Blog Archive

Sunday, April 26, 2026

Tesla Issued Cease-and Desist Letter in South Texas Due to Heavy Metals and Near-Brackish Water in Lithium Refinery Wastewater


     According to a post by Yash Bajaj in AutoBlog, Tesla’s billion-dollar lithium refinery outside Corpus Christi, marketed by CEO Elon Musk as a clean, acid-free operation, has been issued a cease-and-desist order for wastewater that has tested positive for carcinogenic heavy metals and high lithium concentrations. The facility had been discharging about 231,000 gallons of wastewater per day into a local drainage ditch. At a 24-hour continuous rate, that is about 160 gallons per minute.




     The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) issued Tesla a wastewater permit in January 2025. However, the permit apparently did not cover heavy metals or lithium.

Local officials at the Nueces County Drainage District No. 2 were completely unaware of the arrangement until their maintenance workers discovered an unfamiliar pipe expelling black liquid across their easement in early 2026. While the TCEQ conducted a brief investigation in February 2026, state regulators cleared Tesla of any violations because the original permit did not require monitoring for lithium or heavy metals.”

     According to Arcelia Martin of Inside Climate News:

Eurofins Environment Testing, an accredited lab with locations across the globe, reported traces of hexavalent chromium, a well-known carcinogen, and arsenic, an environmental poison. Nueces County Drainage District No. 2, which manages the ditch, commissioned the test.”

     Other components of concern found in the Tesla wastewater are strontium, vanadium, and lithium. These can be toxic to aquatic organisms, other wildlife, and humans. Other minerals at significantly higher than background concentrations include sodium, potassium, calcium, and magnesium put the water’s salinity at near-brackish conditions, about 10-20 times more salty than typical freshwater. These salts can dehydrate and kill plants. They can also kill the plants holding the banks of the ditch, resulting in greater erosion.

     High levels of manganese, iron, and phosphorus were also detected. The iron can deplete dissolved oxygen. The phosphorus can help trigger harmful algae blooms. There are also elevated levels of ammonia, which breaks down into nitrite, then nitrate. Nitrate can fertilize algal growth and increase chemical oxygen demand (COD). This can cause problems such as suffocation for fish.

     All of these chemicals are indicative of industrial-sourced wastewater. There seems to be nothing else that could cause such concentrations of these chemicals, although there is a possibility that some of the arsenic may come from local groundwater through a nearby overflowing pond. Nueces County Drainage District No. 2 referred to the water testing results as “quite disturbing.” South Texas is currently dealing with depleting groundwater levels, and the wastewater will likely have a negative effect on local water quality and eventually local groundwater quality as it infiltrates the ground.




     As noted, the TCEQ tested the water in February and found it to meet the permitted conditions. Apparently, TECQ did not expect elevated levels of these toxic metals and contaminants.

TCEQ initiated its February investigation after workers for the drainage district found an unfamiliar pipe stretched across its easement. The workers reported black liquid expelling into the ditch. The drainage district, which manages the ditch area, was unaware that the state gave Tesla permission to use it.”

District officials were confused how the state could allow Tesla to discharge an average of 231,000 gallons of lithium refinery wastewater each day into the district’s ditch without notification. TCEQ said it doesn’t communicate directly with local drainage districts as part of the permitting process.”

Volunteer drainage district engineer Aref Mazloum said TCEQ didn’t test for heavy metals in its compliance investigation because that hadn’t been part of the district’s complaint filed earlier this year. When the investigation concluded, he said he requested the results and commissioned the third-party wastewater testing to see what else might be in the water.”

     Mazloum, now with the TCEQ Water Supply division, said the discharge would have to be remediated before it could resume. He said the company should “design and fund an on-site multi-stage wastewater treatment plant.” He recommended reverse osmosis as a treatment method. He also noted that the concentrated brine left over after treatment would have to be hauled away to a hazardous waste facility or processed through a zero-liquid discharge system.

     Fortunately, there are no water intakes or drinking water wells within five miles downstream of the site. The drainage ditch flows into Petronila Creek and eventually to Baffin Bay, a Gulf fishing spot.  

