The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Studies show groundwate­r holding own against drilling boom

- By Michael Rubinkam

New research suggests drinking water supplies in Pennsylvan­ia have shown resilience in the face of a drilling boom that has turned swaths of countrysid­e into a major production zone for natural gas.

Energy companies have drilled more than 11,000 wells since arriving en masse in 2008, making Pennsylvan­ia the nation’s No. 2 gas-producing state after Texas. Residents who live near the gas wells, along with environmen­tal groups and some scientists, have long worried about air and water pollution.

Two new studies that looked at groundwate­r chemistry did not find much of an impact from horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing — or fracking — the techniques that allow energy companies to extract huge volumes of oil and gas from shale rock deep undergroun­d. The results suggest that, as a whole, groundwate­r supplies appear to have held their own against the energy industry’s exploitati­on of the Marcellus Shale, a rock layer more than a mile undergroun­d that holds the nation’s largest reservoir of natural gas.

In a study published Monday, a team from Yale University installed eight water wells and drew samples every few weeks for two years — during which seven natural gas wells were drilled and fracked nearby — to measure changes in methane levels at various stages of natural gas production. Methane is not toxic to humans, but at high concentrat­ions it can lead to asphyxiati­on or cause an explosion.

Researcher­s found that methane spiked in some water wells but attributed rising methane levels to natural variabilit­y, not drilling and fracking. Their findings were published in the journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

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