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Posts Tagged ‘Susquehanna County’

Federal judge denies Cabot Oil and Gas Corp. to dismiss a case brought by Dimock Twp. residents

Pennsylvania Gas Drilling Injury LawyersA federal judge has denied a motion by Cabot Oil and Gas Corporation to dismiss a case brought by Dimock Township residents two years ago. The residents claim their water, health, and property was damaged by the Pennsylvania natural gas driller. Cabot motioned to have a federal judge throw out the case brought by over 60 residents of the Susquehanna County township. The gas company has argued that the families failed to establish a legal basis for the law suit against them.

Last month, the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection said Cabot could stop delivery of clean water by November 30. This was outlined in a December 2010 settlement between the DEP and Cabot.

The settlement also required that:

  • Cabot offer to install methane-removal systems
  • Fund escrow accounts with twice the tax-assessed value of each of the 19 affected Susquehanna County homes.

However, this settlement did not require the company to restore the water to its pre-drilling quality. Now Dimock Township residents are making last-minute push to prolong the water deliveries from Cabot. In a recent petition for an injunction, the families state the department’s settlement terms ignored state law, which requires drillers to permanently restore or replace water supplies contaminated by their operations. Cabot is denying contamination was caused by their drilling activities. Their argument is that the appeal came too late from the Dimock residents. Cabot is also claiming their well water is safe to drink and even if it were not, the Dimock residents could get their own fresh water delivered “at modest cost” or collect it from a local well in Montrose.

Filed almost two years ago in November of 2009, the Susquehanna County residents of Dimock, Pennsylvania claimed Cabot Oil and Gas’s drilling activities introduced methane and other toxins into their properties and drinking water, causing illness, property damage, fear of future sickness and emotional distress. Pennsylvania courts have not directly addressed whether gas drilling is an “abnormally dangerous” activity that fits the strict liability standard.

Gushers highlight potential of Pa. gas field

Gushers highlight gas potential of Pa.’s Marcellus Shale; drillers boost production estimates

 

Michael Rubinkam, Associated Press, On Sunday June 26, 2011, 8:15 pm EDT

ALLENTOWN, Pa. (AP) — Two unexpected gushers in northeastern Pennsylvania are helping to illustrate the enormous potential of the Marcellus Shale natural gas field.

Each of the Cabot Oil & Gas Corp. wells in Susquehanna County is capable of producing 30 million cubic feet per day — believed to be a record for the Marcellus and enough gas to supply nearly 1,000 homes for a year. The landowners attached to the wells, who leased the well access, numbering fewer than 25, are splitting hundreds of thousands of dollars in monthly royalties.

“There was definitely excitement among the team that planned out these wells and executed their completion,” said Cabot spokesman George Stark.

Drilling companies knew the Marcellus held a lot of gas. They just had to figure out a way to get it out, and they say they’re getting better at it all the time.

The result is that the Marcellus, a rock formation beneath Pennsylvania, New York, West Virginia and Ohio, has turned out to be an even more prolific source of gas than anyone anticipated. Energy firms are boosting their production targets, not only because new wells are coming on line but also because they’re managing to coax more gas from each well.

Operators say they have a greater understanding of the complicated geology of the Marcellus, allowing them to land their drill bits in the sweet spot of the formation. They’re drilling horizontally at greater distances, giving them access to more of the gas locked within the rock. And they’re tweaking how they break apart the shale.

“It’s like batting practice,” said Matt Pitzarella, spokesman for Range Resources Corp. “The more you swing the bat, the better you get.”

Fort Worth, Texas-based Range has boosted its estimate of the amount of natural gas it will ultimately be able to harvest from its Marcellus Shale wells, telling investors this month that it plans to triple production to 600 million cubic feet per day by the end of 2012.

Another major player, Chesapeake Energy Corp., has likewise reported a dramatic increase in expected well production. Early on, the Oklahoma City-based driller predicted that each well would yield 3.5 billion cubic feet of gas over its life span. That amount has since doubled, to more than 7 billion cubic feet, and continues to go up.

“Growing confidence in reserve quality is a major reason why many of the largest, most-successful, domestic and international energy companies are heavily investing in the Marcellus and other American shale plays,” said Jeff Fisher, Chesapeake’s senior vice president of production.

Indeed, major oil companies like Chevron Corp., Exxon Mobil Corp. and Royal Dutch Shell PLC have placed multibillion-dollar bets on the Marcellus, a 400-million-year-old rock formation that geologists say holds the nation’s largest reservoir of natural gas and perhaps the second-largest in the world.

To unlock the shale’s riches, drillers combine horizontal drilling with hydraulic fracturing, a technique known as fracking that pumps millions of gallons of water, along with sand and chemicals, into the well to creature fissures in the rock and allow natural gas to flow up. Fracking has raised environmental concerns, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is studying its impact on groundwater. The industry insists the process is environmentally safe.

The technology has unleashed a drilling frenzy in Pennsylvania — where more than 3,300 Marcellus wells have been sunk the past few years — and accounts for a twelvefold increase in U.S. shale gas production since 2000. Gas harvested from the Marcellus and other shale fields around the country — including the Barnett Shale in Texas and the Haynesville Shale in Louisiana — now represents a quarter of total U.S. natural gas production.

The new Cabot wells help illustrate why boosters believe the gas field could help steer U.S. energy policy for decades to come. They were also a nice bit of good news for Cabot, the Houston-based driller that endured two years of bad publicity after state regulators accused it of polluting water supplies in Dimock Township, Susquehanna County.

The wells — also located in Dimock — are “producing like gushers,” exulted Stark, the Cabot spokesman, helping to push the company’s daily production above 400 million cubic feet per day.

