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Chevron said on Sunday afternoon that one of two wells in Greene County that were still leaking natural gas after a Feb. 11 explosion has been capped.

In statement, the company, which owns three wells at the drilling site in Dunkard, said the flow of gas from the 7H well had stopped as of 2:25 p.m.

The next step will be capping the nearby 6H well and assessing the integrity of the third well, called 8H, and completing "any necessary repairs to secure the well," the company said.

Gas had been leaking from the wells near Bobtown since the explosion 12 days ago, which killed Cameron International worker Ian McKee, 27, of Morgantown, W.Va. The fire that was ignited by the explosion burned until last weekend.

The cause of the explosion, which happened as workers were readying one of the wells for production, remains undetermined. The state Department of Environmental Protection is investigating.

First Published February 23, 2014 6:04 PM



Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/local/region/2014/02/23/Chevron-caps-on...

http://www.naturalgasintel.com/articles/97500-chevron-shuts-down-se...

Chevron Shuts Down Seven PA Wells in Wake of Greene County Fire

February 24, 2014
 


Chevron Appalachia LLC has temporarily ceased operations at seven wells across Pennsylvania over concerns about wellhead configurations and their ability to handle high pressures after a fatal explosion and fire at one of the company's sites in Greene County, PA on Feb. 11.

Scott Perry, deputy secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection's (DEP) Office of Oil and Gas Management, said the company identified 27 wells across the state that were constructed in a similar way to two that caught fire after an explosion at a three-well pad in Dunkard Township, about 70 miles south of Pittsburgh (see Shale DailyFeb. 11).

It remains unclear what caused the explosion, which left Cameron International's Ian Mckee, 27, dead and another contractor injured (see Shale DailyFeb. 20). Initially, state regulators suspected a blowout, but they now believe gas leaked from the wellhead and was ignited by something on the surface (see Shale DailyFeb. 12).

"These all have similar wellhead configurations, and there's concerns about pressure within the wells and valves on the wellhead that can handle those pressures," Perry said of the seven wells Chevron shut down.

Perry said the DEP recently asked Chevron to assess its wells across the state, but added that the company had already started to do so. The 27 wells the company has identified for further review are awaiting pipeline connections or being readied for sales, Perry said.

At the time the explosion occurred at the Dunkard site, a crew was preparing to run tubing ahead of a production start-date for the Lanco 7H, which caught fire along with the Lanco 6H. Another well, the Lanco 8H, was likely damaged in the blaze too.

"We did ask them to assess their wells, but they had already started that work," Perry said. "They're prioritizing the wells they want to get back to work on and providing us with information on what they're going to do and how they're evaluating those wells so they're comfortable with resuming operations."

It remains unclear exactly which wells the company has shut down or even where they are located in the state. The company did not provide any additional details. According to state records, Chevron has 447 active Marcellus Shale wells across Pennsylvania.

The fire at the Dunkard site stopped burning on Feb. 15, and after more than a week of work to stop the flow of gas at the site, Houston-based Wild Well Control capped the Lanco 7H on Sunday after cutting the wellhead and installing a capping stack.

The section of the 7H wellhead where the leak occurred will be transported offsite for further analysis by an independent third party as part of the investigation into the cause of the incident, according to Chevron.

Perry said efforts to cap the Lanco 6H were taking place on Monday and were expected to continue on Tuesday. After that well is capped, Wild Well will assess the integrity of the Lanco 8H and make any necessary repairs to secure its wellhead equipment.

Wild Well also plans to install plugs as a protective barrier 8,000 feet below the surface in all three wells to prevent gas pressure from reaching the wellheads.

"The continuing well intervention efforts involve many steps and have to be executed in a precise, controlled, methodical manner," Chevron said in a statement. "We are working to be efficient in our efforts to minimize the duration however. The safety of the workers and operations will determine the appropriate pace."

Thanks for the updates

Workers finish capping second gas well in Greene County

Read more: http://triblive.com/news/adminpage/5660824-74/county-gas-chevron#ix...

By Jason Cato

Published: Tuesday, Feb. 25, 2014, 1:09 p.m.


Work crews on Tuesday finished capping the second of two natural gas wells in Greene County that began leaking two weeks ago, Chevron officials said.

“At this time both wells are capped, stopping gas flow from the wells,” said Chevron spokeswoman Lee Ann Wainwright. “These are significant milestones in our response efforts.”

Freezing and other weather issues delayed the start of work to cap the second well, said DEP spokesman Alan Eichler.

The Chevron well site in Dunkard exploded and caught fire on Feb. 11, killing a Warren County native working for a subcontractor. Two of three well heads burned for five days and continued to spew gas after extinguishing themselves. A crew with Wild Well Control in Houston, Texas, capped the first well on Sunday.

The third well head, which did not appear to have contributed to the fire, will be examined, Chevron officials have said.

Chevron has halted work at seven Pennsylvania sites with high-pressure gas wells ready for production, all similar to the one in rural Greene County. The company plans to inspect each of those wells every three days until DEP officials are satisfied the caps are sound.



Read more: http://triblive.com/news/adminpage/5660824-74/county-gas-chevron#ix...
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http://www.chevron.com/news/mediaresources/updates.news?utm_campaig...

