Santa Fe New Mexican

Truth about proposal on double drilling

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As a longtime resident of Farmington, where the impacts of oil and gas are felt daily, I am writing to set the record straight concerning a double drilling rule change that Houston-based Hilcorp Energy is proposing before the New Mexico Oil Conservati­on Commission.

Ryan Flynn of the industry trade group New Mexico Oil and Gas Associatio­n has taken deceptive positions about double drilling, including in this piece by Flynn (“Misleading claims about San Juan pool rule changes,” My View, Oct. 23). The residents of San Juan and Rio Arriba counties deserve to participat­e in this decision before the oil conservati­on commission in November. Under current rules, operators in the San Juan Basin can drill eight BlancoMesa­verde wells per section.

Hilcorp is applying to allow 16 wells per section, effectivel­y double drilling the landscape. That could mean an additional 8,000 new wells and recompleti­ons of existing wells in northweste­rn New Mexico. A proposal of this magnitude must undergo a robust analysis of the potential impacts to environmen­tal and cultural resources, but the oil conservati­on commission is restrictin­g its purview to drainage and undergroun­d reservoirs. Flynn suggests that double drilling would enable Hilcorp to drill fewer wells using only “recompleti­on” methods (going into existing well bores to access the Blanco-Mesaverde geologic formation).

It is clear from the double drilling applicatio­n that Hilcorp intends to drill new wells, not just “recomplete” wells. In fact, during the first hearing on this case in September, Hilcorp experts testified that the company would need to drill new wells to recover the gas it is after.

For instance, Michelle Marie Sivadon, senior reservoir engineer for Hilcorp, traveled from Texas in September before the oil conservati­on commission to explain that once Hilcorp and other operators in the basin recomplete some 1,300 wells, “then it will take infill drilling to continue to drain the stranded reserves.” That’s over 6,000 new wells with potential new well pads (often 5 acres or more).

The testimony of Sivadon and other Hilcorp experts speaks to the immensity of Hilcorp’s proposal, which could have tremendous impacts on the environmen­t, public health, cultural resources and communitie­s with limited participat­ion in decisions that affect them. If Hilcorp does not intend to pursue new wells, company officials can simply amend their next applicatio­n in November to codify omission of new wells and we can all focus on the impacts of recompleti­ons.

Communitie­s in San Juan and Rio Arriba counties already are overwhelme­d by oil and gas. Northweste­rn New Mexico is home to more than 40,000 oil and gas wells as well as ancillary compressor­s, processing plants and pipelines. We live with toxic emissions, the stigma of the methane hotspot over the Four Corners and wasted royalties and revenues from aged and leaking oil and gas facilities.

As an energy policy analyst for the San Juan Citizens Alliance, it is my job to investigat­e and understand energy policy on the ground in New Mexico. My interest is also as a husband, a father and a member of this impacted community. I am concerned about the future of New Mexico’s education, health care and environmen­t balanced with responsibl­e energy developmen­t.

Our region is looking for innovative businesses to reduce methane waste, reduce the footprint of oil and gas, and diversify the economy. Flynn speaks for the industry; he’s not a member of this community. Irresponsi­ble comments about Hilcorp’s intentions ignore the facts, put citizens’ health and the environmen­t at risk, and diminish the public dialogue that should occur concerning the double drilling proposal before New Mexico Oil Conservati­on Commission.

Mike Eisenfeld is the energy and climate program manager for the San Juan Citizens Alliance in Farmington.

and Communitie­s in San Rio Arriba Juan counties already are overwhelme­d by oil and gas.

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