Link to this: http://tinyurl.com/howmanytrees
Someone asked me to estimate (ballpark) how many trees have been lost in NY due to pipelines.
Yet, in NY there are many pipelines, and many of them are decades old.
So this number is very hard to estimate, and requires assumptions about time horizon,
width of rights of way for pipelines of various sizes. Also, getting the raw data is difficult.
It's actually easier to ask:
"How many trees have been lost in PA due to Marcellus exploration?
I like doing these kinds of guesstimates, so I gave it a crack....
It's pretty staggering:
Here is the calculation. This numerical analysis is based on scientific data in published sources, so my answer is probably "close", within an order of magnitude of being correct.
How much forest is lost due to each well pad?
``A recent analysis of Marcellus well permit locations in Pennsylvania found that well pads and associated infrastructure (roads, water impoundments, and pipelines) required nearly 3.6 hectares (9 acres) per well pad with an additional 8.5 hectares (21 acres) of indirect edge effects (Johnson, 2010).`` -- http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2012/1154/of2012-1154.pdf
This is the reference:
Johnson, Nels, 2010, Pennsylvania energy impacts assessment, Report 1: Marcellus Shale Natural Gas and Wind, The Nature Conservancy, Pennsylvania Chapter, and Pennsylvania Audubon, accessed January 12, 2011, at: http://www.nature.org/wherewework/northamerica/states/pennsylvania/news/news3511.html.
We'll use the conservative number of 9 acres per well pad.
This is the reference:
Johnson, Nels, 2010, Pennsylvania energy impacts assessment, Report 1: Marcellus Shale Natural Gas and Wind, The Nature Conservancy, Pennsylvania Chapter, and Pennsylvania Audubon, accessed January 12, 2011, at: http://www.nature.org/wherewework/northamerica/states/pennsylvania/news/news3511.html.
We'll use the conservative number of 9 acres per well pad.
How many Trees per acre in PA? (approximately)
Source: http://www.fs.fed.us/ne/newtown_square/publications/resource_bulletins/pdfs/2004/ne_rb159.pdf
250 @ 2"
100 @ 4"
50 @ 6"
40 @ 8"
25 @ 10"
20 @ 12"
14 @ 14"
10 @ 16"
---------
~500 trees per acre of forested land (of various sizes.)
Same document says: "Pennsylvania has 16,652,100 acres of forest land".
Wikipedia says PA area is 46,000 sq mi., which is 29.5 million acres.
This means 57% of PA is forested.
250 @ 2"
100 @ 4"
50 @ 6"
40 @ 8"
25 @ 10"
20 @ 12"
14 @ 14"
10 @ 16"
---------
~500 trees per acre of forested land (of various sizes.)
Same document says: "Pennsylvania has 16,652,100 acres of forest land".
Wikipedia says PA area is 46,000 sq mi., which is 29.5 million acres.
This means 57% of PA is forested.
How many wells per pad?
``While multi-well pads have increased over the past five years, the overall ratio of wells-per-pad remains low. Since 2006, over 1,553 Marcellus well pads have been developed to support 3,279 Marcellus wells in Pennsylvania indicating a well-to-pad average of 2.11. The data show that this ratio is increasing: in 2009 the average was 1.53 wells per pad, and in 2010 the average was 2.15. ``
Source: http://extension.psu.edu/naturalgas/news/2011/10/multi-well-pads-in-the-marcellus-shale
So let's use 2 wells per pad for our estimate.
Source: http://extension.psu.edu/naturalgas/news/2011/10/multi-well-pads-in-the-marcellus-shale
So let's use 2 wells per pad for our estimate.
How many wells drilled in PA so far?
John Holko says it's 3700:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S1TQ50Aqoko&#t=27m10s
How much of PA is farmland?http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S1TQ50Aqoko&#t=27m10s
Tony Ingraffea says it’s 5,500:
Some disagreement may be due to the ambiguity of “wells drilled”.
Are we talking about vertical wells? or the horizontal legs?
Are we talking about vertical wells? or the horizontal legs?
We want to be conservative, so let’s use 3,700.
- "Also in 2002, farmland acres totaled 7.7 million, or 27 percent of all the land in Pennsylvania." Source: http://www.rural.palegislature.us/news0304.html
OK, now we have everything we need. Let's run the calculation:
1: Number of wells so far / number of wells per pad = number of well pads.