 

 


References:

 

Tesla’s 'clean' lithium supply faces questions after toxic metals found in wastewater. Yash Bajaj. AutoBlog. April 25, 2026. Tesla’s 'clean' lithium supply faces questions after toxic metals found in wastewater

Independent Testing Where Tesla’s Lithium Refinery Discharges Wastewater Found Toxic Metals: The drainage district that commissioned the test has now sent a cease-and-desist letter to Tesla’s operations, near Corpus Christi. Arcelia Martin.  Inside Climate News. April 21, 2026. Independent Testing Where Tesla’s Lithium Refinery Discharges Wastewater Found Toxic Metals - Inside Climate News

26.04.15 Tesla Letter and Report. THE LAW OFFICE OFFRANK A. LAZARTE, PLLC. April 15, 2026. 26.04.15 Tesla Letter and Report | DocumentCloud

 

 

Saturday, April 25, 2026

U.S. LNG Export Update: 3BCF/Day Rise in Exports Expected through 2027, 10th Export Terminal Comes Online, and Import Prices Very High in Europe and Asia Due to Iran War


     U.S. LNG exports are set to rise by about 2BCF/day through 2027. Current export capacity is 18.3 BCF/day, with actual exports at about 17 BCF/day. That is nearly a 93% utilization rate. Utilization rates picked up and are expected to remain high to offset losses, especially from Qatar, due to the Iran war. The graph below shows total exports and imports from the U.S. via pipeline and LNG. Note that the U.S. imports about 0.1 BCF/day of LNG to New England for winter inventory and is expected to continue that rate or less through 2027. These imports only exist because much, much cheaper gas that could be pipelined from Northeastern PA is not available due to opposition to pipelines, mainly from the state of New York. Pipeline gas exports to Mexico continue to increase incrementally, but the biggest rise in exports is mainly LNG exports. Some of the U.S. natural gas pipelined to Mexico is expected to be liquefied and exported from Mexico as LNG. Two terminals are expected to come online, one in 2026 and one in 2027, with a combined export capacity of 0.6 BCF/day. The U.S. also imports about 8.7 BCF/day from Canada via pipeline. This is expected to drop to 8BCF/day as Canada diverts some production to feed 2.1 BCF/day of new LNG exports from its West Coast. The Appalachian region is expected to replace some of that gas as its production is expected to grow by about 1 BCF/day or more through 2027.




     Qatari LNG exports represent:

“….10 Bcf/d, or 20% of global supply. Qatar also sustained damage to 17% of its export capacity after a March 18 attack on the Ras Laffan LNG export facility damaged two liquefaction trains. QatarEnergy estimates repairs on the damaged trains could take up to five years.”

     Since the advent of the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, more U.S. LNG exports have been diverted from Asia to Europe, as the following graph shows. In 2025, exports to Europe reached a record high of 10.3 BCF/day.




     EIA also recently reported:

On April 22, 2026, Golden Pass LNG—the 9th liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal in the United States—shipped its first cargo from Train 1, according to the project developer. The shipment left port 23 days after achieving first LNG production in March 2026. The terminal began shipping as geopolitical developments in the Strait of Hormuz have affected over 10 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d), or approximately 20%, of global supply. Golden Pass LNG is the only new U.S. LNG export terminal currently expected to begin LNG shipments in 2026.”




     LNG import prices have been very high in Asia and Europe due to the Iran War. The following graph shows that before the war, LNG import prices in both Europe and Japan were a little over three times the average Henry Hub price. Those prices peaked in late March at about seven times Henry Hub prices and are now back at about five times Henry Hub prices.

