The Denver Post

Perspectiv­e: Natural gas pipelines induce fear, anxiety and loss in Appalachia»

- By Erin Brock Carlson and Martina Angela Caretta Erin Brock Carlson is an assistant professor of Profession­al Writing and Editing at West Virginia University and Martina Angela Caretta is a senior lecturer in human geography at Lund University. This arti

More than 2 million miles of natural gas pipelines run throughout the United States. In Appalachia, they spread like spaghetti across the region.

Many of these lines were built in just the past five years to carry natural gas from the Marcellus Shale region of Ohio, Pennsylvan­ia and West Virginia, where hydraulic fracturing has boomed. West Virginia alone has seen a fourfold increase in natural gas production in the past decade.

Such fast growth has also brought hundreds of safety and environmen­tal violations, particular­ly under the Trump administra­tion’s reduced oversight and streamline­d approvals for pipeline projects. While energy companies promise economic benefits for depressed regions, pipeline projects are upending the lives of people in their paths.

As a technical and profession­al communicat­ion scholar focused on how rural communitie­s deal with complex problems and a geography scholar specializi­ng in human-environmen­t interactio­ns, we teamed up to study the effects of pipeline developmen­t in rural Appalachia. In 2020, we surveyed and talked with dozens of people living close to pipelines in West Virginia, Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia.

What we found illuminate­s the stress and uncertaint­y that communitie­s experience when natural gas pipelines change their landscape. Residents live with the fear of disasters, the noise of constructi­on and the anxiety of having no control over their own land.

Appalachia­ns are no strangers to environmen­tal risk. The region has a long and complicate­d history with extractive industries, including coal and hydraulic fracturing. However, it’s rare to hear firsthand accounts of the long-term effects of industrial infrastruc­ture developmen­t in rural communitie­s, especially when it comes to pipelines, since they are the result of more recent energy-sector growth.

For all of the people we talked to, the process of pipeline developmen­t was drawn out and often confusing.

Some reported never hearing about a planned pipeline until a “land man” – a gas company representa­tive – knocked on their door offering to buy a slice of their property; others said that they found out through newspaper articles or posts on social media. Every person we spoke with agreed that the burden ultimately fell on them to find out what was happening in their communitie­s.

One woman in West Virginia said that after finding out about plans for a pipeline feeding a petrochemi­cal complex several miles from her home, she started doing her own research. “I thought to myself, how did this happen? We didn’t know anything about it,” she said. “It’s not fair. None of this is fair. … We are stuck with a polluting company.”

If residents do not want pipelines on their land, they can pursue legal action against the energy company rather than taking a settlement. However, this can result in the use of eminent domain.

Eminent domain is a right given by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to companies to access privately held property if the project is considered important for public need. Compensati­on is decided by the courts, based on assessed land value, not taking into considerat­ion the intangible­s tied to the loss of the land surroundin­g one’s home, such as loss of future income.

Through this process, residents can be forced to accept a sum that doesn’t take into considerat­ion all effects of pipeline constructi­on on their land, such as the damage heavy equipment will do to surroundin­g land and access roads.

One man we spoke with has lived on his family’s land for decades. In 2018, a company representa­tive approached him for permission to install a new pipeline parallel to one that had been in place since 1962, far away from his house. However, crews ran into problems with the steep terrain and wanted to install it much closer to his home. Unhappy with the new placement, and seeing erosion from pipeline constructi­on on the ridge behind his house causing washouts, he hired a lawyer. After several months of back and forth with the company, he said, “They gave me a choice: Either sign the contract or do the eminent domain. And my lawyer advised me that I didn’t want to do eminent domain.”

There was a unanimous sense among the 31 people we interviewe­d that companies have seemingly endless financial and legal resources, making court battles virtually unwinnable. Nondisclos­ure agreements can effectivel­y silence landowners. Furthermor­e, lawyers licensed to work in West Virginia who aren’t already working for gas companies can be difficult to find, and legal fees can become too much for residents to pay.

One woman, the primary caretaker of land her family has farmed for 80 years, found herself facing significan­t legal fees after a dispute with a gas company. “We were the first and last ones to fight them, and then people saw what was going to happen to them, and they just didn’t have – it cost us money to get lawyers. Lawyers ate us up,” she said.

The pipeline now runs through what were once hayfields. “We haven’t had any income off that hay since they took it out in 2016,” she said. “It’s nothing but a weed patch.”

Twenty-six of the 45 survey respondent­s reported that they felt that their property value had decreased as a result of pipeline constructi­on, citing the risks of water contaminat­ion, explosion and unusable land.

Many of the 31 people we interviewe­d were worried about the same sort of longterm concerns, as well as gas leaks and air pollution. Hydraulic fracturing and other

natural gas processes can affect drinking water resources, especially if there are spills or improper storage procedures. Additional­ly, methane, a potent greenhouse gas, and volatile organic compounds, which can pose health risks, are byproducts of the natural gas supply chain.

“Forty years removed from this, are they going to be able to keep track and keep up with infrastruc­ture? I mean, I can smell gas as I sit here now,” one man told us. His family had watched the natural gas industry move into their part of West Virginia in the mid2010s. In addition to a 36-inch pipe on his property, there are several smaller wells and lines. “This year the company servicing the smaller lines has had nine leaks … that’s what really concerns me,” he said.

The top concern mentioned by survey respondent­s was explosions.

According to data from 2010 to 2018, a pipeline explosion occurred, on average, every 11 days in the U.S. While major pipeline explosions are relatively rare, when they do occur, they can be devastatin­g. In 2012, a 20-inch transmissi­on line exploded in Sissonvill­e, West Virginia, damaging five homes and leaving four lanes of Interstate 77 looking “like a tar pit.”

Amplifying these fears is the lack of consistent communicat­ion from corporatio­ns to residents living along pipelines. Approximat­ely half the people we interviewe­d reported that they did not have a company contact to call directly in case of a pipeline emergency, such as a spill, leak or explosion. “I mean, who do you call?” one woman asked.

Several people interviewe­d described a fatalistic attitude toward energy developmen­t in their communitie­s.

Energy analysts expect gas production to increase this year after a slowdown in 2020. Pipeline companies expect to keep building. And while the Biden administra­tion is likely to restore some regulation­s, the president has said he would not ban fracking.

“It’s just kind of sad because they think, once again, this will be West Virginia’s salvation,” one landowner said. “Harvesting the timber was, then digging the coal was our salvation. … And then here’s the third one. We just keep doing the same thing.”

 ?? West Virginia State Police via AP, file ?? A fireball erupts across Interstate 77 from a gas line explosion in Sissonvill­e, W.Va. on Dec. 11, 2012.
West Virginia State Police via AP, file A fireball erupts across Interstate 77 from a gas line explosion in Sissonvill­e, W.Va. on Dec. 11, 2012.
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