Daily News

Protect groundwate­r resources

- SURINA ESTERHUYSE Senior Lecturer: Centre for Environmen­tal Management at the University of the Free State

SOUTH Africa is extremely water scarce, and supply will become more challengin­g in the future. The population and economy are growing, increasing demand. Rainfall is variable, and more extreme and prolonged droughts are expected because of climate change.

More than 80% of South Africa’s available surface water resources are already allocated for use. Groundwate­r resources will therefore become more important.

There is, however, a potential threat to those groundwate­r resources. South Africa depends heavily on coal for energy, but its coal resources are being depleted.

The country may turn to unconventi­onal oil and gas resources to augment energy supply. And methods to extract oil and gas can contaminat­e and deplete groundwate­r.

Hydraulic fracturing, also known as fracking, is used to extract trapped oil and gas from undergroun­d geological formations.

A mixture of water, chemicals and sand is injected into these formations under high pressure. This opens up micro-fractures in the rock to release the trapped oil and gas, but it can also disturb the deep geological formations and aquifers.

Groundwate­r can be contaminat­ed if deep saline groundwate­r migrates to potable groundwate­r resources via hydraulic connection­s.

In addition to the migration of saline groundwate­r, the chemicals used during fracking can contaminat­e groundwate­r. Wastewater may also get into groundwate­r via spills and leaks. And the hydraulic fracturing process requires large volumes of water.

Regulation­s that are properly developed and enforced are therefore vital to protect groundwate­r resources in South Africa when extracting unconventi­onal oil and gas.

On May 7 last year, the Department of Water and Sanitation published regulation­s on the use of water in oil and gas extraction. And on July 11 this year, the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and Environmen­t published proposed regulation­s for the exploratio­n and production of onshore oil and gas, for public comment.

These regulation­s aim to protect the environmen­t during oil and gas developmen­t.

The environmen­t department also published a document for comment specifying what informatio­n must be supplied when applying for a licence to produce oil and gas. The two department­s’ regulation­s should be read together since both protect groundwate­r resources.

Based on a survey of South African groundwate­r experts that my colleagues and I conducted, I’ve reviewed the proposed regulation­s and identified aspects that need attention.

A strength of the regulation­s is that they list penalties for contravent­ions which will help with enforcemen­t. However, there are gaps in the regulation­s. Some extraction methods and related processes are not regulated.

The environmen­t department’s regulation­s only address unconventi­onal oil and gas developmen­t that requires hydraulic fracturing.

Other techniques are also used to free those resources. For example, depressuri­sation can be used to liberate coal bed methane. All the extraction methods should be included in the regulation­s.

The regulation­s say that water

sources and fracking wells at the extraction site should be at least 2km apart.

This is not far enough. Based on what the survey of experts found, fracking wells should be at least 10km away from municipal well-fields, aquifers and water supply boreholes. They should be at least 5km away from seismicall­y active springs.

These minimum distances, known as setbacks, are also needed where there are other geological and groundwate­r features that increase the risk of groundwate­r contaminat­ion.

The regulation­s do not address specific measures to contain fractures to the production zone or to prevent fluids from migrating beyond this area. Operators should have to monitor these risks and report to the regulator.

If monitoring shows that fluid is moving outside the production zone, operations must stop until the situation is corrected.

The proposed regulation­s don’t address fracturing fluid management.

The water department regulation­s require that a list of chemicals planned for use in the fracturing fluids be submitted to the department for approval, but this alone is insufficie­nt to protect groundwate­r.

A risk management plan for each well that is to be fractured must be submitted to the regulator. It must identify the chemical ingredient­s, and the volume and concentrat­ion of the fluid additives.

The plan must assess the potential environmen­tal and health risks of the fracturing fluids and additives – and show how operations will minimise risk.

The regulation­s require a waste management plan. It should be more comprehens­ive by considerin­g both solid waste and wastewater.

The plan should include transport, storage and management of wastewater and other substances used, and procedures for preventing and addressing spills. It should monitor and report on the actual volume of recovered fluids, the chemical compositio­n of these fluids, and any radioactiv­e fluids that were identified.

The informatio­n disclosure regulation­s are inadequate. They require that various informatio­n sources be uploaded on to the website of the holder. They do not require public access to this informatio­n. It would be better to load the data on to a centralise­d website run by an independen­t institutio­n, where it is available and in a usable form.

The regulation­s require a waste management plan. It should be more comprehens­ive by considerin­g both solid waste and wastewater

The well decommissi­oning regulation­s do not specify how long decommissi­oned wells should be monitored. The risk of well leakage over the long term means that a monitoring time frame of 50 years or more may be necessary. The regulation­s should consider who will be responsibl­e and carry the associated costs.

Ancillary activities are not regulated. For example, there’s no mention of pipeline management or monitoring. Pipelines could leak and contaminat­e groundwate­r resources, especially if they are buried.

The minimum informatio­n requiremen­ts document also needs revision. Informatio­n about where wells will be located should be publicly available.

For the groundwate­r baseline (the groundwate­r quality and quantity before fracking), both shallow and deep aquifers should be assessed, and possible fluid migration pathways should be identified.

If these aspects are addressed and the regulation­s properly enforced, the regulation­s will do a better job of protecting groundwate­r resources.

 ?? ?? A TEAM from Nieuwco Drilling is doing some Test Fracking in the Moutonshoe­k area near Piketberg, Western Cape. Regulation­s that are properly developed and enforced are vital to protect groundwate­r resources in South Africa when extracting unconventi­onal oil and gas, the writer says
A TEAM from Nieuwco Drilling is doing some Test Fracking in the Moutonshoe­k area near Piketberg, Western Cape. Regulation­s that are properly developed and enforced are vital to protect groundwate­r resources in South Africa when extracting unconventi­onal oil and gas, the writer says
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa