Hubbard ODNR reps back in Valley
Wednesday, December 14, 2011 at 5:10PM
No Frack Ohio in Citizen Activists, Ohio

By Robert Guttersohn

rguttersohn@vindy.com

Hubbard

Less than a month after Ohio Department of Natural Resources representatives took the three-hour drive from Columbus to Coitsville, they were back in the Mahoning Valley on Tuesday.

This time they appeared in front of Hubbard Townhip trustees and approximately 50 township residents who had questions of ODNR regarding a proposed injection well slated to be constructed on Hubbard Masury Road near Interstate 80.

Injection wells, which often are drilled as deep as 9,000 feet below the ground, accept brine water from well drilling, including fracking, a process in which water, chemicals and sand are blasted into rocks thousands of feet below the ground to unlock oil and natural gas.

The proposed site for the injection well is along the Little Yankee Run Creek, which eventually empties into the Shenango River.

Several communities in western Pennsylvania rely on the river for drinking water.

D&L Energy would drill the well, the same company that has done so in Coitsville. And like the ODNR meeting in Coitsville, a D&L Energy representative was not present to answer some questions specific to the Hubbard site.

The theme of Tuesday’s meeting was, “Is this the right site?”

“We have no say-so in the site they choose,” said ODNR geologist Tom Tomastik.

The site would consist of 20 holding tanks and a dyke that would be large enough to hold back 100 percent of the brine water from flowing into the creek if all tanks began to leak.

He said D&L Energy would drill 9,100 feet into the earth and inject brine water through pores in the rock formation. Tomastik said they will not know how many gallons the rock formation can take a day until the well is drilled and tested.

Residents also were concerned about the possible link between the wells and the recent uptick in earthquakes. The earthquakes’ epicenter has been in proximity to Youngstown’s D&L Energy well on the city’s West Side.

Article originally appeared on No Frack Ohio (http://www.nofrackohio.com/).
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