I hope you enjoy this free Land Desk dispatch, which is made possible by paid subscriptions from readers. The Land Desk has no ads, underwriters, or corporate bribes. So I’m counting on you to pony up a few bucks so that I can continue to provide this service. That will give you access to premium content and all of the archives (which go behind the paywall a couple of weeks after they are posted). San Juan Basin fossil fuel industries keep polluting, even as they fade awayIt's time to launch a land-healing and restoration economy
📈 Data Dump/Hydrocarbon Hoedown 📊The San Juan Basin in northwestern New Mexico was once one of the busiest fossil fuel extraction zones in the nation — maybe even the world. Now it’s a gas-patch in decline, but the leftovers from more than a century of heavy drilling continue to sully the landscape, the water, and the air of the Four Corners region. Beginning in the 1920s, petroleum companies such as Standard Oil, Sinclair, and others began drilling the 10,000-square-mile swath of mesas, valleys, and badlands that resembles a huge dinner plate. Since then, they have drilled at least 40,000 wells in search of oil and natural gas, the hydrocarbon remnants of ancient aquatic critters that plied the salty waters of an inland sea some 70 million years ago. Meanwhile, towering draglines gouged into the Fruitland coal formation, exhuming what was left of the fecund swamps along that receding sea’s shores to burn it in the nearby coal plants. While the Basin is relatively rich in coal, oil, and even uranium, it mostly became known for its vast stores of natural gas, or methane, in the form of conventional reservoirs, in tight shales, and adsorbed to coal seams, a.k.a. coalbed methane. Spurred by tax incentives, technological advances, high natural gas prices, and a friendly regulatory environment — not to mention a willingness to turn the region into an energy sacrifice zone — fossil fuel firms descended on the Basin in the 1990s and early 2000s and a drilling frenzy ensued. Ironically, it was another technological advance that busted the long-running boom. The advent of “fracking,” or the combination of horizontal drilling and multi-stage hydraulic fracturing, rendered vast stores of oil and gas stored up in tight shale formations economically extractable. That opened up the Bakken in North Dakota and the Marcellus formation in Pennsylvania and Ohio, glutting the domestic natural gas market and substantially depressing prices. When drillers started targeting more profitable oil, they also brought up oodles of methane, further deflating natural gas prices. In 2009, the San Juan Basin’s gas industry slid into a slump from which it has yet to emerge. One might hope that as drilling and production (and tax revenues and other economic benefits) subside, so would the attendant impacts, giving the land and water and air a chance to heal. But even a gas patch in decline is a busy place, what with workers driving the web of roads to service aging wells and to haul off the millions of gallons of wastewater that is pumped up with the crude and the methane. And, nearly every one of those tens of thousands of wells drilled over the years, whether producing or not, can still be a source of pollution.
The natural gas industry as a whole is hoping the Big Data Center Buildup will open new markets for its wares, possibly boosting the price enough to give drillers an incentive to return to the San Juan Basin. Not to give anyone any wild ideas, but I’m kind of surprised no one has proposed a hyperscale data center complex in the San Juan Basin with a co-located gas-fired power plant (or maybe that’s what Navajo Transitional Energy Company plans to do with power from its proposed 742-megawatt natural gas plant on reclaimed portions of its Navajo coal mine?). But even if this does take place, it’s not likely to increase demand enough to spur another drilling boom. I figured I’d check in to see whether business is kicking up in the Basin, and whether gas field “incidents” are on the rise or fall. Drilling activity has ramped up somewhat, but since it was starting at almost zero that’s not saying much: Over the past year or so there have been no more than three or four active rigs drilling at any given time. Meanwhile, oil and gas wells — old and new, active and idle — continue to experience spills and releases at a concerning rate. In fact, Hilcorp, one of the largest operators in the San Juan Basin, was named Earthworks’ and the Gas Leak Project’s Polluter of the Month this June, mostly due to leaky facilities in the San Juan Basin. Whether the Basin has a future as a gas patch or not, isn’t it about time to clean up the messes left from the last century? It’s not hyperbole to say that you could build a whole new industry around reclamation and remediation, land restoration and healing.
Some data points:
ICYMI: Also in the San Juan Basin, the Navajo Transitional Energy Company not only wants to keep running its Navajo coal mine for another 110 years, but it also wants to build a 742-megawatt natural gas plant on reclaimed portions of the mine. Oy.
🥵 Aridification Watch 🐫Wildfire season has arrived, and it looks like it could be a doozy. A handful of fires were sparked on Colorado’s Western Slope, most likely by lightning. The most significant of those is probably the Bee Hive Fire north of Bedrock on the edge of the Paradox Valley; as of Monday evening it had grown to 180 acres. The much smaller Paradox Trail Fire was burning further north and east. The Tower Fire near Scipio, Utah, had grown to nearly 1,400 acres by Monday evening, and the fast-moving South Mountain Fire near Tooele, Utah, was at 1,000 acres as of early Tuesday morning. Meanwhile, the Papa Fire northeast of Flagstaff, Arizona, is raging through grasslands and conifers. 📸 Parting Shot 🎞️You’re on the free list for The Land Desk. For the full experience and to access all of the archives, become a paying subscriber. ☕️ Don’t want to subscribe but want to support our coffee habit? Then Buy me a Coffee! 🚴🏼
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2026 Jonathan P. Thompson |