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E-ALERT -  August 10, 2012

Bayou Corne Sink Hole

view on leanweb.org

Bayou Corne Sink Hole Incident Map

Map of the Bayou Corne sinkhole incident

 

Bayou Corne Sink Hole Incident Timeline

  • Oxy Geismar Well No. 3 (serial number: 180708) is the cause of the sink hole.
  • The well was first permitted in April 15, 1982 for the mining of salt water brine from the Napoleonville Salt Dome.
  • In 1995 Texas brine received permission from Louisiana Department of Natural Resources to pump soil contaminated with Naturally Occurring Radioactive Material (NORM) into the well.
  • In early September 2010, Texas Brine began reworking the cavern well, milling a section of salt higher than the existing cavern roof, at 3,400 feet deep, to see if the upper strata could be mined. A DNR permit for that work was issued in May 2010.
  • In 2011 the well failed a pressure test showing that the integrity of the well had been lost. Texas Brine Company sent a letter to Louisiana Department of Natural Resources reporting the failed test and expressing concern over the possibility that "a breach out of the salt dome appears possible."
  • On June 6, 2011 the well bore above the cavern was plugged with cement.

It has been reported to OEP that the Louisiana National Guard helicopter pilot/crew, using infrared equipment, flew over the slurry/sinkhole site on the night of August 9, 2012 and observed a 10-20 foot growth to the North & South.

 

Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality reported that tests done on August 8, 2012 showed "no detectable levels for naturally occurring radioactive material" at the surface of the sink hole or in water samples taken from the sink hole.

 

The diesel fuel present at the site is from the "diesel blanket;" a layer of diesel fuel put into the brine filled cavern to protect the cavern roof and steel well casings. 

 

A patrol conducted by boat on August 9, 2012 showed no change in the bubbling gas.

 

Due to a variety of factors It appears suspect to us that the source of the gas bubbles is the collapsed cavern. The collapsed cavern was never used to store gas. The bubble sites are quite a distance from the sink hole; some on the other side of a number of other brine and storage caverns from the collapsed cavern. And there has been no apparent change to the bubbling throughout the collapse incident.

 

Go to LEANWEB for the map and more information:

http://www.leanweb.org/our-work/community/public-health/bayou-corne-sinkhole



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