More Haze in Theodore National Park

Bakken boom linked to haze at Theodore Roosevelt park

Post­ed on  by Greenwire

Emissions from gas flaring and truck traffic are partly to blame for an increase in haze-causing pollution in North Dakota's Theodore Roosevelt National Park. (Photo by Geof Wilson via Creative Commons)

By Phil Taylor

As new oil wells crop up by the thou­sands in the min­er­al-rich Bakken play in north­west North Dako­ta, near­by Theodore Roo­sevelt Nation­al Park has expe­ri­enced spikes in haze-caus­ing pol­lu­tion, accord­ing to a new study.

While the boom has cre­at­ed wealth for the state of 700,000, which boasts the nation’s low­est unem­ploy­ment rate, the study by Col­orado State Uni­ver­si­ty and the Nation­al Park Ser­vice sug­gests the devel­op­ment may come at the cost of clear park skies.

The two-year study pro­vides a much more detailed glimpse of air qual­i­ty than was pre­vi­ous­ly avail­able in the 70,000-acre park, made famous for its bad­lands, pet­ri­fied forests and bison herds.

Pre­lim­i­nary results shared with Green­wire show sig­nif­i­cant spikes in ammo­ni­um nitrate, a fine par­ti­cle that caus­es haze, as well as fine par­ti­cles ammo­ni­um sul­fate and black car­bon, also known as soot.

Black car­bon, which is emit­ted from trucks and flares, can affect both health and vis­i­bil­i­ty and also con­tributes to cli­mate change, researchers said.

While vis­i­bil­i­ty has improved across much of the coun­try — dri­ven by reduc­tions in emis­sions of sul­fur diox­ide and nitro­gen oxides from pow­er plants and vehi­cles — that trend isn’t hold­ing up in west­ern North Dako­ta and east­ern Montana.

The trend is acute in Theodore Roo­sevelt, which is one of 156 fed­er­al Class 1 areas des­ig­nat­ed for the high­est lev­els of vis­i­bil­i­ty pro­tec­tion under the Clean Air Act. The area is sup­posed to be returned to nat­ur­al vis­i­bil­i­ty with­in 50 years, accord­ing to U.S. EPA’s region­al haze rule.

Over one 24-hour peri­od last win­ter, ammo­ni­um nitrate lev­els aver­aged 8.7 micro­grams per cubic meter, or about nine times the aver­age con­cen­tra­tion in the rur­al West. That lev­el is less than one-fourth the con­cen­tra­tion EPA con­sid­ers a health risk.

“The biggest impact we’ve seen so far are these high par­ti­cle for­ma­tions that cre­ate haze, which impacts vis­i­bil­i­ty,” said Jeff Col­lett, head of CSU’s Atmos­pher­ic Sci­ence Depart­ment and a co-leader of the study.

The con­cen­tra­tions are “sig­nif­i­cant­ly high­er” than in oth­er rur­al regions and even exceed lev­els in Pinedale, Wyo., the site of one of the nation’s largest gas plays, Col­lett said.

The spikes are like­ly asso­ci­at­ed with increased nitro­gen oxide emis­sions from truck traf­fic, drilling rigs and oth­er com­bus­tion activ­i­ty that accu­mu­late and lead to fine par­ti­cle for­ma­tion dur­ing stag­na­tion peri­ods, he said.

The fine par­ti­cles form when nitric acid com­bines with ammo­nia. While the source ammo­nia is a mys­tery, there appears to be no short­age in the region. It means future increas­es in nitro­gen oxide emis­sions could trans­late to even greater con­cen­tra­tions of fine par­ti­cle lev­els and asso­ci­at­ed haze, Col­lett said.

Drilling activ­i­ty has soared over the past sev­er­al years in the Bakken, where rough­ly 2,000 new wells are spud each year and near­ly 30 per­cent of the nat­ur­al gas is burned off in flares, con­tribut­ing to the for­ma­tion of par­tic­u­late sul­fates and nitrates. Thou­sands of truck­ing events are required for each well, NPS said.

It’s a con­cern for park staff, who have lob­bied to raise aware­ness of the impacts of drilling on the park’s bucol­ic scenery.

“Being able to see long dis­tances is very impor­tant to vis­i­tors,” said park Super­in­ten­dent Valerie Nay­lor. “We want to keep our air as clear as possible.”

Across the West, haze-caus­ing fine par­ti­cles have reduced vis­i­bil­i­ty from a nat­ur­al range of 140 miles down to 33 to 90 miles, accord­ing to EPA.

While the vast major­i­ty of the drilling activ­i­ty has occurred on pri­vate lands north of the nation­al park, it’s esti­mat­ed that with­in a decade or so, the state could house as many as 40,000 wells on and around pub­lic lands man­aged by the Bureau of Land Man­age­ment and For­est Service.

“There’s uncon­trolled, ram­pant growth,” said Bret Schich­tel, a researcher with the Park Service’s Air Resources Divi­sion who is help­ing lead the study.

