Texarkana Gazette

Texas oil well spewed pollution for 10 months, group says

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An oil well site in the Permian Basin owned by a bankrupt shale producer has spewed polluting gases into the atmosphere for 10 months, despite being investigat­ed by Texas regulators, according to an environmen­tal group.

Infrared video footage collected during multiple visits from November 2019 through September show “intense and significan­t” emissions from MDC Energy LLC’s Pick Pocket location in West Texas, Earthworks said in a letter to two state regulatory agencies on Thursday. The group called on the Texas Commission on Environmen­tal

Quality and the Texas Railroad Commission to rescind permits for MDC.

“TCEQ and RRC must properly address these intense emissions including, but not limited to, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), methane, and hydrogen sulfide,” Sharon Wilson, Earthworks’ thermograp­her, wrote in the letter.

TCEQ said in a statement that it would look into the issues raised in Wilson’s letter. An enforcemen­t case for complaints raised about MDC’s operations “is currently under developmen­t and will include the assessment of an administra­tive penalty and corrective actions, as needed,” the agency said. The RRC didn’t immediatel­y have comment.

As the list of U.S. oil companies collapsing into bankruptcy grows, concerns are mounting about what happens to their wells if they’re unable to pay to maintain or properly plug them. Millions of wells have been left abandoned across the country, many of which have been found to leak methane. That’s drawn particular scrutiny because methane is a greenhouse gas that retains far more heat in the atmosphere upon its release than carbon dioxide.

Texas has taken a friendly stance toward the shale industry. But, more recently, some of the industry’s biggest investors, and even some oil producers, have called for stricter regulation­s. Another major environmen­tal concern is the widespread industry practice of flaring in which producers burn off excess natural gas. Recent surveys by the Environmen­tal Defense Fund found flares in the Permian are frequently unlit or malfunctio­ning, meaning methane is being released directly into the air.

Earthworks filed a series of complaints last December documentin­g emissions captured at the Pick Pocket location. Four months later, in April, TCEQ conducted an investigat­ion of the site.

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