An Overview of Unconventional Oil and Natural Gas: Resources and Federal Actions

April 22, 2015 (R43148)

Contents

Figures

Tables

Appendixes

Summary

The United States has seen resurgence in petroleum production, mainly driven by technology improvements—especially hydraulic fracturing and directional drilling—developed for natural gas production from shale formations. Application of these technologies enabled natural gas to be economically produced from shale and other unconventional formations and contributed to the United States becoming the world's largest natural gas producer in 2009. Use of these technologies has also contributed to the rise in U.S. oil production over the last few years. In 2009, annual oil production increased over 2008, the first annual rise since 1991, and has continued to increase each year since. Between January 2008 and May 2014, U.S. monthly crude oil production rose by 3.2 million barrels per day, with about 85% of the increase coming from shale and related tight oil formations in Texas and North Dakota. Other tight oil plays are also being developed, helping raise the prospect of energy independence, especially for North America.

The rapid expansion of tight oil and shale gas extraction using high-volume hydraulic fracturing has raised concerns about its potential environmental and health impacts. These concerns include potential direct impacts to groundwater and surface water quality, water supplies, and air quality. In addition, some have raised concerns about potential long-term and indirect impacts from reliance on fossil fuels and resulting greenhouse gas emissions and influence on broader energy economics. This report focuses mainly on actions related to controlling potential direct impacts.

States are the primary regulators of oil and gas production on non-federal lands. In recent years, many oil and gas producing states have revised laws and regulations governing oil and gas production in response to changes in production practices as producers have expanded into tight oil, shale gas, and other unconventional hydrocarbon formations. However, state rules vary considerably, leading to calls for more federal oversight of unconventional oil and gas extraction activities and hydraulic fracturing specifically.

Provisions of several federal environmental laws can apply to certain activities related to oil and gas production, and proposals to expand federal regulation in this area have been highly controversial. Some advocates of a larger federal role point to a wide range of differences among state regulatory regimes and argue that a national framework is needed to ensure a consistent minimum level of protection for surface and groundwater resources and air quality. Others argue against more federal involvement and point to the long-established state oil and natural gas regulatory programs, regional differences in geology and water resources, and concern over regulatory redundancy.

The federal role in regulating oil and gas extraction activities—and hydraulic fracturing, in particular—has been the subject of considerable debate and legislative proposals for several years, but legislation has not been enacted. While congressional debate has continued, the Administration has pursued a number of regulatory initiatives related to unconventional oil and gas development under existing statutory authorities.

This report focuses on the growth in U.S. oil and natural gas production driven primarily by tight oil formations and shale gas formations. It also reviews selected federal environmental regulatory and research initiatives related to unconventional oil and gas extraction, including the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) hydraulic fracturing rule (finalized in March 2015) and Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) actions.


An Overview of Unconventional Oil and Natural Gas: Resources and Federal Actions

Introduction: Change Is Afoot

In the past, the oil and natural gas industry considered resources locked in tight, impermeable formations such as shale uneconomical to produce. Advances in directional well drilling and reservoir stimulation have dramatically changed this perspective. It is production from these unconventional formations that has changed the U.S. energy posture and global energy markets.

U.S. oil and natural gas production is on the rise, primarily driven by resources from tight formations. The techniques developed to produce shale gas—directional drilling and hydraulic fracturing1—have migrated to the oil sector. The United States is the third-largest oil producer in the world but also the fastest-growing producer. The United States surpassed Russia in 2009 as the world's largest natural gas producer. Production from tight formations is expected to make up a significant part of production of each commodity well into the future (see Figure 1).

Figure 1. Percentage of U.S. Oil and Natural Gas from Tight Oil and Shale Gas

2005-2040

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), Annual Energy Outlook 2014, http://www.eia.gov/oiaf/aeo/tablebrowser/ and other EIA data.

Note: Prior to 2007, EIA did not report tight oil and shale gas data.

This report focuses on the growth in U.S. oil and natural gas production driven primarily by tight oil formations and shale gas formations. It does not address other types of unconventional production such as coalbed methane or tight gas, as their contributions to overall U.S. production have not changed as dramatically as shale gas.2 There has been continued congressional interest related to unconventional natural gas and oil production. In March 2015, the House Natural Resources Committee's Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources held a hearing addressing the new Bureau of Land Management (BLM) hydraulic fracturing rule. Among actions in the 113th Congress, the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee held three roundtable discussions on natural gas supply and use3; the House Natural Resources Committee held a hearing on hydraulic fracturing legislation and the BLM proposed rule; and the House Energy and Commerce Committee's Subcommittee on Energy and Power held a hearing in June 2013 on U.S. energy abundance.4

Geology Is What Makes a Resource Unconventional

Unconventional formations are fine-grained, organic-rich, sedimentary rocks—usually shales and similar rocks. The shales and rocks are both the source of and the reservoir for oil and natural gas, unlike conventional petroleum reservoirs. The Society of Petroleum Engineers describes "unconventional resources" as petroleum accumulations that are pervasive throughout a large area and are not significantly affected by pressure exerted by water (hydrodynamic influences); they are also called "continuous-type deposits" or "tight formations." In contrast, conventional oil and natural gas deposits occur in porous and permeable sandstone and carbonate reservoirs. Under pressure exerted by water, the hydrocarbons migrated upward from organic sources until an impermeable cap-rock (such as shale) trapped it in the reservoir rock. Although the unconventional formations may be as porous as other sedimentary reservoir rocks, their extremely small pore sizes and lack of permeability make them relatively resistant to hydrocarbon flow. The lack of permeability means that the oil and gas typically remain in the source rock unless natural or artificial fractures occur.

Price Drives Industrial Innovation

Historically, natural gas prices in the United States have been volatile. From 1995 to 1999, the spot price of natural gas averaged $2.23 per million British thermal units (MBtu, sometimes noted as mmBtu) but increased to an average price of $4.68 per MBtu, in nominal dollars, during the 2000-2004 period, an almost 110% rise. Prices hit a peak in December 2005 at $15.38 per MBtu but remained relatively high through July 2008, as can be seen in Figure 2. Along with the rise in prices, U.S. net imports of natural gas also rose, increasing 32% between 1995 and 2000 and 41% between 1995 and 2007.

As U.S. prices and imports continued to trend up, the industry undertook two competing solutions to meet the need for more natural gas—increased liquefied natural gas (LNG) imports and development of techniques to produce shale gas. The LNG import facilities were much higher profile and were cited extensively in industry and popular press. Approximately 50 import projects were proposed, and 8 were eventually constructed during the mid- to late 2000s, along with the recommissioning of older facilities.

Figure 2. Monthly U.S. Natural Gas Prices

2002-2014

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, http://www.eia.gov/dnav/ng/hist/rngwhhdM.htm.

Notes: Units = nominal dollars per million British thermal units (mmBtu). Data for 2014 are through July.

Although horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing have been industry techniques for some time, their application to shale gas formations is relatively new. Advances in directional drilling, particularly steerable down-hole motors, allowed drilling operators to better keep the well bore in the hydrocarbon-bearing shale formations. Well stimulation was also required, and improvements in hydraulic fracturing techniques, particularly multistage hydraulic fracturing and the ability to better control the fractures, contributed to making shale gas production a profitable venture.

In 2007, the Energy Information Administration (EIA) first recorded shale gas production, when it accounted for just 7% of U.S. natural gas production. In 2013, shale gas production accounted for almost 40% of U.S. production (see Figure 1), while almost all the LNG import terminals were idle and many applied to become export terminals.5

Technologies Stimulate Shale Gas Production First

The application of advances in directional drilling and hydraulic fracturing were first applied to shale gas formations, particularly as natural gas prices increased in the mid-2000s. Methane molecules and those of natural gas liquids (NGLs) are smaller than crude oil molecules and therefore tend to be more responsive to hydraulic fracturing. The success of shale gas development has driven U.S. natural gas production to increase almost every month on a year-on-year basis (see Figure 3) from 2008 through May 2014. The rise in shale gas development has also resulted in natural gas prices declining, as shown in Figure 2.

Figure 3. Monthly U.S. Natural Gas Production

2008-2014

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, http://www.eia.gov/dnav/ng/ng_prod_sum_dcu_NUS_m.htm.

The decline in prices and production in the latter half of 2008 was mainly the result of the economic downturn. However, as the economy picked up in 2009, natural gas resumed its upward production trajectory while prices stayed low. Overall U.S. natural gas production grew, as did the contribution from shale. The continued increase in production can be attributed, in part, to industry improvements in extracting more of the natural gas from the shale formations. Continued progress in hydraulic fracturing and directional drilling techniques has enabled companies to drive down production costs while increasing output.

