Tech startup’s pollution detector aids enviro justice group

by Todd Woody

If you had been driving through North Texas this week you
might have seen a white Dodge Sprinter van circling some of the natural gas wells
and compression stations that have sprung up around the Barnett Shale belt like
boom-time subdivisions.

Drillers tap natural gas by splitting shale through a
process called hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, that injects fluids laced
with chemicals into the rock formations. The proliferation of shale gas
drilling northeast of Dallas has ignited an uproar among residents, some of
whom fear that fracking could be poisoning ground water and polluting the air
with carcinogens. But the industry won’t
disclose all the chemicals it uses and Texas environmental authorities won’t
compel them to do so.

Which brings us back to our mystery van. Inside was a desktop
computer-sized analyzer connected to a translucent tube that snaked out the
roof of the van. The analyzer is made by a Silicon Valley company called Picarro and it provides real-time measurements
of methane and other greenhouse gas emissions. By correlating the data with
wind patterns, Picarro scientists can pinpoint the source of emissions. Oil and
gas operations emit methane, which can also indicate the presence of benzene and
other carcinogens, according to Picarro scientists.

This is an image created by a mashup of the methane concentrations recorded by the Picarro analyzer in Flower Mound, Texas, overlaid on a Google map.A Picarro employee had driven the van to Texas from
California at the request of Wilma Subra, a Louisiana scientist, environmental
justice activist and MacArthur genius grant recipient. Picarro’s director of
research and development, Chris Rella, flew to Texas and joined Subra and
activists from EarthworksTexas Oil & Gas
Accountability Project
on the hunt for fugitive emissions in the towns of
DISH and Flower Mound.

DISH—the name is capitalized because in 2005 the town
changed its name in exchange for free satellite television from the DISH
Network—is home to about 200 people and a dozen compression stations that
push natural gas from wells into pipelines. As the Picarro van drove around
DISH, concentrations of methane spiked from background concentrations of 1.8
parts per million to 20 parts per million near the compression stations. As the
analyzer recorded the spikes they were automatically plotted on a Google map.

Twenty miles to the southeast in the Dallas exurb of Flower
Mound, methane concentrations near natural gas wells literally went off the
analyzer’s chart, topping 40 parts per million, says Subra and Picarro
executives.

“I see this as very, very beneficial to the environmental
justice movement,” says Subra. “It gives you real-time data and you can
potentially identify the source as opposed to having to collect air samples and
then have them analyzed. You can see the plume on the map and how close houses
are to the compressor stations.”

(Last month, I
took a ride in the same van with Rella to chart methane plumes
from oil
refineries in the San Francisco Bay Area. As atmospheric gases are drawn into
the analyzer, laser beams are shot into an “optical cavity” in the machine.
Methane and carbon molecules are absorbed at different wavelengths and the
lasers measure the amount of absorption.)

Unlike other analyzers that require trained operators, the
Picarro machine can run more-or-less on autopilot.

That ease of use and the machine’s ability to take stealthy
and instantaneous measurements could prove to be a powerful tool for
environmental justice activists pressing companies to disclose emissions of
pollutants.

Once activists pinpointed the methane emissions in DISH and
Flower Mound, they presented
their findings
to Texas environmental authorities. They also took air
samples to be analyzed for other pollutants.

“We think the day will come sooner than most people realize
when school kids can literally take an analyzer like ours and drive it around
town,” Michael Woelk, Picarro’s chief executive, told me last month. “In a
matter of hours they could put up online a Google map showing methane gas
plumes and other plumes around their community and with that demand that
something be done.”

Picarro, which licenses its core technology from Stanford
University, has sold its $50,000 analyzers to the U.S. National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration, the Chinese government and academic scientists.
California is deploying the machines to create the world’s
first statewide greenhouse
gas monitoring network.

So why is the company making common cause with the environmental
justice movement?

“We see a real market for our products,” says Alex Salkever, a Picarro spokesman. “We don’t see a
lot of environmental justice groups buying $50,000 analyzers. But the EPA or
another group could give grants for a library of analyzers that get lent out.”

Picarro made inroads with the activist community in January
when company executives attended a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
environmental justice meeting in New Orleans. They met Subra and did a
drive-around of Louisiana petrochemical plants to demonstrate the analyzer’s
capabilities.

“Ultimately, we would be happy if natural gas companies buy
our machines to know what’s going on with their facilities in real time,” says
Salkever. “We see this as a market where we’ll be doing well by doing good.”

Environmental group Earthworks made this video of its stealth monitoring of methane emissions near natural gas compression stations in North Texas.

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