fbpx

Landowners fear injection of fracking waste threatens West Texas aquifersInside Climate News, The Texas TribuneMedia Coverage | Mar 10, 2023

By Dylan Baddour and Pu Yin Huang
March 10, 2023

Oil wells and flares border the tract where David Shifflett grows pecan trees. Credit: Pu Ying Huang/The Texas Tribune

A pipe for produced water sits at the edge of Shifflett’s property. Credit: Pu Ying Huang/The Texas Tribune

Underground pollution

A drilling rig in Pecos County. Credit: Pu Ying Huang/The Texas Tribune

A worker offloads wastewater at a disposal well at Reeves County in February. Credit: Pu Ying Huang/The Texas Tribune

Thousands of holes

Greg Perrin manages the Reeves County Groundwater Conservation District from his office in the town of Pecos. Credit: Pu Ying Huang/The Texas Tribune

“Oil field apocalypse”

Rancher Schuyler Wight surveys the puddles of crude oil that has been leaking from an abandoned well on his property. Credit: Pu Ying Huang/The Texas Tribune

Various leaks are shown on Ashley Watt’s property during a tour led by oilfield firefighter Hawk Dunlap and attorney Sarah Stogner. The pair are working with Watt to document the conditions of the leaky wells. Credit: Pu Ying Huang/The Texas Tribune

Ashley Watt, owner of Antina Cattle Company, began commissioning excavations on the abandoned wells on her property to investigate the leaks. Credit: Pu Ying Huang/The Texas Tribune

At Lake Boehmer, Hawk Dunlap holds a hydrogen sulfide gas monitor, which begins to beep when gas levels grow dangerously high. Credit: Pu Ying Huang/The Texas Tribune

Hawk Dunlap stands at the site of Lake Boehmer, a brine lake that has leaked out of an old well in Pecos County. Credit: Pu Ying Huang/The Texas Tribune

Earthquakes and springs

She said this region’s largest earthquake in memory, a magnitude 5.7 in 1995, before fracking, happened 40 miles southeast of here and turned San Solomon Springs murky for a week. Seismicity affects the subterranean caverns that feed the springs, she said, and she worries what earthquakes and wastewater injection could do.

Neta Rhyne, owner of Toyahvale Desert Oasis, at her storefront near San Soloman Springs in Toyahvale. Credit: Pu Ying Huang/The Texas Tribune

Spring water flows to nearby farmers through roadside canals in the town of Toyahvale. Credit: Pu Ying Huang/The Texas Tribune

Protesting permits

David Shifflett inspects old reports in the Pecos Enterprise of earthquakes in his area. Credit: Pu Ying Huang/The Texas Tribune

Related News