Natural Gas Liquids: A Production Driver

NGLs have taken on a new prominence as shale gas production has increased and prices have fallen. As natural gas prices have stayed low, company interests have shifted away from dry natural gas production to more liquids-based production. NGL is a general term for all liquid products separated from natural gas at a gas processing plant and includes ethane, propane, butane, and pentanes. When NGLs are present with methane, which is the primary component of natural gas, the natural gas is referred to as either "hot" or "wet" gas. Once the NGLs are removed from the methane, the natural gas is referred to as "dry" gas, which is what most consumers use.

Each NGL has its own market and its own value. As the price for dry gas has dropped because of the increase in supply and other reasons, such as the warm winter of 2011, the natural gas industry has turned its attention to producing in areas with more wet gas in order to bolster the value it receives (see Figure 4). Some companies have shifted their production portfolios to tight oil formations, such as the Bakken in North Dakota and Montana, to capitalize on the experience they gained in shale gas development. Historically, the individual NGL products have been priced against oil, except for ethane. As oil prices have remained higher since 2008 relative to natural gas, they have driven an increase of wet gas production. Because of its low price, dry gas is often treated as a "byproduct" of wet gas and oil production.

Figure 4. Natural Gas, Oil, and NGL Prices

2010-2014

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration.

Notes: According to EIA, the NGL composite price is derived from daily Bloomberg spot price data for natural gas liquids at Mont Belvieu, TX, weighted by gas processing plant production volumes of each product as reported on Form EIA-816, "Monthly Natural Gas Liquids Report." The mix of NGLs will vary by source, and the price will vary by the actual market for the product. The natural gas price is at Henry Hub, and the oil price is West Texas Intermediate (WTI). Units = nominal dollars per million British thermal units ($/mmBtu). Data for 2014 are through May.

Increased Tight Oil Production Raises Independence Possibility

The prospect of U.S. energy independence is grounded in the production growth from tight oil formations such as the Bakken Formation in North Dakota and Montana and the Eagle Ford Formation in Texas.6 Relative to other fuels, the United States is more dependent upon imports for its oil requirements, still accounting for about 47% of consumption.7 Canada is the largest supplier of U.S. oil imports, which is why energy independence is usually mentioned as North American energy independence.8 The United States added almost 1 million barrels per day (b/d) of oil production between 2012 and 2013 (see Figure 5). U.S. oil production has reached levels not seen in more than a decade but is almost 2 million b/d short of the highs in the 1970s. Since 2005, when crude oil imports reached a peak, they have dropped almost 2.4 million b/d, or 24%, through 2013.9 Also since 2005, U.S. consumption of crude oil and petroleum products has been trending downward, contributing to the decrease in imports.

Figure 5. Monthly U.S. Oil Production

2008-2014

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, http://www.eia.gov/dnav/pet/hist/LeafHandler.ashx?n=PET&s=MCRFPUS1&f=M.

The continued shift of industry resources toward oil-rich production has prompted forecasts of continued growth. Domestic crude oil production is projected to rise through the end of the decade. The tremendous increases are primarily due to dramatic increases in production from the previously mentioned Bakken Formation in North Dakota and the Eagle Ford play in Texas, both tight oil formations.10

Environmental Concerns and Responses

As with other energy sources or fuel production, the development of unconventional oil and gas resources can pose both environmental risks and net benefits, some direct and others indirect. Potential direct risks may include impacts to groundwater and surface water quality, public and private water supplies, and air quality. In addition, some have raised concerns about potential long-term and indirect impacts from reliance on fossil fuels and resulting greenhouse gas emissions and influence on broader energy economics. On the other hand, natural gas is seen by many as a "bridge" fuel that can provide more energy per unit of greenhouse gas produced than some alternatives (e.g., coal) and has only recently been produced in sufficient quantity and at low enough prices to provide a viable alternative fuel that is widely regarded as relatively cleaner-burning (i.e., no mercury or sulfur emissions and substantially lower emissions of nitrous oxides and carbon dioxide per Btu of energy produced compared to coal). This report focuses primarily on measures to address potential direct impacts.

Among the variety of potential direct environmental impacts, many may be mitigated with appropriate safeguards, existing technology, and best practices. For example, management of wastewater associated with increased unconventional oil and gas production activity has in some cases placed a strain on water resources and on wastewater treatment plants that were not designed to remove salts and other contaminants from hydraulic fracturing flowback and produced water, and these impacts can be mitigated by investing in additional control technologies.

Water Quality Issues

Water quality issues have received much attention, and of these, the potential risks associated with well stimulation by hydraulic fracturing have been at the forefront. Complaints of contaminated well water have emerged in some areas where unconventional oil and gas development has occurred, although regulators have not reported a direct connection between hydraulic fracturing of shale formations at depth and groundwater contamination. In shale formations, the vertical distance separating the target zone from usable aquifers generally is much greater than the length of the fractures induced during hydraulic fracturing. Thousands of feet of rock layers typically overlay the produced portion of shale, and these layers serve as barriers to flow. In these circumstances, geologists and state regulators generally view as remote the possibility of creating a fracture that could reach a potable aquifer. If the shallow portions of shale formations were developed, then the thickness of the overlying rocks would be less and the distance from the shale to potable aquifers would be shorter, posing more of a risk to groundwater. In contrast to shale, coalbed methane (CBM) basins often qualify as underground sources of drinking water. Injection of fracturing fluids directly into or adjacent to such formations may be more likely to present a risk of contamination, and this is where initial regulatory attention and study was focused.11

State regulators have expressed more concern about the groundwater contamination risks associated with developing a natural gas or oil well (drilling through an overlying aquifer and casing, cementing, and completing the well), as opposed to hydraulic fracturing per se. The challenges of sealing off the groundwater and isolating it from possible contamination are common to the development of any oil or gas well and are not unique to hydraulic fracturing. However, horizontally drilled, hydraulically fractured oil and gas wells pose more development and production challenges and are subject to greater pressures than conventional vertical wells.

Identifying the source or cause of groundwater contamination can be difficult for various reasons, including the complexity of hydrogeologic processes and investigations, a lack of baseline testing of nearby water wells prior to drilling and fracturing, and the confidential business information status traditionally provided for fracturing compounds. Investigations by regulators and researchers have generally found that incidents involving residential water well contamination (including methane gas migration) have been caused by failure of well-bore casing and cementing or other well development and operating problems rather than the hydraulic fracturing process.12

The debate over groundwater contamination risks associated with hydraulic fracturing has been fueled in part by the lack of scientific studies to assess more thoroughly current practices and related complaints and uncertainties. To address this issue, Congress has asked the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to conduct a study on the relationship between hydraulic fracturing and drinking water.13 The "hydraulic fracturing" debate also has been complicated by terminology. Many do not differentiate the well stimulation process of "fracing" or "fracking" from the full range of activities associated with unconventional oil and gas exploration and production.14

Other water quality concerns—associated with both conventional and unconventional oil and natural gas extraction—include the risks of contaminating ground and surface water from surface spills, leaks from pits, and siltation of streams from drilling and pad construction activities. Because of the large, but short-term, volumes of water needed for the hydraulic fracturing operations used to extract shale gas and tight oil, water consumption issues have emerged as well. Water use issues include the impacts that large water withdrawals might have on groundwater resources, streams and aquatic life (particularly during low-flow periods), and other competing uses (e.g., municipal or agricultural uses). Such impacts may be regional or localized and can vary seasonally or with longer-term variations in precipitation.

The management of the large volumes of wastewater produced during natural gas production (including flowback from hydraulic fracturing operations and water produced from source formations) has emerged in many areas as a significant water quality issue as well as a cost issue for producers. In some areas, such as portions of the Marcellus Shale region,15 capacity is limited for wastewater disposal using underground injection wells (historically, the most common and preferred produced-water disposal practice in oil and natural gas fields), and surface discharge of wastewater is an increasingly restricted option.16 Such issues, as well as water-use concerns, are driving increased water recycling and reuse in the industry.

Air Emissions

Air emissions associated with unconventional oil and natural gas production have also raised public health concerns and have drawn regulatory scrutiny. Air pollutants can be released during various stages of oil and natural gas production. Emission sources include pad, road, and pipeline construction; well drilling and completion, and flowback activities and natural gas processing, storage, and transmission equipment. Key pollutants include methane (the main component of natural gas and a potent greenhouse gas), volatile organic compounds (VOCs), nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide, particulate matter, and various hazardous air pollutants.17 According to EPA, the oil and gas industry is a significant source of methane and VOC emissions, which react with nitrogen oxides to form ozone (smog). EPA has identified hydraulically fractured gas wells during flowback as an additional source of these emissions in the natural gas industry.18

Releases of methane and other pollutants can also occur where natural gas is produced in association with oil and natural gas gathering pipelines and other infrastructure are lacking. In such cases, the natural gas must generally be flared or vented. Flaring reduces VOC emissions compared to venting, but like venting, it contributes to greenhouse gas emissions without producing an economic value or displacing other fuel consumption.19 Natural gas flaring has become an issue with the rapid and intense development of tight oil from the Eagle Ford Formation in Texas and the Bakken Formation in North Dakota, which have significant amounts of associated gas.20 Other areas that have experienced large increases in tight oil production have also had increases in the amount of natural gas being flared.

