More sinkhole methane safety precautions ordered
Credits: Facebook
In another attempt to protect security human rights of Assumption Parish people in the vicinity of the Louisiana state emergency sinkhole disaster, Louisiana state officials on Monday issued more orders to Texas Brine Co. LLC to minimize risks of potential exposure to natural gas under the Bayou Corne community where the large sinkhole has reached the size of seven football fields.“The steps outlined in this directive will give us an added layer of protection in ensuring public safety and move the response effort closer to bringing the lives of the residents of the Bayou Corne area back to normal,” Department of Natural Resources (DNR) Conservation Commissioner James Welsh said in a news release about the unprecedented sinkhole disaster event.The community, increasingly plagued with methane gas leaks and earthquakes, has been under a mandatory evacuation order for over 100 days. Louisiana is under a declared state of emergency due to the Bayou Corne sinkhole disaster.Last week, sinkhole methane pressure was found just below surface, closer to residents.Also last week, a new published report showed the drilling wells can cause earthquakes, human-made quakes, and the strongest of such quakes are associated with deep-injection wastewater disposal wells.
La. sinkhole methane explosion possible says sheriff, refuting naysayers
The Assumption Parish sheriff stated that methane ignition and explosion are possible in the Bayou Corne sinkhole area, refuting naysayers about such an explosion and spotlighting grave human rights issues related to the "history-making event" and "environmental nightmare,’ according to aKLFY Channel 10 three-part special televised report aired Friday.The possibility exists that Louisiana's sinkhole-related methane, percolating in over a dozen sites near and miles away from the sinkhole area, could ignite and cause an explosion, according to Assumption Parish Sherriff Michael J. Waguespack, interviewed about the unprecedented Bayou Corne event unfolding in South Louisiana's swampland.Waguespack, lover of south Louisiana people and culture, made the statement toKLFY reporter Chuck Huebner about the massive amount of methane known to be trapped below the Assumption Parish sinkhole area surface, continually leaking and bubbling to the surface.“If it finds a source, an oil well, a water well, it will basically come to the surface. If that’s inside of a shed, or something off the ground and it’s captured, it’s an ignition source," stated Waguespack."Then 'Boom,' and you have an explosion,” he said.Numerous comments about the impossibility of methane igniting have been posted on Deborah Dupré's Examiner.com article pages about the Bayou Corne sinkhole disaster.This week, methane in tap water of a Napoleonville man's home was reportedly bubbling and flammable but claimed to be unrelated to methane leaks in the expanding sinkhole area of Napoleonville Salt Dome and not unusual in Louisiana, according to the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality on Wednesday.In early October, the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals (DHH) advised the Assumption Parish President that the Bayou Corne sinkhole area had high levels ofmethane in nearby water wells, posing risks to health, fire and explosion and that residents need to heed the mandatory evacuation order.Locals were not publicly advised about that DHH notice. Only about 150 of the 350 residents under mandatory evacuation have heeded the order, some saying they will be notified in time to leave if the situation is really life-threatening.
Sinkhole area flammable methane tap water unrelated to disaster says DEQ
Methane in tap water that is bubbling and flammable in the home of a Napoleonville man is unrelated to methane leaks in the expanding sinkhole area of Napoleonville Salt Dome and not unusual in Louisiana, said Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality on Wednesday."If I can light the water in my faucet, something is wrong," said Napoleonville resident Ronald Pate, who has lived there sixteen years.Napoleonville is approximately five miles from the Bayou Corne sinkhole disaster area that is over the collapsing 1-mile by 3-mile Napoleonville Salt Dome plaguing nearby waterways with methane and earthquakes.Last week, an outer edge of the dome collapsed, not long after earthquakes jolted locals. The outer edge is now “gone,” according to officials. Six days after more hard jolts from earthquakes last week, the sinkhole grew again, now reaching the size of six football fields.Louisiana Sinkhole Costs DNR $2M So Far
By MELINDA DESLATTE | November 1, 2012A massive sinkhole that has swallowed more than 5 acres of land in Assumption Parish and contaminated an aquifer has cost the Louisiana Department of Natural Resources more than $2 million for response efforts.And there’s no estimate of when the emergency response needs will end.A department spokesman said the state will seek reimbursement for the spending from Texas Brine Co. LLC, which it blames for causing the sinkhole. But there are no assurances the company will cover the costs.“Texas Brine has received no accounting of those costs, but when we do, we will address that issue in an appropriate manner,” Sonny Cranch, a company spokesman, said Monday.
photo credit: Assumption Parish Police JuryIn August, the sinkhole opened up near a community along Bayou Corne, a sparsely populated area of swampland about 40 miles south of Baton Rouge. Residents in the area had reported strange bubbling in their waterways and tremors before the sinkhole emerged. Officials issued a voluntary evacuation order to about 350 people living in the area that remains in effect.State officials have been testing, monitoring and trying to determine what caused the sinkhole and what threat it poses since August. Patrick Courreges, a spokesman for the Department of Natural Resources, released data showing the agency’s costs have reached about $2.2 million so far.“DNR is using money from its own response budget to ensure swift action to protect the community; however, we will seek reimbursement from the responsible party and will hold Texas Brine accountable for all costs associated with the problems caused by its failed cavern,” Courreges said in an email.Much of the department’s spending on the sinkhole, about $1.6 million, has been paid to Baton Rouge-based Shaw Environmental and Infrastructure Inc., for area testing and for overseeing drilling operations to remove gas from the aquifer.The Shaw contract, which Gov. Bobby Jindal’s administration handled through an emergency procurement process and not through a regular competitive bid structure, started at less than $50,000 in September but has been amended twice and could grow even larger.Courreges said the natural resources department doesn’t have a timeline for declaring the sinkhole stable or an estimate for what its final response costs might be.“Those are not yet possible to estimate, because the fact gathering on the extent of the natural gas in the aquifer and the mechanics of the zone of collapse underground is still ongoing,” he said.The state says data shows the sinkhole is linked to the collapse of a side wall of an underground salt cavern that Houston-based Texas Brine operated. The company extracted brine and piped it to nearby petrochemical facilities.The company has acknowledged a relationship between the sinkhole, the breached cavern and gas and oil found in both. But the company has suggested geologic tremors in the area may have caused the cavern breach.read more at http://www.claimsjournal.com/news/southcentral/2012/11/01/216569.htm
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UPDATE: 10-20-2012
Louisiana Sinkhole Update 17 Oct 2012
OCTOBER 17, 2012 BY LEAVE A COMMENTWeekend News
•October 20, 2012 • Leave a CommentSat. & Sun. at the sinkhole
No Louisiana sinkhole solution
Emergency leaders in Assumption Parish said they saw improvements at the Bayou Corne sinkhole site Friday afternoon in terms of crude-soaked vegetation, but admit there is still no solution or cause of the disaster. . . .http://www.examiner.com/article/no-louisiana-sinkhole-solutionWAFB - Business sinking in Bayou Corne < has VIDEO — Remarkable B.S. effort (!!)We are sequestering the Minden explosion news onto their own pages …. BUT …. there’s new film of clean up efforts and it’s added to out post “Sinkhole Expands – Idahopicker Video + PHOTOS”. AND we added to the Oddities at Minden page this video that has space weapon theory about the explosion that also looks plausible.MORE here later . . . .Posted in Louisiana, oil & gas industry
Tags: Assumption Parish, Bayou Corne, Bayou Corne sinkhole, GREASY MIKE, ISS Minden, louisiana sinkhole,rods from god minden, salt cavern, sinkhole Bayou Corne, sinkhole expands
Citizen Ideas as to What is Happening
•October 20, 2012 • 2 CommentsWe’ll post HERE what ordinary people think about astonishing developments with the sinkhole and these sci-fi meteors this this week!
