4.7 Article

Isotopic and element ratios fingerprint salinization impact from beneficial use of oil and gas produced water in the Western US

期刊

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
卷 716, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.137006

关键词

Evaporation; Agriculture; TDS; Strontium; Sulfate; Lithium

资金

  1. Pennsylvania State University
  2. Energy and Environmental Sustainability Laboratory (EESL) at Penn State
  3. NSF [INTERN 1747807, CBET 1703412]
  4. Environmental Defense Fund
  5. Colorado State University Water Center

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Salinization of global freshwater resources is a concerning health and economic issue of the 21st century and requires serious management and study to understand how, and by what mechanism, Total Dissolved Solids (TDS) is changing in major watersheds. Oil and gas (O&G) produced water is a complex and saline (10-300 g/L TDS) wastewater often disposed to surface waters post-treatment. However, in western US. states, beneficial use of minimally treated O&G produced water discharged to ephemeral streams is permitted through the USEPA National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) for agriculture and wildlife propagation. In a remote Wyoming study region, beneficial use of O&G NPDES effluents annually contributes 13 billion L of water to surface water resources. The primary O&G TDS constituents are sulfate and sodium followed by chloride and calcium. Significant TDS increases from 2013 to 2016 in a large perennial river (River C) impacted by O&G effluent disposal, slight TDS increases in a perennial river (River B) and chronically elevated TDS (upwards of 2500 mg/L) in a smaller tributary (Tributary A) comprised mainly of CMG effluents led to an investigation of O&G impacts to surface waters in the region. Chloride-normalized metal ratios such as Br/Cl and delta H-2 and delta O-18 distinguished evaporation as the mechanism for increasing TDS derived from O&G on Tributary A. which is causing O&G effluents that meet NPDES regulations to not only exceed outfall regulations downstream where it is beneficially used for irrigation and drinking water but also exceed aquatic life and livestock recommended limits. Sr-87/Sr-86 and delta S-34(SO4) suggested minor impacts from O&G TDS loading on River C but also support an additional salinity source, such as streambed geological controls, the cause of significantly increasing TDS. While lithium isotopes provided insight into the O&G effluent origin (delta Li-7 ranged 9-10%.) and water-sediment interactions along O&G effluent streams, they did not function as distinct salinity tracers in the larger downstream rivers. This study suggests a multi-isotope (Sr-87/Sr-86 and delta S-34(SO4)) approach is often necessary for fingerprinting salinization sources and determining best management practices because multiple salinity sources and environmental mechanisms may need to be identified to protect water quality. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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