State Regulation of Oil and Gas Development

Oil and natural gas development is occurring in at least 32 states.21 Shale gas, tight oil, or other unconventional resources (such as coalbed methane) are found in many of these states, primarily on non-federal lands (see Figure 6). States are the principal regulators of oil and gas production activities on state and private lands.22 The federal government, through the Department of the Interior's Bureau of Land Management (BLM), has responsibility for overseeing oil and gas development on federally managed lands; however, some states require operators on federal public lands within state boundaries to comply with the state's oil and gas rules.23

Hydraulic fracturing, traditionally without horizontal drilling, has been used for decades to stimulate increased production from existing oil or gas wells. This technique, along with other well stimulation techniques, has been regulated to varying degrees through state oil and gas codes. The detail and scope of applicable regulations vary across the states, and some states have regulated "well stimulation" broadly without addressing hydraulic "fracturing" explicitly.24 State regulators have noted that hydraulic fracturing operations have been regulated through provisions that address various production activities, including requirements regarding well construction (e.g., casing and cementing), well stimulation (e.g., hydraulic fracturing), well operation (e.g., pressure testing and blowout prevention), and wastewater management.25

Nonetheless, drilling and fracturing methods and technologies have changed significantly over time as they have been applied to more challenging formations, greatly increasing the amount of water, fracturing fluids, and well pressures involved in tight oil and shale gas production operations. State groundwater protection officials have reported that development of shale gas and tight oil using high-volume hydraulic fracturing, in combination with directional drilling, has posed new challenges for the management and protection of water resources.26 Consequently, many of the major producing states have revised or are in the process of revising their oil and gas laws and regulations to respond to these advances in oil and natural gas production technologies and related changes in the industry.27

Figure 6.Unconventional Shale Plays in the Lower 48 States

(with federal lands shown)

Source: CRS, compiled from U.S. Energy Information Administration sources.

Notes: No information had been reported on active shale plays in Alaska at the time of this report. Hawaii's volcanic origin does not support the geologic process leading to the deposition of shale.

When revising laws and regulations, some states have added provisions to address hydraulic fracturing specifically, such as requirements for disclosure of chemicals used in hydraulic fracturing. Additionally, various states have adopted measures on water resources protection (including casing, cementing and pressure testing, well spacing, setbacks, water withdrawal, flowback, and wastewater storage and disposal requirements).28 According to the Ground Water Protection Council (GWPC), the number of states with regulations governing hydraulic fracturing operations specifically increased from 4 in 2009 to 13 in 2013, and the number of states requiring reporting of hydraulic fracturing chemicals grew from 9 in 2009 to 21 in 2013.29 In February 2015, the GWPC reported that 27 states required chemical disclosure, and at least 18 of these states allow or require companies to meet public disclosure requirements by using the FracFocus website (see Figure 7).

Figure 7.States Requiring Disclosure of Hydraulic Fracturing Chemicals

Source: Ground Water Protection Council, http://fracfocus.org/welcome.

Notes: FracFocus was established in 2011 by the Ground Water Protection Council and the Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission. FracFocus is a publicly available registry where oil and gas companies may voluntarily identify chemicals used in hydraulic fracturing operations at specific wells. Many states allow or require operators to meet state disclosure requirements by posting information on the FracFocus website. Similarly, new Bureau of Land Management (BLM) hydraulic fracturing regulations require oil and gas operators on federal lands to disclose chemicals through the FracFocus website.

In December 2014, the New York State environmental commissioner announced plans to prohibit high-volume hydraulic fracturing based on the findings of a public health review.30 Maryland environmental officials recommended in late 2014 that shale gas drilling be allowed using best practices, following a three-year review of potential risks pursuant to an executive order. In 2013, North Carolina lawmakers enacted legislation prohibiting the issuance of permits for oil and gas development using hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling until new regulations were in place and the legislature took affirmative action to allow permits to be issued; in 2014, the state enacted legislation authorizing a regulatory permitting program for shale gas development.31

Debate over the Federal Role

While states continue to adopt and implement varying frameworks for oversight and regulation of unconventional gas and oil development, some Members of Congress and various environmental groups have pressed for greater environmental oversight of shale energy development at the federal level. Some advocates of a larger federal role point to a wide range of differences in substance, scope, and enforcement among state regulatory regimes and assert that a national framework is needed to ensure a consistent baseline level of environmental and human health protection and transparency.32 Such advocates further argue that greater regulatory uniformity would reduce risks and uncertainties to both the industry and the public.33 Others, including many oil and gas states, argue against greater federal involvement and point to established state oil and gas programs and regulatory structures (which include a range of structures involving commissions, boards, or divisions within natural resource agencies working to varying degrees with, or within, state environmental agencies). In this view, experience lies with the states, and in addition to the relative nimbleness of states to review and revise laws and rules, the states are better able to consider regional differences in geology, topography, climate, and water resources.

In the 113th Congress, as in recent Congresses, the federal role in regulating oil and gas production generally, and hydraulic fracturing specifically, was the subject of hearings, seminars, and legislation.34 In the 114th Congress, bills have again been proposed to either limit or expand federal involvement in regulating oil and gas development (see "Legislation" section). Such proposals have been contentious, and Congress has not enacted such legislation since amending the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) in the Energy Policy Act (EPAct) of 2005 (P.L. 109-58) to explicitly exclude from the SDWA definition of underground injection of fluids (other than diesel fuels) related to hydraulic fracturing operations.35

Selected Federal Responses to Unconventional Resource Extraction

Provisions of several federal environmental laws and related regulations currently apply to certain activities associated with oil and natural gas production.36 The Clean Water Act (CWA), for example, prohibits the discharge of pollutants from point sources into surface waters without a permit,37 and SDWA requires an Underground Injection Control (UIC) permit for wastewater disposal through deep well injection.38 A SDWA UIC permit is required for the underground injection of fluids or propping agents for hydraulic fracturing operations if the injected fracturing fluids contain diesel fuels.39 In 2012, EPA issued regulations under the authority of the Clean Air Act that require reductions in emissions related to oil and natural gas production, including emissions of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from hydraulically fractured natural gas wells.40

While congressional debate has continued on legislative proposals, the Administration has been pursuing additional initiatives to regulate or otherwise manage activities related to unconventional oil and gas production. EPA has been most active and is considering actions under several pollution control statutes. Among these efforts, EPA is working to (1) establish pretreatment standards to control discharges of wastewater from shale gas extraction to publicly owned wastewater treatment plants; (2) revise water quality criteria to protect aquatic life from discharges of brine produced during oil and gas extraction to surface waters; and (3) subject hydraulic fracturing chemicals to toxic substance reporting requirements. In February 2014, EPA finalized permitting guidance for the use of diesel in hydraulic fracturing operations.41 The Appendix of this report provides a brief overview of selected federal environmental research and regulatory activities related to the production of tight oil and gas resources. Several of these initiatives are reviewed below.

EPA Study on Hydraulic Fracturing and Drinking Water

In 2009, the 111th Congress urged EPA to conduct a study on the relationship between hydraulic fracturing and drinking water to gain a better understanding of potential contamination risks.42 In 2011, EPA published a final study plan that identified research projects that would address the full life cycle of water in hydraulic fracturing, from water acquisition to chemical mixing and injection through wastewater treatment and/or disposal. The study is intended to (1) examine conditions that may be associated with potential contamination of drinking water sources, and (2) identify factors that may lead to human exposure and risks.43 As part of the study, EPA has been investigating five reported incidents of drinking water contamination in areas where hydraulic fracturing has occurred. The purpose of the retrospective case studies is to determine the potential relationship between reported impacts and hydraulic fracturing activities.44

In December 2012, EPA released a status report presenting the agency's efforts on 18 research projects being conducted for the study.45 Many of the individual research projects have been peer reviewed and published, and these papers are available on the agency website.46 EPA has designated the hydraulic fracturing study as a "highly influential scientific assessment,"47 which will undergo peer review by EPA's independent Science Advisory Board.48 EPA is synthesizing the results of the research projects into a draft report and plans to submit it for peer review and public comment in 2015. A final report is not expected to be completed before 2016.

Multiagency Collaboration on Unconventional Oil and Gas Research

In March 2011, the White House issued a broad Blueprint for a Secure Energy Future, which identified a need to "expand safe and responsible domestic oil and gas development and production." Additionally, the President directed the Secretary of Energy to identify steps that could be taken to improve the safety and environmental performance of shale gas production and to develop consensus recommendations on practices to ensure the protection of public health and the environment.49

In response, the Secretary of Energy's Advisory Board (SEAB) convened the Shale Gas Production Subcommittee to identify and evaluate issues and make recommendations to mitigate possible impacts of shale gas development. The SEAB final report included recommendations for the states, federal government, and industry. The subcommittee recommended, among other actions, that companies and regulators—to the extent that such actions had not been undertaken—adopt further measures to protect water quality and to manage water use and wastewater disposal, publicly report the composition of water and flow throughout the fracturing and cleanup process, disclose fracturing fluid composition, and adopt best practices for well development and construction (especially casing, cementing, and pressure management).50 The committee also recommended actions to protect air quality through reduction of emissions of air toxics, ozone precursors, methane, and other pollutants.

