Monday 14 January 2013

Metgasco continues its plans to abandon test wells after drilling is completed


Metgasco inspires a lot of confidence when it openly speaks of abandoning the Glenugie test well after attempting to seal its 800 metre length with a concrete pour.
There is no mention of any form of periodic monitoring of the integrity of this plug.

The 'rehabilitation' of such wells has been known to deteriorate over time in some instances and, I'm sure that this particular corporation will expect the community to monitor its old exploration sites and local government to pick up the tab for any necessary initial investigations in the future should problems occur.

By then the directors and major shareholders will have moved on to pastures new.
 
 
METGASCO DRILLING ANNOUNCEMENT
11 January 2013
 
Drilling announcement - Thornbill E04 spuds
 
Metgasco advises that the Thornbill E04 well was spudded with AJ Lucas Rig 103 last night. The current operation is drilling a surface hole and installing surface casing.
 
Thornbill E04 is a simple vertical well whose objective is to better define coal distribution in PEL 426. The total planned depth of the well is 800 metres. The well will be “plugged and abandoned” before the rig leaves the site and the site rehabilitated.
 
This well is the start of a work program that has been approved by the New South Wales Government. One of the short to medium term goals of this program is to provide competitively priced natural gas to local businesses.
 
Metgasco’s Managing Director, Mr Peter Henderson reaffirmed that: “Once we have completed drilling our exploration wells, we will drill some lateral wells to demonstrate the productivity of the coal seams, before drilling our conventional prospect, the Greater Mackellar structure.
Metgasco has a 100% interest in PEL 426.
 
Richard Shields
Metgasco Limited
Mobile: 0418 418 877

*
My blue bolding

Remembering the deeply weird side of Mr. Rabbitt - Part Three


In which Mr. Rabbitt openly and proudly admits (what he now denies) that he is not his wife Margie’s idea of a what a good husband should be………
Snapshot taken from an article about then Liberal Party candidate, Tony Abbott - Tough Guy For Canberra by Simon Kent published in The Sun Herald on Sunday 27 March 1994

*January 2013 photograph of Oppostition Leader Tony Abbott from Google Images

Sunday 13 January 2013

The Grafton Knitting Nannas Strike Again! Making testosterone-fuelled Metgasco a running joke

 
This time a NSW Police vehicle gets a peaceful makeover in Knot The Gate Yellow on 7 January 2013…..
 

What are those crazy women doing? - Better call the cops, they're just around the corner. - I'm a bit worried, Stu, they've got fluffy toy chickens and knitting.

Looking, looking, looking - for evidence that Abbott isn't telling another whopper

 
Australian Opposition Leader Tony Abbott explains his historical position on reproductive technology in January 2013:
 
 
 
Really? So all I have to do is look for supporting documentation, right?
Unsurprisingly what I found did not reflect Abbott's fractured version of events.
 
This is Tony Abbott for the record on a number of occasions in April 2005:
 
Abbott used ABC radio to press home his point about the financial side. There was "some evidence", he said, that doctors had substantially lifted their charges and action would be taken if "profiteering" was found. The Government should name the clinics where rates had shot up. Abbott went on to claim the safety net had resulted in "a lot more money going into the pockets of people getting IVF treatment".

 
 
 
Mr. Abbott in May 2005:
 

Saturday 12 January 2013

Is Metgasco ignoring the Clarence Valley total fire ban in its drive to sink an exploration well at Glenugie?

 
According to the NSW Rural Fire Service; For public safety, a Total Fire Ban is declared for days when fires are likely to escape and be difficult to contain. This is caused by a combination of dry vegetation and hot, dry, windy weather.
 
Such weather conditions were occurring in the Clarence Valley the day before yesterday, yesterday and again today and, total fire bans have been in place.   

As responsible citizens and caring members of our community the vast majority of Northern Rivers residents take note of these fire bans and limit our outdoor activities appropriately.
 
However, mining companies do not have to obey the same rules as local residents if they do not wish to do so and, on 10 January 2013 Metgasco began to drill an exploration well on farm land at Glenugie in the Clarence Valley.
 
 
If this drilling did encounter coal seam gas Metgasco may flare such gas on site despite the fire risk.
 
Flare line at Talma, Richmond Valley NSW
 
Excerpt from Metgasco Limited, 2010, REVIEW OF ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS, For proposed Exploration Drilling Program Clarence Moreton Basin, New South Wales.
(Petroleum Exploration Licence No 426) Grafton-Exploration Drilling Program:
 
At the sites, an area of up to 110 by 110 metres will be temporarily fenced for the period of drilling and testing activities and all such activities will be contained within the fenced area. Appropriate signage relating to restricted entry, fire hazards, protective clothing, etc. will be prominently displayed.
Equipment on site will include the drilling rig, air compressors, support vehicles and transportable buildings for drill equipment storage. There will be minimum physical disturbance at each site beyond the drilling of the well itself (including cellar). It is expected that the drilling operations will be zero release at the well site, and all drilling fluid will be contained within on-site tanks. However, if it is deemed necessary for safe drilling operations, up to three small sumps, (3m x 3m x 2m), two large sumps (10m x 10m x 2m) and a smaller flare pit at the end of the flare line may be dug on site. Sumps will be lined with high density polyethylene (HDPE) 200 μm poly liner. It may also be necessary to grade the area where the rig base will sit on the site…..
Because the proposed drilling comes under the Petroleum (Onshore) Act 1991, the wells may be fitted with blow out prevention (BOP) equipment which will be installed on casing cemented to at least 10% of the anticipated final depth.
Prior exploration suggests that the composition of the gas encountered may be predominately methane with minor nitrogen (N2) and carbon dioxide (CO2). Any methane gas produced on site will be flared if necessary, utilising a flare line and flare pit at a safe location away from the well so as to minimise
hazards. Although it is flammable, methane (the principal component of natural gas) is not poisonous. [my red bolding]
 
When I woke this morning there were still a number of bushfires listed as active in the Clarence Valley and this was part of the Australian Bureau of Meteorology predictive temperature mapping:
 

Click on map to enlarge
 

Ashby lodges a tit for tat appeal in Ashby v Commonwealth & Slipper

 
James Hunter Ashby and his new legal team finally files his appeal in Ashby v Commonwealth & Slipper – asserting that the Rares judgment which found the original proceedings were an abuse of process was in error.
 

Chris Gulaptis forgets where he was born


NSW Nats MP Chris I will not will let you down Gulaptis was born in West Australia and now lives in Maclean in the Clarence Valley.
Two facts which shoulld be firmly fixed in his 57 year old noggin by now.
So what's this doing on his Facebook page? Is he saying he was born in The Scottish Town?