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Life Cycle Water Consumption and Wastewater Generation Impacts of a Marcellus Shale Gas Well

[Image: see text] This study estimates the life cycle water consumption and wastewater generation impacts of a Marcellus shale gas well from its construction to end of life. Direct water consumption at the well site was assessed by analysis of data from approximately 500 individual well completion r...

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Autores principales: Jiang, Mohan, Hendrickson, Chris T., VanBriesen, Jeanne M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2013
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3915742/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24380628
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/es4047654
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author Jiang, Mohan
Hendrickson, Chris T.
VanBriesen, Jeanne M.
author_facet Jiang, Mohan
Hendrickson, Chris T.
VanBriesen, Jeanne M.
author_sort Jiang, Mohan
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] This study estimates the life cycle water consumption and wastewater generation impacts of a Marcellus shale gas well from its construction to end of life. Direct water consumption at the well site was assessed by analysis of data from approximately 500 individual well completion reports collected in 2010 by the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. Indirect water consumption for supply chain production at each life cycle stage of the well was estimated using the economic input–output life cycle assessment (EIO-LCA) method. Life cycle direct and indirect water quality pollution impacts were assessed and compared using the tool for the reduction and assessment of chemical and other environmental impacts (TRACI). Wastewater treatment cost was proposed as an additional indicator for water quality pollution impacts from shale gas well wastewater. Four water management scenarios for Marcellus shale well wastewater were assessed: current conditions in Pennsylvania; complete discharge; direct reuse and desalination; and complete desalination. The results show that under the current conditions, an average Marcellus shale gas well consumes 20 000 m(3) (with a range from 6700 to 33 000 m(3)) of freshwater per well over its life cycle excluding final gas utilization, with 65% direct water consumption at the well site and 35% indirect water consumption across the supply chain production. If all flowback and produced water is released into the environment without treatment, direct wastewater from a Marcellus shale gas well is estimated to have 300–3000 kg N-eq eutrophication potential, 900–23 000 kg 2,4D-eq freshwater ecotoxicity potential, 0–370 kg benzene-eq carcinogenic potential, and 2800–71 000 MT toluene-eq noncarcinogenic potential. The potential toxicity of the chemicals in the wastewater from the well site exceeds those associated with supply chain production, except for carcinogenic effects. If all the Marcellus shale well wastewater is treated to surface discharge standards by desalination, $59 000–270 000 per well would be required. The life cycle study results indicate that when gas end use is not considered hydraulic fracturing is the largest contributor to the life cycle water impacts of a Marcellus shale gas well.
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spelling pubmed-39157422014-02-06 Life Cycle Water Consumption and Wastewater Generation Impacts of a Marcellus Shale Gas Well Jiang, Mohan Hendrickson, Chris T. VanBriesen, Jeanne M. Environ Sci Technol [Image: see text] This study estimates the life cycle water consumption and wastewater generation impacts of a Marcellus shale gas well from its construction to end of life. Direct water consumption at the well site was assessed by analysis of data from approximately 500 individual well completion reports collected in 2010 by the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. Indirect water consumption for supply chain production at each life cycle stage of the well was estimated using the economic input–output life cycle assessment (EIO-LCA) method. Life cycle direct and indirect water quality pollution impacts were assessed and compared using the tool for the reduction and assessment of chemical and other environmental impacts (TRACI). Wastewater treatment cost was proposed as an additional indicator for water quality pollution impacts from shale gas well wastewater. Four water management scenarios for Marcellus shale well wastewater were assessed: current conditions in Pennsylvania; complete discharge; direct reuse and desalination; and complete desalination. The results show that under the current conditions, an average Marcellus shale gas well consumes 20 000 m(3) (with a range from 6700 to 33 000 m(3)) of freshwater per well over its life cycle excluding final gas utilization, with 65% direct water consumption at the well site and 35% indirect water consumption across the supply chain production. If all flowback and produced water is released into the environment without treatment, direct wastewater from a Marcellus shale gas well is estimated to have 300–3000 kg N-eq eutrophication potential, 900–23 000 kg 2,4D-eq freshwater ecotoxicity potential, 0–370 kg benzene-eq carcinogenic potential, and 2800–71 000 MT toluene-eq noncarcinogenic potential. The potential toxicity of the chemicals in the wastewater from the well site exceeds those associated with supply chain production, except for carcinogenic effects. If all the Marcellus shale well wastewater is treated to surface discharge standards by desalination, $59 000–270 000 per well would be required. The life cycle study results indicate that when gas end use is not considered hydraulic fracturing is the largest contributor to the life cycle water impacts of a Marcellus shale gas well. American Chemical Society 2013-12-31 2014-02-04 /pmc/articles/PMC3915742/ /pubmed/24380628 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/es4047654 Text en Copyright © 2013 American Chemical Society Terms of Use (http://pubs.acs.org/page/policy/authorchoice_termsofuse.html)
spellingShingle Jiang, Mohan
Hendrickson, Chris T.
VanBriesen, Jeanne M.
Life Cycle Water Consumption and Wastewater Generation Impacts of a Marcellus Shale Gas Well
title Life Cycle Water Consumption and Wastewater Generation Impacts of a Marcellus Shale Gas Well
title_full Life Cycle Water Consumption and Wastewater Generation Impacts of a Marcellus Shale Gas Well
title_fullStr Life Cycle Water Consumption and Wastewater Generation Impacts of a Marcellus Shale Gas Well
title_full_unstemmed Life Cycle Water Consumption and Wastewater Generation Impacts of a Marcellus Shale Gas Well
title_short Life Cycle Water Consumption and Wastewater Generation Impacts of a Marcellus Shale Gas Well
title_sort life cycle water consumption and wastewater generation impacts of a marcellus shale gas well
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3915742/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24380628
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/es4047654
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