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Project Ketch

Project Ketch was a 1964 United States Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) proposal to use nuclear explosives to excavate a natural gas storage reservoir in Pennsylvania. The project was proposed as a component of Project Plowshare, which sought ways to use nuclear devices in public works and industrial development projects. The project was the only Plowshare project proposed for the northeastern United States.

A detailed study for the project was published in 1967, but the project stalled after local opposition developed. Project Gasbuggy, a similar test in New Mexico that was carried out in 1968, showed that better understanding of the effects of rock fracturing was needed before Project Ketch could proceed. The project was never pursued any further.

Proposal edit

In the early 1960s, the AEC worked to publicize the Project Plowshare program for peaceful use of atomic devices. The 1960s saw government-mandated low prices for natural gas, providing little incentive for exploration of new gas sources, and contributed to gas shortages.[1] A consistent theme of Plowshare was the creation and use of underground cavities for natural gas storage. Storage reservoirs are used to balance divergences between supply and demand, as contingency against emergencies, and as a means of arbitrage.[2] Existing storage reservoirs tended to be concentrated in areas away from their markets, and a demand was seen for additional storage capacity, closer to markets in the northeastern United States in an area without sufficient natural reservoirs.[1]

Discussions between the AEC and the Columbia Gas Corporation began in 1964 to find a suitable site for a demonstration project in Pennsylvania.[3] The project's focus was an area to the south of Renovo in Sproul State Forest, close to areas that had seen gas exploration and near existing gas transmission pipelines,[1] which was seen as thinly populated and of marginal economic usefulness. The proposed Plowshare experiment was named "Project Ketch".[4] General area survey work by the AEC and Columbia took place in 1965–66. Discussions with the Pennsylvania state government began in 1966. Surveys referred to the local residents as "natives", and characterized their dwellings as "rickety". No effort was made to assess local views concerning the project, suggesting that "[f]rom very limited contact, the native populations would appear somewhat resistant to change or progress and may take some convincing." News of the project first came to public notice in a February 14, 1967, article in the Pittsburgh Press.[2]

An AEC study, published in July 1967, stated that as a result of the detonation, "There would be no air blast effects, of course, and radiation effects would be safely contained underground." It went on to assert that "Purging of the chimney, filtration and dehydration treatment at the wellhead can be employed to eliminate appreciable radioactivity from gas stored in the reservoir. Levels attainable should render the gas suitable for use in existing pipeline facilities, and provide a favorable basis for determinations regarding eventual public consumption."[5] The report projected that radioactivity would be reduced significantly in the six to nine months following the explosion, while krypton-85 and tritium "might require flushing from the chimney". The report stated that dilution during transmission and combustion would in general reduce radioactivity below permissible limits.[6]

An August 11, 1967, letter from Pennsylvania governor Raymond P. Shafer granted conditional approval to the project for site evaluation studies, reserving the right to refuse approval of later phases if the project was shown to not benefit the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. However, a lease was still required for the site before work could begin.[1]

Opposition and cancellation edit

Once the project became known, local residents began to ask about potential effects of the project. AEC and Columbia responses asserted that there would be no problems, emphasizing the remoteness of the "wilderness" area and its apparently marginal economic utility, implying that the region was effectively empty of population or utility. Initially the project was presented as a demonstration and did not describe any immediate economic value or benefit. After this rationale began to be questioned, the AEC and Columbia suggested that the demonstration project would lead to economic development of the region, with potentially thousands more blasts, these much closer to population centers once the concept had been tried in a remote area. Opposition coalesced in Renovo, 12 miles (19 km) from the site,[7] and in State College, 30 miles (48 km) away. Although the area had been clearcut for timber before the 1930s, it was portrayed by opposition as "unsoiled mountain land".[2]

Louis Roddis Jr., a nuclear engineer and member of the Pennsylvania Governor's Science Advisory Committee, wrote that "there is a distinct public relations problem since the northeastern United States is not as accustomed to either earthquake shocks or nuclear test shots as is the southwestern United States."[7]

On December 10, 1967, a similar test was carried out near Dulce, New Mexico. Project Gasbuggy sought to gather data on fracturing low-permeability strata to stimulate gas production. Gasbuggy succeeded in increasing permeability, to the point that groundwater filled an unexpected proportion of the fractures. The Gasbuggy results indicated that better understanding of local hydrology should be established for similar projects. The Pennsylvania project stalled, and no work was undertaken. As opposition became more focused, Columbia withdrew from the project in 1968. The required site lease was never negotiated. Funding for Plowshare ceased in 1975.[1]