In 2012, the President issued Executive Order (E.O.) 13605, "Supporting Safe and Responsible Development of Unconventional Domestic Natural Gas Resources," to coordinate the efforts of federal agencies overseeing the development of unconventional domestic natural gas resources and associated infrastructure. The order states, "Because efforts to promote safe, responsible, and efficient development of unconventional domestic natural gas resources are underway at a number of executive departments and agencies, close interagency coordination is important for effective implementation of these programs and activities."51

E.O. 13605 established an interagency working group to coordinate agency activities and to engage in long-term planning to ensure coordination on research, resource assessment, and infrastructure development. In April 2012, the lead agencies—the Department of Energy (DOE), EPA, and the Department of the Interior (DOI/U.S. Geological Survey)—signed a Memorandum of Agreement to develop a multiagency research plan "to address the highest priority research questions associated with safely and prudently developing unconventional shale gas and tight oil reserves." In July 2014, the three agencies released a research and development strategy for unconventional oil and gas resources.52

BLM Regulation of Hydraulic Fracturing

While states have the predominant role in regulating oil and gas development on state and private lands, the federal government is responsible for managing oil and gas resources on federal lands. Additionally, some states require oil and gas operators on federal lands within their state to comply with various state rules; consequently, the debate over the federal role in regulating unconventional oil and gas production—and related concerns over possible overlapping, inconsistent, or duplicative rules—has extended to activities on federal lands.

The Bureau of Land Management is the federal agency responsible for overseeing oil, natural gas, and coal leasing and production on federal and Indian lands, including split estates, where the federal government owns the subsurface mineral estate and another entity owns the surface.53 BLM is tasked with leasing subsurface mineral rights not only on BLM-administered land but also for lands managed by other federal agencies, including the U.S. Forest Service.54 BLM oversees roughly 700 million subsurface acres of federal mineral estate and 56 million subsurface acres of Indian mineral estate nationwide. As of June 30, 2014, there were roughly 47,000 active oil and gas leases and 95,000 wells on public lands. BLM estimates that 2,800 new wells were drilled on federal and Indian lands in 2013 and that hydraulic fracturing was used to stimulate roughly 90% of these wells.55

Final Hydraulic Fracturing Rule

On March 26, 2015, BLM promulgated a hydraulic fracturing rule applicable to oil and gas operations on federal and Indian lands.56 The rule revises BLM's oil and gas rules related to hydraulic fracturing, which were promulgated in 1982 and last revised in 1988, before the widespread use of hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling.57 The rule is scheduled to enter into effect on June 24, 2015.

When first proposing the rule in 2012, BLM noted that the "rule is necessary to provide useful information to the public and to assure that hydraulic fracturing is conducted in a way that adequately protects the environment."58 BLM estimates that the rule will affect roughly 2,800 hydraulic fracturing operations each year; however, based on previous levels of activity on federal lands, the rule could affect as many as 3,800 operations annually, and total compliance costs could reach $45 million annually.59

BLM received more than 177,000 comments on the proposed rule, and in May 2013, BLM published a Supplemental Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (SNPR) and Request for Comment.60 BLM reviewed more than 1.4 million comments on the SNPR before issuing the final rule.61

In developing the rule, BLM reached out to states, industry, and other stakeholders. Some elements of the rule are patterned after state requirements, and the final rule shares overarching features with the 2012 proposal and the 2013 SNPR. Broadly, the rule revises BLM oil and gas regulations to:

Following are selected requirements of the final BLM hydraulic fracturing rule:

BLM further plans to revise its oil and gas rules to set standards to limit venting and flaring of natural gas at oil and gas production facilities on federal and Indian lands.66

Coast Guard Regulation of Barge Shipments of Shale Gas Wastewater

The disposal of the large volumes of wastewater produced during shale gas extraction has posed challenges for companies, state regulators, and communities—particularly in the Marcellus Shale region. On-site disposal options are limited, and trucking wastewater to distant injection wells is costly. In 2012, the Coast Guard received two requests for approval for the bulk shipment of wastewater resulting from shale gas extraction in the Marcellus Shale to storage or treatment centers and final disposal sites in Ohio, Texas, and Louisiana.

The Coast Guard regulates the shipment of hazardous materials on the nation's rivers and classifies cargoes for bulk shipment.67 For a cargo that has not been classified in the regulations or under prior policy, the ship owner must request Coast Guard approval prior to shipping the cargo.68 The Coast Guard has identified concerns with shipment of shale gas wastewater in barges. A key Coast Guard concern with the wastewater is "its potential for contamination with radioactive isotopes such as radium-226 and -228. Radium is of particular concern because it is chemically similar to calcium and so will easily form surface residues and may lead to radioactive surface contamination of the barges."69 Consequently, the Coast Guard currently does not allow barge shipment of shale gas extraction wastewater (SGEWW), and is developing a policy to allow SGEWW to be transported for disposal.

In March 2013, the Coast Guard submitted for review to the Office of Management and Budget a draft document, "Carriage of Conditionally Permitted Shale Gas Extraction Waste Water in Bulk." In October 2013, the Coast Guard published a notice of availability of a proposed "policy letter" concerning barge shipments of SGEWW and requested public comment. The Coast Guard received more than 70,000 comments and has been reviewing them. After addressing public comments, the Coast Guard plans to issue a final policy letter that specifies conditions and information requirements that barge owners would be required to meet to receive approval to transport shale gas wastewater in bulk on inland waterways.70

Legislation

The 113th Congress

Contrasting bills were offered in the 113th Congress addressing unconventional oil and gas development and hydraulic fracturing specifically. Several bills proposed to limit federal regulation of hydraulic fracturing activities, while others would have expanded federal involvement.

In November 2013, the House passed H.R. 2728 to amend the Mineral Leasing Act to prohibit the Department of the Interior (DOI) from enforcing any federal regulation, guidance, or permit requirement regarding hydraulic fracturing relating to oil, gas, or geothermal production activities on or under any land in any state that has regulations, guidance, or permit requirements for hydraulic fracturing. Although the language broadly applied to any federal regulation, guidance, and permit requirements "regarding hydraulic fracturing," the prohibition on enforcement applied only to DOI and therefore presumably would have impacted only hydraulic fracturing operations on lands managed by that agency. The bill would have also required DOI to defer to state regulations, permitting, and guidance for all activities related to hydraulic fracturing relating to oil, gas, or geothermal production activities on federal land, regardless of whether those rules were duplicative, more or less restrictive, or did not meet federal guidelines.

As passed, H.R. 2728 further would have (1) prohibited the department from enforcing hydraulic fracturing regulations on Trust lands, except with express tribal consent, and (2) required the Government Accountability Office to study the economic benefits of domestic shale oil and gas production resulting from hydraulic fracturing. H.R. 2728 also incorporated the text of H.R. 2850 (H.Rept. 113-252), the EPA Hydraulic Fracturing Study Improvement Act. These provisions proposed to require EPA to (1) follow certain procedures governing peer review and data presentation in conducting its study on the relationship between hydraulic fracturing and drinking water, and (2) issue the final report by September 30, 2016. On November 20, 2013, S. 1743, a companion bill to H.R. 2728 as introduced, was offered in the Senate. H.R. 2728 was placed on the Senate Legislative Calendar in December 2013. In September 2014, the House passed broad energy legislation (H.R. 2), which included the text of H.R. 2728 in Subdivision D. The Senate did not act on either bill.

Similarly, the Fracturing Regulations are Effective in State Hands Act, H.R. 2513 and S. 1234, proposed to give states sole authority to regulate hydraulic fracturing operations on lands within state boundaries. The legislation further specified that hydraulic fracturing on federal public lands would be subject to the law of the state in which the land is located. S. 1482, the Empower States Act of 2013, would have generally prohibited the Secretary of the Interior from issuing regulations or guidelines regarding oil and gas production on federal land in a state if the state had otherwise met the requirements under applicable federal law. Among other provisions, the bill also proposed to (1) amend the Safe Drinking Water Act to require federal agencies, before issuing any oil and gas regulation or guideline, to seek comment and consult with each affected state agency and Indian tribe, and (2) require any future rule requiring disclosure of hydraulic fracturing chemicals to refer to the FracFocus database. H.R. 1548 (H.Rept. 113-263) would have prohibited the BLM hydraulic fracturing rule from having any effect on land held in trust or restricted status for Indians, except with the express consent of its Indian beneficiaries. H.R. 2, Section 25009, included this language.