BEST:LINK – http://youtu.be/HzhRC3tAfVk
LINK – http://youtu.be/lwtOvTmV4GY
LINK – http://youtu.be/eYFatYbkcx4More later . . . .Posted in Louisiana, oddity, oil & gas industry, science, unverified
Tags: Assumption Parish, Bayou Corne sinkhole, louisiana sinkhole, Louisiana SINKHOLE METHANE, MISSION ASSUMPTIONIST, PAN CLAM-UP, sinkhole Bayou Corne, SINKHOLE METHANE COVER UP
Some New Things Here
•October 20, 2012 • 6 CommentsOn the SIDEBAR we added a site to the BLOGROLL that shows live Meteor and Meteorite data.Meteorites are the ones that don’t all burn up entering the atmosphere. We added the live RSS feed to it with the others on the sidebar too.With the sinkhole expanding at this alarming rate be aware some others may have news faster than we post it – so check the sidebar for the headlines.Posted in Louisiana
Tags: live meteor news, meteorite news, sinkhole expands Louisiana
Residents Filed Class Action Lawsuit Against Texas Brine
•October 19, 2012 • Leave a CommentAug. 12 news we missed -Louisiana Residents Files Class Action Lawsuit Against Texas Brine
Tags: bayou corne lawsuit Texas Brine, Bayou Corne sinkhole, class action lawsuit against Texas Brine, Lisa LeBlanc Texas Brine, louisiana sinkhole, Louisiana sinkhole radiation, radioactive sinkhole, sinkhole Bayou Corne,sinkhole evacuation, Texas Brine
Not So Crazy – The Minden Explosion / Sinkhole Connection
•October 19, 2012 • 9 CommentsThe Examiner -
La. sinkhole methane caused Minden explosions is possibility physicists say
“Citizens, however, are not buying those explanations. Digging only a little deeper, one sees the connection between north Louisiana’s Monday night explosion area and south Louisiana’s sinkhole area: The areas are joined by that water system of interconnected aquifers.”http://www.examiner.com/article/la-sinkhole-methane-caused-minden-explosions-is-possibility-physicists-sayCommenter, Atossa, called this one early on –Tags: Deborah Dupré, Louisiana sinkhole aquifer Minden, Minden explosion aquifer, Minden explosion sinkhole,sinkhole methane caused Minden
Sinkhole Expands – Idahopicker Video + PHOTOS . . . UPDATED
•October 19, 2012 • Leave a CommentLINK – http://youtu.be/nGJ5aF9lu2Y
ENE-News has PHOTOS
- Signs of disintegration seen in new areas far outside giant sinkhole’s official border
- Latest flyover footage shows giant Louisiana sinkhole taking new shape
Incredibly, Texas Brine doesn’t notice giant increase of slough in!
MORE WILL GO HERE . . .Like THIS:LINK - http://youtu.be/B7y6EnKs1EMshortlink to this page - http://wp.me/p2GNDM-zTPosted in Louisiana, oil & gas industry
Tags: Bayou Corne, Bayou Corne sinkhole, idahopicker, louisiana sinkhole, sink hole, SINK HOLE 1/3 BIGGER,sinkhole, sinkhole Bayou Corne, sinkhole expands, sinkhole flyover
New Fly Over Videos
•October 19, 2012 • Leave a CommentFrom Assumption Parish – all very short -
- http://youtu.be/i7DTEcGz9xI
- http://youtu.be/MuxjSNq3MZI
- http://youtu.be/pbGWOSqNLtE
- http://youtu.be/l7h27yppTL0
The Parish’s YouTube channel is on the sidebar →
Posted in Louisiana, oil & gas industry
Tags: Assumption Parish, Bayou Corne fly over videos, Bayou Corne sinkhole, louisiana sinkhole, sinkhole Bayou Corne, sinkhole fly over videos
How Officials in Kansas Located Trouble Pocket of Natural Gas in 2001
•October 19, 2012 • Leave a CommentInteresting story from this website comment -Here’s how the Kansas State Geological Survey found the gas pockets in Hutchinson, Kansas in 2001:
Hutchinson, Kansas: A Geologic Detective Story
by M. Lee AllisonEveryone in downtown Hutchinson, a city of 40,000 in central Kansas, heard or felt the natural gas explosion Wednesday morning, Jan. 17.City Manager Joe Palacioz was meeting with his department heads at City Hall, four blocks away, when they heard the blast and felt the shock wave shake the building. The fire and police chiefs rushed towards the sound of the explosion. Palacioz headed to the city’s emergency operations center and would stay there for many days as the crisis unfolded.