   



References:

 

The 10th U.S. liquefied natural gas export terminal, Golden Pass, ships first cargo. Energy Information Administration. April 23, 2026. The 10th U.S. liquefied natural gas export terminal, Golden Pass, ships first cargo - U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)

U.S. natural gas exports to grow nearly 30% by 2027 as LNG facilities ramp up. Energy Information Administration. April 16, 2026. U.S. natural gas exports to grow nearly 30% by 2027 as LNG facilities ramp up - U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)

Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report Supplement: For week ending April 22, 2026: Release Date: April 23, 2026. Energy Information Administration. Natural Gas - U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)

 

Marcellus Shale Coalition Promotes Fact-Based Clarity Ahead of and During Pennsylvania Methane Hearings


      The Marcellus Shale Coalition notes that Pennsylvania’s methane hearings (that happened this week) will likely generate headlines but likely not generate clarity, which its recent blog post, Separating Methane Facts from Fiction, seeks to provide. The coalition is an oil & gas industry advocacy group local to the Marcellus region of mainly Pennsylvania and smaller pieces of West Virginia and Ohio. The group notes that they are committed to educating policymakers, especially as less educated oppositional rhetoric is often thrown at the industry.

     The post starts with basic facts: 1) agriculture is responsible for one-third of human-caused methane emissions, twice as much as natural gas system emissions, which make up 17%. 2) Total U.S. human-caused methane emissions are down 19% since 1991, during a period when natural gas production doubled. 3) Natural sources such as wetlands are responsible for one-third of total methane emissions. They don’t mention biogenic waste emissions from landfills, which also contribute more than natural gas systems to human-caused methane emissions.

     They link to a report by the Appalachian Methane Initiative, which states that the Appalachian Basin consistently has the lowest methane emissions intensity among U.S. oil & gas basins. The initiative involves “independent monitoring providers, technical consultants, and top-tier universities.” The most recent study utilized “nearly 17,000 unique surveyed sites measurements across approximately 31,800 square miles (82,360 square kilometers) of the Appalachian Basin.” The key findings of that report, shown below, are interesting. Two things that stand out for me are that 1) conventional wells make up 2% of gas production, but two-thirds of methane emissions in the basin, and 2) 80% of large satellite-detected methane plumes are from coal mining operations.




     They note that the state of Pennsylvania has a comprehensive methane regulatory framework that requires:

 “…leak detection and repair (LDAR), routine inspections, and detailed monitoring across well sites and compressor stations. Operators must conduct regular inspections and submit emissions and operational data, ensuring transparency through publicly accessible compliance records and state oversight.”

     Next, they address the “dramatic claims” that often occur in the media about methane emissions. They consider the use of the term “super-emitter,” which refers to a single point with a high leaking rate. Of course, super-emitters may be completely repaired after they are identified. They note that some high leak rates are associated with maintenance or ensuring safety, and may be:

“…based on momentary snapshots – capturing short-duration, controlled events like maintenance or safety procedures.”

     Snapshots do not capture the whole story, and if those snapshots are associated with maintenance events, they are very temporary, not continuous leaks.

Emission estimates depend heavily on weather conditions, site characteristics, and verification from additional data sources. Without that, conclusions can be off the mark.”

Responsible analysis draws from multiple inputs – ground monitoring, aerial surveys, and operational data – not a single point in time.”

     They stress that the real story is based on data, not rhetoric.

     The Pennsylvania methane hearings included presentations from the PADEP, the Sierra Club, Environmental Defense Fund (which has its own methane-detecting satellites), Earthworks, Clean Air Council, the Pennsylvania Independent Oil and Gas Association, and the Marcellus Shale Coalition.

     Two graphs of methane emissions and methane emissions intensity, by oil & gas basin, from the Marcellus Shale Coalition, are shown below, followed by a graphic of unconventional (shale/"fracked horizontal wells") oil & gas emissions versus emissions from cows.








     Below is a graphic of methane plumes by

 company, compiled by Earthworks.  





 

References:

 

Separating Methane Facts from Fiction. Marcellus Shale Coalition Blog. April 15, 2026. Separating Methane Facts from Fiction – Marcellus Shale Coalition

Appalachian Basin Once Again Confirmed as Lowest Methane Intensity Major Oil and Gas Basin in the United States. The Appalachian Methane Initiative. March 20, 2026. Appalachian Basin Once Again Confirmed as Lowest Methane Intensity Major Oil and Gas Basin in the United States

House Environmental Resources & Natural Protection Committee Public Hearing. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. April 21, 2026. Testimony on Methane Emission from Oil and Gas.docx

Friday, April 24, 2026

Konica Minolta’s Quantitative Optical Gas Imaging Camera GMP03: With an Introduction to Quantitative Optical Gas Imaging (QOGI): White Paper Summary & Review



