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Saturday

Exploring the “Evidence” related to Fracking


Hydraulic Fracturing = Fracking
 


I have long been an advocate for looking more closely at the risks of Hydraulic fracturing. Friends and Facebook posts share the dangers associated with “fracking,” sometimes posting spills and leaks or speculation about risks. I decided to research online some of the information. It is difficult for me to believe TV ads sponsored by the oil and gas industry since they have been hesitant to reveal the actual toxic chemicals used in the process and have a vested interested in continuing the practice. I spoke with a state representative several years ago about the potential dangers of fracking and was not shocked to hear him repeat the talking points for supporting fracking claiming it is environmentally safe because the drilling companies deem it so... and is good for the state and country for better economic and national security.

Most simply, fracking or hydraulic fracturing is a method used when drilling in shale to extract natural gas. The process takes millions of gallons of water and is usually combined with various chemical compounds.

Many complex factors come into play as we look at the safety and issues surrounding “fracking.” They include:

·       the economics of the practice,

·       perceptions about the implications for national security of relying on domestic or imported energy,

·       the consequences for climate change from the emissions of different amounts of greenhouse gases from different energy strategies,

·       the positive and negative implications of fracking for employment and quality of life in rural communities, and

·       the scientific evidence about the environmental consequences of the practice, including risks to water availability, water and air quality, and local ecosystems.

 

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In 2012, the Pacific Institute did a study and report entitled, “Hydraulic Fracturing and Water Resources: Separating the Frack from the Fiction” (http://pacinst.org/publication/hydraulic-fracturing-and-water-resources-separating-the-frack-from-the-fiction ).

 

The following information is directly extracted from the executive summary of that report:

·       Hydraulic fracturing is standard practice for extracting natural gas from unconventional sources, including coal-beds, shale, and tight sands, and is increasingly being applied to conventional sources to improve their productivity. It has been reported that hydraulic fracturing is used on 90% of all oil and gas wells drilled in the United States, although insufficient data are available to confirm this estimate.

·       To better identify and understand what the key issues are, the Pacific Institute conducted extensive interviews with a diverse group of stakeholders, including representatives from state and federal agencies, academia, industry, environmental groups, and community-based organizations from across the United States. 

·       For the purpose of this report, we use a broad definition of hydraulic fracturing to include impacts associated with well construction and completion, the hydraulic fracturing process itself, and well production and closure. Despite the diversity of viewpoints among those interviewed, there was surprising agreement about the range of concerns and issues associated with hydraulic fracturing.

·       Interviewees identified a broad set of social, economic, and environmental concerns, foremost among which are impacts of hydraulic fracturing on the availability and quality of water resources. It especially examines the impacts of hydraulic fracturing and unconventional natural gas extraction on water resources and identifies areas where more information is needed. Our focus throughout the report is on shale gas, although we discuss other unconventional natural gas sources where information is readily available.

·       In particular, key water-related concerns identified by the interviewees included (1) water withdrawals; (2) groundwater contamination associated with well drilling and production; (3) wastewater management; (4) truck traffic and its impacts on water quality; (5) surface spills and leaks; and (6) storm-water management.

·       Much of the media attention about hydraulic fracturing and its risk to water resources has centered on the use of chemicals in the fracturing fluids and the risk of groundwater contamination. The mitigation strategies identified to address this concern have centered on disclosure and, to some extent, the use of less toxic chemicals. Risks associated with fracking chemicals, however, are not the only issues that must be addressed. Indeed, interviewees more frequently identified the overall water requirements of hydraulic fracturing and the quantity and quality of wastewater generated as key issues.

·       Most significantly, a lack of credible and comprehensive data and information is a major impediment to identify or clearly assess the key water-related risks associated with hydraulic fracturing and to develop sound policies to minimize those risks. Due to the nature of the business, industry has an incentive to keep the specifics of their operations secret in order to gain a competitive advantage, avoid litigation, etc. Additionally, there are limited number of peer-reviewed, scientific studies on the process and its environmental impacts. While much has been written about the interaction of hydraulic fracturing and water resources, the majority of this writing is either industry or advocacy reports that have not been peer-reviewed. As a result, the discourse around the issue is largely driven by opinion. This hinders a comprehensive analysis of the potential environmental and public health risks and identification of strategies to minimize these risks.

·       Finally, the dialog about hydraulic fracturing has been marked by confusion and obfuscation due to a lack of clarity about the terms used to characterize the process. For example, the American Petroleum Institute, as well as other industry groups, using a narrow definition of fracking, argues that there is no link between their activities and groundwater contamination, despite observational evidence of groundwater contamination in Dimock, Pennsylvania and Pavillion, Wyoming that appears to be linked to the integrity of the well casings and of wastewater storage. Additional work is needed to clarify terms and definitions associated with hydraulic fracturing to support more fruitful and informed dialog and to develop appropriate energy, water, and environmental policy.