In contrast to the above bills, several others proposed to expand federal regulation of hydraulic fracturing. The Fracturing Responsibility and Awareness of Chemicals Act (FRAC) of 2013 (H.R. 1921 and S. 1135) would have amended the SDWA to (1) require disclosure of the chemicals used in the fracturing process, and (2) repeal the hydraulic fracturing exemption established in EPAct 2005 and amend the term "underground injection" to include the injection of fluids used in hydraulic fracturing operations, thus authorizing EPA to regulate this process under the SDWA. The Climate Protection Act of 2013, S. 332, Section 301, contained similar chemical disclosure provisions. Additionally, S. 332 proposed to repeal SDWA Section 1425, which provides states with an alternative to meeting the specific requirements contained in EPA UIC regulations by allowing states to demonstrate to EPA that their existing programs for oil and gas injection wells are effective in preventing endangerment of underground sources of drinking water.71 S. 332, Section 302, would have required EPA to report to Congress on fugitive methane emissions resulting from natural gas infrastructure.

Legislation was also introduced to require baseline and follow-up testing of potable groundwater supplies in the vicinity of hydraulic fracturing operations. H.R. 2983, the Safe Hydration is an American Right in Energy Development Act of 2013, would have amended the SDWA to prohibit hydraulic fracturing unless the person proposing to conduct the fracturing operations agreed to testing and reporting requirements regarding underground sources of drinking water. The legislation would have required testing (for substances specified by EPA) before, during, and after hydraulic fracturing operations. EPA would have been required to post all test results on its website.

Broader oil and gas regulatory bills included H.R. 1154, the Bringing Reductions to Energy's Airborne Toxic Health Effects Act, which proposed to amend the Clean Air Act to authorize EPA to aggregate emissions from oil and gas wells, pipelines, and related units for purposes of regulating toxic air pollutants. H.R. 2825, the Closing Loopholes and Ending Arbitrary and Needless Evasion of Regulations Act of 2013, would have amended the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act to require EPA to determine whether wastes associated with oil and gas production meet the criteria for hazardous waste and to regulate any such wastes as hazardous.

The 114th Congress

Legislation in this Congress addressing unconventional oil and gas production repeats themes from 113th Congress. Again bills have been introduced both to expand and limit federal regulation of hydraulic fracturing operations. Several relevant bills are outlined below.

Conclusion: Above- and Below-Ground Issues a Concern

The prospect that by the end of the decade the United States could become a significant exporter of natural gas and the world's leading oil producer is a phenomenal change of circumstances from just a few years ago. The technological advances that drove the changes in the United States have also reversed the global perspective of dwindling oil and natural gas resources and increased the concern about greenhouse gas emissions. Other countries seek to emulate the U.S. production success but have yet to do so. The U.S. oil and gas situation continues to be extremely dynamic, and many questions remain about how the United States will develop its resources.

Many observers, including U.S. government officials, have only recently recognized the tremendous resource size and the benefits that will accrue from developing the resources. Even though shale gas development is still considered very new and tight oil production is even newer, the industry has continued to improve its efficiency in extracting the resources, particularly of natural gas. As more industry resources are shifted to tight oil plays, the natural gas sector has had to produce more with less. Some in industry point out that at the beginning of shale gas development about 5% of the resource was able to be extracted; now it is closer to 20% but will likely increase over time. By comparison, the extraction rate for conventional gas is between 30% and 60% of the resource.

Development of these resources has generated concern and debate over potential environmental and human health risks. Concerns include potential impacts to groundwater and surface water resources from well development and stimulation operations and wastewater management, as well as air quality impacts from emissions of air pollutants, including methane. These concerns have drawn scrutiny of regulatory regimes governing this industry and have led to calls for greater federal oversight of oil and gas development. A growing concern is that the deep-well disposal of oil and gas production wastewater may be responsible for increasing rates of seismic activity in certain areas.72 Although primary regulatory authority over oil and natural gas exploration and production on state and private lands generally rests with the states, provisions of several federal environmental laws currently apply to certain activities associated with oil and natural gas exploration and production. Moreover, EPA has been reviewing other statutory authorities and pursuing new regulatory initiatives, and BLM is planning further revisions to its oil and gas rules to address venting and flaring of natural gas on federal and Indian lands. A broader concern among some is that the low price of natural gas is having negative consequences for the development and growth in energy efficiency, renewable energy sources, and nuclear power, potentially resulting in another generation of greenhouse-gas-producing energy sources.

The importance of tight oil and shale gas resources to U.S. energy policy and regional economies is likely to keep issues surrounding their development on the agenda in the 114th Congress. Bills have been introduced to expand and also to constrain federal involvement in oil and gas development involving hydraulic fracturing. Meanwhile, the Administration continues to pursue actions to broaden federal oversight of this industry sector through administrative means.73

Appendix. Selected Federal Initiatives Related to Unconventional Oil and Gas Production

Table A-1. Selected Federal Actions
Related to Unconventional Oil and Gas Production

(with emphasis on hydraulic fracturing)

Agency: Statute, as Amended

Regulatory/Guidance

Research

Status

EPA: Clean Air Act (CAA)

Air emissions. In 2012, EPA issued regulations that revised existing rules and promulgated new ones to regulate emissions of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), sulfur dioxide, and hazardous air pollutants (HAPs) from many production and processing activities in the oil and gas sector that had not been subject previously to federal regulation.

 

Rules were promulgated in August 2012 (77 Federal Register 49489); requirements phase in through 2015.

 

Particularly pertinent to shale gas production are the New Source Performance Standards (NSPS), which require reductions in emissions of VOCs from hydraulically fractured natural gas wells. The rules require operators to use reduced emissions completions (green completions) for all hydraulically fractured natural gas wells beginning no later than January 2015.

 

EPA agreed to revisit elements of the NSPS and, on April 12, 2013, proposed revisions to the NSPS for storage tanks (78 Federal Register 22125).

 

Applying broadly across the sector, the NSPS require reductions of VOCs from compressors, pneumatic controllers, storage vessels, and other emission sources and also revise existing standards for sulfur dioxide emissions from onshore natural gas processing plants and HAPs from dehydrators and storage tanks.

 

 

 

In September 2013, EPA updated its 2012 performance standards for oil and natural gas to address VOC emissions from storage tanks used by the crude oil and natural gas production industry. The updates are intended to ensure that tanks likely to have the highest emissions are controlled first, while providing tank owners and operators time to purchase and install VOC controls. The amendments reflect recent information showing that more storage tanks will be coming on line than the agency originally estimated. (Thus, presumably, producers need more time to purchase and install emission controls.)a

 

On September 23, 2013, EPA finalized revisions to the NSPS for storage tanks (78 Federal Register 58416).

 

In July 2014, EPA proposed updates and clarifications to NSPS requirements for well completions, storage tanks, and natural gas processing plants. The proposal would not change the required emission reductions in the rules, including standards applicable to hydraulically fractured natural gas wells.

 

On July 17, 2014, EPA proposed changes to the NSPS rules (79 Federal Register 41752).

 

 

 

 

EPA: Clean Water Act (CWA)

Wastewater discharge. In 2011, EPA announced plans to begin two separate rulemakings to revise the Effluent Limitations Guidelines and Standards (ELGs) for the Oil and Gas Extraction Point Source Category to control discharges of wastewater from (1) coalbed methane (CBM) and (2) shale gas extraction. Under CWA Section 304(m), EPA sets national pretreatment standards for discharges of industrial wastewater based on best available technologies that are economically achievable (BAT). States incorporate these limits into discharge permits. Oil and gas wastewaters often contain elevated levels of TDS (i.e., salts), and shale gas wastewater may contain chemicals, metals, and naturally occurring radioactive materials (NORM).

Discharges to treatment plants: Existing ELGs lack pretreatment standards for "indirect" discharges of unconventional oil and gas wastewaters to publicly owned wastewater treatment works (POTWs), which typically are not designed to treat this wastewater.c In April 2015, EPA proposed to establish a "zero discharge" pretreatment standard to ban discharges to POTWs of wastewater resulting from unconventional oil and gas (excluding CBM) production. EPA notes that, while states are not approving requests for such discharges to POTWs, the proposed zero discharge standard would "provide regulatory certainty and would eliminate the burden on POTWs to analyze such requests" (80 Federal Register 18561).

Discharges to surface water: Current ELGs prohibiting direct discharges of oil and gas extraction wastewater into surface waters do not apply to CBM-produced water. Rather, CBM wastewater discharge permits are based on the best professional judgment of state or EPA permit writers. EPA was considering developing national discharge standards for CMB operations but has determined not to do so.

 

Notice of the final Effluent Guidelines Program Plan was published in October 2011 (76 Federal Register 66286).

On April 7, 2015, EPA issued a proposed rule that would set a "zero discharge" pretreatment standard for discharges of wastewater from unconventional oil and gas extraction to POTWs (80 Federal Register 18557).