     Optical imaging via specialized cameras known as optical gas imaging (OGI) cameras has become standard in exploring oil & gas facilities for detecting, and to a lesser extent, quantifying gas leaks. The GMP03 is Konica Minolta’s latest handheld Quantitative Optical Gas Imaging (QOGI) camera, which provides methane detection and field quantification. Accurate quantification is one of the biggest challenges to understanding facility-level methane leaks. The company refers to the camera as a tool that provides Reliable Quantitative Optical Gas Imaging (R‑QOGI). The company’s white paper: Design Philosophy of Reliable - Quantitative Optical Gas Imaging camera GMP03 for Achieving “Reliable Quantification” in the Field is summarized and reviewed below. First is the abstract:


ABSTRACT

This white paper presents the design philosophy for achieving reliable, decision ready quantification using the RQOGI camera GMP03 under real-world field conditions. While OGI cameras have become widely adopted for rapid leak detection, effective methane-mitigation efforts and regulatory reporting increasingly require identifying leaks and quantifying emission rates. Direct-contact methods, such as high-volume sampling, or bagging techniques, are often impractical in hazardous, hard-to-reach, or structurally complex facilities, reinforcing the need for a robust non-contact alternative. 

However, field-based QOGI faces inherent fundamental challenges. Outdoor airflow is rarely stable, and wind-driven plume deformation introduces significant temporal variability. As a result, measurement sequences often contain transient segments that are unsuitable for quantification, leading to unstable results and a high dependence on operator interpretation.

To address these challenges, the R-QOGI camera GMP03 reframes quantification as a time-series evaluation problem. It analyzes plume dynamics and environmental stability over time, automatically selects only data segments suitable for quantification, and generates a single representative emission value.  In addition, the R-QOGI camera GMP03 provides an intuitive reliability indicator derived from cumulative imagery and environmental metrics, enabling users to assess the reliability of each result on site while reducing reliance on operator judgment. 

Finally, this paper outlines how QOGI cameras are evolving beyond fugitive emissions to address higher-rate events—such as vents, blowdowns, and episodic releases—that are required to be quantified under recent regulatory and reporting frameworks. These advancements include large-scale calibration, enhanced background reconstruction.

     OGI cameras utilize infrared imagery to detect methane leaks. QOGI pixilates that imagery in order to better quantify leaks. It generates “stable, high contrast, high dynamic range gas flow imagery through proprietary image processing technologies.”

     Wind can have a profound effect on OGI measurements. A key feature of the QOGI camera is its ability to work through wind-driven variability, as shown below.




    “{The camera}… introduces an automated capability to evaluate temporal fluctuations in plume shape, motion, and environmental conditions, extracting only the segments deemed suitable for quantification and generating a single representative value.”

     Several environmental variables affect the ability of OGI cameras, including the QOGI camera, to accurately measure emissions rates by influencing gas detection sensitivity.

Flow rate estimation using QOGI cameras is strongly influenced by gas detection sensitivity at the time of imaging and by surrounding environmental noise. When sensitivity is degraded or when noise levels are high, the algorithm cannot acquire sufficient information, making it inherently difficult to estimate highly accurate flow rate values.”

     Altitude, time of day, relative position of the sun, and clouds can all affect measurements. With its previous model, the company introduced a sensitivity map function to help filter out and work around environmental noise. Since these noise sources, like clouds and wind, change over time, one can take measurements at different times to validate results.




Rather than focusing on “always producing correct numerical values,” GMP03 places emphasis on “enabling users to judge whether a result should be adopted.”

     Understanding the effects of environmental noise in differing conditions allows for better estimation of leak rates.



     They note that the incorporation of representative values and reliability indicators gives the product a higher accuracy.

     Below, they give some examples where underestimation and overestimation of leak rates are likely.

 “In addition to the influence of wind, estimation errors may occur under these imaging conditions:

- When the temperature of the observed object is close to the gas temperature, detection sensitivity decreases and the flow rate tends to be underestimated.

- In environments with significant noise, noise may be misidentified as gas, leading to overestimation of the flow rate.”

