By James Burgess of Oilprice.com:
Photos and video footage continues to be published online showing evidence of flooded fracking sites still in operation, toppled or displaced condensate tanks (which hold waste fracking fluid), smaller tanks and barrels floating in the waters, and leaking unknown fluids, and various pieces of drilling debris scattered throughout the state.
According to the Huffington Post, the historic floods affecting Colorado have already taken the lives of eight people with hundreds more still missing. It has destroyed, or damaged nearly 20,000 homes, 50 bridges, and forced more than 10,000 people to evacuate the region. Only now, as the state officials begin to make plans to rebuild, will the scale of the impact on the fracking industry be revealed.
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Cliff Willmeng, an anti-fracking activist and spokesman for East Boulder County United, explained that there are “hundreds, if not thousands, of wells underwater right now and we have no idea what those wells are leaking. It’s very clear they are leaking into the floodwaters, though.”
The oil and gas industry has assured that the floods should not affect the fracking sites in any way. Tisha Schuller, the CEO and President of the Colorado Oil and Gas Association, said that “none of the fracking sites have been left open during the flood and we don’t have any major issues going on. There were no fracking sites affected by the flood.”
However at least one pipeline has already been confirmed to be broken and leaking, and as the floodwaters subside it is only expected that more broken infrastructure and leaks will begin to surface.
Some of the largest oil companies operating in the area have managed to remotely shutdown their wells. Anadarko Petroleum Corp. has shut down 600 wells and stopped all drilling activity in affected regions; Noble has shut down 10% of its Colorado wells; Encana Oil & Gas has shut down nearly 400 wells; and PDC Energy has shut down over 100 wells. Although this is very few in the larger scheme of things as there are more than 20,000 wells in the Niobrara Formation in Northern Colorado alone. By James Burgess of Oilprice.com
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