Fracking waste wells owned by an Ohio senator are leaking. The state paid $1.3 million to clean it up

Genesis leak

A dormant natural gas production well on Jan. 24, 2021 started spraying out toxic brine at rates reaching 42 gallons per minute. The Ohio Department of Natural Resources later traced the brine back to a Class II injection well owned by Ohio Sen. Brian Chavez. (Photo via ODNR)ODNR

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Injection wells owned by an Ohio state senator leaked fracking waste deep underground in Noble County before blas♌ting through the surface miles away at an oil well, 💙warranting a $1.3 million cleanup effort.

The state paid to remediate the mess in January 2021, but it hasn’t asked state Sen. Brian Chavez’s Deeprock Dispos▨al Solutio🧜ns for a dime to cover the costs. Instead, state regulators billed the owners of the idled production well that the brine used as a chimney to reach the surface before contaminating nearby land and water.

State show Deeprock is owned by Chavez, a Republican appointed to the seat in Decembe🔯r. He owns several oil and gas companies, and reported in several others.

In June of 2021, Gov. Mike DeWine appointed Chavez to serve on the Oil and Gas Commission, a panel o꧒f five commissioners that considers appeals of ODNR’s orders against the industry. Chavez represented “majo♛r petroleum” until his appointment to the Senate.

That same year, brine from Deeprock injection wells sho෴t ouﷺt of the ground .

On Jan. 5, 2021, state records reflected that Deeprock Disposal Solutions acquired two wells housing brine – the toxic, sometimes radioactive byproduct of fracking operations – at high pressure, thousands of feet underground. At that point, their brine already had reached at least three production wells over the prio💞r decade, according to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.

Mere weeks after the transfer, on Jan. 24, a production well owned by West Virginia-based Genesis Resources began spitting out brine at , threatening to reach two nearby rivers and a creek. It took ODNR officials and contractors days to plug the leak. Records show offic♕ials removed more than 362,000 gallons of liquid from a nearby stream and that 450 fish, salamanders, frogs and other nearby animals👍 died.

The Genesis well hadn’t produced oil in🐎 years. , obtained in ꧑a public records request, state that “Genesis Resources was not engaged in the response and had departed the scene.”

Thi🐲s was but one of five well incidents of Deeprock’s brine discharging from nearby production wells 🐷between 2010 and 2023. The releases occurred 1.5 miles northeast of Deeprock’s injection wells, and as far as 5 miles southwest. The state’s permits for those wells allow for it only to leach into the ground within a half-mile radius.

Two years after the Genesis blowout, EPA officials another production well a few miles away was “releasing oilfield brine into a nearby intermittent stream.” Only then did ODNR suspend Deeprock’s༺ operations and formally attribute the five spillage incidents to its operations.

Instead of Deeprock, the department in January 2023 Genesis to pay back the $1.3 million the state spent on remediating the 2021 well blowout. Genesis argued that Deeprock made the mess and should pay to clean it up. Lawyers for both the company and an insurer s💫uggested ODNR was negligent in permitting the injection wells in the first place.

ODNR, in response, said it’s “legally irrelevant” where the bri💧ne came from. What matters is that the brine came up through Genesis’ abandoned oil well like a straw, without which it couldn’t have surfaced. If Genesis thinks this is Deeprock’s fault, the company can always file a lawsuit.

As required by state law, Deeprock posted a $15,000 bond and has provided c⭕ertificates of insurance totaling $15 million in coverage, ODNR said.

Many in the ru💖ral area of southeast Ohio 🏅rely on private wells for drinking water. ODNR spokesman Andy Chow said there’s no reason to believe water has been contaminated, and there are no mapped groundwater wells within a half-mile radius of the affected production wells. ODNR, he said, isn’t aware of any ongoing monitoring. But Dave Yoxtheimer, a professor at the Penn State College of Earth and Mineral Sciences, said the pattern of spills should warrant water testing of nearby private sources.

“I’d want m♊y water tested if I lived within a mile orജ so,” he said.

Chavez declined to be interviewed or answer specific questions about the inciden♏ts. He offered a statement via a Senate spokesman.

“As an expert in the field, a former member of the Oil and Gas Commission, and as a responsible operator, public and environmental safety are paramount to Senator Chavez,” the s🧜tatement reads. “From petroleum engineers to the welders on a platform, these hard-working professionals have families who also want clean air and water, despite what radical political activists and today’s media want you to think. This industry is needed now more than ever, as it꧂ responsibly generates reliable and affordable energy that the so called ‘green energy’ political lobby cannot.”