     In the R-QOGI approach, the reliability indicators are based on factors such as imaging sensitivity, noise level, and wind conditions. Ideal imaging conditions lead to better quantification. Thus, it could become a strategy to plan OGI measurements with the predicted weather. Weather prediction has gotten very good and detailed, so that planning accordingly can yield the best results. Adjusting the shooting angles based on prevailing wind direction can improve imaging quantification results. Reliability factors can also determine whether re-shooting an area is warranted.

“…the RQOGI camera GMP03 is designed with the understanding that plume behavior and imaging conditions vary over time, and it places strong emphasis on enabling users to assess the validity of the results.”

     They stress that giving the reliability indicators with each reading is essential in getting accurate estimations.

     The graph below shows that the company’s statistical method of representative values offers somewhat better accuracy than simple averaging of values. The percentages indicate “the proportion of estimates falling within a factoroftwo range (50%–200%) relative to the true flow rate.”




     The white paper’s section on future technical directions notes that QOGI tech has, in the past, mainly focused on small, fugitive, unintentional leaks of less than a few kilograms per hour. Those are still important, but there is now more focus on vents, blowdowns, and large episodic events. One reason for more focus on these is that, as the smaller leaks are repaired, the larger leaks associated with maintenance events like blowdowns take up a greater share of the overall leaks. This means that there is now more emphasis on measuring and quantifying leak rates during these events. For the scientist, this is an opportunity to acquire more data, improve understanding, and potentially to get better overall quantification. However, as they note, larger gas plumes behave differently from small ones.

Field evaluations at METEC and Stanford have demonstrated that traditional concentrationpathlength (ppm-m) estimation methods—optimized for small leaks—can significantly underestimate emissions in the 20–1000 kg/hr range, particularly in situations where gas retention prevents accurate background determination.”

     The company has implemented the following enhancements to better quantify larger leaks and has plans to release future products to better measure such releases:





With planned product releases for vent and blowdown quantification in 2026 and super-emitter quantification in 2027, QOGI systems are evolving into comprehensive emission measurement platforms capable of supporting regulatory reporting, carbon accounting, and operational decision making. As global methane reduction initiatives accelerate, these innovations will play a vital role in enabling operators to understand their full emission profiles and to take informed, data-driven action.”

     To summarize, the R-QOGI camera GMP03 has enabled judgment to be shifted from human operators to an algorithmic framework specifically designed for field conditions. This allows it to better account for plume behavior and environmental factors. Essentially, it has the ability to filter out what should be considered bad data due to poor conditions. They seem to suggest that prior measurements have relied too much on human judgement, and replacing that with algorithms coordinated with field conditions can give more consistent results.   

     Finally, they note that GMP03 is not simply a tool, but a platform as well:

Advances in large-scale correction, background reconstruction, and total mass estimation further extend the applicability of OGI based quantification to high-rate and long-range scenarios. Together, these developments position QOGI as a comprehensive emissions measurement platform rather than a niche inspection tool.”

  

 

References:

 

Design Philosophy of Reliable - Quantitative Optical Gas Imaging camera GMP03 for Achieving Reliable Quantification in the Field. Konica Minolta. KonicaMinolta_design-philosophy-of-reliable-quantative-optical-gas-imaging-camera.pdf

 

Dark Vision’s Kraken In-Line Inspection Pipeline Pigging Tool Acoustically Images Seam Welds, Complex Cracks, and Dents: Cuts Pigging Downtime Per Section, Enables More Monitoring, and Provides High-Detail 3D Photorealistic Visuals


   

     This post was initiated by a LinkedIn post giving a strong endorsement from a colleague who is an accomplished petroleum engineer:

While I try to maintain professional decorum in my LinkedIn posts save for the occasional light-hearted photo or comment, let me be much more blunt.”

DarkVision's Kraken ILI tool is a complete game changer. More data, more resolution, the ability to look at crack, corrosion, and deformation all in one run. This is an absolute tectonic shift in technology.”

     That post made me want to look further into this technology. It is good to know what new technologies are impacting industries and how they work.

