EPA Orders Swamp Angel Energy to Pay Penalty for
Unauthorized Disposal of Brine Waste
PHILADELPHIA
(September 28, 2012) The U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency today announced a Consent Agreement and Final
Order requiring Swamp Angel Energy, LLC, to pay a civil penalty of $54,324 and
plug a well that was used illegally for dumping oil production brine waste. The
well is located in Pennsylvania’s Allegheny National Forest where Swamp Angel
operates oil production wells.
EPA’s Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) complaint alleged that
in 2007 and 2008, a former part-owner of Swamp Angel and a former site
supervisor dumped approximately 228,000 gallons of contaminated brine into two
pre-existing wells in the Allegheny National Forest without a permit. Wastewater
from Swamp Angel’s oil production wells in the ANF was supposed to be disposed
of at an authorized treatment facility.
Since then,
Swamp Angel applied for and received a SDWA permit from EPA to use one of the
wells for disposal of brine generated during oil production. As part of the
settlement, Swamp Angel will plug the other well to prevent contamination of
underground sources of drinking water. The SDWA’s Underground Injection Control Program seeks to protect underground sources of drinking water from unpermitted disposal of wastes underground. The use of these two wells for brine disposal raised particular concern because EPA was provided little information about the wells’ construction, condition or integrity, and had not granted a permit or authorization.
Proper plugging of the remaining unpermitted well will prevent the potential for oil and gas wastes to flow between the oil formations up into an underground source of drinking water, or for surface contamination to flow into the well and migrate into underground formations.
In 2010, a criminal case involving the company's former part-owner and site supervisor was resolved when these individuals pled guilty to violating the SDWA through the illegal disposal of brine into these wells in 2007 and 2008. The owner received 10 months of home detention, three years probation, a $5,000 fine, and 100 hours of community service.
Swamp Angel’s former site supervisor was sentenced to eight months home detention, three years probation, a $4,000 fine, and 80 hours of community service.
Swamp Angel is
headquartered in Wichita, Kansas. As part of the administrative settlement, the
company did not admit or deny the violations.
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