Influences and Countermeasures of the Shale Gas Exploitation on Water Environment

2014 ◽  
Vol 522-524 ◽  
pp. 1039-1044
Author(s):  
Qiu Lei Guo ◽  
Shu Heng Tang ◽  
Yi Wan ◽  
Er Ping Fan

When energy crisis is somewhat relieved by the shale gas production, serious negative impacts are simultaneously created to the environment e.g. the regional underground water system will be seriously damaged. Currently, the shale gas production, which is blossoming in China at present, centralizes primarily in the South-west area, where the hydrological environment is quite complicated and pretty weak. In this paper, three threatens caused during the shale gas exploitation is summarized and the crisis source is also outlined. Furthermore, the probable solutions aiming at these problems are discussed, thereby the concept of ‘Water resources tolerance ability evaluation model in SouthWest China’ being proposed. This paper emphasizes that the further enhancement of environment monitoring, improvement of legislation in the related areas as well as domestic adjustment of production technologies are critical to balance the industrializing production and sustainable development.

2017 ◽  
pp. 123-152
Author(s):  
Sohrab Zendehboudi ◽  
Alireza Bahadori

Author(s):  
Vadim Lyalko ◽  
Oleksandr Azimov ◽  
Yevgen Yakovlev

The article considers the relevance of the application of modern remote aerospace and hydrogeological methods in the problems of the ecological safety for the hydrosphere in Ukraine during unconventional hydrocarbons extraction, especially shale gas is considered. Case studies of pilot implementation of these methods are present for the Bilyaivska area adjacent to the Yuzivka licensed site within the Dnieper-Donets Depression as the biggest artesian basin within Ukraine. A number of the hydrogeological filtration parameters of multilayers' system (water aquifers, aquitard and aquiclude regional layers) enable to obtain the rough estimate of the temporal indices for the areal upward pollutant migration from the fracturing zone to the groundwater aquifers in the potential process of shale gas production (as an example the 400-Bilyaivska well). It is found that the possible variety of the rock double permeability in the complete rock continuum is responsible for the passage time of diffusive convective pollutant migration from the fracturing zone to the groundwater aquifers, and this time interval consists of 170 ÷70 years. Considering the balance ratio between the water volume for the dilution of pollutants to the safe concentrations and the volume of porous solutions, which is over the fracturing zone the conclusion is drawn that remains of technological solutions in the fracturing zone in some cases can continuously contaminate the underground water within the zones of slow and active water exchange.


Water Policy ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 423-440 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lei Wu ◽  
Tong Qi ◽  
Dan Li ◽  
Huijuan Yang ◽  
Guoqing Liu ◽  
...  

The surface water of 10 major river systems across China has been under intermediate pollution with striking eutrophication problems in major lakes (reservoirs). More data from the Ministry of Environmental Protection of China showed that underground water in 57% of monitoring sites across Chinese cities was polluted or extremely polluted. Rural water pollution, the rising number of incidents of industrial pollution, outdated sewerage systems, and the overuse of pesticides and chemical fertilizers also endanger the health of rural inhabitants in China. Nearly 0.2 billion rural residents could not use drinking water in accordance with the national standard, and there were reports of ‘cancer villages' and food-borne diseases (cancer village refers to a village where a certain proportion of its inhabitants suffer from the same kind of cancer or where there is a hike in cancer incidence in that area). This study aims to raise awareness of the prevention and control of water pollution and to propose a set of national research and policy initiatives for the future safety of the water environment in China.


Fuels ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 286-303
Author(s):  
Vuong Van Pham ◽  
Ebrahim Fathi ◽  
Fatemeh Belyadi

The success of machine learning (ML) techniques implemented in different industries heavily rely on operator expertise and domain knowledge, which is used in manually choosing an algorithm and setting up the specific algorithm parameters for a problem. Due to the manual nature of model selection and parameter tuning, it is impossible to quantify or evaluate the quality of this manual process, which in turn limits the ability to perform comparison studies between different algorithms. In this study, we propose a new hybrid approach for developing machine learning workflows to help automated algorithm selection and hyperparameter optimization. The proposed approach provides a robust, reproducible, and unbiased workflow that can be quantified and validated using different scoring metrics. We have used the most common workflows implemented in the application of artificial intelligence (AI) and ML in engineering problems including grid/random search, Bayesian search and optimization, genetic programming, and compared that with our new hybrid approach that includes the integration of Tree-based Pipeline Optimization Tool (TPOT) and Bayesian optimization. The performance of each workflow is quantified using different scoring metrics such as Pearson correlation (i.e., R2 correlation) and Mean Square Error (i.e., MSE). For this purpose, actual field data obtained from 1567 gas wells in Marcellus Shale, with 121 features from reservoir, drilling, completion, stimulation, and operation is tested using different proposed workflows. A proposed new hybrid workflow is then used to evaluate the type well used for evaluation of Marcellus shale gas production. In conclusion, our automated hybrid approach showed significant improvement in comparison to other proposed workflows using both scoring matrices. The new hybrid approach provides a practical tool that supports the automated model and hyperparameter selection, which is tested using real field data that can be implemented in solving different engineering problems using artificial intelligence and machine learning. The new hybrid model is tested in a real field and compared with conventional type wells developed by field engineers. It is found that the type well of the field is very close to P50 predictions of the field, which shows great success in the completion design of the field performed by field engineers. It also shows that the field average production could have been improved by 8% if shorter cluster spacing and higher proppant loading per cluster were used during the frac jobs.


2020 ◽  
Vol 58 (3) ◽  
pp. 397-424
Author(s):  
Jesse Salah Ovadia ◽  
Jasper Abembia Ayelazuno ◽  
James Van Alstine

ABSTRACTWith much fanfare, Ghana's Jubilee Oil Field was discovered in 2007 and began producing oil in 2010. In the six coastal districts nearest the offshore fields, expectations of oil-backed development have been raised. However, there is growing concern over what locals perceive to be negative impacts of oil and gas production. Based on field research conducted in 2010 and 2015 in the same communities in each district, this paper presents a longitudinal study of the impacts (real and perceived) of oil and gas production in Ghana. With few identifiable benefits beyond corporate social responsibility projects often disconnected from local development priorities, communities are growing angrier at their loss of livelihoods, increased social ills and dispossession from land and ocean. Assuming that others must be benefiting from the petroleum resources being extracted near their communities, there is growing frustration. High expectations, real and perceived grievances, and increasing social fragmentation threaten to lead to conflict and underdevelopment.


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