On August 7, 2013, EPA proposed to delist CBM from the ELG rulemaking plan based on the "declining prevalence and economic viability" of the industry. EPA determined that no economically achievable technology is available currently (78 Federal Register 48159).

EPA: CWA

Wastewater discharge. Produced water from oil and gas production (including flowback from hydraulic fracturing) can have high levels of total dissolved solids (TDS), largely chlorides, which can harm aquatic life and affect receiving water uses (e.g., fishing or irrigation). EPA is updating its chloride water quality criteria for protection of aquatic life.

CWA Section 304(a)(1) requires EPA to develop criteria for water quality that reflect the latest scientific understanding of the effects of pollutants on aquatic life and human health. States may use EPA-recommended criteria to establish or update state water quality standards, which in turn are used to develop enforceable discharge permits. If reflected in state water quality standards, the revised chloride water quality criteria could affect discharges of produced water from extraction of conventional and unconventional oil and gas (e.g., CMB).b

 

Draft criteria document expected in early 2016.

EPA: Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA)

Diesel fuels. EPA has issued UIC Program Guidance for Permitting Hydraulic Fracturing with Diesel Fuels in response to the revised SDWA definition of "underground injection" in the Energy Policy Act (EPAct) of 2005 to explicitly exclude the underground injection of fluids (other than diesel fuels) used in hydraulic fracturing. The guidance provides recommendations for EPA permit writers to use in writing permits for hydraulic fracturing operations using diesel fuels. The guidance applies in states where EPA implements the UIC program for oil and natural gas related (Class II) injection wells. States are not required to adopt the guidance but may do so.d

 

Draft guidance issued in May 2012.

Final guidance issued in February 2014.

EPA: SDWA

 

Study. EPA is studying the relationship between hydraulic fracturing and drinking water. Congress requested the study in EPA's FY2010 appropriations act. EPA designated the pending "report of results" as a "highly influential scientific assessment," which requires peer review by qualified specialists.

Draft report is expected to be submitted for peer review in 2015.

A final report is expected in 2016 (extended from 2014).

EPA: Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA)

Chemical reporting. In response to a citizen petition (TSCA Section 21), EPA published an Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPR) to get input on the design and scope of possible reporting requirements for hydraulic fracturing chemicals. EPA is considering requiring information reporting under TSCA Section 8(a) and health and safety data reporting under Section 8(d). EPA has sought public comment on the types of chemical information that could be reported and disclosed and approaches to obtaining this information for chemicals used in hydraulic fracturing.

 

Initiated in January 2012.

ANPR under TSCA Section 8 published May 9, 2014 (79 Federal Register 28664).

Public comment period closed September 18, 2014.

EPA: Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)

Storage/disposal pits and ponds. EPA has been considering developing guidance to address the design, operation, maintenance, and closure of pits used to store hydraulic fracturing fluids for reuse or pending final disposal. These wastes are exempt from regulation as a hazardous waste under RCRA.

In April 2014, EPA issued a document that compiles voluntary management practices for oil and gas exploration and production wastes. This non-regulatory, non-guidance document is intended to provide information only and does not establish agency policy.

 

In April 2014, EPA issued a Compilation of Publicly Available Sources of Voluntary Management Practices for Oil and Gas Exploration and Production (E&P) Wastes as They Address Pits, Tanks, and Land Application.

Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management (BLM): Mineral Leasing Act, Indian Mineral Leasing Act

Hydraulic fracturing on public lands. BLM has promulgated revisions to rules governing oil and natural gas production on federal and Indian lands. BLM proposes to (1) require public disclosure of chemicals used in hydraulic fracturing, (2) tighten regulations related to wellbore integrity, and (3) add new reporting and management/storage requirements for water used and produced in hydraulic fracturing. BLM first proposed a rule in May 2012. After extensive public comment, BLM issued a Supplemental Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on May 24, 2013 (78 Federal Register 31636).

 

Final rule published March 26, 2015 (80 Federal Register 16130).

Department of Homeland Security, Coast Guard: 46 U.S.C. Ch. 37

Wastewater shipment. The Coast Guard regulates the shipment of hazardous materials on the nation's rivers. Because of the potential for shale gas wastewater in the Marcellus Shale region to contain radioactive materials (especially radium, which can form surface residues and may lead to radioactive surface contamination of the barges), the Coast Guard currently does not allow barge shipment of shale gas extraction wastewater. In 2013, the Coast Guard's Hazardous Materials Division issued a proposed policy letter establishing requirements for bulk shipment of shale gas extraction wastewater by barge for disposal. The Coast Guard received more than 70,000 comments and has been reviewing them.

 

On October 30, 2013, the Coast Guard published a notice for a one-month comment period on a proposed policy letter setting conditions for bulk shipment of shale gas wastewater (78 Federal Register 64905).

DOE/EPA/DOI-USGS: E.O. 13605

 

Federal research coordination. In 2012, the three agencies agreed, through an MOU, to develop a multiagency research plan "to address the highest priority research questions associated with safely and prudently developing unconventional shale gas and tight oil resources."

Multiagency Research Strategy was issued on July 18, 2013.e

Source: Prepared by the Congressional Research Service.

Notes: This table presents selected Administration activities related to unconventional oil and natural gas extraction. It excludes, for example, regional or site-specific research studies conducted by federal agencies. More information on EPA initiatives to regulate oil and gas production and hydraulic fracturing is available at EPA's website, Natural Gas Extraction—Hydraulic Fracturing, http://www2.epa.gov/hydraulicfracturing.

a. These CAA rules, issued under court order, establish new air emissions standards for the "Crude Oil and Natural Gas Production" and "Natural Gas Transmission and Storage" source categories. For details, see CRS Report R42986, An Overview of Air Quality Issues in Natural Gas Systems, by [author name scrubbed].

b. For more information, see the EPA Water Quality Criteria web page, http://water.epa.gov/scitech/swguidance/standards/criteria/.

c. EPA explains that "[f]or direct dischargers of unconventional oil and gas wastewaters from onshore oil and gas facilities—with the exception of coalbed methane—technology-based limitations are based on the Effluent Limitations Guidelines (ELGs) for the Oil and Gas Extraction Category (40 CFR Part 435). Permits for onshore oil and gas facilities must include the requirements in Part 435, including a ban on the discharge of pollutants, except for wastewater that is of good enough quality for use in agricultural and wildlife propagation for those onshore facilities located in the continental United States and west of the 98th meridian.... Part 435 does not currently include categorical pretreatment standards for indirect discharges to publicly owned treatment works (POTWs) for wells located onshore." U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Unconventional Extraction in the Oil and Gas Industry, http://water.epa.gov/scitech/wastetech/guide/oilandgas/unconv.cfm.

d. EPA regulates the underground injection of fluids through SDWA §§1421-1426; 42 U.S.C. §§300h-300h-5. In February 2014, EPA issued UIC Program Guidance for Permitting Hydraulic Fracturing with Diesel Fuels, which generally follows EPA Class II underground injection well requirements (i.e., well construction standards; mechanical integrity testing; operating, monitoring, and reporting requirements; and public notification and financial responsibility requirements). The guidance provides recommendations for EPA permit writers for tailoring requirements for hydraulic fracturing using diesel fuels. The guidance applies in states where EPA implements the UIC program for Class II wells (including Pennsylvania, New York, Michigan, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Virginia).

e. Federal Multiagency Collaboration on Unconventional Oil and Gas Research—A Strategy for Research and Development, http://unconventional.energy.gov/.

Footnotes

1.

Hydraulic fracturing is an industry technique that uses water, sand, and chemicals under pressure to enhance the recovering of natural gas and oil. It has taken on new prominence as it has been applied to tight oil and shale gas formation as an essential method for producing resources from those types of formations.

2.

Coalbed methane and tight gas accounted for 33% of U.S. natural gas production in 2011 but are projected to account for only 28% in 2040, according to the Energy Information Administration (EIA).

3.

U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, "Full Committee Forum: Domestic Supply and Exports," May 21, 2013, http://www.energy.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/hearings-and-business-meetings?ID=0380bed7-f9ef-4450-bfa0-a3af60f7a184.

4.

U.S. Congress, House Energy and Commerce Committee, Subcommittee on Energy and Power, "U.S. Energy Abundance: Regulatory, Market, and Legal Barriers to Export," June 18, 2013, http://energycommerce.house.gov/hearing/us-energy-abundance-regulatory-market-and-legal-barriers-export.

5.

For additional information on U.S. natural gas exports, see CRS Report R42074, U.S. Natural Gas Exports: New Opportunities, Uncertain Outcomes, by [author name scrubbed] et al.

6.

For additional information on the Bakken Formation, see CRS Report R42032, The Bakken Formation: Leading Unconventional Oil Development, by [author name scrubbed] et al.

7.

BP, BP Statistical Review of World Energy, June 2014, pp. 8-9.

8.

CRS Report R41875, The U.S.-Canada Energy Relationship: Joined at the Well, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed]. Mexico is the third-largest source of U.S. oil imports but is not always included in discussions of North American energy independence, as its oil sector is not as integrated with the United States as is Canada's.