This sudden release of natural gas burst from the ground under Woody’s Appliance store and the adjacent Décor Shop, blowing out windows in nearby buildings. Customers and workers staggered out into the street from both stores, remarkably only shaken and dazed. Within minutes, the two businesses were ablaze.. . . Eight miles northwest of Hutchinson on Wednesday morning, technicians at the Yaggy underground natural gas storage field saw a dramatic drop in pressure in one underground, manmade salt cavern or “jug” that they had been filling with natural gas.Posted in Louisiana, oil & gas industry, old story, science
Tags: Hutchinson, Hutchinson Kansas gas, Kansas A Geologic Detective Story, Kansas salt cavern, locate natural gas pocket, M. Lee Allison, manmade salt cavern, salt cavern
Sinkhole Thread on Hunting Website Yields Nuggets
•October 19, 2012 • Leave a CommentWow!Also on the Louisiana Sportsman website comments is this:“Crosstex Energy to Move Huge Volume of Butane to Another Dome” by Cajun-Pete“. . . I think it is in the right direction to avert a potentially EXTREMELY serious situation should the sink hole continue to grow, possibly threatening the integrity of this HUGE butane storage dome. What I have feared the most from this mess is the risk of the sink hole damaging the integrity of the nearby huge butane jug. Should that happen, and butane begin to escape to the surface, it would have the potential for a HUGE CATASTROPHIC EVENT! I have worked in the oil and petrochemical industry for over 32 years before retirement. I’ve seen several vapor cloud explosions during my career. The damage such an explosion could create is HUGE. With the volume of butane in this jug, should it begin leaking, it could potentially create a vapor cloud explosion that could affect communities for many, many miles away, and burn uncontrolled for weeks to months before emptying the jug should Crosstex not be able to somehow transfer it elsewhere.”http://www.louisianasportsman.com/lpca/index.php?section=reports&event=view&action=full_report&id=161572#.UIGHh4bO80wPosted in Louisiana, oil & gas industry
Tags: Bayou Corne sinkhole, butane bayou corne, butane sinkhole, Crosstex Energy, Louisiana HUGE CATASTROPHIC EVENT, louisiana sinkhole, sinkhole Bayou Corne, sinkhole explosion danger, vapor cloud explosion
Sinkhole is Also Near Huge Chevron Salt Dome with MILLIONS of Gallons of Natural Gas
•October 19, 2012 • Leave a CommentComment on a hunting website: “Bayou Corne Sinkhole from a ‘Native’ who Grew Up There”
(the sinkhole is) “only 630 yards away from Chevron’s HUGE salt dome in which they store several million gallons of natural gas.
http://www.louisianasportsman.com/lpca/index.php?section=reports&event=view&action=full_report&id=161572#.UIGHh4bO80wPosted in Louisiana, oil & gas industryTags: Assumption Parish, Bayou Corne, Bayou Corne sinkhole, chevron salt dome, louisiana sinkhole, natural gas bayou corne, salt cavern, sink hole, sinkhole, sinkhole Bayou Corne
9:00 a.m. Update
•October 19, 2012 • Leave a CommentThursday News
•October 18, 2012 • Leave a CommentThe Examiner – Bubbling bayous smell of oil mafia
LINK – http://youtu.be/6Yo3pyshTVcAssumption Parish – NEXT MEETING TUES. Oct. 23 - (with no time allotted for questions no doubt!)- The resident briefing will be held on Tuesday, October 23, 2012, at 6:00 p.m. at the St. Joseph the Worker Catholic Church Hall in Pierre Part. The time was inadvertently left out on yesterday’s post.http://assumptionla.wordpress.com/2012/10/18/845-a-m-update-2/
ATTENDING? Please Stream it live! (HOW TO)
MORE LATER . . .(see sidebar for anything on NW Louisiana fireball)Sorry All! Thought meeting was tonight (earlier version) . . .Posted in Louisiana, oil & gas industry, P.R.Tags: Assumption Parish, Bayou Corne sinkhole, louisiana sinkhole, sink hole, sinkhole, sinkhole Bayou Corne
Summary of Sinkhole News Blackout
•October 18, 2012 • Leave a CommentLINK – http://youtu.be/SFFC1hdr9bYSee Also - Press Abandons Bayou CorneRELATED - From The Examiner – Bubbling bayous smell of oil mafia“On Oct. 10, this author highlighted some public dismay over lack of national news reports on Bayou Corne’s sinkhole disaster, causing the state’s emergency and mandatory evacuation declarations. Some readers’ statements referring to this media near-blackout . . . “Posted in Louisiana, U.S., oil & gas industry
Tags: louisiana sinkhole, sinkhole Bayou Corne, Lake Peigneur salt dome, Lake Peigneur bubbling, sinkhole Media Blackout, Media Blackout bayou corne, news stays away from sinkhole, news blackout sinkhole
Texas Brine Finally Removing Oil from Cavern
•October 18, 2012 • Leave a CommentThe Advocate – Oil in cavern and sinkhole being moved[snip] . . . Scientists think the cavern’s side wall was too close to the edge of the dome and a “side breach” happened on the lower part of the wall, according to Welsh’s order. This “side breach” allowed an estimated 3.3 million cubic yards of material into the cavern, as well as crude oil and gas from natural underground formations next to the dome, the order says.Courreges said the movement of this material into the cavern released pressure from the tightly compacted underground formations outside the dome, allowing earth to shift and causing the sinkhole.Oil and gas from those formations also were able to rise to the surface. In addition to crude on the sinkhole’s surface, gas has been found in an underground aquifer in the area and in area waterways.It is not clear is whether any more oil and gas from the formations outside the dome might continue to enter the cavern once the crude oil is removed by Texas Brine.Texas Brine’s update about it < news flash! No sinkhole expansion! – they CLAIM (!!!)So when they finish … that should stop all this crude from entering the bayou… proving there’sNO CONNECTION to the BP oil spill! Let’s watch!Posted in Louisiana, oil & gas industry
Tags: Assumption Parish, Bayou Corne observation well, Bayou Corne sinkhole, BP oil spill Louisiana, louisiana sinkhole, oil removal cavern, salt cavern, sink hole, sinkhole, sinkhole Bayou Corne, Texas Brine, texas brine oil removal
INDEX of NW Louisiana Explosion, Fireball Stories
•October 18, 2012 • 2 CommentsThe original report with many updates:
Northwest Louisiana Reporting Loud Boom, Shaking . . . Updated
That Loud Boom in NW Louisiana – an Overhead Airburst??The Nuke Waste That’s Stored in the Salt Dome Where the Fireball, Booming Happened3 Video Reports About the Blast in NW Louisiana – Train Also Blew UpNW Louisiana Explosions – Oddities < includes related events outside LouisianaADDITIONAL:
- Idahopicker’s YouTube Channel
- Photo, video of Shanksville from Killtown
- Unusual Crater at Shanksville
Tags: Boom NW Louisiana, camp minden explosion, explosion louisiana, fireball Louisiana, Loud Boom in NW Louisiana, meteor Minden Louisiana, meteor NW Louisiana, north west louisiana, nw louisiana, Shanksville
NW Louisiana Explosions – Oddities
•October 18, 2012 • Leave a CommentStrange News & Opinion About the Oct. 15 Event in Minden, Louisiana
PLUS FOREIGN REPORTS
Sott.net – Meteorite Impacts Earth in Minden, Louisiana – Media and Government Cover It Up
COMPARE - The ‘BUNKER’ in Minden crater (from Idahopicker) to Shanksville, Flight 93 crater(from Killtown)Also - Unusual Crater at ShanksvilleALABAMA MUNITIONS ACCIDENT at the same time.