Project edit

The site location was set in Sproul State Forest, Beech Creek Township, in Clinton County, Pennsylvania, close to Centre County. The location was in the southwestern end of the Hyner Anticline, in the Chemung Portage Group of strata. The project proposed the detonation of a 24-kiloton nuclear device in an 18-inch (46 cm) wide borehole, at a depth of about 3,300 feet (1,000 m) to create a cavity suitable for natural gas storage.[1] The location was near an existing gas storage area in the Leidy gas field. The result of the detonation was expected to be a rubble-filled "chimney," about 90 feet (27 m) wide and about 300 feet (91 m) tall, capped by impermeable formations. Fractures were expected to extend to a radius of around 650 feet (200 m). The natural gas storage capacity was expected to be about 465,000,000 cubic feet (13,200,000 kl), stored at 2,100 pounds per square inch (140 bar) pressure.[1][8]

The proposed project phasing envisioned the following:

  • Phase I: 8 months of study and evaluation for feasibility
  • Phase II: 6 months of construction, drilling the borehole, and detonation of the device
  • Phase III: 11 months of measurements of the cavern and radiological surveys
  • Phase IV: 6 months of gas storage facility development
  • Phase V: 14 months of initial operation and evaluation[1][9]

Construction costs for a typical operational facility were expected to be from $1.55 million (equivalent to $13,707,000 in 2023) for a small reservoir using a 24-kiloton device to $2.08 million (equivalent to $19,006,000 in 2023) for one created with a 100-kiloton device.[10] The assumed costs to obtain a nuclear device from the AEC were $390,000 for a 24-kiloton device, to $460,000 for a 100-kiloton device, in 1967 costs.[11]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Randolph, Amy (Fall 2017). "The Half-Century Anniversary of Project Ketch— A Proposal to Create Natural-Gas Storage in North- Central Pennsylvania Through Nuclear Detonation" (PDF). Pennsylvania Geology. 47 (3): 3–12. Retrieved July 30, 2023.
  2. ^ a b c Krygier, J.B. (July 1998). "Project Ketch: Project Plowshare in Pennsylvania". Ecumene. 5 (3): 311–322. doi:10.1177/096746089800500305. JSTOR 44252111. S2CID 144304632. Retrieved July 30, 2023.
  3. ^ Beck, Colleen M.; Edwards, Susan R.; King, Maureen L. (September 1, 2011). "Project Ketch". The Off-Site Plowshare and Vela Uniform Programs: Assessing Potential Environmental Liabilities through an Examination of Proposed Nuclear Projects,High Explosive Experiments, and High Explosive Construction Activities (PDF) (Report). Vol. 2. pp. 4-170–4-192. doi:10.2172/1046575.
  4. ^ "Nuclear Gas Plan Stirs Controversy". New York Times. February 25, 1968. Retrieved July 31, 2023.
  5. ^ Project Ketch. Columbia Gas System, United States Atomic Energy Commission, Lawrence Radiation Laboratory, and United States Bureau of Mines. July 1967. p. i. OSTI 4321824.
  6. ^ Columbia, AEC et al p. 15
  7. ^ a b Malawskey, Nick (February 8, 2018). "How about setting off a nuclear bomb to mine Pa.'s natural gas? It was considered". Patriot-News. Retrieved July 31, 2023.
  8. ^ Columbia, AEC et al p. 22
  9. ^ Columbia, AEC et al p. 30
  10. ^ Columbia, AEC et al p. 17
  11. ^ Columbia, AEC et al p. 35

Further reading edit

  • Beck, Colleen M.; Edwards, Susan R.; King, Maureen L. (September 1, 2011). The Off-Site Plowshare and Vela Uniform Programs: Assessing Potential Environmental Liabilities through an Examination of Proposed Nuclear Projects,High Explosive Experiments, and High Explosive Construction Activities (PDF) (Report). Vol. 1. doi:10.2172/1046574.
  • Beck, Colleen M.; Edwards, Susan R.; King, Maureen L. (September 1, 2011). The Off-Site Plowshare and Vela Uniform Programs: Assessing Potential Environmental Liabilities through an Examination of Proposed Nuclear Projects,High Explosive Experiments, and High Explosive Construction Activities (PDF) (Report). Vol. 2. doi:10.2172/1046575.
  • Beck, Colleen M.; Edwards, Susan R.; King, Maureen L. (September 1, 2011). The Off-Site Plowshare and Vela Uniform Programs: Assessing Potential Environmental Liabilities through an Examination of Proposed Nuclear Projects, High Explosive Experiments, and High Explosive Construction Activities (PDF) (Report). Vol. 3. doi:10.2172/1046576.

