November 8, 2018
Recently, 65 residents gathered in a rural elementary school auditorium just a few football fields away from a massive oil project proposed on top of Santa Maria’ s water supply.
On October 23, residents learned about three Kern County oil companies’ plans to triple production in Santa Barbara County. The 760 new wells proposed in Northern Santa Barbara County, as close as 1,900 feet from Benjamin Foxen Elementary in Sisquoc, would threaten groundwater and cause air pollution and noise.
Speakers from four local non-profit health and environmental groups detailed those threats.
“This could essentially turn into one of the largest oil fields in California,” said Katie Davis, Chair of the Sierra Club Santa Barbara Group. “Are we going to be Kern County here or maintain the rural character of this area?”
Not traditional oil wells
Companies are seeking permission to heat water to 500 degrees and inject high pressure steam into the ground to loosen up heavy oil. These “enhanced oil recovery wells” require a vast amount of energy and water. Heating the steam will use more gas than all of Santa Barbara County’s homes, said Davis.
Each of the three companies will need from 7 to 8 million gallons of fresh water said Alicia Roessler, Staff Attorney for the Environmental Defense Center. Roessler said the project would be among the top 10 percent of carbon-intensive oil projects in the world due to the energy-intensive thermal extraction methods used to drill for the heavy Cat Canyon oil.
The project relies on climate-damaging natural gas to generate the steam to loosen up oil.
Drinking water at risk
The drinking water supply for Santa Maria, the County’s largest city, sits right underneath the oil fields. Smaller communities like Sisquoc and Garey, including the Benjamin Foxen Elementary School, rely entirely on local groundwater.
Roessler said during 2011-2015, ERG was responsible for 21 oil spills that released over 20,000 gallons of crude, said Roessler. A significant amount of waste water would be produced and the most economical way to dispose it would be underground. There is a very high density of disposal wells in this area, Roessler said, pointing out that ERG and other companies were illegally injecting the toxic wastewater into the aquifer.
Projects will also involve acidizing, injecting several toxic chemicals and acids, such as hydrofluoric acid, a chemical weapon component into the ground, said Davis. ERG predicts 18 spills in 10 year, she said.
“If we don’t advocate for our own water and own health, nobody else is going to,” said Rebecca August, President of Safe Energy Now, an organization supporting fossil-free energy in Northern Santa Barbara County.
Air pollution and trucks traffic
The projects would also impact air quality generating high particulate matter, Roessler said. Heavy dust would be produced during construction and continue during 24-hour-a-day operations. Wells can also emit hydrogen sulfide, a toxic gas into the air, during drilling.
The projects would also generate significant truck traffic. “I’m concerned about how many hundreds of tanker trucks will be traveling on these local roads,” said Roessler, noting that 61 percent of all fatal heavy truck accidents occur on rural roads.
Loss of nature and personal health risk
Besides the noise, water and air impacts, many of the speakers spoke of the destruction of native habitat. According to Aera Energy, its project will require that 3 million cubic feet of earth will be moved and up to 1,500 mature oak trees will be killed.
Dr. Kevin Beckman, a former Santa Maria Marian Hospital emergency room physician, said that the chemicals used in the process of enhanced drilling disrupt cellular membranes, affect hormone receptors and cause DNA mutations. Known toxic chemicals include Benzene, Toluene, Xylene and Radioactive isotopes. “There is no safe level of Benzene.”
Polluting industries choose low-income communities
“The reason why we had this here is because your children and your grandchildren will be most affected by these project,” said Food and Water Watch’s Senior Organizer Ana Rosa Rizo-Centino. “Corporations seem to always pick low-income communities to create their most harmful projects because they think they can buy us off, and I’m sorry but my health, my child’s health is priceless.”
Letting your voice be heard
The three oil companies are in various phases of the application process: Santa Barbara County is expected to decide on the first application from bankrupt ERG Energy this winter. The draft Environmental Impact Report for a second applicant, Aera Energy, owned by Exxon and Shell, will be released by the County before the end of the year. A third company PetroRock, which owns a company known for its toxic waste dump, is expected to follow this Spring.
“I would encourage everyone to become engaged, and to become involved, said Roessler. “You have a voice. The decision-makers will listen.”
Media coverage: "Meeting focuses on risks of three proposed oil developments in Cat Canyon," Santa Maria Times, October 24, 2018
Learn more:
How you can help:
A. Call and email the Santa Barbara County Planning Commissioners.
1) Send your email to all 5 Planning Commissioners via: David Villalobos, Planning Board Assistant Supervisor, dvillalo@co.santa-barbara.ca.us
2) Contact them individually via phone. Name and phone for each of the 5 Planning Commissioners can be found on this web page: http://www.sbcountyplanning.org/boards/pc/cpc.cfm
B. Call and email the Santa Barbara Board of County Supervisors.
1) Send your email to all 5 Supervisors via the Clerk of the Board at: sbcob@co.santa-barbara.ca.us
2) Contact your own Supervisor: Name, email and phone for each of the 5 Supervisors can be found on this web page: https://www.countyofsb.org/bos
Subject: Reject Cat Canyon Oil proposals
Message (copy and paste):
I urge you to reject the upcoming proposals for 760+ new wells from Aera, ERG, and PetroRock. All three projects would use dirty and carbon-intensive thermally enhanced oil production methods to extract heavy crude oil in Cat Canyon. Drilling deeper and deeper through the Santa Maria Groundwater Basin is extremely risky and threatens the County’s precious groundwater resources. These projects would also dramatically increase tanker truck traffic and accidents, result in 24-hour light and noise pollution, and degrade air quality, impacting our public health and safety. These projects would alter our rural quality of life for decades to come and are too risky to approve.
A community meeting on proposals to triple oil production in Santa Barbara County held at Benjamin Foxen Elementary on Oct. 23, 2018
Aerial of Aera oil field in Kern County (Belridge).
-- Jon Ullman, Sierra Club Los Padres Chapter Director