.LINK – http://youtu.be/SpmyfZptVoY
LINK – http://youtu.be/kcfKP4_N-G0
LINK – http://youtu.be/nj424JKNQDQ
Camp Minden Hit by a Cruise Missile!
LINK – http://youtu.be/vDZwDFDoyz0
devon england has huge booms!
Meteor’s sonic boom shakes Devon, police inundated with calls
Police in Devon were inundated with calls after a loud bang shook the earth and left people frightened just after 4pm on Thursday.Police say they initially thought there had been a mini-earthquake, but calls to the British Geological Survey proved that wasn’t the case.
The BGS suggested it was more likely to have been the sonic boom caused by a meteor passing through the earth’s atmosphere.
A police spokesman said: “We received a number of calls just after 4pm on Thursday from people reporting a loud bang and shaking.
“There were reports of crockery shaking and similar disturbance.
“According to the BGS it is likely to have been caused by a meteor sonic boom.”
According to the BBC, doors were blown open at a police station in South Devon. . . .http://www.thisisplymouth.co.uk/Meteor-s-sonic-boom-shakes-Devon-police-inundated/story-17123792-detail/story.html
BBC – People across Devon and Cornwall have inundated police with calls saying they had experienced an earth tremor.
Thanks to comment by Atossa for Devon tip!Rhode Island: Sonic boom may have been military drill
LINK – http://youtu.be/I98ftQxOuRE
LINK – http://youtu.be/b00ZhD5CwOA.Idahopicker’s YouTube Channel < also on the sidebarOn space weapons and the NRO etc. - Glimpses of America’s Man-Made Disasters
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
We don’t know what to call this event and in ‘tags’ we use NW Louisiana as a common name. This page will carry all the strange speculation on the event. The original news post of Oct. 16 will get added on to with the regular news. And we’ll make an index page for easier navigation to be on the sidebar. This blog is about the Bayou Corne sinkhole … not about every happening in Louisiana. BUT . . . this strange event may later tie into the sinkhole so we’re following it.shortlink to this page - http://wp.me/p2GNDM-xUPosted in Alabama, Louisiana, oddity, Tex, unverifiedTags: loud boom Louisiana, louisiana fireball, meteor Louisiana, meteor Minden NW Louisiana, minden explosion,Minden louisiana, minden louisiana cruise missle, north west louisiana, nw louisiana, Strange News Menden,Strange News nw louisiana
3 Video Reports About the Blast in NW Louisiana – Train Also Blew Up
•October 17, 2012 • 20 CommentsIdahopicker has 3 videos up with more on the explosion(s) in NW Louisiana.
LINK – http://youtu.be/FvEG6haqcvg
LINK – http://youtu.be/5Lk996qh2_o
LINK – http://youtu.be/GHSXvI1Mxi0KSLA News video of the crater is more clear.The third video that shows the wrecked train looks awfully familiar!
A lot more on our earlier post - Northwest Louisiana Reporting Loud Boom, Shaking
Posted in Louisiana, oddity, TexTags: bright flash louisiana, bunker louisiana, explosions NW Louisiana, idahopicker, loud boom Louisiana,northwest louisiana, nw louisiana
Wed. Sinkhole News
•October 17, 2012 • Leave a CommentBayou Corne area news today will go here – since there’s a lot from NW Louisiana that has its own posts.(Note: ROV = underwater robot)ROV now in vicinity of BP’s oil sheen — Concern seabed in Gulf fractured, causing new leaks
LINK – http://wp.me/p2GNDM-wWROV VIDEO – 1 month ago (we want to see it LIVE … trying to find out how …)Texas Brine sticks to its guns - says NO expansion at sinkhole (when photos clearly show it)!Louisiana ranked 2nd WORST stateMORE here later . . and check our COMMENTS. Many readers sending great info today!
MORE NEWS:
Tags: Assumption Parish, bayou corne elevation change, Bayou Corne sinkhole, bayou corne sinking, gulf of mexico fissure, gulf of mexico fracture, gulf seafloor cracked, louisiana sinkhole, Louisiana sinkhole sinking, sink hole, sinkhole, sinkhole Bayou Corne, sinkhole expands
The Nuke Waste That’s Stored in the Salt Dome Where the Fireball, Booming Happened
•October 17, 2012 • 8 CommentsNORTHWEST LOUISIANA: Vacherie Dome near Minden, Louisiana.