External links edit

  • The Project Ketch feasibility study (AEC, July 1967)


41°10′57″N 77°53′25″W / 41.18250°N 77.89028°W / 41.18250; -77.89028

project, ketch, 1964, united, states, atomic, energy, commission, proposal, nuclear, explosives, excavate, natural, storage, reservoir, pennsylvania, project, proposed, component, project, plowshare, which, sought, ways, nuclear, devices, public, works, indust. Project Ketch was a 1964 United States Atomic Energy Commission AEC proposal to use nuclear explosives to excavate a natural gas storage reservoir in Pennsylvania The project was proposed as a component of Project Plowshare which sought ways to use nuclear devices in public works and industrial development projects The project was the only Plowshare project proposed for the northeastern United States A detailed study for the project was published in 1967 but the project stalled after local opposition developed Project Gasbuggy a similar test in New Mexico that was carried out in 1968 showed that better understanding of the effects of rock fracturing was needed before Project Ketch could proceed The project was never pursued any further Contents 1 Proposal 2 Opposition and cancellation 3 Project 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksProposal editIn the early 1960s the AEC worked to publicize the Project Plowshare program for peaceful use of atomic devices The 1960s saw government mandated low prices for natural gas providing little incentive for exploration of new gas sources and contributed to gas shortages 1 A consistent theme of Plowshare was the creation and use of underground cavities for natural gas storage Storage reservoirs are used to balance divergences between supply and demand as contingency against emergencies and as a means of arbitrage 2 Existing storage reservoirs tended to be concentrated in areas away from their markets and a demand was seen for additional storage capacity closer to markets in the northeastern United States in an area without sufficient natural reservoirs 1 Discussions between the AEC and the Columbia Gas Corporation began in 1964 to find a suitable site for a demonstration project in Pennsylvania 3 The project s focus was an area to the south of Renovo in Sproul State Forest close to areas that had seen gas exploration and near existing gas transmission pipelines 1 which was seen as thinly populated and of marginal economic usefulness The proposed Plowshare experiment was named Project Ketch 4 General area survey work by the AEC and Columbia took place in 1965 66 Discussions with the Pennsylvania state government began in 1966 Surveys referred to the local residents as natives and characterized their dwellings as rickety No effort was made to assess local views concerning the project suggesting that f rom very limited contact the native populations would appear somewhat resistant to change or progress and may take some convincing News of the project first came to public notice in a February 14 1967 article in the Pittsburgh Press 2 An AEC study published in July 1967 stated that as a result of the detonation There would be no air blast effects of course and radiation effects would be safely contained underground It went on to assert that Purging of the chimney filtration and dehydration treatment at the wellhead can be employed to eliminate appreciable radioactivity from gas stored in the reservoir Levels attainable should render the gas suitable for use in existing pipeline facilities and provide a favorable basis for determinations regarding eventual public consumption 5 The report projected that radioactivity would be reduced significantly in the six to nine months following the explosion while krypton 85 and tritium might require flushing from the chimney The report stated that dilution during transmission and combustion would in general reduce radioactivity below permissible limits 6 An August 11 1967 letter from Pennsylvania governor Raymond P Shafer granted conditional approval to the project for site evaluation studies reserving the right to refuse approval of later phases if the project was shown to not benefit the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania However a lease was still required for the site before work could begin 1 Opposition and cancellation editOnce the project became known local residents began to ask about potential effects of the project AEC and Columbia responses asserted that there would be no problems emphasizing the remoteness of the wilderness area and its apparently marginal economic utility implying that the region was effectively empty of population or utility Initially the project was presented as a demonstration and did not describe any immediate economic value or benefit After this rationale began to be questioned the AEC and Columbia suggested that the demonstration project would lead to economic development of the region with potentially thousands more blasts these much closer to population centers once the concept had been tried in a remote area Opposition coalesced in Renovo 12 miles 19 km from the site 7 and in State College 30 miles 48 km away Although the area had been clearcut for timber before the 1930s it was portrayed by opposition as unsoiled