2017
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b01696
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Watershed-Scale Impacts from Surface Water Disposal of Oil and Gas Wastewater in Western Pennsylvania

Abstract: Combining horizontal drilling with high volume hydraulic fracturing has increased extraction of hydrocarbons from low-permeability oil and gas (O&G) formations across the United States; accompanied by increased wastewater production. Surface water discharges of O&G wastewater by centralized waste treatment (CWT) plants pose risks to aquatic and human health. We evaluated the impact of surface water disposal of O&G wastewater from CWT plants upstream of the Conemaugh River Lake (dam controlled reservoir) in wes… Show more

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Cited by 66 publications
(43 citation statements)
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“…In the 1980s, Mitchell Energy, a company operating in the United States, succeeded in combining vertical with horizontal drilling techniques enabling the extraction of natural gas from previously inaccessible shale formations (Prud'homme 2014). This created what are now often classified as unconventional (horizontal) drilling techniques (Clough and Bell 2016), in unconventional (low-permeability) shale formations (Burgos et al 2017), for unconventional hydrocarbons (shale gas) (Speight 2013).…”
Section: Unconventional Hydraulic Fracturing (Uhf) For Shale Gas In Tmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In the 1980s, Mitchell Energy, a company operating in the United States, succeeded in combining vertical with horizontal drilling techniques enabling the extraction of natural gas from previously inaccessible shale formations (Prud'homme 2014). This created what are now often classified as unconventional (horizontal) drilling techniques (Clough and Bell 2016), in unconventional (low-permeability) shale formations (Burgos et al 2017), for unconventional hydrocarbons (shale gas) (Speight 2013).…”
Section: Unconventional Hydraulic Fracturing (Uhf) For Shale Gas In Tmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The potential consequences of UHF-climate change (Staddon and Depledge 2015), contaminated water supplies (Burgos et al 2017;Gottschalk et al 2013), earthquakes (Ellsworth 2013), loss of habitat due to the infrastructure required for wellpads, and noise 4 -all likely impinge upon other species' individual and community health and wellbeing. The supposed need for humans to have fossil fuel energy does not supersede the right of other species to maintain the integrity and health of their populations.…”
Section: Principle Threementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Studies that question the environmental and health impacts of shale have become heavily contested in the highly political US regulatory arena (see, for example McKenzie et al 2014). Nonetheless, an increasing number of ongoing studies find a number of impacts including low infant birthweights, stress and quality of life, asthma, and environmental effects including earthquakes and possible ground water contamination (see Burgos et al 2017;Currie, Greenstone, and Meckel 2017;National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences 2014;see US Geological Survey 2018).…”
Section: Place Scale and Shale Gas Extractionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…8.3-27.0 L/GJ for coal [70,71]. Moreover, other issues have also been identified [72][73][74][75]. For instance, shallow aquifers and groundwater resources can be contaminated with fugitive hydrocarbons.…”
Section: Regional and Local Context 221 Regional Water-energy Nexusmentioning
confidence: 99%