9.

EIA, U.S. Imports of Crude Oil and Petroleum Products, July 30, 2014, http://www.eia.gov/dnav/pet/hist/LeafHandler.ashx?n=PET&s=MCRIMUS2&f=A.

10.

Adam Sieminski, Outlook for Shale Gas and Tight Oil Development in the U.S., U.S. Energy Information Administration, presentation for the American Petroleum Institute, Washington, DC, April 4, 2013, p. 12.

11.

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Evaluation of Impacts to Underground Sources of Drinking Water by Hydraulic Fracturing of Coalbed Methane Reservoirs, Final Report, EPA-816-04-003, Washington, DC, June 2004, p. 4-1. EPA reviewed 11 major coalbed methane formations to determine whether coal seams lay within underground sources of drinking water (USDWs). EPA determined that 10 of the 11 producing coal basins "definitely or likely lie entirely or partially within USDWs."

12.

Avner Vengosh, Robert B. Jackson, and N. Warner et al., "A Critical Review of the Risks to Water Resources from Unconventional Shale Gas Development and Hydraulic Fracturing in the United States," Environmental Science and Technology, vol. 10, no. 1021 (2014), p. 405118.

13.

Department of the Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2010, P.L. 111-88, H.Rept. 111-316. The EPA study (expected to be published in 2016) includes five case studies that involve drinking water contamination incidents in areas where unconventional oil and gas development is occurring.

14.

A 2012 Pacific Institute study found that many individuals interviewed for the study defined "hydraulic fracturing" much more broadly than the industry meaning of the term (i.e., the pressurized injection of fluids into a production well). These individuals used the term broadly to include well construction, completion, and other associated activities. Noting the differences, the authors concluded that "additional work is needed to clarify terms and definitions associated with hydraulic fracturing to support more fruitful and informed dialog and to develop appropriate energy, water, and environmental policy." See Hydraulic Fracturing and Water Resources: Separating the Frack from the Fiction, p. 29, http://www.pacinst.org/reports/fracking/.

15.

The Marcellus Shale formation is one of the largest unconventional natural gas resources in the United States, underlying much of West Virginia and Pennsylvania, southern New York, eastern Ohio, western Maryland, and western Virginia.

16.

For a discussion of water management issues associated with shale energy development, see CRS Report R43635, Shale Energy Technology Assessment: Current and Emerging Water Practices, by [author name scrubbed], [author name scrubbed], and [author name scrubbed]. See also [author name scrubbed], Garvin Heath, and Jordan Macknick, et al., Natural Gas and the Transformation of the U.S. Energy Sector: Electricity, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, November 2012, http://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy13osti/55538.pdf.

17.

For a detailed discussion of air pollution issues associated with oil and gas exploration and development and recent EPA regulations, see CRS Report R42833, Air Quality Issues in Natural Gas Systems, by [author name scrubbed].

18.

EPA, Overview of Final Amendments to Air Regulations for the Oil and Natural Gas Industry: Fact Sheet, October 2012, http://www.epa.gov/airquality/oilandgas/pdfs/20120417fs.pdf.

19.

When vented, natural gas (largely methane) is released to the air without being burned. In contrast, when natural gas is flared (burned), the main byproduct is carbon dioxide. Flaring is preferred to venting for safety reasons but also because methane is several times more potent than carbon dioxide as a greenhouse gas (although more short-lived in the atmosphere). Flaring also reduces emissions of ozone-forming pollutants compared to venting.

20.

See CRS Report R42032, The Bakken Formation: Leading Unconventional Oil Development, by [author name scrubbed] et al. See also EIA, "North Dakota Aims to Reduce Natural Gas Flaring," Today in Energy, October 20, 2014, http://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.cfm?id=18451.

21.

EIA, Rankings: Natural Gas Marketed Production, 2012, http://www.eia.gov/state/rankings/#/series/47. EIA reports gas production in 32 states and oil production in 31 states. Five states (Texas, North Dakota, California, Alaska, and Oklahoma) accounted for the bulk of oil and gas production in 2012. The biggest gains in oil production were in North Dakota and Texas due in large part to increased horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing activity.

22.

For a review of federal laws and regulations addressing leasing of federal lands for exploration and production of oil, gas, and coal, see CRS Report R40806, Energy Projects on Federal Lands: Leasing and Authorization, by [author name scrubbed].

23.

Some states enter into memoranda of understanding with BLM to coordinate administration and enforcement of various regulatory requirements on public lands within the state.

24.

For state-specific information, see the Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission, Summary of State Statutes and Regulations, http://www.iogcc.state.ok.us/state-statutes.

25.

For example, before the state enacted hydraulic fracturing legislation (SB 4) in September 2013, California regulators noted that requirements for protecting underground resources and well construction standards "provide a first line of protection from potential damage caused by hydraulic fracturing." However, the state noted, "There is a gap between the requirements placed on oil and gas operators to safely construct and maintain their wells, and the information they provide to the Division about hydraulic fracturing operations and steps taken to protect resources and the environment. The Department's pending regulatory process is intended to close that gap." California Department of Conservation, Hydraulic Fracturing in California, http://www.conservation.ca.gov/dog/general_information/Pages/HydraulicFracturing.aspx. Among other provisions, the California law requires public disclosure of chemicals, baseline and follow-up testing of nearby water wells, and groundwater monitoring plans, and it directs the state to conduct a comprehensive environmental study of impacts associated with hydraulic fracturing. Also, SB 4 directs regulators to make any needed revisions to rules governing construction of wells and well casings to ensure well integrity.

26.

See, for example, Ground Water Protection Council, State Oil and Natural Gas Regulations Designed to Protect Water Resources, 2014, http://www.gwpc.org/state-oil-gas-regulations-designed-protect-water-resources-2014-edition.

27.

Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Indiana, Michigan, Montana, North Dakota, New Mexico, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah, West Virginia, and Wyoming are among the states that in recent years have revised oil and gas laws and/or rules that address unconventional oil and gas development and hydraulic fracturing specifically.

28.

For a comparison of state requirements for specific activities (e.g., wastewater disposal, chemical disclosure, and cementing), see Resources for the Future, A Review of Shale Gas Regulations by State, July 2012, http://www.rff.org/centers/energy_economics_and_policy/Pages/Shale_Maps.aspx.

29.

Ground Water Protection Council, State Oil and Natural Gas Regulations Designed to Protect Water Resources, 2014, p. 8.

30.

New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, "New York State Department of Health Completes Review of High-Volume Hydraulic Fracturing," press release, December 17, 2014, http://www.dec.ny.gov/press/100055.html. High-volume hydraulic fracturing is used for shale gas and tight oil development. The state has not prohibited other well stimulation and hydraulic fracturing operations.

31.

General Assembly of North Carolina, Session Law 2013-365, Senate Bill 76. Also, Vermont banned hydraulic fracturing. (EIA does not list Vermont as an oil- or gas-producing state.) The New Jersey legislature passed a ban on shale gas drilling; however, the governor vetoed the bill and imposed a one-year ban, which has expired.

32.

See, for example, Matthew McFeeley, State Hydraulic Fracturing Disclosure Rules and Enforcement: A Comparison, Natural Resources Defense Council, July 2012.

33.

For further discussion, see [author name scrubbed], Garvin Heath, and Elizabeth Paranhos et al., Natural Gas and the Transformation of the U.S. Energy Sector: Electricity, Joint Institute for Strategic Energy Analysis, January 2013, http://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy13osti/55538.pdf.

34.

The 113th Congress explored the role of states and the federal government in oil and gas production, specifically, and in environmental protection broadly. In February 2013, the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, Subcommittee on Environment and the Economy, held a hearing, The Role of the States in Protecting the Environment Under Current Law. The Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources held a series of Natural Gas Roundtables, including a May 2013 forum on Shale Development: Best Practices and Environmental Concerns.

35.

SDWA requires regulation of underground injection activities to protect underground sources of drinking water. EPA has long regulated underground injections related to oil and gas field wastewater disposal and enhanced oil recovery. Historically, EPA had not regulated injection of fluids for hydraulic fracturing of oil or gas production wells. In 1997, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit ruled that injections for fracturing for coalbed methane production in Alabama constituted underground injection and must be regulated under SDWA. For more information, see CRS Report R41760, Hydraulic Fracturing and Safe Drinking Water Act Regulatory Issues, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed].

36.

See CRS Report R43152, Hydraulic Fracturing: Selected Legal Issues, by [author name scrubbed], [author name scrubbed], and [author name scrubbed].

37.

CWA Section 301 prohibits the discharge of pollutants into the nation's waters except in compliance with the provisions of the law, which include obtaining a discharge permit. 33 U.S.C. §1311. For information on applicable CWA requirements, see EPA, "Natural Gas Drilling in the Marcellus Shale, NPDES Program Frequently Asked Questions," March 16, 2011, http://www.epa.gov/npdes/pubs/hydrofracturing_faq.pdf.