Update No. 14: Pennsylvania Incident

Feb. 25, 2014, 4:00 p.m. EST – Today at approximately 4:00 p.m., Wild Well Control successfully capped the second Lanco well, the 6H. At this time both wells are capped, stopping gas flow from the wells. These are significant milestones in our response efforts.

The next step is for Wild Well Control to assess the integrity of the 8H well. The integrity testing involves inspecting the seals on the well head as well as testing the integrity of the valves and ports. Once we have diagnostics from the testing, we will begin planning the path forward and complete any repairs, if necessary, to secure this final well.

The continuing well intervention efforts involve many steps and must be executed in a precise, controlled, and methodical manner. We are working to be efficient in our efforts; and the safety of the workers and operations will determine the appropriate pace.

Once it is determined that the 8H well is also secure, a thorough investigation to determine the cause of the incident will begin.

Air samples were also taken and were consistent with readings at a Pennsylvania DEP air quality station in Washington, PA. Air sampling will continue during the duration of the response activities.

DILLINER, Pa. (AP) — Crews have replaced and secured the head of a third natural gas well in southwestern Pennsylvania near two others that caught fire, killing a worker last month.

Scott Perry, deputy secretary for the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, tells the (Washington) Observer-Reporter (http://bit.ly/1krhJwe) that the third well head was replaced on Saturday.

Another Chevron well at the same drilling pad exploded and caught fire Feb. 11 in Greene County's Dunkard Township, killing Ian McKee, a technician working there at the time. Another well nearby caught fire three days later, before the first could be extinguished.

The third well whose head was replaced Saturday had not been leaking and did not catch fire. It was secured as a precaution.

http://www.timesunion.com/news/article/Third-well-safe-at-site-of-s...

http://www.chevron.com/news/mediaresources/updates.news?utm_campaig...

Update No. 15: Pennsylvania Incident

March 3, 2014, 6:00 p.m. EST – Over the last few days, Wild Well Control and Chevron conducted tests to assess the integrity of the Lanco 8H well, after previously capping the 7H and 6H wells. The testing included inspecting the seals on the well head and testing the integrity of the valves and ports. We then successfully installed a valve that shuts off the gas flow and replaced the wellhead on the Lanco 8H well. With the actions taken this weekend, all three wells on the Lanco pad are now secure.

Over the next several weeks, we will be installing plugs about 8000 feet below the surface in all three wells as an extra layer of protection to relieve any pressure on the wellheads. We are continuing to conduct our investigation into the cause of the incident in cooperation with the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection and all appropriate regulatory authorities. 

Chevron pizza 'scandal' isn't one in small town

Associated Press

Critics are raging after an energy giant offered pizza coupons to a community near a natural gas well that exploded last month, killing a worker.

News stories, TV shows and blogs — many sarcastic or outright scornful — spread the word far and wide. "Shame on you," one person wrote about the offer by Chevron Corp. "How insulting!" said another. Comedy Central's satirical "The Colbert Report" skewered it.

But the 750 or so residents of the hamlet of Bobtown? Not one has signed an online petition demanding an apology for the pizza offer. In fact, during a recent visit, The Associated Press found the talk of the town is more the furious response by outsiders.

"We feel it was something outside groups generated," said Pete Novak, a co-director of the Polish American Club, a local gathering spot. None of the patrons has voiced outrage, he said, and residents laughed about how people who have never set foot in Bobtown claim to speak for its citizens.

Several people noted that Chevron's pizza offer was made to apologize for traffic after the fire, not to downplay the loss of life.

"I thought it was pretty decent of them," said Ray Elli, 54, who noted that the fire was about a mile outside town, on a ridge, and that people in town didn't feel threatened.

Bill Sowden, co-owner of Bobtown Pizza, the area's only restaurant, says 12 people have redeemed the coupons distributed by Chevron. The whole issue, he said, was blown out of proportion.

"We're just a food place," he said.

The outsized reaction from people not directly affected by the accident illustrates the larger passions surrounding the fracking debate. Many critics seek stricter regulations or bans to protect air and water from pollution, while supporters speak of the economic benefits for an energy-hungry nation. Each side claims the high moral ground.

About 12,000 people have signed an online petition demanding Chevron apologize, according to petition organizer Karen Feridun.

"There are a few from nearby communities, but none right from Bobtown," Feridun wrote in emails this week to the AP. She lives about 250 miles away, at the other end of Pennsylvania. The petition isn't even on public display in Bobtown, about 2 miles from the West Virginia border.

One petition signer from New York City mentioned "Chevron's cavalier arrogance." Other signers came from Alaska, Florida and many other states, as well as Australia, Bulgaria, Costa Rica, Germany and Italy.

Chevron hasn't responded to the petition, Feridun said.

Company spokesman Kent Robertson said in an email that Chevron works to be a good partner in communities, that it has been "overwhelmed by the support" from residents and that it appreciates their understanding.

For more than a century, the region around Bobtown has been coal country, and there's still an active mine nearby. But in the past five years, natural gas locked in shale deep underground became newly accessible because of the advent of hydraulic fracturing, or fracking.

