Citizens Take Monitoring Into Own Hands as Eagle Ford Shale Boom Continues Undaunted

Julie-Dermansky-022
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Hugh Fitzsimons lll, a buffalo rancher on the outskirts of Carrizo Springs, Texas, cautiously watches the fracking industryโ€™s accelerating expansion. His 13,000-acreย ranch is atop the southwestern part of the oil-rich Eagle Ford Shale, which stretches from Leon County in northeast Texas to Laredo, along the Mexicanย border.

During the last two years Fitzsimons has watched the fracking boom transform a rural locale into an industry hub. Desolate dirt roads are now packed with truckย traffic, and commercial development to service the growing industry has sprung up along state highways, creating air and noiseย pollution.

Hugh A. Fitzsimons III

Hugh A. Fitzsimons lll on a dirt road near his ranch in the Eagle Ford Shale. ยฉ2014 Julie Dermansky for Oceans 8ย Films

Though Fitzsimons stands to profit from oil extraction, he has not turned a blind eye to the industryโ€™s damaging effects on the environment. He wantsย to make sure the expanding industry acts responsibly and is doing his part to ensure that happens, a tall order since a state-sponsored report estimates theย number of wells could grow from 8,000 to 32,000 by 2018 and industry polices itself for the mostย part.

Hugh A. Fitzsimmons III's buffalo next to pumpjack.

Hugh A. Fitzsimons lllโ€™s buffalo next to a pumpjack on his ranch. ยฉ2014 Julie Dermansky for Oceans 8ย Films

The two Texas regulatory agencies that handle concerns and complaints about the fracking industry are the Texas Railroad Commission and the Texasย Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ). According to a reportย on the Eagle Ford Shale’s air quality ย by the center for Public Integrity, Inside Climate News and the Weather Channel, โ€œTexas regulatory agencies reveal a system that does more to protect theย industry than theย publicโ€.

One of the key findings in the report: โ€œTexasโ€™ airย monitoring system is so flawed that the state knows almost nothing about the extent of the pollution in the Eagle Ford. Only five permanent air monitorsย are installed in the 20,000-square-mile region, and all are at the fringes of the shale play, far from the heavy drilling areas where emissions areย highest.โ€œย 

Furthermore, despite hundreds of complaints about polluted air in the last two fiscal years, the TCEQ has levied only 35 fines, according to the New Yorkย Times.ย 

Andย the Texas Railroad Commission has not been satisfied with scientistsโ€™ proof that the fracking industry has contaminated water inย the state, despite mountingย evidence.ย 

Flare fracking Karnes County

Flare from a fracking industry siteย in Karnes County, Texas. ยฉ2014 Julie Dermansky for Oceans 8ย Films

Fitzsimons served on the Wintergreen Water Conservation District for Dimmit County. He wants to get the fracking industry to utilize brackish water for frack jobs that each require millions of gallons of water, instead ofย permitting water from the aquifer or the Rio Grande River to beย used.

โ€œThe Rio Grande River is one of the most endangered rivers in the world,โ€ he toldย DeSmogBlog, adding that the amount of water being drawn form the aquifer jeopardizes the regionโ€™s drinking water already threatened byย drought.ย 

Recently his ranch foreman learned to operate a FLIR camera, a tool used by regulators that documents fumes not visible to the naked eye. Withย eight wells being drilled on his ranch in the coming months, he will supplement any monitoring the state canย offer.

Fracking in Karnes County, Texas

Frack job in Karnes County, Texas. ยฉ2014 Julie Dermansky for Oceans 8ย Films

It is a good idea, considering the experiences of residents of Karnes County, at the epicenter of the Eagle Ford Shaleโ€™s fracking boom. Some whoย have made air quality complaints to the TQEQ told DeSmogBlog it takes days before a regulator shows up and by then, the problem often has subsided. Emissions are also at their worst at night, but regulators normally only monitor the air during theย day.ย 

Lynn D. Buehring, one of those residents, has called the TCEQ 125 time this year alone. There have been more then 50 wells drilled within 2.5 miles ofย her home. This summer, there was a drilling rig a couple of hundred feet behind her house and two flares burning at other sites visibleย from her frontย porch.ย 

Lynn D. Buehring respirator Karnes County

Lynnย D. Buehring often wears a respirator outside of her homeย in Karnes County. ยฉ2014 Julie Dermansky for Oceans 8ย Films

Fracking flare

Flare at a fracking industry site near Lynn Buehringโ€™s home in Karnes County. ยฉ2014 Julie Dermansky for Oceans 8ย Films

Buehring filed a lawsuit against Marathon Oil Corp, claiming the companyโ€™s operations have diminished her quality of lifeย and negatively impacted her health. She developed breathing problems shortly after the fracking began and suffers from ailments often associatedย with exposure to toxic air including nose bleeds, heads aches and dizziness. The air is so bad some days, she doesnโ€™t go outside atย all.ย 

Buehringโ€™s case is on hold, pending the outcome of a case filed by the Cerny family, Karnes County residents represented by Buehringโ€™s lawyer Thomasย Ramirez lll. A state district judge threw out the Cernyโ€™s case in August. Theย judgment is now being appealed the Texas Court ofย Appeals.

