Literature DB >> 27232111

The costs of avoiding environmental impacts from shale-gas surface infrastructure.

Austin W Milt1, Tamara D Gagnolet2, Paul R Armsworth3.   

Abstract

Growing energy demand has increased the need to manage conflicts between energy production and the environment. As an example, shale-gas extraction requires substantial surface infrastructure, which fragments habitats, erodes soils, degrades freshwater systems, and displaces rare species. Strategic planning of shale-gas infrastructure can reduce trade-offs between economic and environmental objectives, but the specific nature of these trade-offs is not known. We estimated the cost of avoiding impacts from land-use change on forests, wetlands, rare species, and streams from shale-energy development within leaseholds. We created software for optimally siting shale-gas surface infrastructure to minimize its environmental impacts at reasonable construction cost. We visually assessed sites before infrastructure optimization to test whether such inspection could be used to predict whether impacts could be avoided at the site. On average, up to 38% of aggregate environmental impacts of infrastructure could be avoided for 20% greater development costs by spatially optimizing infrastructure. However, we found trade-offs between environmental impacts and costs among sites. In visual inspections, we often distinguished between sites that could be developed to avoid impacts at relatively low cost (29%) and those that could not (20%). Reductions in a metric of aggregate environmental impact could be largely attributed to potential displacement of rare species, sedimentation, and forest fragmentation. Planners and regulators can estimate and use heterogeneous trade-offs among development sites to create industry-wide improvements in environmental performance and do so at reasonable costs by, for example, leveraging low-cost avoidance of impacts at some sites to offset others. This could require substantial effort, but the results and software we provide can facilitate the process.
© 2016 Society for Conservation Biology.

Keywords:  access roads; agrupación de tuberías; carreteras de acceso; conjunto de pozos; conservation planning; environmental externalities; externalidades ambientales; gathering pipelines; multiobjective planning; optimización espacial; planeación de la conservación; planeación multiobjetiva; políticas de gas de esquisto; shale-energy policy; spatial optimization; well pads

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Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27232111     DOI: 10.1111/cobi.12766

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Conserv Biol        ISSN: 0888-8892            Impact factor:   6.560


  1 in total

1.  Time Series Analysis of Energy Production and Associated Landscape Fragmentation in the Eagle Ford Shale Play.

Authors:  Jon Paul Pierre; Michael H Young; Brad D Wolaver; John R Andrews; Caroline L Breton
Journal:  Environ Manage       Date:  2017-08-30       Impact factor: 3.266

  1 in total

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