38.

The Safe Drinking Water Act of 1974 (P.L. 93-523) authorized the UIC program at EPA. UIC provisions, as amended, are contained in SDWA Part C, §§1421-1426; 42 U.S.C. §§300h-300h-5.

39.

EPAct 2005 (P.L. 109-58, §322) amended SDWA to exempt from the definition of underground injection the injection of fluids or propping agents (other than diesel fuel) for hydraulic fracturing purposes.

40.

The rules regulate VOC emissions from hydraulically fractured natural gas wells, compressors, pneumatic controllers, storage vessels, and leaking components at onshore natural gas processing plants, as well as sulfur dioxide emissions from onshore natural gas processing plants. The new standards require producers to capture about 90% of the natural gas that escapes into the atmosphere as a result of production using hydraulic fracturing. For further discussion, see CRS Report R42986, An Overview of Air Quality Issues in Natural Gas Systems, by [author name scrubbed].

41.

The EPA "UIC Program Guidance for Permitting Hydraulic Fracturing with Diesel Fuels" generally follows EPA Class II underground injection well requirements (i.e., well construction standards; mechanical integrity testing; operating, monitoring, and reporting requirements; and public notification and financial responsibility requirements). The guidance provides recommendations for EPA permit writers for tailoring requirements for hydraulic fracturing using diesel fuels. It applies in states where EPA implements the UIC program for Class II wells (including Pennsylvania, New York, Michigan, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Virginia).

42.

The Department of the Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2010 (P.L. 111-88, H.Rept. 111-316):

Hydraulic Fracturing Study.—The conferees urge the Agency to carry out a study on the relationship between hydraulic fracturing and drinking water, using a credible approach that relies on the best available science, as well as independent sources of information. The conferees expect the study to be conducted through a transparent, peer-reviewed process that will ensure the validity and accuracy of the data. The Agency shall consult with other Federal agencies as well as appropriate State and interstate regulatory agencies in carrying out the study, which should be prepared in accordance with the Agency's quality assurance principles.

43.

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Plan to Study the Potential Impacts of Hydraulic Fracturing on Drinking Water Sources, Office of Research and Development, EPA/600/R-11/122, November 2011, http://www2.epa.gov/hfstudy.

44.

EPA has conducted retrospective case studies at five sites to develop information about the potential impacts of hydraulic fracturing on drinking water resources under different circumstances. The case studies include (1) the Bakken Shale in Dunn County, ND; (2) the Barnett Shale in Wise County, TX; (3) the Marcellus Shale in Bradford County, PA; (4) the Marcellus Shale in Washington County, PA; and (5) coalbed methane in the Raton Basin, CO.

45.

EPA, Office of Research and Development, Study of the Potential Impacts of Hydraulic Fracturing on Drinking Water Resources: Progress Report, EPA 601/R-12/011, December 2012.

46.

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, EPA's Study of Hydraulic Fracturing and Its Potential Impact on Drinking Water Resources, Published Scientific Papers, http://www2.epa.gov/hfstudy/published-scientific-papers.

47.

Ibid., p. 4.

48.

Because EPA has designated the hydraulic fracturing study as a "highly influential scientific assessment," the agency is to follow the peer review planning requirements described in the Office of Management and Budget's Information Quality Bulletin for Peer Review, 2004. The Bulletin states that important scientific information must be peer reviewed by qualified specialists before being disseminated by the federal government. The EPA Science Advisory Board is an external federal advisory committee that conducts peer reviews of significant EPA research products and activities.

49.

The White House, "Blueprint for a Secure Energy Future," March 30, 2011, p. 13, http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/blueprint_secure_energy_future.pdf.

50.

U.S. Department of Energy, the Secretary of Energy Advisory Board (SEAB), Shale Gas Production Subcommittee, Second Ninety Day Report, November 18, 2011, http://www.shalegas.energy.gov/. In November 2013, Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz requested the SEAB to form a task force to review how FracFocus "houses the information Federal and State regulatory agencies require as part of their regulatory functions with regard to disclosure of the composition and quantities of fracturing fluids injected into unconventional oil and gas wells." This review is available at http://energy.gov/seab/secretary-energy-advisory-board-seab-task-force-fracfocus-20.

51.

Executive Order 13605, "Supporting Safe and Responsible Development of Unconventional Domestic Natural Gas Resources," April 13, 2012, http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/DCPD-201200269/pdf/DCPD-201200269.pdf.

52.

The Memorandum of Agreement and research strategy are available at the Administration website, "Multi-Agency Collaboration on Unconventional Oil and Gas Research," http://unconventional.energy.gov/.

53.

Mineral Leasing Act of 1920 (30 U.S.C. §181 et seq.), the Indian Mineral Leasing Act (25 U.S.C. §2107), the Federal Land Policy and Management Act (43 U.S.C. §1701 et seq.), and other statutes.

54.

For a discussion of federal lands leasing authorities and activities, see CRS Report R40806, Energy Projects on Federal Lands: Leasing and Authorization, by [author name scrubbed].

55.

Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management, "Oil and Gas; Hydraulic Fracturing on Federal and Indian Lands: Final Rule," 80 Federal Register 16131, March 26, 2015.

56.

80 Federal Register 16130.

57.

The final rule revises existing BLM well completion regulations at 43 C.F.R. §316.3-2 and adds a new §3162.3-3. The rule is available at http://www.blm.gov/wo/st/en/info/newsroom/2015/march/nr_03_20_2015.html.

58.

BLM, "Oil and Gas; Well Stimulation, Including Hydraulic Fracturing, on Federal and Indian Lands: Proposed Rule," 77 Federal Register 27691, May 11, 2012.

59.

80 Federal Register 16195. BLM estimates that compliance could cost $11,400 per hydraulic fracturing operation (roughly 0.13 to 0.21% of the cost of drilling a well).

60.

BLM, "Oil and Gas; Hydraulic Fracturing on Federal and Indian Lands: Supplemental Notice of Proposed Rulemaking," 78 Federal Register 31636, May 24, 2013.

61.

The 2012 proposed rule applied to "well stimulation" activities broadly. The SNPR would have applied to hydraulic fracturing and refracturing but excluded acidizing and enhanced secondary and tertiary recovery so that the rule would apply only to hydraulic fracturing and not to other "well stimulation" activities. The final rule does not include the term refracturing.

62.

Operators may submit requests for approval either through an application to drill (APD) or notice of intent (NOI). Under existing law and regulations, BLM field offices must post APDs for at least 30 days before issuing a permit (see 43 C.F.R. §316.3-1(g)). The BLM rule does not preempt notification requirements of states or tribes.

63.

FracFocus was established in 2011 by the Ground Water Protection Council, an organization of state water quality regulatory agencies, and the Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission, a multi-state government agency. FracFocus is a publicly available registry where oil and gas companies may voluntarily identify chemicals used in hydraulic fracturing operations at specific wells. Many states allow or require operators to meet state disclosure requirements by posting information on the FracFocus website (http://www.fracfocus.org). FracFocus is supported, in part, by the Department of Energy.

64.

§3162.3-3(k)(1).

65.

§3162.3-3(k)(2). In 2012, BLM proposed to implement on public lands "whichever rules, state or Federal, are most protective of Federal lands and resources and the environment, consistent with longstanding practice and relevant statutory authorities." 77 Federal Register 72694.

66.

Office of Management and Budget, Unified Agenda, RIN: 1004-AE14: Department of the Interior, "Venting and Flaring: Waste Prevention and Use of Produced Oil and Gas for Beneficial Purposes," Notice of Proposed Rulemaking expected 2015, http://reginfo.gov/public/do/eAgendaViewRule?pubId=201410&RIN=1004-AE14.

67.

This action is based on authority in 46 U.S.C. Chapter 37—"Carriage of Liquid Bulk Dangerous Cargoes." Implementing regulations are published in 46 C.F.R. Subchapter O—"Certain Bulk Dangerous Cargoes."

68.

See 46 C.F.R. 153.900(c)-(d) or 46 C.F.R. 151.01-15.

69.

U.S. Coast Guard, Marine Safety Engineering, Shale Gas Extraction Waste Water, Commercial Regulations and Standards Directorate, Fall 2012, p. 5, http://www.uscg.mil/hq/cg5/cg52/docs/2012fall.pdf.

70.

U.S. Coast Guard, "Carriage of Conditionally Permitted Shale Gas Extraction Waste Water in Bulk: Notice of Availability and Request for Comments," 78 Federal Register 64905, October 30, 2013. http://www.uscg.mil/hq/cg5/cg521/.

71.

42 U.S.C. §300h-4.

72.

For information on this topic, see CRS Report R43836, Human-Induced Earthquakes from Deep-Well Injection: A Brief Overview, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed].

73.

See the Appendix for a review of federal research and regulatory initiatives related to unconventional oil and gas production, with emphasis on hydraulic fracturing.