A few weeks ago, Bill Blackwell turned off a stretch of road in South
Texas and onto a property where five oil wells are being drilled.
Nobody stopped him. Blackwell wasn’t a threat. He owns the property, on
which he has a second home. The drilling company, though, was supposed
to maintain a guard at the entrance.
“Somebody could have driven right up to the house,” he said. “If you
have just an open area, people don’t feel particularly constrained –
there are no signs, nobody to keep them out.”
In South Texas, in the rejuvenated Permian Basin of West Texas, and
in other drilling hot spots around the country, landowners are
confronting a litany of safety and security concerns – many of which they didn’t anticipate – as they allow hydraulic fracturing on their land.
The oil boom is bringing jobs and wealth to areas such as South Texas
that for decades had little of either, but it also is eroding
residents’ sense of familiarity, and with it, a sense of security. Towns
in which everyone knew everyone else are now seeing a boom in new
hotels and restaurants, which are overrun with strangers chasing
high-paying jobs in the rejuvenated Oil Patch.
Like Blackwell, many landowners worry that contractors hired by the
drilling companies aren’t taking proper care of the land. The number of
rig workers – strangers – on their properties overwhelms others.
Property owners aren’t the only ones with concerns. Thanks to the oil
boom, drilling companies are facing safety and security issues of their
own.
In places like South Texas’ Eagle Ford shale, any drilling in the
past 50 years probably involved low-production “stripper” wells that
required little monitoring. Because of hydraulic fracturing, oil
companies have more at stake in each drilling project. A typical well in
the Eagle Ford can cost as much as $7 million to $10 million, and
because of the volume of oil produced, companies must do more to protect
the value their production than they did in the old days.
“You have a lot of expensive equipment out there and you don’t want
the potential for sabotage or destruction,” said Charles Goslin, a
senior operations advisor with Houston-based Butchko Security Solutions,
which provides risk assessment and security for energy companies and
other businesses. “The corporate oil and gas companies want to do the
right thing but when it gets out to the operations, these things run on
the contractors. You’ve got a lot of the subcontractors, and you can’t
check it all out. They’ve got fairly low-paid security guards on the
gates that sit out there by themselves on a trailer.”
If access to well sites is poorly monitored, record keeping often is
worse. What security logs or other well-site data are maintained are
often stored in files or notebooks, but these paper records are
difficult to review or in some cases even find. Workers at the site
often don’t update them, and policies may not be followed closely in
drilling areas with little supervision.
As the industry balances a drilling boom with a more skeptical public
– and one that demands more safeguards – the need for better safety and
security measures is growing.
Some of this is to be expected. Wildcatters and small independents
led much of the initial charge to tap new reserves through hydraulic
fracturing, and they tend to take more risks and adhere to fewer safety
standards. Rising drilling activity attracted the attention of the
larger companies, many of which are implementing stricter safety
policies.
The boom, though, also is triggering a labor shortage, forcing oil companies to hire less experienced workers.
“When labor is scarce, you’re getting more inexperienced people into
potentially hazardous environment,” said Stenning Schueppert, senior
vice president of strategy and corporate development for Total TOT +1.66% Safety, a firm that consults on safety and training issues for oil companies.
In South Texas, the proximity to Mexico adds a new dimension to the
concerns. The remote, scrubby plains provide cover for Mexican cartels
smuggling drugs, humans and other contraband, Goslin said. Roads built
to give drilling crews access to well sites also make it easier for
smugglers to bring their wares into the country.
While the Eagle Ford’s location near the border presents unique
security challenges, the broader issues involving well-site security,
contractor background checks and better monitoring of operations are
cropping up as frequently as new wells in shale formations nationwide.
All of these issues are critical, yet safety and security protocols
at many well sites remain lax compared with other parts of the energy
business such as refineries or offshore rigs. As the domestic oil
renaissance continues to grow, the industry must be more diligent in
developing and implementing safety and security standards that are as
stringent in places like the Eagle Ford as they are in other parts of
the business.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/lorensteffy/2013/12/16/as-fracking-proliferates-landowners-and-drillers-face-safety-security-concerns/?ss=business%3Aenergy
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