Royal Dutch Shell Plc  .com Rotating Header Image

Shell Oil’s pursuit of local waters could have big impacts

 

Shell Frontier Oil and Gas has filed in Steamboat Springs water court to skim 375 cubic feet per second from this section of the Yampa River, west of Maybell in Moffat County’s Sunbeam area. Shell’s filing could dramatically change the landscape of future water rights and use in Northwest Colorado. Enlarge photo 

Shell Oil’s pursuit of local waters could have big impacts

 — When Shell Oil revealed last week it had filed for substantial water rights in the Yampa River west of Craig, the news marked another milestone on the road to fulfilling a prophecy made 2 1/2 years ago:

Powerful interests are coming after the water that originates from melting snow in the mountains of Northwest Colorado.

That was the message that Russell George, then executive director of the Colorado Department of Natural Resources, brought to a water symposium at Hayden High School on June 1, 2006.

George, a former state legislator from Rifle, said it was inevitable that unappropriated water in the Yampa would be called upon to balance the entire state’s needs and obligations. The announcement by Shell this week underscores the likelihood that the Yampa also will be called upon to help meet the nation’s needs for energy.

Shell’s interest in the Yampa stems from the need to amass enough water rights to support a future oil shale industry. It’s a process the company has been engaged in for decades, according to company spokesman Tracy Boyd. Shell’s water rights, if granted, are initially likely to be conditional — any decision to develop a reservoir on a tributary of the Yampa, for example, is at least a decade away. And the day when water would actually be pumped out of the river is several more years further out.

However, Routt County Co mmissioner Doug Monger said if Shell succeeds in obtaining the rights, the water picture in Northwest Colorado will change forever.

“We now have just joined the rest of the world and the rest of the state in having our river over-appropriated,” Monger said. “For us in the valley, to further develop any water, it makes it that much more complicated.”

Monger is chairman of the Upper Yampa Water Con servancy District’s board of directors and sits on the Yampa River Basin Roundtable. The latter is part of a statewide effort to determine how Colorado will meet its water needs for years to come.

A big gulp

Shell Frontier Oil and Gas filed in water court in Steamboat Springs in late December to stake its claim to skim 375 cubic feet per second from the Yampa during high flows fed by snowmelt in the spring and early summer.

That amount represents a minority of the Yampa’s peak spring flows, which commonly exceed 11,000 cf/s west of Maybell, where the river is about to reach its confluence with the Green River on its way to merging with the Colorado River in Utah.

However, Shell officials anticipate that amount of in-stream flow would be sufficient to fill a 45,000-acre-foot reservoir Shell proposes to build off the main stem of the Yampa in Cedar Springs Draw.

To put that volume of water in perspective, the Yampa River system yields about 1.2 million acre-feet annually. Communities in Northwest Colorado consume just 10 percent of that amount before it flows out of the state.

So, it’s easy to see why Shell Oil would look to the Yampa as it attempts to stockpile water rights in anticipation of commercial production of petroleum products that would be cooked out of the oil-rich shale of the Green River Formation.

But Eric Kuhn, general manager of the Colorado River Water Conservation District, is worried that Colorado’s margin for providing water to growing communities already is thin.

Kuhn told the Steamboat Pilot & Today in the summer of 2006 that under the Colorado River Compact, he estimated that as little as 250,000 acre-feet remains to be stored behind new dams. His estimate took into account another 250,000 acre-feet of water from the larger Colorado River system already tied up in planned water projects.

Other water experts contend the amount of available water is greater. Still others think water demands for oil shale development could gobble it all up — the water needs of energy development haven’t escaped Western Slope water interests.

Concerned about the challenge of meeting statewide water needs, the state Legislature passed the Colorado Water for the Twenty-first Century Act in 2003. The result was the Statewide Water Supply Initiative that created diverse panels of citizens to take a close look at water in each of the state’s major drainages.

One result, in late August 2008, was the release of a preliminary report about how energy development, from oil shale to the mining of coal and uranium, would impact Northwest Colorado.

The results of the study led Dan Birch, deputy general man ager of the Colorado River Water Conservation District, to call the oil shale industry an “800-pound gorilla.” Based on estimated oil shale reserves of 1 trillion barrels of oil, Birch told an audience in Grand Junc tion in September 2008 that the industry again could require half as many barrels of water. That’s enough to swallow all of Colorado’s remaining undeveloped water under the Colorado river Compact of 1922, he estimated.

Energy to make energy

The study finds that oil shale could demand water on several levels. The first is in the recovery of petroleum products from the rock.

Boyd said his company is studying a process that would use a freeze wall — essentially freezing ground water in an area surrounding oil shale deposits to isolate them, and then de-watering the earth inside that boundary.

Water would be consumed in the process of separating petroleum products as they come out of the ground.

Later, water would be pumped back into the area to replace what had been previously pumped out.

However, large amounts of water would be consumed by new power plants needed to supply the energy the oil shale process requires. And additional water would be consumed by the growing legion of energy workers.

Greg Trainor, who participated in the report on the water needs of energy development in western Colorado, said it concluded that at full production, it could take as many as 14 new power plants — the size of the existing coal-fired plant in Craig — to meet oil shale’s demands.

Trainor is the utilities and street system director for the city of Grand Junction.

Oil shale development would require “a huge effort just in terms of construction of power plants,” Trainor said. “Think of the energy that would go into building the power plants.”

Respecting elder rights

Monger said the fact that Shell is seeking water rights in the Yampa River will have profound implications for water users in the valley. To begin with, any new water right would be junior to Shell’s. The water likely would remain in the river for 15 years to come, but the date when it becomes activated would hang over the valley’s future.

Shell’s filing is based on speculation attached to an unproven technology for energy extraction, he observed. However, businesses that need new sources of water, including agriculturalists, will find it harder to acquire capital because of the difficulty of demonstrating clear title to water, Monger said.

And the cost of filing for new water rights, previously a relatively uncomplicated process, is sure to become a more complex legal process requiring the expenditure of thousands of dollars in fees.

Monger is an irrigator on his own ranch in addition to his role on water boards. He can see the day coming when other interests seeking water could pursue the leasing or purchase of historical agricultural rights.

“That will be the next thing,” Monger said. “Because in order to ensure firm yields and consistent water supplies, you need to be higher in the seniority rankings.”

SOURCE ARTICLE

This website and sisters royaldutchshellgroup.com, shellnazihistory.com, royaldutchshell.website, johndonovan.website, and shellnews.net, are owned by John Donovan. There is also a Wikipedia segment.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Comment Rules

  • Please show respect to the opinions of others no matter how seemingly far-fetched.
  • Abusive, foul language, and/or divisive comments may be deleted without notice.
  • Each blog member is allowed limited comments, as displayed above the comment box.
  • Comments must be limited to the number of words displayed above the comment box.
  • Please limit one comment after any comment posted per post.