Water (Feb 2023)

Effective Management Changes to Reduce Halogens, Sulfate, and TDS in the Monongahela River Basin, 2009–2019

  • Joseph W. Kingsbury,
  • Rachel Spirnak,
  • Melissa O’Neal,
  • Paul Ziemkiewicz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/w15040631
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 4
p. 631

Abstract

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The Monongahela River Basin has an extensive history of fossil fuel development, including coal mining and natural gas extraction. In late summer 2008, total dissolved solids (TDS) concentrations exceeding the United States Environmental Protection Agency′s (EPA) secondary drinking water standards were detected. After determining the source, a voluntary discharge management plan (VDMP) was developed by the West Virginia Water Research Institute (WVWRI) and implemented by the coal industry (2010). Additional remediation actions included Pennsylvania’s prohibition of produced wastewater in publicly owned treatment facilities (2011) and construction of a reverse osmosis treatment facility (2013). We used a locally weighted polynomial regression in conjunction with a segmented regression to assess the discharge and concentration trends/changepoints for bromide, chloride, sulfate, and total dissolved solids at various locations relative to the three remedial actions. We detected significant (α p-value = 0.002). The combination of the VDMP with Pennsylvania’s produced water prohibition (−0.16, p-value p-value p-value < 0.001) Since the implementation of these changes, primarily the VDMP which encompasses most of the watershed, TDS in the Monongahela has not exceeded the EPA′s secondary drinking water standards. Future management decisions should include efforts to further expand the VDMP and to monitor changes in land use or severe changes in discharge.

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