OriginClear's equipment purifies wastewater by zapping it with electric pulses. Source: OriginClear via Bloomberg
California’s epic drought
is pushing Big Oil to solve a problem it’s struggled with for decades:
what to do with the billions of gallons of wastewater that gush out of
wells every year.
Golden State drillers have pumped much of that liquid back
underground into disposal wells. Now, amid a four-year dry spell, more
companies are looking to recycle their water or sell it to parched farms
as the industry tries to get ahead of environmental lawsuits and new
regulations.
The trend could have implications for oil patches across the country.
With fracking boosting the industry’s thirst for water, companies have
run into conflicts from Texas to Colorado
to Pennsylvania. California could be an incubator for conservation
efforts that have so far failed to gain traction elsewhere in the U.S.
Drillers
may have little choice. The state’s 50,000 disposal wells have come
under increased scrutiny this year, after regulators said they’d
mistakenly allowed companies to inject wastewater near underground
drinking supplies. Environmental groups sued the state to stop the
practice at 2,500 sites considered most sensitive.
A win for environmentalists could drive up disposal prices and delay
drilling by months for Chevron Corp., Linn Energy LLC and other
companies, according to a June 12 report by Bloomberg Intelligence
analysts Brandon Barnes and Matthew Kerner.
Conservation Rising
Conservation is “suddenly leaping to the
forefront,” said Laura Capper, founder of Houston-based CAP Resources,
which advises the industry on water use. “You’re going to see a lot of
retrofit programs. If they’re not already recycling, they’ll be
adapting.”
Sarah Nordin, a spokeswoman at Linn, didn’t immediately return
messages seeking comment on the lawsuit. Cam Van Ast, a Chevron
spokesman, declined to discuss it.
In central California’s San Joaquin Valley, Chevron piped almost 8
billion gallons of treated wastewater to almond and pistachio farmers
last year. California Resources Corp., the state’s biggest oil producer,
plans to quadruple the water it sells to growers, Chief Executive
Officer Todd Stevens told investors at an April conference.
An environmental group, Water Defense,
questioned whether Chevron’s sales to farmers created the risk of
industrial chemicals contaminating the food chain. The local
water-quality control board ordered the company to conduct tests and
Chevron says it has met all the pollution standards in its permit.
Water Flow
One of the industry’s biggest headaches is what to
do with the torrents of naturally occurring “produced water” that come
out of wells along with oil and gas. Members of the Western States
Petroleum Association, a group of major drillers including Chevron and
CRC, will unearth more than 92 billion gallons of wastewater this year,
based on a May survey by the association.
The water’s typically too salty to be potable, although in parts of
the state it can be treated enough for use by farmers. The vast majority
of the waste is either reused for drilling or injected into disposal
wells.
That may change thanks to businesses such as OriginClear Inc., a Los
Angeles-based licensor of technology that purifies wastewater by zapping
it with electric pulses. OriginClear has run pilot projects for both
CRC and natural-gas producer Aera Energy LLC, William Charneski,
OriginClear’s senior vice president, said in a Dallas interview.
Other companies are using technologies developed to treat
petroleum-contaminated land to better cleanse their wastewater, said
Barnes, the Bloomberg Intelligence analyst.
More Recycling
If California eventually mandates re-use of
water at the well, it could energize recycling across the oil industry
with other state legislatures following suit, said Chris Robart, a
managing director at market-research company IHS Inc. of Englewood,
Colorado.
One lesson emerging from oilfields: Operators don’t need to use
expensive cleaning techniques to make wastewater suitable for drilling.
Instead, less extensive but cheaper treatment is proving good enough, an
insight that could help the practice take off elsewhere, Robart said.
“It’s cut out the whole high-end portion of the market,” he said.
“They don’t need fancy technology. You need tried-and-true and simple
and cheap.”
North of Santa Barbara, Santa Maria Energy LLC has won approval for
an $8 million pipeline connecting its oilfields to a local sewage
treatment plant. The company will use treated effluent from the plant in
drilling operations.
Capper, the Houston consultant, has been hired to boost water recycling in one company’s fields from 20 percent to as much as 90, she said.
“I don’t think they have any choice but to recycle,” she said. “It’s the right thing to do.”
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