 

The Pacific Institute analysis concludes that a lack of credible and comprehensive data makes it much more difficult to identify or clearly assess the key water-related risks associated with hydraulic fracturing and to develop sound policies to minimize those risks. That conclusion was stated in 2012.

 

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Dr. Peter Gleick, a water and climate change expert, authored an article entitled: “The Growing Evidence of the Threat of Fracking to the Nation’s Groundwater” ( http://scienceblogs.com/significantfigures/index.php/2013/06/27/the-growing-evidence-of-the-threat-of-fracking-to-the-nations-groundwater ).

 

He writes:

“In fact, even with the limited research done to date, there is clear scientific evidence that fracking not only can — but already has — led to groundwater contamination, including a new study just released this week.

 

Here are just seven separate lines of evidence:

1.    As far back as 1984, the USEPA reported on a clear case in which hydraulic fracturing fluids and natural gas from production operations contaminated a groundwater well in West Virginia, ‘rendering it unusable.’

2.    The USEPA issued a draft report in 2011 on groundwater contamination in Pavillion, Wyoming, that showed extensive presence of fracking chemicals (natural and synthetic) in shallow and deep groundwater systems. Some of this contamination may have resulted from faulty wells drilled through groundwater aquifers; some of it may have resulted from surface seepage of fracking waste fluids escaping from badly designed and managed wastewater pits.

3.    The US Geological Survey Report issued its own independent assessment of the Pavillion, Wyoming groundwater testing that also showed high concentrations of several chemicals used in fracking.

4.    A Canadian groundwater contamination report described a “hydraulic fracturing incident” in 2011 in which errors in well drilling and management led to the release of fracking chemicals into groundwater including isopropanolamine, benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, xylene, petroleum hydrocarbons, and more.

5.    A Duke University peer-reviewed study showed that fracked groundwater systems pose risks to other groundwater systems that were thought to be, but were not, hydraulically separate. This study clearly shows the risks in some groundwater geologies of cross contamination.

6.    Even more compelling, another peer-reviewed study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences documented “systematic evidence for methane contamination of drinking water associated with shale gas extraction.”

7.    The latest peer-reviewed study, released this week [June 2013], also shows strong evidence that increased concentrations of methane and other hydrocarbons in drinking water wells are directly correlated with proximity to gas wells in the Marcellus Shale region of Pennsylvania.”

 

“This growing evidence of a real threat to some of the nation’s valuable groundwater makes it all the more disturbing to learn that the US EPA is halting its own independent assessment of groundwater contamination from fracking in the Pavillion gas fields of Wyoming and even worse, turning that research over to a project funded by the fracking company itself. This smells rotten and is not how independent research should be done.”

 

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What is in this chemical cocktail injected into the wells to assist the extraction process? Here is one list from a company doing fracking in Wyoming (posted in 2011):


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Fracking has been used commercially employed as a method of gas extraction since the 1940s: Click Here to see a map of fracking operations around the planet >>> http://www.gaslandthemovie.com/map

 

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In an article by writer and scientific researcher, Dr. Jennifer J. Brown entitled, “Growing Evidence of Fracking’s Health Risks” (http://www.everydayhealth.com/news/growing-evidence-of-fracking-health-risks ), she writes:

 

“What concerns me the most about fracking is the almost complete lack of comprehensive study of health risks,” said Susan Nagel, PhD, a researcher of the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Women’s Health at the University of Missouri in Columbia, whose work is focused on the effects of hormone-disrupting chemicals in the environment.

 

Concerned Health Professionals (NY) spelled out fracking-related health risks in the open letter, which was signed by 25 health and medical organizations, including the New York Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Lung Association of New York, as well as more than 200 individual health professionals. The letter points to new data on potential health dangers of fracking, and follows a similar call for a ban from the Medical Society of the State of New York (MSSNY).

 

A growing body of medical evidence links fracking, the politically controversial process of natural gas extraction, to specific health risks, said a group of health professionals in a recent open letter to New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and acting state health commissioner Howard Zucker (http://concernedhealthny.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Medical-Experts-to-Governor-Cuomo-May-29FINAL.pdf ).

 

One public health concern about fracking is the potentially toxic and hormone-disrupting chemicals (http://www.endocrine.org/~/media/endosociety/Files/Publications/Scientific%20Statements/EDC_Scientific_Statement.pdf) — described in a recent Endocrine Society Scientific Statement — used in the blasting process, as well as radiation and methane gas released from the ground at fracking sites.

