What is Coal Bed Methane (CBM)?
Coal Bed Methane
is methane (natural gas) trapped in coal seams underground. To extract
the gas, after drilling into the seam, it is necessary to pump large
amounts of water out of the coal seam to lower the pressure.
There are a
similar catalogue of negative environmental and social effects as with
Shale Gas. This includes methane migration, toxic water contamination,
air pollution, increased carbon emissions and a general
industrialisation of the countryside.
Impacts that are specific to CBM
include depletion of the water table and potentially subsidence.
In common with other unconventional gas extraction, such as Shale
Gas, CBM wells do not produce large amounts of gas per well and
production declines very quickly. It is therefore necessary to drill
large numbers of wells, covering huge swathes of the landscape.
CBM
exploitation began in the US and over 55,000 CBM wells have been drilled
in the last decade or so, mostly in the western states (Colorado, New
Mexico and Wyoming in particular).
In Australia, where it is known as
Coal Seam Gas (CSG), over 5,000 CBM wells have been drilled in
Queensland in the last few years and the industry is aggressively
expanding into New South Wales.
In the UK CBM is more advanced than
Shale Gas and full scale production may begin soon.
This article has been published here with kind permission of http://frack-off.org.uk
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