DEG's Issues Are Your Issues

Membership Is In Your Best Interest

These are exciting times for the Division of Environmental Geosciences:

  • DEG-sponsored technical and poster sessions at the recent AAPG annual meeting in Dallas combined rock-solid, real-world applications with great attendance and discussions.
  • The DEG luncheon featured a spirited talk on water resources by well-known entrepreneur and AAPG member T. Boone Pickens.
  • Calgary 2005 technical sessions and field trips are shaping up to be awesome!
  • Our peer-reviewed technical journal, Environmental Geosciences, has a new look, lower production costs and a record backlog of quality papers awaiting publication. We're even considering a few special issues. It is as if EG has suddenly been "discovered!"

Sounds wonderful, doesn't it? Well, it is wonderful, and these successes are the direct result of the tireless efforts of many dedicated individuals over the last 12 years, from DEG past-presidents to new student members, and from section representatives to session chairs.

However, there's a small hitch in our git-along: Our membership numbers are declining.

The obvious question to ask is "Why?"

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These are exciting times for the Division of Environmental Geosciences:

  • DEG-sponsored technical and poster sessions at the recent AAPG annual meeting in Dallas combined rock-solid, real-world applications with great attendance and discussions.
  • The DEG luncheon featured a spirited talk on water resources by well-known entrepreneur and AAPG member T. Boone Pickens.
  • Calgary 2005 technical sessions and field trips are shaping up to be awesome!
  • Our peer-reviewed technical journal, Environmental Geosciences, has a new look, lower production costs and a record backlog of quality papers awaiting publication. We're even considering a few special issues. It is as if EG has suddenly been "discovered!"

Sounds wonderful, doesn't it? Well, it is wonderful, and these successes are the direct result of the tireless efforts of many dedicated individuals over the last 12 years, from DEG past-presidents to new student members, and from section representatives to session chairs.

However, there's a small hitch in our git-along: Our membership numbers are declining.

The obvious question to ask is "Why?"


I believe that DEG now stands poised at a critical crossroads in its history. Increasingly complex (and potentially expensive) environmental issues, regulations and concerns permeate every aspect of the hydrocarbon and energy mineral exploration, production, processing and distribution industries.

Environmental compliance is regulated at the international, federal, state and local governmental levels. Other very real environmental drivers arise from the public and financial sectors, as well as from internal corporate business units.

Here are just a few examples:

  • Permitting is required for seismic data acquisition and for siting of wells and boreholes.
  • Preventative measures must be taken to protect both surface and ground water at well production and mine locations; hazardous air pollutants and greenhouse gas emissions must be controlled and reported.
  • The transportation infrastructure is crowded with environmental regulations applicable to maritime shipping, pipelines and trucking.
  • Wells and boreholes must be properly abandoned to prevent hydrocarbon and/or brine contamination of ground-water resource aquifers.
  • Property conditions must be determined prior to real estate transactions; potential environmental impacts of drilling mud chemistry must be considered.
  • Legal wrangling over water rights are becoming more prevalent
  • Potential and/or actual impacts to endangered species and protected environs must be studied.

The list goes on and on. Oh, and of course, don't forget the "traditional" components of "environmental" — the leaking underground or aboveground storage tank, the burst pipeline, the wrecked tanker, the legacy of manufactured gas plants, the refinery, the chemical spill and the proper characterization and disposal of waste.


It is plain to see that the livelihood of every single AAPG member is affected either directly or indirectly by environmental issues related to the industry in which they work. Therefore, it is in every AAPG member's best interest to actively support DEG's mission:

  • To aid AAPG members in the application of multidisciplinary expertise to the petroleum/energy minerals industries for the purpose of resolving environmental issues.
  • To educate AAPG members about important environmental, hydrogeologic, and resource conservation issues.
  • To communicate AAPG's commitment to protect the environment while developing the world's natural resources in a responsible manner.
  • To promote environmental self-regulation within the petroleum/energy minerals industries.

I would add to this list one more critical role DEG can play within AAPG — to showcase the multitude of environmental success stories that our AAPG members and their companies spend so much time, money and effort striving so diligently to achieve.

Any organization is only as strong and vibrant as its membership. If AAPG geologists and their employers do not actively participate in DEG by becoming members and by contributing their time, their experience and their success stories, then I fear the division will stagnate at best.

If, however, the broad membership of AAPG acknowledges and envisions the actual and potential value-added benefits of DEG, then we will thrive.

Therefore, I personally invite and challenge each of you to actively promote membership and participation in DEG to your friends, colleagues, co-workers, supervisors and managers.

From independents to majors, from students to professors, from consultants to regulators — we can only benefit if we're all pulling in the same direction with a common goal in focus.

DEG is for everyone in AAPG!

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