Article

Water Use for Shale-Gas Production in Texas, U.S.

Bureau of Economic Geology, Jackson School of Geosciences, The University of Texas at Austin, 10100 Burnet Road, Building 130, Austin, Texas 78758, United States
Environ. Sci. Technol., 2012, 46 (6), pp 3580–3586
DOI: 10.1021/es204602t
Publication Date (Web): March 2, 2012
Copyright © 2012 American Chemical Society
*Phone: (512) 471-6246; e-mail: jp.nicot@beg.utexas.edu.

Abstract

Abstract Image

Shale-gas production using hydraulic fracturing of mostly horizontal wells has led to considerable controversy over water-resource and environmental impacts. The study objective was to quantify net water use for shale-gas production using data from Texas, which is the dominant producer of shale gas in the U.S. with a focus on three major plays: the Barnett Shale (∼15 000 wells, mid-2011), Texas-Haynesville Shale (390 wells), and Eagle Ford Shale (1040 wells). Past water use was estimated from well-completion data, and future water use was extrapolated from past water use constrained by shale-gas resources. Cumulative water use in the Barnett totaled 145 Mm3 (2000–mid-2011). Annual water use represents ∼9% of water use in Dallas (population 1.3 million). Water use in younger (2008–mid-2011) plays, although less (6.5 Mm3 Texas-Haynesville, 18 Mm3 Eagle Ford), is increasing rapidly. Water use for shale gas is <1% of statewide water withdrawals; however, local impacts vary with water availability and competing demands. Projections of cumulative net water use during the next 50 years in all shale plays total ∼4350 Mm3, peaking at 145 Mm3 in the mid-2020s and decreasing to 23 Mm3 in 2060. Current freshwater use may shift to brackish water to reduce competition with other users.

Supporting Information


Details discussing mining water use with additional figures, information on units used in this work, and glossary. This material is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.

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Article Views: 5,827 Times
Received 21 December 2011
Date accepted 1 March 2012
Published online 2 March 2012
Published in print 20 March 2012
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