12 MANAGEMENT OF RADIOACTIVE AND NON-RADIOACTIVE WASTES FROM NUCLEAR FACILITIES; 11 NUCLEAR FUEL CYCLE AND FUEL MATERIALS; DECOMMISSIONING; ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS; HIGH-LEVEL RADIOACTIVE WASTES; UNDERGROUND DISPOSAL; RADIOACTIVE WASTE FACILITIES; CONSTRUCTION; COMPLIANCE; COST ESTIMATION; LOUISIANA; OPERATION; RADIOACTIVE WASTE MANAGEMENT; REGULATIONS; SALT DEPOSITS; SITE CHARACTERIZATION; SPENT FUELS; ENERGY SOURCES; FEDERAL REGION VI; FUELS; GEOLOGIC DEPOSITS; MANAGEMENT; MATERIALS; NORTH AMERICA; NUCLEAR FACILITIES; NUCLEAR FUELS; RADIOACTIVE MATERIALS; RADIOACTIVE WASTES; REACTOR MATERIALS; USA; WASTE DISPOSAL; WASTE MANAGEMENT; WASTESSOURCE: http://lasinkhole.wordpress.com/END UPDATE----------------------------------------------------------------------------
update 8-24-2012
Crosstex plans to transfer butane
BY DAVID J. MITCHELLRiver Parishes bureauAugust 21, 2012
BAYOU CORNE — Crosstex Energy LP of Dallas plans to begin on Tuesday shifting liquid butane from one underground storage cavern to another in the Napoleonville Salt Dome, moving the flammable product 1,000 feet farther away from a large sinkhole in northern Assumption Parish, company officials said.
Jill McMillan, Crosstex spokeswoman, said Friday that although the company believes the liquid butane in the cavern has not been affected by the sinkhole and poses no threat to the public, Crosstex is making the shift to the more distant location to address any community concerns.
“In an abundance of caution, we have decided to make some piping changes and move product from the well closest to the slurry to the well farthest from slurry to further alleviate any concerns from public,” McMillan said.
Crosstex has two caverns at its salt dome facility south of La. 70 South between Bayou Corne and Grand Bayou.
The cavern now holding the 940,000 barrels of liquid butane is 1,500 feet from the sinkhole.
The cavern Crosstex plans to move the butane into is 2,500 feet from the sinkhole, McMillan said.
Labeled “Well #1,” that cavern is filled with brine and empty of hydrocarbons, company officials told state regulators.
The cavern has a capacity of 1.7 million barrels and had held propane early this year, according to filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
Authorities quickly imposed an evacuation order covering about 150 residences in the Bayou Corne community.
DNR scientists suspect the Texas Brine cavern may have failed and caused the sinkhole and natural gas releases in the area, sometimes visible as bubbles surfacing in waterways.
The Crosstex and Texas Brine caverns were carved from the Napoleonville Dome, a 1-by-3-mile solid salt deposit steadily used for brine production and the kind of hydrocarbon storage Crosstex employs for its customers.
The large underground salt formation was pushed up vertically from ancient sea beds and, for decades, industry has used the dome for brine production.
The perimeter has also been the focus of intensive oil and gas exploration.
Hollowed from the solid salt formation, caverns left by brine production are often used later for storage of natural gas, butane and other hydrocarbons.
Brine is used for several industrial processes.
The liquid butane has been a source of community concern and focus of some media accounts — which some state regulators say were far overstated — that the sinkhole could damage the cavern or its related infrastructure and result in a large release of butane in gaseous form, possibly leading to a massive explosion.
Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality Secretary Peggy Hatch asked Crosstex last week to provide a more detailed analysis of a possible worst-case scenario involving the cavern.
In an Aug. 15 letter to Hatch, a Crosstex official wrote that the liquid product is more than a half-mile underground and is under downward pressures and gravitational and other forces holding the butane inside the cavern.
Due to these pressures, wrote Sean Atkins, Crosstex vice president of compliance, the liquid butane “will not free-flow upward to the surface without a mechanical means for doing so, such as pumping.”
Atkins added later in the letter to Hatch, “Again, there has never been a catastrophic failure of a salt dome storage cavern resulting in an instantaneous release of butanes at the surface.”
Atkins’ letter says the worst-case scenario would be, in fact, a pipe failure releasing 8,400 gallons of butane that could lead to a level of pressure change, at nearly 1,600 feet, that parish officials have said would break windows.
John Boudreaux, director of the Assumption Parish Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness, said that pressure change could result from an ignition of the butane.
Despite assurances of safety by Crosstex and state regulators, some residents said they want to see the butane removed from the entire area.
Alicia Heilig said in an interview Friday that there are too many unknowns to take risks with the cavern, noting the widely suspected connection between the sinkhole and the Texas Brine cavern remains an unconfirmed theory.
“They don’t know is my point,” said Heilig, 27, who lives just outside the evacuation zone with her two young children.
John Achee Jr., 35, community activist who has become a fixture at the Bayou Corne command post and operates two Facebook pages that have become forums on the sinkhole, said many residents are concerned about the butane cavern’s proximity to the sinkhole and the possibility of a catastrophic explosion.
But he said in an email Saturday that while many may still think the butane should be removed from the area, Crosstex’s plan to move the butane to a cavern farther from the sinkhole will ease some concerns.
“We applaud Crosstex for taking this precautionary action,” Achee wrote.
In a separate development Saturday afternoon, people at the command post could hear the rhythmic hammering of well casing in the distance.
Crews were driving the casing into the ground in preparation for an observational well that DNR has ordered Texas Brine to drill.
DNR wants Texas Brine to use the well to carry out diagnostic testing for a better understanding of the company’s possibly failed salt cavern.
Sonny Cranch, spokesman for Texas Brine, said crews with Riceland Drilling Co. of Lafayette must to drive about 400 feet of metal casing until it halts at the 300-foot-thick caprock overlying the Napoleonville Dome.
read more at: http://theadvocate.com/home/3671799-125/crosstex-plans-to-transfer-butane
| The Louann Salt is more than 200 million years old, and is located at great depths along the Gulf of Mexico's shoreline. In some places, however, this salt has moved due to the enormous pressure being put on it from the rocks above. The map below shows us exactly where the Louann Salt is located below the surface (south of the blue line), and where structures (dark green "blobs" on the map) have been created by its underground movement. |
Posted: 08/22/2012 12:43 pmAfter a sinkhole formed in Assumption Parish early this month, hundreds of neighbors fled, lawsuits were filed and Louisiana Dept. of Natural Resources Secretary Scott Angelle resigned. A hole on the edge of a salt dome near Pierre Part, La. -- about 80 miles northwest of New Orleans -- has grown to 400 feet wide and over 400 feet deep in spots. The salt water or "slurry" within it contains diesel fuel.
Underground salt domes, used to mine brine, salt and sulphur, dot the area. Natural gas pipelines crisscross the region. And because caverns mined for brine are also used to store natural gas, propane and butane, residents are worried about possible fires and explosions. They fear the sinkhole may be radioactive.