     The company, Dark Vision, provides acoustic imaging for industrial processes. This imaging utilizes thousands of signal arrays, and data processing is done via cloud computing and machine learning. The company keeps the world’s largest industrial acoustical datasets; the datasets collected for each project are converted via software with AI/machine learning into photorealistic high-fidelity visuals. 

     In the case of pipelines, it allows for better imaging of vulnerable points in pipelines and the small cracks that can later become bigger cracks. Better imaging = better monitoring. It also works in high-pressure/high-temperature environments.












    Dark Vision’s in-line inspection (ILI) tool called Kraken can evaluate all major pipeline damage types, including metal loss, axial cracks, and dents. Importantly, it can do this with a single tool in a single run. The detailed 3D images of pipeline anomalies can assist evaluators in finding the root causes of anomalies. For unraveling crack morphologies, Kraken can exceed legacy amplitude-based inferred measurement methods. It provides ultra-fast acoustical imaging at very high resolutions. Kraken’s results were validated against industry-standard tools, including a metrology-grade laser scanner and a phased-array ultrasound handheld tool. It also performed well in challenging anomalies such as stress corrosion cracking (SCC), hook cracks, and lack of fusion. The product was first introduced and featured in 2025’s 37th International Pipeline Pigging and Integrity Management Conference. The abstract is below.




     At 2026’s 38th International Pipeline Pigging and Integrity Management Conference Proceedings, Dark Vision submitted a paper detailing Kraken’s capabilities, including its ability to measure “misaligned and over/under trimmed weld profiles, short lack-of-fusion (LoF) penetrators, and hook cracks in welds,”  as well as “stress corrosion cracking (SCC) and complex laminations with surface breaking features.” The paper’s abstract is below.




   A tool such as this can reduce the downtime associated with using multiple pigging tools, multiple tool runs, and allow for more pigging over a company’s assets. This means it can support better pipeline integrity monitoring.   

 

References:

 

Beyond the Surface: Dig Results from Direct Imaging ILI of Seam Welds and Complex Crack Defects in Pipelines. Greer Simpson, Corey Richards, Marshall Lu, Aaron Schwing, Jason Moritz. 38th International Pipeline Pigging and Integrity Management Conference (PPIM 2026). Held 19-22 January 2026, Houston, Texas, USA. Pages 625-656. (Abstract) Beyond the Surface: Dig Results from Direct Imaging ILI of Seam Welds and Complex Crack Defects in Pipelines - proceedings.com

The Future of Industrial Acoustic Imaging is Here: Discover what makes DarkVision’s technology the world leading solution in industrial asset inspection. DarkVision Technology. Our Technology | Advanced Industrial Imaging | DarkVision

PPIM 2025 Paper: Introducing Triple-threat Detection and Sizing in a Single Pass. 37th International Pipeline Pigging and Integrity Management Conference (PPIM 2025). January 28, 2025. (Abstract). PPIM 2025 Paper: Introducing Triple-threat Detection and Sizing in a Single Pass | Whitepapers | DarkVision

Thursday, April 23, 2026

Chemical Leaked at West Virginia Silver Recovery Plant was Hydrogen Sulfide (H2S): 2 Killed, 30 Hospitalized, One in Critical Condition


     A dangerous chemical leak occurred at the Catalyst Refiners plant in Institute, West Virginia, this week, resulting in two deaths and 30 hospitalizations, with one in critical condition. The leak occurred when the company was in the process of preparing to shut down part of the plant, which recovers silver via chemical reactions. Silver is used as a catalyst for other chemical reactions.




     According to AP, Kanawha County Commission Emergency Management Director C.W. Sigman noted that:

A chemical gas reaction occurred at the plant involving nitric acid and another substance, Sigman said at a news briefing. He added that there was “a violent reaction of the chemicals and it instantaneously overreacted.”

Starting or ending a chemical reaction are the most dangerous times,” Sigman said.

The chemical reaction that was believed to have occurred during a cleaning process produced toxic hydrogen sulfide, Kanawha County Commission President Ben Salango said.

