The Oklahoman

Fracking: The rest of the story

- BY MIKE CANTRELL Cantrell is president of the Oklahoma Energy Producers Alliance, an associatio­n composed of companies, operators, leasehold owners and royalty owners concerned with protecting the rights of convention­al vertical oil and gas well producers

Let’s be clear, horizontal well drilling and fracking have been an economic boon for Oklahoma. It has provided a much-needed lifeline to the oil and gas industry and the Oklahoma economy over the last decade. No reasonable person can be against it as long as it is done responsibl­y and regulated properly.

Unfortunat­ely, we are attempting to regulate horizontal drilling and fracking with rules and procedures developed for the vertical well universe. This must change. One of the unintended consequenc­es of this activity that has received much attention is earthquake­s. Fracking of horizontal wells has been tied to as many as 300 localized earthquake­s in the past several years.

However, other unintended consequenc­es haven’t received muchneeded attention. The livelihood­s of many Oklahoma families are being destroyed almost daily due to fracking of horizontal wells. Most horizontal wells are completed with a highvolume and high-pressure hydraulic fracturing procedure involving the injection of 4 million to 5 million barrels of water and chemicals and 4 million to 5 million pounds of sand injected at over 10,000 psi of pressure. Further, in the past year alone, the fracking of horizontal wells has been linked to 30-plus pollution incidents.

The fracking of horizontal wells has adversely impacted vertical wells as far as 1 ½ to 2 miles away. This has occurred to hundreds if not thousands of vertical wells. A study commission­ed by the Oklahoma Energy Producers Alliance found that, in Kingfisher County alone, more than 400 vertical wells were adversely impacted by horizontal well fracking over a two-year period. This represents a major loss of income from these vertical wells often owned by Oklahoma families and family owned small producers who have lived in our state for generation­s, which includes many OEPA members.

The livelihood­s of many Oklahoma families are being destroyed daily by horizontal fracking. The Oklahoma Corporatio­n Commission needs to be as vigilant in protecting the rights of vertical well owners and producers who have been here for generation­s, have found the oil and gas, and are producing it profitably, as they are aggressive in permitting this destructio­n by protecting horizontal well drillers.

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Mike Cantrell

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