A couple of companies and possibly more are involved. A well owned by Texas Brine Co., LLC, located at the sinkhole, began producing brine in the early 1980s, but was plugged and sealed with cement to a depth of 2,500 feet in mid-2011.
Last week, Sonny Cranch, spokesman for Texas Brine, said "the site is not radioactive. That's been confirmed by Louisiana Dept. of Environmental Quality tests and by the state Dept. of Natural Resources. There's no radioactive material there, beyond what might be naturally occurring. For instance, if you live in a brick and concrete house, you'll have some radioactivity."
Attorney Daniel Becnel Jr. in Reserve, who filed a class action suit on behalf of neighbors, said "the reason residents worry about radioactivity is because companies store radioactive material at the bottom of these caverns. All the companies around here inject pollution into deepwater wells, hoping it will never surface. Gas, however, has started bubbling up from this sinkhole."
Last week, Rodney Mallet, spokesman for the Louisiana Dept. of Environmental Quality, said "we began our monitoring on July 13" of this year. "The Dept. of Natural Resources was involved with the bubbling before us," he said. "We tested before the sinkhole formed, and sampled air and bubbles before the slurry hole appeared." DEQ has taken radiation, water and air samples, and has examined nearly a hundred private properties.
Mallett said that DEQ's Mobile Air Monitoring Lab is testing air by the sinkhole, while Texas Brine removes diesel fuel. Texas Brine is ridding the sinkhole's slurry of diesel. "No samples to date have indicated any risks to human health from air pollution and water pollution," Mallett said. "All sampling data is available at DEQ."
Mallett said "rumors of explosions seem to be alarmist and unfounded. However, we have asked Crosstex, which owns the nearest cavern, to provide a risk-management plan and its worst-case scenario. We're operating out of an abundance of caution and making decisions based on sound science."
Within the area, 150 homes and 350 residents are under mandatory evacuation, Sheriff Waguespack said last week. "People are staying with relatives and friends," he said. "They'll remain evacuated for at least another thirty days until the source of the bubbling is determined."
Becnel said "Angelle always supports big business. He was at the DNR when more than 40,000 fish died in the Pearl River a year ago. He was going to let the paper mill polluter in that case off with a sIap on the hand until the media and attorneys made a big stink about it." A discharge from a Temple-Inland plant in Bogalusa, La. caused the August 2011 fishkill.
"Angelle was at the DNR when the sinkhole opened up," Becnel said.
This month, Jindal appointed Angelle to the Louisiana State University Board of Supervisors.
Angelle is also running for a position on the state's Public Service Commission this fall.
But Becnel said "it's hard to believe there was an urgent need to fill that Board of Supervisors vacancy."
On August 9, Louisiana Office of Conservation Commissioner Jim Welsh ordered Texas Brine to drill a relief well to assess the integrity of the cavern. Texas Brine contracted Riceland Drilling of Lafayette to do the job.
Drilling was expected to begin on August 19, Waguespack said last week. "They have to drill down at least 3,000 feet and directly into the cavern to try to find the source of the bubbling," he said.
Cranch said "drilling will take 40 days, give or take a few days. The well will be used to relieve any natural gas pressure in the cavern, and then imaging equipment with a sonar device will examine whether the cavern's wall was breached." The well will not be used for brine or natural gas production.
Before the sinkhole developed on August 3, residents of the Bayou Corne and Grand Bayou areas said they'd seen natural gas bubbles and felt tremors for over two months. Texas Brine officers met with DNR officials in late July, four days before the sinkhole formed. According to U.S. Geological Survey data, tremors appeared to center on the western edge of the Napoleonville Dome.
Waguespack said the last, similar incident occurred in late 2003 when Grand Bayou residents were evacuated because of a gas leak from the salt dome. The salt cavern that's being monitored now passed its last federally-required, mechanical integrity test or MIT in October 2010.
As for diesel fuel odors, Cranch said diesel was used as a sealing agent, especially at the top of the dome when the well was closed last year. Waguespack said "diesel fuel is used as a pad in these wells to stop corrosion of the casing."
Meanwhile, Texas Brine has worked with state and local officials to set up a relief fund for evacuees. The company has agreed to pay for residents' expenses dating to the start of the evacuation and began issuing housing assistance checks last week.
"The sinkhole remains about 400 feet across and is still bubbling," Waguespack said last Wednesday. "We don't smell odors today, but on some past mornings we picked up the smell of diesel."
read more at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/susan-buchanan/louisiana-sinkhole_b_1810972.html
------------------------------end update----------------------------
update 8-17-2012
Louisiana sinkhole – fears of radioactivity and gas explosion as sinkhole gets bigger
BY
CHILLYMANJARO – AUGUST 16, 2012POSTED IN: EDITORS' PICKS, GEOLOGY, SEISMIC ACTIVITIES
Boiling bubbles in the waters of Bayou Corne, in Assumption Parish, about 50 miles south of Baton Rouge in Louisiana, US, concerned residents in mid-May. Then, suddenly a massive sinkhole appeared on August 3. It forced the closure of nearby highway 70 after a gas line along that route bent and led to fears of an explosion. Officials believe the sinkhole could give off radiation or cause explosions that would harm local residents. Nearly 150 residences were asked to evacuate their homes on August 13 after the sinkhole swallowed nearby trees. Assumption Parish Police Jury continues monitoring Bayou Corne and Grand Bayou waterway bubbles.
Potentially radioactive sinkhole in Louisiana swallowed trees and forced mandatory evacuation (Credit: Inquisitr)Dr. Madhurendu Kumar, DNR director of the state’s oil and gas division, said the sinkhole could have been caused by structural problems in Texas Brine’s salt dome beneath it. Salt cavern is part of Napoleonville salt dome - a massive ancient structure that Texas Brine Company mines for use with mining petroleum, salt and sulphur. Texas Brine has mined the salt dome since 1973 for brine used by industry, using water to wash out salt deep in the dome and selling the resulting brine mix, company and DNR officials have said. DNR has ordered the Texas Brine Company to drill a well and see if it is the cause of the dark gray water-filled hole nearby. It will take at least 40 days to drill the well.The potentially failed cavern may also be the source of natural gas that has bubbled up on nearby bayous and from an abandoned water well, emergency preparedness officials said. Texas Brine and other salt dome operators use salt-dome cavities left behind from mining operations to store hydrocarbons such as natural gas for companies that lease the wells. Texas Brine ceased operating the cavern in 2011 and plugged and abandoned the well used to access it, state officials said.