     Seven first-responders, ambulance workers, were among those hospitalized. Patient symptoms included respiratory symptoms, including cough, shortness of breath, sore throat, and itchy eyes. A shelter-in-place order was issued for the surrounding area and lifted more than five hours later. As the chemical is diluted by the ambient air, there is no danger or concern about local air quality since the leak has presumably been contained.

The leak required a large-scale decontamination operation in which people had to remove their clothes and be sprayed down, authorities said.”




     Investigations into the cause of the leak will likely be carried out by the state DEP, OSHA, and the National Chemical Safety Board. West Virginia Governor Patrick Morrisey noted that the Kanawha County Emergency Management team has been managing the response.

“…Sigman said earlier this afternoon that the chemical released contained Nitric Acid, but it was mixed with another chemical.”

According to Dr. Tom Takubo, commissioners and 911 officials, the second chemical was an M2000A chemical. Takubo says that the chemical is a pulmonary irritant that gets into and coats the lungs and keeps oxygen from getting into the bloodstream, but says that he does not know the lasting impacts of exposure.”

Sigmon says the mixture of the two chemicals happened in a pump area while they were decommissioning a tank, and that’s when the “violent reaction” of the chemicals happened, creating hydrogen sulfide. He says it “instantaneously” exposed the workers.”

     The company is owned by Ames Goldsmith Corp. Its president, Frank Barber, noted that the leak:

“…appears to have resulted in the creation of chemical fumes within a building at the facility. The fumes were contained within that one building.”

     As someone who has been trained in H2S safety as part of my oilfield training and who has also experienced low-level H2S poisoning via a gas well, I know how dangerous these exposures are, especially inside a building where concentrations can become very high very quickly. H2S safety training involves wearing Scott air packs, basically oxygenated tanks. This is likely how the situation was decontaminated by workers.

 


References:

 

Chemical leak at a West Virginia plant kills 2 people and sends 30 more to hospitals, officials say.   John Raby. April 22, 2026. Chemical leak at a West Virginia plant kills 2 people, sends 30 more to hospitals, officials say | AP News

Kanawha County, WV: Two dead, multiple injured in West Virginia chemical emergency. Jackson Lilly and Jessica Patterson. April 22, 2026. Two dead, multiple injured in West Virginia chemical emergency | WOWK

Eni’s Natural Gas and Condensate Discovery in Kutei Basin, Offshore Indonesia: Known to Be Sourced by Organic Matter Carried by Turbidite Sands, a Rare Occurrence


Sandstone Source Rocks with Coal Fragments and Abundant Leaf Matter in the Kutei Basin

     There are different kinds of sedimentary basin hydrocarbon systems. The type of kerogen generated through deep burial catagenesis depends on the source of the organic matter. Marine mudstones are the most common hydrocarbon source rocks, but there are also occurrences of terrestrial-sourced organic matter. Apparently, this is the case in the Kutei Basin, offshore Indonesia. This was determined back in 2006 and explained in an AAPG Bulletin paper led by author Arthur Saller. He noted that cores and drill cuttings show that the basin’s best source rocks are sandstones that also carried plant matter that got deposited with the turbiditic deep water sandstones. Saller noted that the sandstones have significantly higher TOC values than the shales. It was noted that the organic matter was composed of:

“…laminar coaly fragments, pieces of wood, resinite, and other coaly debris. Laminar coaly fragments are dominant, and their size, shape, and cuticle structure indicate that they were leaf fragments. Fossil leaf fragments occur in all deep-water sandstone packages from the upper slope to the basin floor. Fossil leaf fragments were apparently carried into deep water by turbidity currents during lowstands of sea level.”

     It is also noted that source rocks that contain leaf fragments often result in liquids that are waxy.




     A recent article in GeoExPro by Henk Kombrink explains why the mudstones and shales have much lower TOC values in what is considered to be a marine basin:

Well-oxygenated conditions, resulting in rapid decomposition of the algal material, and strong bottom currents are seen as two important factors as to why the shales do not have high marine organic matter contents.”

     Kombrink notes that the organic matter carried by the Miocene-aged sandstones in turbidity currents was deposited quickly in deeper water, resulting in preservation of the organic matter. Fluvial-Deltaic systems carried the organic matter to the sea, and turbidity currents quickly carried it underwater to the slope and basin floor.