Like other drillers, Cabot has steadily increased the horizontal length of its wells, from an average of 2,100 feet in 2008 to 3,600 feet last year. It has seen a corresponding increase in capacity.

Capacity, though, does not always translate to production.

Cabot’s wells, and Marcellus wells in general, are not running at full tilt, mainly because the infrastructure required to take the gas from wellhead to market is not yet fully in place. An oversupply of natural gas and the availability of crews to fracture the wells are other limiting factors.

“We certainly have had to manage our pace of drilling with the installation of pipeline infrastructure and demand in the market,” Chesapeake’s Fisher said in a statement. “While some delays in production startups are common in the early phase of these large-scale plays, the industry is working hard to build the infrastructure that will enable Marcellus reserves to get to market for decades to come.”

The Marcellus isn’t the only shale formation in Pennsylvania that energy companies have their eye on. Drillers are just beginning to explore the gas-bearing Utica and Upper Devonian formations. The Utica is deeper that the Marcellus, and the Upper Devonian is shallower.

“It’s triple the resource potential under the same plot of land,” said Kevin Cabla, an energy analyst at Raymond James & Associates.

 

Posted at: Yahoo.com

 

 

DLP Retained in Susquehanna County Accident

DLP was recently retained by a clint working in the natural gas drilling industry who was involved in a serious automobile accident in Susquehanna County.  DLP is currently investigating the matter on behalf of its new client.  The twelve lawyers at DLP handle serious truck accident and automobile accident cases throughout Nortest  and Central Pennsylvania.

Shale work not risk to air quality, says study

MATT HUGHES [email protected]

 

The state Department of Environmental Protection on Monday released the results of a study into Marcellus Shale natural gas operations and their effect on air quality.

The survey, based on data collected near Marcellus Shale natural gas operations in Susquehanna and Sullivan counties over four weeks, detected the main constituents of natural gas, including methane, ethane, propane and butane, as well as low levels of associated compounds such as carbon monoxide and odorants, but not in concentrations significant enough to present a health risk.

“This short-term study of the air emissions at surveyed sites shows no emission levels that would constitute a concern to the health of residents living near these operations,” DEP Director of the Bureau of Air Quality Joyce Epps said. “This study provides us with good information as part of our ongoing effort to gauge the impact these operations have on our air quality, public health and the environment.”

DEP said it did not intend the study to be comprehensive or to address the cumulative impact of the substances it tracked.

The air monitoring surveys near natural gas operations in Susquehanna County were conducted at a completed and operating gas well in Dimock Township; two compressor stations near Springville and at a well site being hydraulically fractured near Lawton.

The agency collected background samples at Sones Pond in the Loyalsock State Forest in Sullivan County.

DEP also conducted similar air-monitoring studies near Marcellus gas facilities in north-central and southwestern Pennsylvania. The results of results are currently being evaluated. Results from a study in southwestern Pennsylvania were announced in November 2010.

The full report is available on DEP’s website, http://www.depweb.state.pa.us.

 

Copyright: Times Leader

 

Victim Blames Facility Owner for Assault

The Scranton Times – 02/28/2006
BY: JAMES HAGGERTY STAFF WRITER

The owner of a Wyoming County assisted-living facility did not alert her staff that a resident who sexually assaulted an 86-year-old Alzheimer’s patient four years ago was a convicted sexual offender, the victim’s attorney said during a federal negligence trial Monday.

The victim, now 90, is seeking more than $75,000 from Country Living Personal Care Home, Nicholson, and its owner, Shirley D. Sheridan,? of Montrose, resulting from the sexual assault on Feb. 27, 2002. It is the Times-Tribune’s policy not to name sexual-assault victims.

The woman was a resident of the home when she was sexually assaulted in her room by Daniel Statham, then 31 and a resident of Country Living, her complaint states.

Mr. Statham, who is mentally handicapped, was a convicted sexually violent predator who should not have been living at the home because of the danger he posed to others, the victim’s attorney, Sean McDonough, told U.S. Magistrate Judge Thomas Blewitt at the non jury trial.

The victim, now of Millington, Tenn., and her son, also of Millington, allege the facility and Mrs. Sheridan disregarded her safety and rights, which resulted in the assault. Mrs. Sheridan has stated she did not know Mr. Statham was a convicted sex offender and “Megan’s Law” violator.

Mr. Statham was convicted in 1995 in Wayne County Court of aggravated indecent assault involving a 14-year-old girl and was sentenced to six years in state prison, court records show. After his release in 2001, he was charged in Northumberland County for failing to register as a sexual predator under the state’s “Megan’s Law.” He was placed on supervised probation by a county judge and ordered to live in a halfway house in Scranton and get counseling.

Mr. Statham was to be put on a bus to Scranton. Somehow, Northumberland County sheriffs deputies took him to the Omni Health Personal Care Home in Montrose, Susquehanna County, also owned by Mrs. Sheridan.

Court papers indicate Lackawanna County officials were unable to find a place for Mr. Statham to reside, and he was moved to Country Living on Oct. 26, 2001.

Mrs. Sheridan knew Mr. Statham was a convicted sexual offender, Mr. McDonough charged, but did not notify the staff of the home. “She exposed (the victim) to a terrible risk,” he said.
Attorney Eugene Hickey, who represents Country Living and Mrs. Sheridan, denied the home was at fault. Mrs. Sheridan did not know the man’s criminal history or that he was a threat, he said, or she never would have admitted him to the home.

“This isn’t a case of reckless indifference,” Mr. Hickey said. He said Mr. Statham was “dumped” on the home.

State police arrested Mr. Statham on April 8, 2002. He pleaded guilty Feb. 12, 2003, to aggravated indecent assault and was sentenced to five to 10 years in a state prison.

Contact the writer: [email protected]
©The Times-Tribune 2008
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