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Railroad Commission of Texas last week issued new guidelines for permitting of disposalwells in the Permian Basin. The commission said May 16 new requirements will be implemented for permits for saltwater disposalwells in the region.
The following, summarized by Robertson, made it through both chambers and to the governor’s desk: House Bill 48 creates an Organized Oilfield Theft Prevention Unit within the Department of Public Safety to combat theft involving oil and gas equipment in Texas. This unit is tasked with investigating specified oilfield theft-related offenses.
Every year billions of barrels of Produced Water (PW) are generated from oil and gas production around the world. As fields age, they generate higher water to oil ratios. In some mature fields, 10 barrels of water are generated for every barrel of oil produced.
If that water cannot be injected back into the disposalwells, where is it all going to go? Well, hold your literal and metaphorical horses. Ira Yates, president and Founder of Friends of the Pecos River (more at: friendsofthepecosriver.org) recently said during an interview, Well, the water has to be clean.
As a whole, the oil patch is a tight-knit community, especially in the Permian Basin, where almost everyone is in the business one way or another. From there we started building SWDs [saltwater disposalwell facilities] and buildings, along with awnings and all, he said. That was Rodriguezs first yes, in late 2021.
Once again, lawmakers have prioritized water, and industry experts remain committed to expanding the use of treated produced water in industrial and agricultural applications, as well as for land discharge, Robertson stated. In their 2024 report, the Railroad Commission estimated nearly 9,000 such wells exist in Texas.
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