This is an aerial view of the sinkhole that emerged recently near Bayou Corne. The Texas Brine Co. LLC facility well pad for a plugged and abandoned salt cavern is at right; Crosstex Energy LP facility is in upper left, while the pipeline corridor is at far lower left. (Credit: Bill Feig/Advocate)
The 1.5 million barrels of liquid butane well and fear of radioactivity
The sinkhole could breach a nearby well that contains 1.5 million barrels of highly volatile liquid butane, which could easily turn into a highly flammable vapor. The 1.5 million barrels of liquid butane 458 meters (1500 feet) from the sinkhole has an explosive capacity of 100 Hiroshima nuclear bombs, 1.5 times the explosive force of the largest thermonuclear weapon in current service in the U.S.Inhalation of butane can cause euphoria, drowsiness, narcosis, asphyxia, cardiac arrhythmia, temporary memory loss and frostbite, which can result in death from asphyxiation and ventricular fibrillation.napoleonsvile Salt Dome area (Credit: DNR Louisiana)Local residents and sheriff point that the Louisiana Department of Natural Resources knew for months that the cavern mined by Texas Brine had integrity problems but that they didn’t tell authorities or do anything about it. Landowners near the sinkhole filed a lawsuit against DNR and Texas Brine claiming that their drinking water in Grand Bayou system is now contaminated because authorities didn’t do anything to prevent the appearance of the sinkhole. DNR and Texas Brine officials stated that the cavern may be closer to the outer wall of the dome than thought, that it could have failed and created the sinkhole.The Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) put air-monitoring stations around the area to measure LELs (lower explosive limits) and say no radiation danger exists, although all test sample results will not be available until later this week. The Department of Natural Resources (DNR) had quietly permitted Texas Brine Company LLC to pump radioactive waste into its now failing cavern near the sinkhole DNR also hid documents showing that cavern may have had problems since 2010. DNR’s Office of Conservation had authorized Texas Brine in 1995 to dispose of naturally occurring radioactive material in the now-possibly failed cavern. Initial readings taken by state testers have not revealed any initial radiation.
“Based on the first round of data, we are confident that the potential exposure of citizens to NORM is not a problem in this matter,” DEQ Secretary Peggy Hatch said in the news release.Louisiana Environmental Action Network (LEAN) reports that, in addition to over twelve areas in and around Bayou Corne and Grand Bayou having “waters rolling from escaping methane, ethane, and propane,” locals have also reported tremors and houses shifting. USGS maps show extra movement and stress from oil and gas operations are susceptible to present pressure of a series of earthquakes west of Louisiana, each being where fracking and frack waste injection storage are ongoing. There has been exploration for oil and gas in that area in the past, which would make the presence of low levels of naturally occurring radioactive material (NORM) possible. The material, called NORM, is often a by-product of oil and gas exploration and production. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s website, radioactivity can vary widely, from background amounts to much higher levels.
Seismic activity
Seismometers picked up thousands of quakes in the Assumption Parish disaster area since June, according to seismologist Dr. Stephen Horton. He and colleagues had installed four instruments underground to record quake activities, and since then, two more, each monitored daily. People reported quakes on June 8 and July 3. Quakes ended when bubbling sinkhole developed but seismic signals continue from sinkhole area. There are seismic signals that appear to emanate from the vicinity of the in the Napoleonville salt dome, in the low amplitude range.Lake Peigneur example
Eighty miles west of Bayou Corne is Lake Peigneur that balances above a salt dome that collapsed in 1980 when a drilling rig punctured a protective layer in the salt mine wall, causing the entire lake, including a drilling rig, several larger barges and large chunks of surrounding land to be pulled down into the cavern. Pressure was so great, the bayou ran backwards, created a large waterfall, and was sucked back into the puncture hole. The event permanently affected the ecosystem of the lake by changing the lake from freshwater to saltwater and increasing the depth of part of the lake.Louisiana Boat Disappears Into Sinkhole, Workers Rescued
A 400-foot deep sinkhole in Louisiana is expanding and today swallowed the boat of two cleanup workers who had to be rescued from the hole. Officials are still fearful of the possibility of explosions from nearby gas-filled caverns."It has expanded 50 feet and during that expansion there were workers that were working on the cleanup of the diesel," Kim Torres, spokeswoman for the Office of Emergency Preparedness, told ABCNews.com today.The two workers were in a boat tied to a tree when the area where the tree grew fell into the sinkhole.The workers were rescued by airboat. They were uninjured but their boat disappeared into the sinkhole. The cleanup process has been halted.The gaping hole measures about 526 feet from northeast to southwest and 640 feet from northwest to southeast. It is in Assumption Parish, La., about 50 miles south of Baton Rouge.
---------------end update--------------------------------------------------
update 8-14-2012
Mysterious Louisiana Sinkhole Raises Concerns of Explosions and Radiation
By CHRISTINA NG | ABC News
The 400-square-foot gaping hole is in Assumption Parish, La., about 50 miles south of Baton Rouge.The sinkhole sits in the middle of a heavily wooded space where it has consumed all of the soaring cypress trees that had been there. Flyover photos show some of the treetops still visible through the mud.
Authorities enacted a mandatory evacuation for between 100 and150 homes in the area, but most people have chosen to stay, according to the Mayor's Office of Emergency Preparedness. If any of the dangers seem to become more imminent, the order will be escalated to a forced evacuation.While officials are not certain what caused the massive sinkhole, they believe it may be have ben caused by a nearby salt cavern owned by the Texas Brine Company.
After being used for nearly 30 years, the cavern was plugged in 2011 and officials believe the integrity of the cavern may have somehow been compromised, leading to the sinkhole.
On Thursday, Louisiana's Department of Natural Resources required that Texas Brine drill a well to investigate the salt cavern as soon as possible, obtain samples from the cavern and provide daily reports on their findings. It could take up to 10 days to set up the drilling process, even with an expedited process.
"We have to arrange for the driller. We have to pick a location. We have to be very careful to not be in a point that's too close to the sinkhole because of the weight of the rig," Texas Brine Company spokesman Sonny Cranch told ABCNews.com today. "We don't want to aggravate the situation."The sinkhole is on the outside edge of the salt dome where this particular brine well is located."There are some indications that it very well may have been connected, but there's just indications," Cranch said. "There's nothing concrete that has connected the sinkhole to the cavern."
