Wabash Valley Resources announces drilling company

Greg Zoeller, Wabash Valley Resources’ vice president of external affairs, announced Tuesday that the company has contracted Baker Hughes, an energy technology company, to drill two deep underground injection wells for carbon dioxide in West Terre Haute and Vermillion County.

Zoeller also apologized to the Vigo County Commissioners at their weekly meeting for requesting they sign off on the Community Benefits Agreement WVR had created.

Their signatures were not technically necessary, he said, and the request fueled anger among local residents who interpreted it as meaning that the commissioners supported the company’s plans. WVR’s CBA will proceed with no hands-on efforts from the commissioners.

“I’ll take the blame — I do have a higher respect for elected officials and I thought they might want to participate in directing the funds. I understand that it may have been awkward,” Zoeller said after the meeting, adding that WVR will continue to work with the commissioners on road improvement, infrastructure improvement and public safety plans.

Funds from the agreement of about $3 million per county will be dispersed by the Wabash Valley Community Foundation with input from non-elected community leaders, and will target areas with smaller populations, like New Goshen and Universal, which often don’t get major grant funding.

The federal government’s Justice40 Initiative details how energy providers can help disadvantaged communities, such as through a Community Benefits Agreement.

Baker Hughes

The focus at the meeting Tuesday, however, was on WVR recruiting Baker Hughes to build the underground injection wells.

“It’s a big day for Wabash Valley Resources,” Zoeller said. “This company, we’ve actually worked with for about four years. They helped with a lot of the design phase. They’re in charge of well development, so they’ll drill the wells, they’ll do all the monitoring, the safety part of it. They’re a major company, world class in terms of this area.”

He continued, “That it took a while for us to announce this doesn’t mean that they haven’t been working with us. They’ve been partners all along in the planning of this. They’ll be in charge of the monitoring all the safety equipment.

“That’s their expertise — our company is going to manufacture anhydrous ammonia for farmers and that’s what we’re going to be good at.”

Anhydrous ammonia is a widely used source of fertilizer that can be potentially dangerous if not handled properly. WVR’s fertilizer will supply the Eastern Corn Belt.

“The farmers in Indiana pay some of the highest prices for fertilizer” because it is not manufactured locally, but in the U.S. South, Russia and Ukraine, Zoeller said. “This will increase the supply tremendously. … Go out and talk to farmers, and they’re anxious to see anhydrous ammonia production in the Midwest.”