this time was that there was less power available.

“We lost about 3,700 megawatts of generation,” said Dan Woodfin, ERCOT’s Director of System Operations. “About half of that was weather-related and the remainder were due to non-weather-related issues.”

Woodfin said about 1,800 megawatts of lost power came from two large plants that were forced offline after some of their monitoring equipment froze.

“Probably if we had lost another unit it would have put us into an Energy Emergency Alert Three,” Woodfin said, referring to the level that would have prompted rolling blackouts.

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ERCOT: Rolling Blackout Threat Averted In Cold Snap

Controllers make daily forecasts of the next day’s electric demand and supply down to every five minutes.

Photo by Filipa Rodrigues/StateImpact Texas

Controllers make daily forecasts of the next day’s electric demand and supply down to every five minutes.

As chilly weather grips much of Texas, the state’s electricial grid operator is asking consumers to reduce their energy use, though it says a brief threat of rolling blackouts has been averted.

In an alert sent at 8 a.m., the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, which operates the grid covering 85 percent of the state, issued an emergency alert, meaning the grid’s power reserves had dropped below a comfortable threshold.

But the situation, ERCOT said, was improving.

Less than an hour earlier, ERCOT issued a “power warning,” which is just a step away from rolling blackouts — controlled, temporary interruptions of power service — due to high demands that threaten to exhaust capacity.

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Anger Greets State Officials in Quake-Prone Texas Town

Residents raise their hands who say they've heard a loud "boom" accompanying some recent earthquakes.

Mose Buchele

One speaker asked fellow residents to raise their hands if they've heard a loud "boom" accompanying recent earthquakes.

Azle, Texas – “I’ve got a crack in my hallway,” chuckled Marion LeBert as he stood in the parking lot of Azle High School.

“Oh my! We have sink holes in our yard. And they’ve gotten bigger since these earthquakes,” commiserated Tracy Napier.

The two were among hundreds of townspeople hoping to get answers at a meeting hosted last  night by the  Railroad Commission of Texas, the state’s oil and gas industry regulators. The area, in Parker and Tarrant counties, didn’t experience earthquakes until recently. Now, it’s seen a swarm of over twenty minor ones in the last two months, troubling residents and causing damage to some homes. The earthquakes would be the topic of discussion.

Merian Labert, Tracy Napier and traded stories of the quake before the meeting.

Mose Buchele

Marion LeBert, Tracy Napier and Tommy Eldridge (left to right) traded earthquake stories before the meeting.

“I just want to kind of sit back and see what [state regulators] are gonna say,” LeBert told StateImpact Texas. “I’ve lived here 20 years and we never had anything like this till they started all the drilling and the fracking and stuff. All I want to do is get the truth out of them.”

Scientific research has shown how similar quakes are caused when waste water from oil and gas drilling is injected into underground disposal wells. This area of North Texas has many such disposal wells. But the link has not been publicly acknowledged by the Railroad Commission (though agency staff agree it exists in internal emails and PowerPoint presentations obtained by StateImpact Texas). Ahead of last night’s meeting, Railroad Commissioner David Porter had said he would would talk about plans to deal with the quakes, signaling that the Commission was willing to publicly offer some answers.

As the meeting got underway, it quickly became clear that plan had changed.

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Town Hall Held on North Texas Quakes


View North Texas Earthquakes in a larger map

A map of recent earthquakes (in red) and oil and gas wastewater disposal wells outside of Fort Worth. Active disposal wells are in green; inactive wells are in yellow. Map by Michael Marks/Terrence Henry

UPDATE: Check back on StateImpact Texas later this morning for full coverage of last night’s event.

Residents around Eagle Mountain Lake outside of Fort Worth have had a shaky few months. Dozens of small earthquakes have struck the area out of the blue. The Dallas-Fort Worth area is not known as a place that’s prone to earthquakes. In fact, before 2007, there were no recorded earthquakes in the area. Since then, there have been hundreds.

Studies of other swarms of earthquakes to the south in Johnson County and around the Dallas-Fort Worth airport have shown disposal wells to be the culprit, where wastewater from oil and gas drilling is injected deep underground. Inject enough wastewater, at the right pressure, and it can cause quiet faults to slip, resulting in earthquakes.

“Over just five years, we’ve come from an environment where, although experts like myself knew injection could cause earthquakes, it wasn’t something on companies minds or the public’s mind,” said Cliff Frohlich,a geologist at the University of Texas at Austin, during an earlier interview. Frohlich has led much of the research into the Texas quakes.

“We’ve gone to an environment now where a lot of people are worrying about this. And over the next five years, this is going to result in a lot more knowledge about the phenomenon. And how to handle it in a responsible way,” Frorhlich said.

Now the quakes seem to have gotten the attention of Texas’ oil and gas regulator, the Railroad Commission of Texas. Continue Reading

New Year Brings Good and Bad News For Texas Wind Power

Wind turbines in West Texas help produce record amounts of electricity for the state.

Mose Buchele/StateImpactWind turbines in West Texas help produce record amounts of electricity for the state.

By New Year’s Day, the network of transmission lines that comprise Texas’ “Competitive Renewable Energy Zone” [CREZ] will be fully operational, bringing electricity from wind turbines in West Texas and the Panhandle to points east. Many of the lines are already active (and have contributed to record-breaking percentages of Texas electricity coming from wind), but the Jan. 1 deadline is cause for celebration among those who have long prided Texas’ role as a leader in wind power.

“I like to compare it to something like the highway for electricity,” Russell Smith, Executive Director of the Texas Renewable Energy Industries Association, told StateImpact Texas.

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