Eni’s New Giant Natural Gas and Condensate Discovery – The Geliga-1 Well

     Eni’s new discovery, the Geliga‑1 exploration well, drilled in the Ganal block in the Kutei Basin, approximately 70 km from the East Kalimantan coast, is estimated to contain in-place resources of approximately 5 trillion cubic feet (Tcf) of gas and 300 million barrels of condensate. The well was drilled to a total depth of around 5,100 meters in a water depth of about 2,000 meters. Excellent reservoir conditions were encountered, and a Drill Stem Test (DST) is planned to confirm production potential.

     The Kutei Basin has a very successful exploration history, with recent wells in 2023 and 2025 encountering significant reserves.

     According to Eni:

The Geliga1 discovery also follows the recent Final Investment Decisions (FIDs) for the Gendalo and Gandang gas project (South Hub), and for the Geng North and Gehem fields (North Hub). The North Hub project will leverage a newly built FPSO with a handling capacity of 1 bscfd of gas and 90,000 bpd of condensate, as well as the existing Bontang LNG Plant.”

Initial assessments indicate that the combined Geliga and Gula resources have the capacity to produce an additional 1 bscfd of gas and 80,000 bpd of condensate, opening the possibility—among others—of establishing, in a fasttrack mode, a third production hub in the prolific Kutei Basin by mirroring the development concept of the ongoing North Hub project. Studies are also underway to evaluate a further rejuvenation of Bontang by resuming additional liquefaction capacity beyond what is already planned for the North Hub development, thus further extending the plant’s operational life.”

     Eni holds an 82% stake in the Geliga-1 well, with China’s Sinopec holding the other 18%.

The Ganal PSC is part of a portfolio of 19 blocks (14 in Indonesia and 5 in Malaysia) that will be contributed to Searah, a jointly controlled company between Eni and Petronas announced in November 2025. The new company will integrate assets, technical expertise and financial capabilities to support growth and strengthen its position in Southeast Asia. Searah’s business plans include the development of approximately 3 billion barrels of oil equivalent (boe) of discovered resources and the unlocking of significant exploration potential. Closing of the transaction is expected within Q2 2026. The valorization to a third party of a 10% stake in the Eni Indonesia portfolio withheld from the Searah transaction is underway and expected to be concluded in 2026. The Geliga discovery adds to the value of this sale.”

     Eni has been active in Indonesia since 2001 and has a net production of about 90,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day, mainly from the Jangkrik and Merakes fields offshore East Kalimantan.

     In his article, Kombrink considers the Kutei Basin find as an example of near-field exploration rather than frontier exploration. He compares near-field exploration wells in the Kutei Basin to the North Sea near-field wells and concludes:

“…the Kutei Basin still has a lot more running room than the North Sea.”

     In other words, these wells are bigger than most new North Sea discoveries these days. He also notes via a LinkedIn post by Dag Helland Hansen of EMGS that a strong increase in resistivity, similar to the successful Gehem field to the north, was observed in the Geliga-1 well.

 



 

References:

 

Geliga-1 – the gas discovery sourced by sandstones. Henk Kombrink. GEOExPro. April 20, 2026. Geliga-1 - the gas discovery sourced by sandstones - GeoExpro

Eni’s major Geliga Gas Discovery Confirms the Strategic Potential of Indonesia’s Kutei Basin and Unlocks Significant New Volumes for Domestic and International Markets. Eni. 20 April 2026. Eni’s major Geliga Gas Discovery Confirms the Strategic Potential of Indonesia’s Kutei Basin and Unlocks Significant New Volumes for Domestic and International Markets

Leaves in turbidite sands: The main source of oil and gas in the deep-water Kutei Basin, Indonesia. Arthur Saller; Rui Lin; John Dunham. AAPG Bulletin (2006) 90 (10): 1585–1608. Leaves in turbidite sands: The main source of oil and gas in the deep-water Kutei Basin, Indonesia | AAPG Bulletin | GeoScienceWorld

     According to a post by Yash Bajaj in AutoBlog, Tesla’s billion-dollar lithium refinery outside Corpus Christi, marketed by CEO Elon M...