Why
are pipelines carving up our pastures? To what purpose?
Why
have the developers come into one of the last easily accessible scenic areas of
Texas, a tourist and retirement destination of great beauty, to undermine what
makes it unique? And, incidentally, the very thing that that makes its small
towns economically vibrant, when all around the state other small towns are
dying?
Why
have they been allowed to do this? Who benefits?
I
know selling pipeline ROW makes the landowner a little money. $500 every 16
feet (rod) in some cases. Or more; or less. Depending…
I
know that successful oil and gas production can make the mineral owners more than a little money. But many of those mineral
owners around here have sold their land to newcomers over the past decade, pocketing their
dollars and retaining the mineral interest whose exploitation can ruin the
peaceful enjoyment of the purchaser for years.
Why
is it happening?
Technology
and the profit motive have combined to allow deep production of (usually wet)
gas in this area through fracking and horizontal drilling. This isn’t shale gas
at the moment, although that is coming. It’s the old Austin Chalk, at around
14,000 feet.
I’m
told by people active in the industry that wet gas is rich in natural gas
liquids, mostly ethane, but also propane, butane, etc. These hydrocarbons are
enjoying boom conditions now. All along the Texas Gulf Coast, petrochemical
companies are investing billions of dollars in crackers and processing
facilities to turn NGL’s, particularly ethane, into plastics, along with
petrochemical and refinery feedstocks.
Wet
gas requires a lot of processing, some of it quite close to the area of
production. Thus, we have more disruption to look forward to. More oversized
well pads needed for this kind of drilling, more noise and disruption related to the
drilling process itself. More pipelines to carry the gas to market. More
processing plants. The “state-of-the-art” cryogenic processing facility being
completed near Burton is one example.
The
company building this infrastructure is Aspen Midstream. Here is what their website
tells us: Aspen Midstream is backed
by growth capital from EnCap Flatrock Midstream. The initial system will
consist of more than 90 miles of 10-inch to 20-inch gas gathering mainlines,
treating facilities, a state-of-the-art cryogenic processing plant with the
capacity to process 200 million cubic feet of natural gas per day, and a
residue gas pipeline to the market hub at Katy, Texas.
The
website goes on to say that they’re looking forward to expanding as the
production expands. That means years and years of noise, toxic odors and visual
ugliness. (For information on the shale play probability, check out: https://eaglefordshale.com/counties/fayette-county-tx)
In
my view, the qualities of city life that no one wants are following us like a
crime we hadn’t meant to commit—industrialization, truck traffic, pollution,
toxic air, ugliness, grinding noise that elevates your heart rate and blood
pressure.
Mess, with no community benefit.
Only a very few will benefit, while many will suffer for years. For some, it’s the rest of their lives.
Mind
you, these are private companies who are doing this because it makes them
money. We who live here will lose money as well as our well-being and that
doesn’t count at all.
Did
anyone tell you this was coming? Did they ask your permission? Or did they keep
the specifics sufficiently secret to prevent any meaningful opposition?
The
overriding argument is that our country needs energy. Texas has been dominated
by the oil and gas industry, riding on this argument, for more than a century. But
we are now exporting energy to other countries. We are now exhorted to look for
non-carbon-based energy sources. Scientists are begging us to think about the excess
of carbon in our atmosphere. Find a way to decrease it, sequester it.
Because
the argument behind it has become a fallacy. The destruction of our lives here
in Fayette and adjacent counties isn’t really so that America can be safe from
her enemies. It’s not for America’s
benefit, at all.
It
is to make plastics for the world, which is already choking in the stuff.
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Disclosure: I have personal
investments in a highly industrialized part of Texas that benefit from the
petrochemical boom. I say: leave our scenic areas alone.