Current:Home > MarketsTexas Study Finds ‘Massive Amount’ of Toxic Wastewater With Few Options for Reuse -WealthRoots Academy
Texas Study Finds ‘Massive Amount’ of Toxic Wastewater With Few Options for Reuse
View
Date:2025-04-11 21:56:57
Oil and gas extraction in the Permian Basin of arid West Texas is expected to produce some 588 million gallons of wastewater per day for the next 38 years, according to findings of a state-commissioned study group—three times as much as the oil it produces.
The announcement from the Texas Produced Water Consortium came two days before it was due to release its findings on potential recycling of oilfield wastewater.
“It’s a massive amount of water,” said Rusty Smith, the consortium’s executive director, addressing the Texas Groundwater Summit in San Antonio on Tuesday.
But making use of that so-called “produced water” still remains well beyond the current reach of state authorities, he said.
Lawmakers in Texas, the nation’s top oil and gas producer, commissioned the Produced Water Consortium in February 2021, following similar efforts in other oil-producing states to study how produced water, laced with toxic chemicals, can be recycled into local water supplies.
The Texas study focused on the Permian Basin, the state’s top oil-producing zone, where years of booming population growth have severely stretched water supplies and planners forecast a 20 billion gallon per year deficit by year 2030.
The consortium’s first challenge, Smith told an audience in San Antonio, was to calculate the quantity of produced water in the Permian. A nationwide study in 2017 identified Texas as the nation’s top source of produced water but didn’t consider specific regions.
It’s a tricky figure to compute because Texas doesn’t require regular reporting of produced water quantities. The consortium based its estimates on annual 24-hour-sampling of wastewater production and monthly records of wastewater disposal.
“There’s just a lack of data, so it’s an estimate,” said Dan Mueller, senior manager with the Environmental Defense Fund in Texas, which is part of the consortium.
Their estimate—about 170 billions of gallons per year—equals nearly half the yearly water consumption in New York City.
That quantity creates steep logistical and economic challenges to recycling—an expensive process that renders half the original volume as concentrated brine which would have to be permanently stored.
“It’s a massive amount of salt,” Smith said. “We’d essentially create new salt flats in West Texas and collapse the global salt markets.”
He estimated that treatment costs of $2.55 to $10 per barrel and disposal costs of $0.70 per barrel would hike up the water price far beyond the average $0.40 per barrel paid by municipal users or $0.03 per barrel paid by irrigators.
On top of that, distributing the recycled water would require big infrastructure investments—both for high-tech treatment plants and the distribution system to transport recycled water to users in cities and towns.
“We’re going to need pipelines to move it,” Smith said. “We have quite a gap we need to bridge and figure out how we’re going to make it more economical.”
That is only if produced water in West Texas can be proven safe for consumption when treated.
Pilot projects for produced water reuse have already taken place in California, where some irrigation districts are watering crops with a partial blend of treated wastewater, despite concerns over potential health impacts. California has banned irrigation with wastewater from fracking, but not wastewater from conventional drilling, even though the two contain similar toxins. Produced water typically contains varying amounts of naturally occurring constituents, including salts, metals, radioactive materials, along with chemical additives. Every region’s produced water will bear different contents, depending on the composition of underground formations.
Beginning reuse efforts in West Texas, Smith said, will require pilot projects and chemical analysis to determine feasibility.
veryGood! (54)
Related
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- The Biden Administration Rethinks its Approach to Drilling on Public Lands in Alaska, Soliciting Further Review
- Full transcript of Face the Nation, July 23, 2023
- Volkswagen recalls 143,000 Atlas SUVs due to problems with the front passenger airbag
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- YouTuber MrBeast Shares Major Fitness Transformation While Trying to Get “Yoked”
- Is a State Program to Foster Sustainable Farming Leaving Out Small-Scale Growers and Farmers of Color?
- Inside Clean Energy: Three Charts that Show the Energy Transition in 50 States
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Michael Cohen settles lawsuit against Trump Organization
Ranking
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Inspired by King’s Words, Experts Say the Fight for Climate Justice Anywhere is a Fight for Climate Justice Everywhere
- New Jersey school bus monitor charged with manslaughter after allegedly using phone as disabled girl suffocated
- State Tensions Rise As Water Cuts Deepen On The Colorado River
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Naomi Campbell Welcomes Baby No. 2
- Climate Change is Spreading a Debilitating Fungal Disease Throughout the West
- NPR quits Twitter after being falsely labeled as 'state-affiliated media'
Recommendation
Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
‘Delay is Death,’ said UN Chief António Guterres of the New IPCC Report Showing Climate Impacts Are Outpacing Adaptation Efforts
Where did the workers go? Construction jobs are plentiful, but workers are scarce
Biden Tightens Auto Emissions Standards, Reversing Trump, and Aims for a Quantum Leap on Electric Vehicles by 2030
Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
The hidden history of race and the tax code
Inside Clean Energy: Here’s Why Some Utilities Support, and Others Are Wary of, the Federal Clean Energy Proposal
Biden Could Score a Climate Victory in a Single Word: Plastics