U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

HTTPS

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock () or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Boyd's Creek III Oil Site

All POLREP's for this site Boyd's Creek III Oil Site
Glasgow, KY - EPA Region IV
POLREP #44 - TVA Continues O&M of Oil Collection System
Printer Friendly  |   PDF
 
On-Scene Coordinator - Perry Gaughan, OSC 4/1/2019
Non-Time-Critical - Removal Action Pollution Report (POLREP) #44
Start Date: 6/1/1993
Pollution Report (POLREP) #44
Site Description
The incident involves an ongoing discharge of crude oil into Boyd’s Creek and the Barren River Lake which is a navigable waterway. This ongoing removal action was continued under an Interagency Agreement between EPA Region 4 and the Tennessee Valley Authority. Funding was obtained under the OSC’s OPA authority and through support from the National Pollution Fund Center in December, 2008.

EPA Region 4 has been involved in plugging abandoned oil wells in and around Boyd's Creek south of Glasgow, Kentucky since 1983. The Boyd's Creek III Site consists of a karst spring that discharges oil and high-sulfur water to the creek on a 50 acre farm along Oil Well Road south of Glasgow. An oil containment and collection system was established in the mid 1990's and has been maintained through an Interagency Agreement with the Tennessee Valley Authority on a monthly basis.  

The leaking wells have been the result of historically poor drilling and plugging techniques combined with the particular hydrogeologic conditions in the area.  The present oil discharge appears to be the result of one, or several improperly abandoned oil wells. In August 2004, as a result of a geophysics survey conducted by EPA ERT, two additonal abandoned oil wells were discovered upgradient of the spring and successully plugged.

During 2014, the National Pollution Fund Center encouraged EPA Region 4 to conduct additional efforts at closing this Site since it has been an ongoing response since the 1995. To assist in this effort, the OSC tasked EPA ERT to conduct a second geophysics survey to further assess the area upgradient of the current oil collection system. In June 2014, EPA ERT's Greg Powell and technical contractors from SERAS conducted the survey. The primary objective of the survey was to map lateral variations of soil resistivity/conductivity to identify areas of low resistivity (high conductivity) that might be related to oil-associated brine emanating from improperly plugged oil wells.  A second objective was to map the subsurface geology to identify natural conduits, such as fractures and dissolution features. A report summarizing these assessment findings was submitted to the OSC during the week of Jan 19th, 2015. (Documents Section - SERAS report and Figures Attachment)

Based on the findings of the geophysics study, two new anomalies were found which warranted further investigation. (See Figure 8 of Figures Attachment in Document Section) .


Current Activities
This report summarizes the operations and maintenance (O&M) activities Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) performed for the US Environmental Protection Agency’s (USEPA) Boyds Creek crude oil recovery project located in Glasgow, Kentucky. This report covers the 13-month monitoring period of Jan 01, 2018 through Jan 30, 2019. The funding for the project is through an Interagency Agreement (IAG) DW-64-92319301-0 between TVA and EPA.

TVA performed basic O&M activities at the Boyds Creek facility during monthly site visits conducted throughout the 13-month period. Site operating conditions were normal with no system upsets (oil release) being observed during the monitoring period. Approximately 2,200 gallons of oil were collected during the monitoring period, with the largest amount  being collected during the January 2019 site visit.