Wells hit natural gas

Shaw officials planning to link wells to flare

A shallow well recently drilled into the aquifer underneath the Bayou Corne area has hit natural gas, Shaw Environmental officials said Tuesday.

That well is one of three that contractors for Louisiana Department of Natural Resources drilled to find and vent natural gas believed trapped in the Mississippi River Alluvial Aquifer.

Also, an earlier boring made by Texas Brine Co. LCC of Houston on its leased property also hit gas, Shaw officials said.

But gas was not on found in another DNR relief well drilled farther west on property west of Bayou Corne.

Along with sampling showing some of the most remote bubble sites are swamp gas from decomposing organic matter, the well findings support earlier indications that gas is in the aquifer, running under the section of northern Assumption Parish. But the findings also suggest that the gas has not spread to populated areas.

Parish officials have said they are concerned the gas could build pressure in the aquifer, escape and lead to an explosive risk, though testing has not found that so far.

The DNR vent/relief well with gas inside it is located north of La. 70 South in the vicinity of a 4-acre sinkhole but east of the most populated portion of the Bayou Corne community. The Texas Brine boring is in the same area but south of La. 70.

Shaw officials working with the Louisiana Department of Natural Resources on the sinkhole told about 100 residents gathered for a community meeting Tuesday that the well north of La. 70 and another drilled on the same site would be linked to a flare to begin removing the gas gradually.

Gary Hecox, a geologist with Shaw Environmental, said releasing the gas too aggressively could damage the well and prevent needed data collection.

“So we’re going to start off and follow a fairly methodical way of doing it, but we’re doing it as fast as we can but still keep everybody safe,” he said.

Texas Brine officials also announced Tuesday that they were preparing to drill their own vent well on their property.

The community has been evacuated since the sinkhole was found Aug. 3. DNR scientists have suspected that an abandoned Texas Brine salt cavern failed and caused the sinkhole.

Texas Brine already announced that the cavern carved from the Napoleonville Dome is 1,500 feet shallower than what it was when it was abandoned in June 2011.

Hecox also said that hydrocarbons pulled from inside the cavern and on top of the sinkhole are virtually identical as far as their chemical makeup.

When asked if that means it is confirmed the failure of the cavern caused the sinkhole, he said “All the data we’ve looked at so far would lead you to that conclusion, yes.”

But he said there is still evaluation to be done of the cavern collapse and more data is needed.

“One-hundred percent in science is a little hard to get to, but right now, the link between what the fill is in the bottom of the cavern and the sinkhole seems to be … the two are linked,” Hecox said.

Hecox said later that, in contrast to early reports, the hydrocarbons in the sinkhole and the cavern are crude oil, not diesel, and may have come from natural oil bearing formations along the side of the salt dome.

Bruce Martin, vice president of operations for Texas Brine, told residents that records show all the diesel used in the cavern had been removed before the cavern was plugged and abandoned.

The Texas Brine cavern is near the edge of the dome.

However, questions remain about where the Texas Brine cavern failed, the roof and the walls at the top portion appear intact, Shaw officials said, and how the crude oil got to the surface.

Hecox said the most likely option is that the crude oil went up the side of the salt dome into the sinkhole.

But he also said that many of the occurrences around Bayou Corne appear to be tied together.

“It is very likely the release of oil and the gas we’re seeing, the cavern collapse, and the sinkhole are all related,” he said.


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Comments (7)


1) Comment by tball - 10/10/2012

@unevahno - I guess you don't know what a salt dome is?? I'm a democrat, you do not drill baby drill a salt dome for oil....

2) Comment by Being_Stupid - 10/10/2012

I Love Natural Gas.

3) Comment by kimfeil - 10/10/2012

I've been following this Bayou Corne story casue my son goes to LSU north of that activity. In response to Being_Stupid....As if the fossil fuel industry and the aged pipelines all across the country can continue to afford to things with business as usual (little oversight as posssible) even after the low hanging fossil fuel fruit has been picked. Once the industry factor$ in climate disruption issues & accidents, the net energy input/output of extreme fossil fuels, it is only a matter of time that renewables will start to look do-able. As for me, I'm glad I have the option for my energy choice to be 100% wind driven, my home heating is carbon neutral with a catalytic wood burning stove, my garden room is my clothes line dryer, the car I drive however is traditional. BUT had I been given a choice for a non-polluting option....you bet it wouldn't have been gasoline or dirty natural gas powered. The industry needs to face that if given a choice, the public will chose to breathe cleaner air and not risk their clean water..The oil and gas industry needs to start providing sustainable energy choices and come into the golden age of sun spills or become eventually obselete. They need to move on...sing with me now..."old school fossil fuels- makes a few rich and the rest of us fools!" I live, blog and breathe in BarnettShaleHell in Arlington TX and use to live near refinery row in Norco, so I know...

4) Comment by mcBR - 10/10/2012

In fact, we can decide to get natural resources while making sure that fiascos like this don't happen. It's not an all or nothing proposition, Being_Stupid. You don't have to quit driving your car or start boycotting oil. Just ask that the state agencies charged with oversight are effective, that common sense laws are in place to protect our beautiful state, and that those responsible for environmental damage are held accountable.

5) Comment by Being_Stupid - 10/10/2012

I watched an episode of Star Trek the other day. Did you know that if you travel down into a sink hole, you will actually time warp into another dimension on the other side. You can end up anywhere and at anytime.

6) Comment by Being_Stupid - 10/10/2012

@unevahno, You make a very good comment. You ought to boycott Big Oil and quit driving your car to work and quit using any product that was manufactured using oil or used oil to transport that product to a grocery store shelf. That would show these Big Oil Tycoons who is boss and that you really mean business and that they should stop drilling for oil and quit producing it.

7) Comment by unevahno - 10/10/2012

To all republicans out there: This is the result of "DRILL BABY, DRILL". Happy now?