On Feb. 11, a Chevron well outside of town exploded, killing Ian McKee, 27, who lived about a half-hour away in Morgantown, W.Va., and worked for a contractor. Five days later, as emergency vehicles clogged some narrow roads around Bobtown, Chevron representatives visited about 100 people, seeking concerns or questions and leaving a gift certificate for a large pizza and 2-liter drink at Bobtown Pizza, which had just opened.

Elli, who was born in Bobtown, said he feels for the worker who died and his family, but that the well fire didn't threaten other residents. And while there are differing opinions about the drilling boom in the community, he doesn't see a problem with it.

"We need gas. Better than getting it from other countries," he said. His current priority is not getting an apology from Chevron, he said, but getting ready for the spring wild turkey season.

He noted that many locals have made money off the drilling boom, both from royalties — which can reach hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars for landowners — and jobs.

Overall, Pennsylvanians support the drilling boom, said G. Terry Madonna, a professor of public affairs at Franklin & Marshall College in Lancaster. A January poll by the school found that 64 percent of respondents somewhat or strongly favor the gas drilling industry, compared with 27 percent who somewhat or strongly oppose it. In some conservative rural areas with active drilling, the support is even higher.

"I think it's pretty fascinating that folks in the community" aren't openly upset with Chevron, Madonna said, agreeing that such kerfuffles are surrogates in the political fight over American energy production.

Novak had some advice for all the people who think they know how Bobtown residents feel: "Come to this small rural area and see for themselves."

A tip of the hat to Bobtown,for not trying to extort millions from Chevron. Small towns are the back bone of America

we need a like button on here....

Pa. DEP says radiation levels ‘normal’ after Greene County gas well fire

A fire broke out on a Chevron natural gas well pad in Dunkard Township, Greene County, Pa. on Feb. 11.

Katie Colaneri/ StateImpact Pennsylvania

A fire broke out on a Chevron natural gas well pad in Dunkard Township, Greene County, Pa. on Feb. 11.

The Department of Environmental Protection says residents were not exposed to unsafe levels of radiation in the days following last month’s explosion and fire on a Chevron natural gas well pad in Greene County.

On Feb. 13 and 14, the Bureau of Radiation Protection collected samples from three spots in Dunkard Township to make sure methane releases from the fire did not result in elevated radiation above normal, background levels, according to the department’s summary report released Friday.

“There is a certain amount of radon in natural gas,” says Scott Perry, DEP’s Deputy Secretary for Oil and Gas Management.

Radon is a radioactive, odorless, colorless gas. However, Perry says when natural gas is released into the atmosphere – as opposed to accumulating in an enclosed space – radon levels are generally not considered a threat to public health. (The DEP is conducting a study on radiation involved in the natural gas development.) Perry says the department tested for radiation in Dunkard Township “out of an abundance of caution.”

The DEP has also finished sampling air quality and has started collecting soil samples.

For more than one week after the fire that broke out on Feb. 11, methane gas spewed from two wells on the pad before specialized emergency crews were able to cap them. The official cause of the fire is still under investigation, but state officials say there may have been a defect in one of the wellheads that caused the release of methane.

At the time, workers were preparing to put the wells into production. State police believe Ian McKee, a 27-year-old contractor on the site, died in the explosion.

The DEP’s Scott Perry says that every three days, Chevron officials are checking wellheads at seven other pads across Pennsylvania that are also being readied for production and where the pressure underground is higher.

http://petroglobalnews.com/2014/04/chevron-cited-for-violations-aft...Chevron cited for violations after Pennsylvania well fire

The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection issued nine citations to Chevron for the well fire that resulted in one contractor’s death.

“For two days after a Marcellus Shale natural gas well exploded in flames in Greene County [on February 11], the well owner, Chevron Corp., refused to allow state investigators onto the property, in violation of oil and gas laws, the state said Thursday,” according to a report by the Pittsburgh Post Gazette.

DEP spokesman John Poister said the state’s emergency team didn’t have “free and unrestricted access” despite a condition in Chevron’s permit granting the access.

The state didn’t force its way onto the property or ask the Pennsylvania State Police to intervene, Poister told the Post Gazette, because “we decided not to make it a pitched battle and instead focused on getting the well capped and making the scene safe.”

“Chevron did not relent until the second day after DEP Secretary Chris Abruzzo visited the site himself and reminded the company of its obligations, Mr. Poister said,” according the news report.

Chevron said it still received the notice of the potential violations last month.

The company said: “During our response to this incident, Chevron’s first priority was to ensure the safety of all responders and prevent additional injuries. For that reason, access to the Lanco site during the initial stages of the incident was restricted. At Chevron’s request, the Pennsylvania State Police established an access control point near the pad. No one, including Chevron personnel, was permitted access to the pad on the day of the incident, until experts from Wild Well Control arrived on the scene and were able to assess the situation. ”

The DEP also cited Chevron for seven violations for failure to operate a well properly and failure to prevent venting of gas, and a violation for a discharge of well production fluids onto the ground, the Post Gazette said.

The citations are step toward negotiating fines, the paper said.

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