
Chloride contamination in oilfield settings is often difficult to resolve using monitoring wells alone. Concentrations may be high, but sources and plume extents remain uncertain—driving delays, over-design, and unnecessary cost.
At a West Texas oilfield site, chloride concentrations reached 181,000 mg/L, yet conventional groundwater data could not determine whether abandoned wellbores, injection wells, or surface releases were responsible. Aestus was brought in to reduce uncertainty and deliver a defensible conceptual site model (CSM). Using GeoTrax Survey™ electrical resistivity imaging, Aestus integrated 16 transects with historical chemistry and targeted confirmation drilling.
The results were decisive:
Highly conductive anomalies aligned with elevated chloride chemistry, allowing plume geometry and migration pathways to be visualized rather than inferred. This imaging-calibrated approach gave the project team a clear roadmap—what to address, what to monitor, and what could be deprioritized.
The takeaway is simple: more certainty leads to better outcomes. By integrating geophysics, confirmation drilling, and 3D visualization, teams can move faster, spend less, and make decisions supported by data—not assumptions.