3,700 / ~2 = 1850 well pads in PA
2: Number of well pads * acres disturbed per well pad = number of acres permanently lost
1850 * 9 acres = 16,650 acres lost forever (*).
16,650 * .57 (57% forested PA avg) = ~9,500 acres of PA forest lost forever.
Multiply this times 2.3 to include edge effects = ~22,000 acres
16,650 * .27 (27% PA is farmland) = ~5,500 acres of PA farmland lost forever. (this may be greater due to a segmentation effect similar to forest edge-effects)
3: Number of acres lost * number of trees per acre = number of trees lost (forever)
9,500 * 500 = 4,750,000 trees lost, forever.(*)
Multiply this times 2.3 to include edge effects = ~11 million trees.
(* = since the access roads, well pads, pipelines, etc. are permanent rights-of-way.)
So there's your answer.
So far, Pennsylvania has lost ~5 million trees, over 16 thousand acres of forest, lost forever due to drilling. (These are conservative estimates).
(Question for you to ponder for extra credit:
How much other life WAS supported by those 5 million trees?)
CONSTITUTION PIPELINE-- HOW MANY TREES?
I do not believe this includes new large transmission lines such as the Constitution,
which is 121 miles * 50' permanent easement. (about double is needed during construction)
121 mi * 5280 ft/mi * 100' construction easement = 64,888,000 ft sq. = ~1,466 acres = ~1,100 football fields.
How many trees destroyed for the pipeline?
1,466 acres total for the pipeline R.O.W. * 500 trees per acre *.57 (percent forest)
= ~430,000 trees.
Let's repeat that for emphasis:
The Constitution Pipeline Would Destroy ~430,000 trees.
How much farmland is destroyed for the pipeline?
1466 acres * .27 (27% farmland) = 400 acres farmland destroyed (~300 football fields)
They say that half that will be "reclaimed".
Over how much time...? 20 years? 50 years?
Will it ever be the same?
Final thoughts (in case the above is not enough to give you nightmares):
Tony Ingraffea says PA is only 2% developed. So to see what PA will look like, multiply the above numbers by 50. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Ml9r-0qY8s#t=1m30s
From Robert Boyle:
Add in this factor: One acre of northern hardwood forest sequesters 100 tons of CO2. Cheers.
--------------
UPDATE: 4-19-14
I first did this calculation a year ago. Stateimpact says the total number of active shale wells no in PA is 6,391. So my numbers above are low by 1.73x.
Here are the better adjusted numbers:
16,409 acres in PA have been destroyed so far.(25.6 sq. miles)
38,000 acres if you include edge effects.
9,515 acres of farmland gone forever.
If we assume 500 trees per acre, this means over 8 million trees have been destroyed in just about 7 years for gas drilling / shale gas fracking in Pennsylvania.
A new report from the PA DCNR says that of state-managed forest land, the total number of lost acres is 1,486. This may be true, but the total number of lost forest in PA including private lands is 11x this number.
- http://www.pressconnects.com/viewart/20140418/NEWS10/304180022/Report-Pennsylvania-forests-impacted-by-drilling
- http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/cs/groups/public/documents/document/dcnr_20029164.pdf
--
--
May you, and all beings
be happy and free from suffering :)
-- ancient Buddhist Prayer (Metta)
This information is valuable and sobering. To some, the large amounts of money to be made make fracking "worth it." Besides forest loss, fracking consumes huge amounts of water drained from Pennsylvania's streams. Fracking also contaminates water underground and elsewhere with various damaging chemicals. There are other adverse environmental impacts as well. I suppose it depends on your point of view. If you look at the damage to our environment and to nature--and care about it--I think fracking is NOT worth it. (Disclaimer: I use natural gas in my home and so I contribute to this environmental destruction. It seems all forms of fuel have negative environmental effects, while of course solar and wind power probably have the least undesirable effects.)
ReplyDeleteI wonder why you repeatedly state that the forests are lost forever. It seems this may well be correct. (I am no expert, just interested in the issue.) However, the PA Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (DCNR) is studying ways to restore fracking sites. They are learning, but the studies don't guarantee any success. The time it takes to restore forests is also an important consideration. I think it's correct that restoration after most of the state's forests were stripped for logging has taken about 120-130 years, and surely the forests today are not "equal" to the virgin forests that once covered 99 pct of the state (in about 1700). Restoration from fracking, if even possible, could take much longer. Consider--trees gone vs. trees gone, pollution, AND underground damage to rock formations. Maybe forever is correct.
Thank you for your calculations.