Leaks

Genesis well

An idled natral gas production well owned by Genesis Resources spits out brine on Jan. 24, 2021, that ODNR later determined came from a Class II natural gas injection well owned by state Sen. Brian Chavez. (ODNR)ODNR

Fracking – technically known as hydraulic fracturing – entails spraying high volumes of a mixture of water, sand and chemicals to fre☂e methane from shale thousands of feet underfoot. The p✅rocess produces “flowback” brine as a byproduct, which can pick up some of the radioactive elements from below. This toxic brew needs to be either treated or properly disposed of.

There are 250 Class II injection wells in Ohio, each housing millions of gallons of brine at high pressure underground. Basic physics and geology explain the splashy episodes. If there’s fluid 🐼underground injected at very high pressure, it naturally wants to go toward the low-pressure conduit of the production well.

“The surprising part to me is that they’re allowing injection at high enough pressure that you’re seeing fluids migrate miles away, which is♔ a pretty large distance for an injection well,” said Yoxtheim꧑er, the Penn State professor.

While Ohio law requires production well owners to plug their wells after they’re done producing, the Genesis well in♌ question is but one of the tens of thousands in the state that are no longer being used to produce oil or natural gas and for the most part are considered abandoned.

On Jan. 3, 2023, ODNR formally ordered Genesis to reimburse the state for $1.3 million in 𒆙cleanup costs. Six days later, ODNR suspended Deeprock’s operations given the history of its brine discharges. But in somewhat contradictory fashion, the agency didn’t seek money from the company.

“Certainly, if you read between the lines, that would appear to be what ODꦚNR is saying: you guys [Deeprock] caused the problem,” Yoxtheimer said. “But on the other hand,♑ we issued you a permit that allows you to cause the problem.”

Appeal

When asked why ODNR is both blaming Deeprock for the mess but asking someone else to pay for it, Chow said “based on Ohio law, that’s who we soughtဣ reimburs♏ement from.” He didn’t specify which law.

Genesis appealed its case to the Oil and Gas Commission in February 2023, which has not yet issued a final ruling. In June 2023, the commission voted 4-0 in de🥀nying a request from Genesis to pause ODNR’s $1.3 million reimbursement order as it coౠnsiders the appeal. Chavez .

By December of that year, Chavez left the commission to begin working as a senator. Genesis has since alleged that ODNR has refused to turn over documents regarding its issuance of permits to Deeprock, and its investigation that led them to blame Deeprock for the spilt brine♔. Genesis questioned whether ODNR was negligent in awarding the permits, oꦕr failing to warn nearby well owners of the potential dangers.

“One of the great mysteries here is why the state is pursuing us so hard and apparently not going after Deꦜeprock,” said Kevin Maloney, a Ge🍒nesis attorney, in an interview.

ODNR argued that all that matters is that Genesis failed to plug its well when it stopped producing oil. And that well leaked brine. Genesis can sue Deeprock in court if it wants♔, but ODNR said🅘 its job is to get the most proximal party to clean up the mess.

“Genesis, instead, simply points the finger and nearby injection wells and argues that if the leaked bri🔯ne originated from those wells, it cannot be l🥀iable for any subsequent issues at its own,” ODNR lawyers wrote.

Appointed

Chavez

Ohio Sen. Brian Chavez, second from right, is seen posing with members of his family in the Ohio Senate chambers. (Source: Ohio Senate)Ohio Senate

Chavez earns at least $100,000 per year from both Deeprock and Utica𝐆 Assets LLC, ethics forms show. He also reported earning between $50,000 and $100,000 from Deep Rock Investments LLC, and the same from serving as a vice president of Condevco. And he owns at least $1,000 each of common stock in Devon Energy 🀅Corp, Diamondback Energy, Halliburton, and Marathon Petroleum.

He appeared on a recent podcast hosted by Ohio Senate President Matt Huffman and his press team. Chave꧃z said he took over a business started by his in🧸-laws, operating 400 vertical oil and gas wells.

Speaking to the senate president, he downplayed risks of climate change, noting that while gas emits carbon dioxide, so do humans while breathing or opening a can of soda. Carbon dioxide in the air, he said, is no bad t༒hing.

“In fact, when we go back and look at the historic time, the reasons why the dinosaurs were so big is because there was a lot more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and the earth was warmer,” he said. “The plants were bigger. They didn’t have to work so hard so survive. They were big. The earth is always changing, and it’s something that we n🏅eed to be able to understand, and not just point fingers and look at short term solutions, or short-term manufactured crises.”

Jake Zuckerman covers state politics and policy for iccwins888.com and The Plain Dealer.

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