Ramirez vehemently disagrees with the judgeโ€™s decision not to hear these cases. Besides believing the law is on his side, โ€œPeopleโ€™s lives are in theย balance,โ€ he told DeSmogBlog. โ€œIt could take anywhere from nine months to two years before the Cernyโ€™s case is considered.โ€ย ย 

One positive thing about the delayย is mounting scientific evidence that backs the clients’ย claims.

Fighting against oil companies in Texas makes you an automatic underdog. The risk of experiencing a backlash if you speak up against fracking isย daunting since most have family members who work in the industry. In Denton, Texas, those who fought and won a ban against fracking were met withย McCarthy-era tactics; two Texas commissioners insinuated that those supporting the ban were funded byย Russia.

Some choose to leave instead of fight. The Grassland Oasis Farm near Floresville, formerly run by Fred and Amber Lyssy, closed in November. ย Six ofย their dogs died after fracking sites started operating next to the farm. Their concerns about the health of the livestock and family weighed on them.ย They considered fighting the industry, but chose to leave. Fred Lyssy will now be managing a farm in Virginia.ย ย 

Fred and Amberย Lyssy with their childrenย at theย Grassland Oasis, now closed. ยฉ2014 Julie Dermansky for Oceans 8ย Films

Grassland Oasis

Grassfedย livestock at theย Grassland Oasis in June, now closed. ยฉ2014 Julie Dermansky for Oceans 8ย Films

Just how long will the boom last and what will be left in its wake?ย ย 

Fitzsimons questions the size of the supply of oil after he noticed pumpjacks being utilized in a shorter period of time after a frack job was completedย thanย before.

โ€œThis is a sign the newer wells might not be as productive as the earlier wells,โ€ he says. Pumpjacks are used to help keep the oil flowingย after a frack job, when the flow slowsย down.ย 

His observations match a prediction made by J. David Hughes, a geoscientist with Post Carbon Instituteย in his 2012 report for the institute. He wrote that the fracking industry would create a ย โ€œdrilling treadmill.โ€ Operators will need to drill more wells to keep productionย levels at the status quo because the ย โ€œsweet spotsโ€ were drilled first, maximizing production, leaving areas with less rich oil and gas bounties to beย found and drilled.ย ย ย 

โ€œDrilling Deeper,โ€ a follow-upย report Hughes coauthored for the Post Carbon Institute this year, predictsย thatย Eagle Ford Shale’sย productionย will peak some time thisย decade and then drop to a fraction of todayโ€™s totals by 2040, far below the U.S. Energy Information Administrationย projections.ย ย 

Fracking in Karnes County

Fracking industry site in Karnes County, the epicenter of the Eagle Ford Shale. ยฉ2014 Julie Dermansky for Oceans 8ย Films

Falling gas prices have threatened to curtail the fracking boom sooner than expected. Operators in the Bakken Shale Region and the Permian Basin areย in the red, according to a Business Insiderย report.

Though Eagle Ford Shale operators are still turning a profit, industry workers in Karnes County areย beginning to worry about their jobs. Buehring’s husband told her that potential layoffs are the conversation of the day at truck-stop cafes where he and otherย locals congregate with industryย workers.ย 

Even if the boom comes to an end earlier than predicted, Fitzsimons worries the water will run out before the party isย over.

โ€œThe regulatory agenciesย have not kept up with technology. They need to revamp what they are doing,โ€ Fitzsimons says. โ€œWe have 1930 rules regulating 21st century oilย fields.โ€

โ€œIn Texas the oil and gas industry is king,โ€ Ramirez says, but he is not one to walkย away from what he sees as a righteous fight. As the boom continues, he thinks the tide will turn as more people experience healthย problemsย associated with theย cumulative effects of breathing toxic emissions produced by the fracking industry.ย Although he, like Fitzsimons,ย hopes industry will correct its ways andย operateย more responsibly, he isn’t holding his breath while he battlesย on.

Julie-Dermansky-022
Julie Dermansky is a multimedia reporter and artist based in New Orleans. She is an affiliate scholar at Rutgers Universityโ€™s Center for the Study of Genocide and Human Rights. Visit her website at www.jsdart.com.

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