Thursday, June 27, 2013

Construction on Witt Farm - Open Flare on Purse Funeral Home

 Pipeline drilling rig on Witt Farm - more of Witt Farm for sale 

Pipeline drilling rig and oil pump on Witt Farm

Preparations of the separators to accommodate for more oil wells

Looks like there are 5 separators now

Flare next to the Funeral Home

Closeup of the Flare from Howell Highway shows soot and smoke

Flare from Howell Highway shows soot and smoke

And from a little further against darker background

You may also want to read the next post that will tell you more about the nasty stuff that is in flares!





Thursday, June 20, 2013

Oil Pump in Heritage Park - Pipeline Drill on the Purse Property

Now we have a oil pump going at Heritage Park.

Meanwhile there is some more drilling going on on the Purse Funeral Home well site but it looks like a pipeline drilling to pump the black gold to the Witt Farm processing facility.


Massive dust clouds on Witt Farm indicated the extension of the current facility to process all the new wells that were added lately. My guess is that the oil from between 4 and 8 wells will soon flow there - and also all the flare gases will be burned off hidden in that barrel. "What you can't see is not there"...

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Purse Funeral Home Drill Site Done - Drilling Rig Moved to Carson Highway Site

I was gone a few days - and was proven wrong about only pipeline digging activities off Carson Highway. Savoy cuts drilling costs by operating just one horizontal drilling rig - and shifting them from one site to the next. The rig that was first at Stratton's Landscaping was moved to Purse, and is now situated off Carson, where it will continuously drill 24/7 for probably another 10 to 14 days. Neighbors complained to me about extreme 24/7 noise and odor pollution. Unfortunately, it is not just bad smell but there are a lot of poisonous and cancerous substances in those fumes - and this well looks really close to some residences - less than the 300 feet they suppose to stay away...

Drilling Rig off Carson at about 9:00 pm (6/17/2013)

Thursday, June 13, 2013

Michigan DEQ Oil Well Permit Applications June 3 - June 10, 2013

The newest DEQ list of recent drilling applications has Savoy applying for 8 new wells around Adrian. Check it out: Weekly Oil & Gas Permit List

Drilling Rig Disappeared from Heritage Park

24 hours later - the horizontal drilling rig disappeared from Heritage Park. Note the tarp-covered structure behind the "Christmas tree". Seems to me that they drilled horizontally to connect the Heritage Park pipeline to somewhere else. Maybe the site on Carson Highway?

Heritage Park Well Site 6/13/2013 6:20 pm

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Drilling in Heritage Park for the 3rd Time - Lot of Activities off Carson Highway

What a shock to see a derrick going up in Heritage Park at the same drill site for the 3rd time - after Savoy meticulously cleaned up the site for production? What changed their mind?





At the same time a lot of drilling and leveling goes up off Carson Highway. It is not looking like a oil drilling rig - and there is a lot of grading and digging going on as well. Only thing I can think of is - another pipeline to Witt Farm?

Maybe the two things are connected? To make good use of the now purchased Witt Farm property Savoy consolidates processing and transportation their?

Monday, June 10, 2013

Toledo Tar Sands Opponents Will Conduct ‘People’s Hearing’ To Counter Ohio EPA Permit for BP Refinery Expansion

From: http://gcmonitor.org/article.php?id=1690

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


Keith Sadler, Toledo Coalition for Safe Energy, (419) 345-6937
Kristina Moazed, Chair, Western Lake Erie Sierra Club, 419-297-7668
Terry Lodge, TCSE, (419) 829-9905


Toledo Tar Sands Opponents Will Conduct ‘People’s Hearing’
To Counter Ohio EPA Permit for BP Refinery Expansion

Opponents frustrated with the proposed refining of Canadian tar sands at the BP Husky petroleum refinery in Oregon, Ohio will convene a “people’s hearing” to protest a scheduled Ohio Environmental Protection Agency public hearing, beginning at 6:00 p.m. on Wednesday, June 5, 2013 at Lake Erie Center, 6200 Bayshore Drive, Oregon, Ohio. The OEPA hearing begins at 6:30.

The Ohio EPA is considering issuance of a federal Clean Air Act permit for a $2.5 billion array of modifications to the refinery’s operations, which will enable the plant to create fuel from bitumen, which is gleaned from oil-bearing sands in the forests of northern Alberta, Canada.

The opponents, who call themselves the Toledo Coalition for Safe Energy, include members of the Western Lake Erie Sierra Club, Occupy Toledo, the Native American Idle No More movement, Toledo Green Party and various citizens and activists. They oppose the air permit for serious public health, environmental and process reasons, and share the view that the public is allowed only a shallow role in the ultimate decision. Convinced that the damaging negative aspects of the project are not being considered, they will present a more accurate framing of the project on the public sidewalk.

“Our people's hearing on tar sands refining is not limited to narrow, technical matters. There are unconsidered major issues of energy policy. BP wants to re-tool their refining to process tar sands, the dirtiest oil on the planet, the bottom of the barrel,” said Dan Rutt of Occupy Toledo. “Three years ago, BP caused the largest environmental disaster in U.S. history in the Gulf of Mexico - a series of criminal acts. Now, they want us to entrust Mother Earth to them, again.”

“When I read the obscure OEPA notice of their hearing, what struck me is that the words ‘tar sands’ appear nowhere,” observed Valerie Crow, Native American journalist, of the growing First Nations Idle No More movement which began in Canada. “How is the public even notified of the chance to express their opinions? But for the acts of a small but dedicated band of concerned citizens demonstrating at various BP gas stations throughout the area, no one would know what’s really at stake. Tar sands mining in Alberta violates First Nations treaties, destroys communities, pollutes water and air and is causing many cancers and other diseases to the people living nearby and downstream.”

Kristina Moazed, Chair of the Western Lake Erie Sierra Club, noted that “An area of Alberta as large as Florida is becoming a permanent wasteland that will support no life just so we can persist in the fantasy of cheap natural resources without paying the true price. We are desperately raping the Earth for ‘extreme energy,’ the last of the carbon fuel reserves. Future life on earth depends on our resistance.”

Sean Nestor, Green Party candidate for Toledo City Council, pointed out that “The permit papers and public statements by BP and OEPA suggest collusion, extending back over a decade, that the proposed project was broken up into pieces to avoid triggering of Clean Air Act regulations, which would then require measures to reduce poisonous air quality. Had these multiple modifications been packaged under one permit as federal and Ohio law require, widespread pollution of East Toledo and Oregon from tar sands might be reduced. Unless the public weighs in, global warming and human suffering from burning fossil fuels cannot be ended.”