There was bubbling in the water and the sinkhole is near areas where there has been exploration for oil and gas in the past, which would make the presence of low levels of naturally occurring radioactive material (NORM) possible.
The state's Department of Environmental Quality said water samples from the sinkhole showed oil and diesel on its surface, but initial readings did not detect radiation.
In the days after the sinkhole opened up on Aug. 3, nearby Highway 70 was closed down because officials discovered that the sinkhole caused a 36-inch natural gas pipeline to bend and feared the possibility of an explosion, according to ABC News' Baton Rouge affiliate WBRZ.
"That's why the mandatory evacuation is going to stay on, because there is a risk for explosion," John Boudreaux of from Assumption Parish Emergency Preparedness said at a meeting with residents on Tuesday, WBRZ reported.
"We are determined to do everything we can to find the answer," president of Texas Brine Mark Cartwright told the residents.
Some community members were visibly frustrated with the situation and lack of answers."You can give us a straight answer because that's all we want," one woman said at the meeting. "We want to know when we can come home and be safe. Because you all go home after a days work. You're safe, but we're not."
Gov. Bobby Jindal issued a declaration of emergency allowing the Governor's Office of Homeland Security to assist in the efforts if necessary.
"This is extremely serious and it's been going on for too long to still be at this point," Kim Torres, spokeswoman for the Office of Emergency Preparedness, told ABCNews.com today. "The people are very aware of how serious this is."
source: http://news.yahoo.com/mysterious-louisiana-sinkhole-raises-concerns-explosions-radiation-161233618--abc-news-topstories.html
---------------------end update----------------------------------------
Louisiana sinkhole roils local natural gas network
By Jeanine PreziosoNEW YORK |
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A sinkhole the size of a football field in southern Louisiana has forced energy companies to halt nearby natural gas pipeline activity and draw down fuel from a local storage cavern.
Chevron Corp's subsidiary Bridgeline Holdings declared force majeure on new injections into its salt dome storage facility near the sinkhole and the town of Napoleonville, through the rest of the year, according to notice to customers posted on its website.
Customers were also asked to begin reducing their current storage inventory to 40 percent of each of their currently contracted amount, according to the Bridgeline filing.
Natural gas traders said Chevron's move to purge the gas could push an additional 4 billion to 5 billion cubic feet of gas on the market. U.S. September and October futures prices settled lower, while winter months settled higher on Wednesday, and traders said companies could be scrambling to sell supplies while locking in winter gas to meet heating demand.
"Chevron Pipeline Co has elected to take the step of drawing down the NS1 cavern as a precaution to ensure that we are doing everything possible to protect public safety and the environment," said Gareth Johnstone, a Chevron spokesman.
The sinkhole, which local media reported was 372-feet wide, was discovered near the cavern on Friday, and has consumed full-grown trees. Sinkholes occur when underground spaces or caverns become so large they can no longer support the land above them, causing a collapse.
There is no indication that gas is leaking from the facility, Johnstone said, adding there was no evidence that the integrity of the cavern was at risk.
Louisiana Commissioner of Conservation James Welsh issued a Declaration of Emergency on Friday due to the sinkhole, located in a region of wooded swamp in Bayou Corne. The Texas Brine Company, which has a plugged salt cavern within 100 yards of the sinkhole, was ordered to investigate the site.
"This is very puzzling."
Unexplained bubbles discovered in the region in recent months had been under investigation by state, local, and federal agencies.
Tremors were also reported in the area before the sinkhole appeared, state officials said, but the cause was still being investigated.
PIPELINES SHUT
Enterprise Product Partners, owner of the Arcadian Gas Pipeline System, said it was forced to shut two 20-inch gas pipelines near the area, according to a spokesman. The gas has been rerouted so the company has been able to continue deliveries to customers, he added.
A spokeswoman for Crosstex Energy said the company shut a portion of its 36-inch natural gas pipeline near the sinkhole taking about 150 million cubic feet a day of supply offline.
Customers have made other arrangements to source other supplies, the spokeswoman said.
Chevron has three natural gas salt dome storage caverns in the area with a total capacity to hold 12.7 billion cubic feet of gas, according to the company website. The storage sites connect with Acadian Gas Pipeline Company, Gulf South Pipeline Company, and Florida Gas Transmission. Maximum withdrawal was listed as 1.1 bcf per day.
"They are worried about the cavern integrity and the slurry breaching the salt dome that they have," said Genscape senior natural gas analyst Andy Krebs.
read more at http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/08/08/us-chevron-natgas-idUSBRE87716I20120808
read more about the above pic here:
http://www.bing.com/images/search?q=louisianna+sinkhole&view=detail&id=E0910542A197E38057EC51E03F05DE0AB3719094&first=36
Louisiana sinkhole expected to keep residents away at least a month
August 10, 2012
Residents living near a sinkhole in a southern Louisiana bayou are not expected to be allowed to return home for at least another month, officials said Friday.
Authorities are investigating the cause of the slurry-filled hole, which is roughly the size of a football field.
Specifically, they are looking into whether a nearby salt cavern could be to blame and have ordered the company that is responsible for that cavern to drill a relief well.
The process is expected to take up to 40 days, said Assumption Parish President Martin Triche. Until the well is drilled, authorities do not anticipate lifting the evacuation order that affects approximately 150 homes.
"We won't feel a level of confidence to lift the evacuation until we have more answers from that well," Triche told reporters.
Roughly half of the residents told to leave heeded the call, he said.
Louisiana officials have reached out to Texas Brine Company, urging it to provide affected residents with some type of assistance while it investigates whether a breach in its cavern might have caused the sinkhole 100 yards away.
The situation is made all the worrisome because the hole is believed to be close to a well containing 1.5 million barrels of liquid butane, a highly volatile liquid that turns into a highly flammable vapor upon release. A breach of that well, Assumption Parish Sheriff Mike Waguespack has said, could be catastrophic.
read more at http://articles.cnn.com/2012-08-10/us/us_louisiana-bayou-sinkhole_1_cavern-louisiana-sinkhole-evacuation-order
New Iberia, Louisiana
September 6, 2005
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