The Woodlands-based Layne Water Midstream and the State of Texas General Land Office said Jan. 27 they are amending their agreement from 2017 to provide Layne additional exclusive rights for reuse and disposal of produced water on 88,000 acres of GLO land in Culberson and Reeves counties in Delaware Basin. The amendment will enable Layne Water Midstream to develop, construct and operate water infrastructure on GLO acreage to gather, transport, treat, recycle and dispose of water produced from oil and gas operations in the region.
J. Michael Anderson, CEO, said, “The amendment allows us to invest further in water infrastructure on GLO lands to gather produced water from energy producers for treatment and reuse in hydraulic fracturing operations and for disposal.” Layne said it will be able to “better serve energy producers through a full range of water midstream services… Revenues from water sales and services will be shared between Layne Water Midstream and the Permanent School Fund” managed by GLO.
Brian Simmons says
Great Article, I represent a company in process of being funded, we have developed technology to convert produced water into water for irrigation, or drinking or disposing into rivers or lakes. We have a portable unit that produces Ozone, it kills all living pathogens, H2S, reduces HARM, we can process 10,000 bbls/d.
The Ozone separates all the oil from the produced water.
Send me your email and I will send our information, the technology is Patent protected.