mountain land 2 Louis Roddis Jr a nuclear engineer and member of the Pennsylvania Governor s Science Advisory Committee wrote that there is a distinct public relations problem since the northeastern United States is not as accustomed to either earthquake shocks or nuclear test shots as is the southwestern United States 7 On December 10 1967 a similar test was carried out near Dulce New Mexico Project Gasbuggy sought to gather data on fracturing low permeability strata to stimulate gas production Gasbuggy succeeded in increasing permeability to the point that groundwater filled an unexpected proportion of the fractures The Gasbuggy results indicated that better understanding of local hydrology should be established for similar projects The Pennsylvania project stalled and no work was undertaken As opposition became more focused Columbia withdrew from the project in 1968 The required site lease was never negotiated Funding for Plowshare ceased in 1975 1 Project editThe site location was set in Sproul State Forest Beech Creek Township in Clinton County Pennsylvania close to Centre County The location was in the southwestern end of the Hyner Anticline in the Chemung Portage Group of strata The project proposed the detonation of a 24 kiloton nuclear device in an 18 inch 46 cm wide borehole at a depth of about 3 300 feet 1 000 m to create a cavity suitable for natural gas storage 1 The location was near an existing gas storage area in the Leidy gas field The result of the detonation was expected to be a rubble filled chimney about 90 feet 27 m wide and about 300 feet 91 m tall capped by impermeable formations Fractures were expected to extend to a radius of around 650 feet 200 m The natural gas storage capacity was expected to be about 465 000 000 cubic feet 13 200 000 kl stored at 2 100 pounds per square inch 140 bar pressure 1 8 The proposed project phasing envisioned the following Phase I 8 months of study and evaluation for feasibility Phase II 6 months of construction drilling the borehole and detonation of the device Phase III 11 months of measurements of the cavern and radiological surveys Phase IV 6 months of gas storage facility development Phase V 14 months of initial operation and evaluation 1 9 Construction costs for a typical operational facility were expected to be from 1 55 million equivalent to 13 707 000 in 2023 for a small reservoir using a 24 kiloton device to 2 08 million equivalent to 19 006 000 in 2023 for one created with a 100 kiloton device 10 The assumed costs to obtain a nuclear device from the AEC were 390 000 for a 24 kiloton device to 460 000 for a 100 kiloton device in 1967 costs 11 References edit a b c d e f g h Randolph Amy Fall 2017 The Half Century Anniversary of Project Ketch A Proposal to Create Natural Gas Storage in North Central Pennsylvania Through Nuclear Detonation PDF Pennsylvania Geology 47 3 3 12 Retrieved July 30 2023 a b c Krygier J B July 1998 Project Ketch Project Plowshare in Pennsylvania Ecumene 5 3 311 322 doi 10 1177 096746089800500305 JSTOR 44252111 S2CID 144304632 Retrieved July 30 2023 Beck Colleen M Edwards Susan R King Maureen L September 1 2011 Project Ketch The Off Site Plowshare and Vela Uniform Programs Assessing Potential Environmental Liabilities through an Examination of Proposed Nuclear Projects High Explosive Experiments and High Explosive Construction Activities PDF Report Vol 2 pp 4 170 4 192 doi 10 2172 1046575 Nuclear Gas Plan Stirs Controversy New York Times February 25 1968 Retrieved July 31 2023 Project Ketch Columbia Gas System United States Atomic Energy Commission Lawrence Radiation Laboratory and United States Bureau of Mines July 1967 p i OSTI 4321824 Columbia AEC et al p 15 a b Malawskey Nick February 8 2018 How about setting off a nuclear bomb to mine Pa s natural gas It was considered Patriot News Retrieved July 31 2023 Columbia AEC et al p 22 Columbia AEC et al p 30 Columbia AEC et al p 17 Columbia AEC et al p 35Further reading editBeck Colleen M Edwards Susan R King Maureen L September 1 2011 The Off Site Plowshare and Vela Uniform Programs Assessing Potential Environmental Liabilities through an Examination of Proposed Nuclear Projects High Explosive Experiments and High Explosive Construction Activities PDF Report Vol 1 doi 10 2172 1046574 Beck Colleen M Edwards Susan R King Maureen L September 1 2011 The Off Site Plowshare and Vela Uniform Programs Assessing Potential Environmental Liabilities through an Examination of Proposed Nuclear Projects High Explosive Experiments and High Explosive Construction Activities PDF Report Vol 2 doi 10 2172 1046575 Beck Colleen M Edwards Susan R King Maureen L September 1 2011 The Off Site Plowshare and Vela Uniform Programs Assessing Potential Environmental Liabilities through an Examination of Proposed Nuclear Projects High Explosive Experiments and High Explosive Construction Activities PDF Report Vol 3 doi 10 2172 1046576 External links editThe Project Ketch feasibility study AEC July 1967 41 10 57 N 77 53 25 W 41 18250 N 77 89028 W 41 18250 77 89028 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Project Ketch amp oldid 1195640722, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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