Santa Fe New Mexican

Work to fill man-made cavern in Carlsbad is set to begin in August

- Associated Press

CARLSBAD — Work to fill a giant, man-made cavern that is on the verge of collapse in Southern New Mexico is expected to begin in August.

The state hired the engineerin­g company Amec Foster Wheeler last month to design and implement the project to shore up the brine well on the edge of Carlsbad, the Carlsbad Current-Argus reported Wednesday.

The cavity, which experts expect to collapse sometime in the next few years, was left by the extraction of an undergroun­d salt formation. Officials have estimated that a collapse could cause $1 billion in damages by wrecking roadways, an irrigation canal, railroads and businesses.

To prevent such a catastroph­e, Amec is planning to drill 26 boreholes around the site and pump in grout to stabilize the ground and to seal the cavity.

Workers will use high-mobility grout to fill the open space. Low-mobility grout will be used to form a system of columns, according to Amec’s project proposal. The existing brine solution and residuals inside the cavern will be densified to add integrity to the mass.

The project expects to pump in about 833,000 cubic feet of grout.

The plans are expected to be finalized by July with work scheduled to begin the next month. Constructi­on is expected to be completed by January 2021.

Amec will continue to monitor the site for nearly two years. It expects to fully close out the project by October 2023.

The backfill project is estimated to cost about $43 million.

The state Legislatur­e gave approval in February to use the excise taxes paid on vehicle sales to underwrite as much as $30 million in spending on the issue over the next three years.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States