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Contractor to Supply New Pipeline to Permian Basin

Tue October 06, 2020 - West Edition #21
Associated Press


Palisade Pipeline signed an agreement in 2019 to buy 6 million gal. of wastewater a day from Lubbock.
Palisade Pipeline signed an agreement in 2019 to buy 6 million gal. of wastewater a day from Lubbock.

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) Oil companies in the Permian Basin of Texas and New Mexico need millions of gallons of water to retrieve petroleum.

At the same time, the city of Lubbock spends $1 million each year to dispose its treated wastewater at two city farms.

Enter Palisade Pipeline, a Houston-based company with plans for a 100-mi. pipeline to transport wastewater from Lubbock to the Permian Basin.

The company signed an agreement in 2019 to buy 6 million gal. of wastewater a day from Lubbock.

"This is a win-win for the community of Lubbock, and also to industry, to basically do a flip from a waste stream into a revenue resource," said Reagan Kneese, Palisade's executive vice president of operations. "Hobbs will act as our operations hub to distribute that water to various end users in Eddy and Lea counties."

Lubbock treats the wastewater, so Palisade doesn't need further treatment, the Albuquerque Journal reported. Pumps along the route will transport water from a Lubbock city reservoir and reclamation plant to a reservoir near Hobbs, New Mexico.

The project comes as New Mexico encourages companies to recycle their produced water — the wastewater that surfaces along with petroleum — instead of pumping scarce fresh water.

"When you think about how concentrated oil and gas is in one region of New Mexico, it's a tremendous amount of water used in a very water-starved region," said Palisade president Phillip Laughlin. "… Every barrel of water we bring offsets a barrel of potable groundwater that would have been taken out of the hydrologic cycle."

The state helped create a produced water research consortium at New Mexico State University. The team is exploring non-industry uses for produced water, like municipal supplies or irrigation.

Originally Palisade marketed their wastewater to industry. But the company soon realized its product could also be sold to power plants and municipalities.

"Municipal reuse is checking those boxes now that produced water is trying to get to," Kneese said.

The city of Jal in southeastern New Mexico is interested in using the Lubbock wastewater to offset groundwater depletions from nearby fracking operations. Jal is currently protesting an application by Intrepid Potash and NGL Energy Partners to pump more groundwater.

"Once that water's gone, it's not coming back," Jal mayor Stephen Aldridge said earlier this month. "That could devastate future water supplies for a small community like ours, where every drop counts."

Palisade will source pipeline materials this year. Construction will take six months and cost tens of millions of dollars, Laughlin said. The company aims to have water flowing through the pipeline before the end of 2021.




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