Researchers are not yet 100 per­cent cer­tain that region­al oil and gas activ­i­ty is respon­si­ble for the fine par­ti­cle spikes, but they believe there is a strong con­nec­tion. Region­al sources such as the Cana­di­an oil sands could also be at play, they said.

The study, which is being fund­ed by the Park Ser­vice and will begin anoth­er round of mea­sure­ments this month, seeks to deter­mine where the emis­sions are com­ing from, and when.

Mon­i­tors were placed in the park’s north and south units, the Fort Union Trad­ing Post and the Knife Riv­er Indi­an Vil­lages nation­al his­toric sites, and the Med­i­cine Lake Nation­al Wildlife Refuge.

The mon­i­tors were placed clos­er to the drilling activ­i­ty than exist­ing fed­er­al air mon­i­tors and took mea­sure­ments every day instead of every third day. Mea­sure­ments were tak­en from mid-Feb­ru­ary to ear­ly April.

It’s unclear whether EPA’s region­al haze rule will require any reg­u­la­to­ry action. The agency has so far tar­get­ed large sta­tion­ary sources of haze-caus­ing emis­sions, includ­ing pow­er plants, refiner­ies and cement facil­i­ties. The Clean Air Act gives states until 2064 to return Class I areas to nat­ur­al visibility.

“It’s not a heavy ham­mer here, but it can start a con­ver­sa­tion about how we resolve this issue,” Schich­tel said.

Accord­ing to an April 2012 Park Ser­vice memo, fed­er­al agen­cies have lit­tle lever­age to curb oil and gas emis­sions in the Bakken.

“Due to the lim­it­ed per­cent­age of fed­er­al vs. pri­vate and state oil and gas own­er­ship cou­pled with the cur­rent air qual­i­ty reg­u­la­to­ry struc­ture (i.e., lim­it­ed air emis­sion con­trol require­ments for the oil and gas sec­tor), few strong han­dles exist for address­ing cumu­la­tive air qual­i­ty con­cerns,” the memo said.

Col­lett said there are vol­un­tary steps the oil and gas indus­try can take to reduce nitro­gen oxide emis­sions. They include run­ning low­er-emit­ting gen­er­a­tors, adding pol­lu­tion con­trols to drill rigs, dri­ving clean­er vehi­cles and reduc­ing truck trips, adding pipelines to move water and oth­er prod­ucts, or elec­tri­fy­ing operations.

An email to the North Dako­ta Petro­le­um Coun­cil seek­ing com­ment on the study was not returned this week.

CSU and NPS have planned a sec­ond sea­son of mea­sure­ments start­ing this month and run­ning through March.

The team will be tak­ing hourly mea­sure­ments to clar­i­fy when the fine par­ti­cle spikes occur and to iden­ti­fy what direc­tion the emis­sions are com­ing from.

The team will also be mon­i­tor­ing for volatile organ­ic com­pounds, which, if detect­ed in high enough con­cen­tra­tions, could hint at the source of emis­sions, such as diesel trucks or oil and gas emis­sions, Schich­tel said.

Drilling around the park is expect­ed to con­tin­ue, thanks to strong crude prices, fast per­mit­ting times and advance­ments in hydraulic frac­tur­ing and hor­i­zon­tal drilling technologies.

It’s reignit­ed a nation­al debate over the bal­ance of ener­gy devel­op­ment and the con­ser­va­tion of scenic and cul­tur­al lands.

The park is known as the “cra­dle of con­ser­va­tion” because it was a site of respite for a young Theodore Roo­sevelt. The park’s 600,000 annu­al vis­i­tors con­tribute $28.32 mil­lion to the local econ­o­my and sup­port 451 jobs, accord­ing to the Inte­ri­or Department.

Nay­lor, the park super­in­ten­dent, said vis­i­tors can already see flares from about two dozen drilling rigs at night from the Buck Hill obser­va­tion area in the Theodore Roosevelt’s south unit and from var­i­ous van­tage points along Scenic Dri­ve in the park’s north unit.

The inher­ent con­flict prompt­ed Inte­ri­or Sec­re­tary Sal­ly Jew­ell to vis­it the park in August.

“This land­scape, which inspired Pres­i­dent Roo­sevelt and still inspires vis­i­tors today, is a big eco­nom­ic engine for the region,” Jew­ell said then. “It’s also a pow­er­ful reminder that, even as we bear wit­ness to a pro­duc­tion boom in the Bakken, there are places impor­tant to Amer­i­ca that are too spe­cial to drill and must be pro­tect­ed for future generations.”

While the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment has lim­it­ed say over where Bakken wells have been drilled, the North Dako­ta Indus­tri­al Com­mis­sion late last month approved a plan that would pre­vent oil drilling activ­i­ty with­in 2 miles of the park’s his­toric Elkhorn Ranch, where Roo­sevelt went to grieve after the deaths of his moth­er and wife in 1884.

Sub­mit­ted by Anony­mous (not ver­i­fied) on Sun, 11/10/2013 — 20:08

Theodore Roo­sevelt Park


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