 

1.    Harmful chemicals can contaminate water at fracking sites. Hormone-disrupting chemicals were among the contaminants found in water supplies at fracking sites. Of the chemicals used in the fracking process, many are substances that can act like the human hormones estrogen and androgen while others block the activity of these hormones. In a study of 39 groundwater samples - http://press.endocrine.org/doi/pdf/10.1210/en.2013-1697 - taken near fracking sites by Dr. Nagel and others, they found higher levels of chemicals that could block estrogen, compared to specimens not near fracking sites.


2.    Methane gas can leak at fracking wells. Even new fracking wells can leak, and over time more of the wells leak — releasing methane gas, according to researchers at the advocacy group Physicians, Scientists & Engineers for Healthy Energy. Odorless and colorless, methane gas is not only explosive; it can also cause health problems if it contaminates air and drinking water. Methane contamination can cause a person to feel tired or dizzy and have headaches. Long-term effects of these gas leaks are not yet clear.


3.    Earthquakes can result from fracking-waste disposal. Fracking waste injection into deep wells may have triggered earthquakes in Oklahoma, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The earthquakes have yet to be directly linked to hydrofracturing. In New York, health experts warned in the May 29th letter that earthquakes from fracking — or fracking waste disposal — could affect the drinking water supply for millions in New York City. "Seismic damage to these aqueducts that results in a disruption of supply of potable water to the New York City area would create a catastrophic public health crisis," the letter notes.


4.    Radioactive materials can contaminate water after fracking. Fracking wastewater has been found to contain radioactive substances, by Lara Haluszczak and others at Pennsylvania State University, in waste that flows back to the surface after blasting to recover natural gas deposits. While underground, this naturally occurring radiation does not pose a health risk. Once it emerges in fracking wastewater, however, analysis by graduate student researcher Andrew Nelson and others at the University of Iowa found that radioactive radium contaminated water sources. Long-term exposure to radium raises the risk of developing lymphoma, leukemia, and bone cancer, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.


5.    Air pollution levels may rise in areas where there is fracking. Levels of cancer-causing pollutants like silica dust, ozone, and the chemical benzene should be monitored more carefully to see if they are on the rise in fracking areas, according to Rachael Rawlins at the University of Texas, Austin. The pollutants come from fracked gas wells, gas that escapes, and even fracking pits that store waste. This contaminated air is potentially dangerous for people with health problems like asthma, and for children.


According to an April 2014 Physicians, Scientists & Engineers for Health Energy report published in Environmental Health Perspectives, studies suggest fracking contributes to air pollution known to be associated with rising health risk rates. The authors noted more research is needed to understand possible health outcomes faced by people living near fracking operations.

 

Independent research must be involved to produce facts we can trust. Government, University, Industry, and even private research is often the recipient of oil and gas corporate funds which may bias findings.

 

One anti-fracking website [Frack Off] provides a useful list of “Reports and Evidence” if you wish to read actual incidents and reports related to accidents and spills >>>> http://frack-off.org.uk/campaign-materials/science-and-data

This is just the tip of the proverbial iceberg in term of considering the evidence about fracking. Most of the information used from posts and articles are direct extracts from the original material. One of the reasons it is difficult to trust government officials, politicians, and agencies who are supposed to protect the welfare of the public is that many of those same people have come from the oil and gas industry. I am also reminded that then Vice President Cheney made it easier for drilling by lifting the EPA regulations and oversight on air and water. It would be good for all to have those regulations put back into play and empower the EPA with some authority to do the job initially assigned to it. As much as I would like to trust the integrity of public officials, I find it difficult and try to find out as much as I can about what they are saying. John Hutchinson jhutch888@yahoo.com
 
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Chemicals used in fracking:
 
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Business Insider: "10 Scariest Chemicals used in Hydraulic Fracking"
In 2005 the Bush-CHENEY administration and Congress used the study to justify legislation of the "Halliburton loophole," which exempts hydraulic fracturing from Safe Drinking Water Act. Legislation also exempted the practice, used in 90 percent of U.S. natural gas wells, from the Clean Water Act and Clean Air Act. [Cheney is a former CEO of Halliburton]

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/scary-chemicals-used-in-hydraulic-fracking-2012-3?op=1#ixzz3DtksT2ni


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List of 78 Chemicals Used in Hydraulic Fracturing Fluid in Pennsylvania
 

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 Fracking Fluid Contains at Least 8 Highly Toxic Chemicals, Many Unknowns
 
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