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Clean Water News
For Immediate Release:
2009-11-04
For More Information:
Contact Luke Metzger (512) 479-0388 Natural Gas Drilling Poses Toxic Threat to Texas’ Drinking Water
AUSTIN - Toxic chemicals
used in natural gas drilling could pose a threat to water quality near Texas’
95,814 gas wells according to a report released today by Environment Texas. The report, Toxic Chemicals on Tap: How Gas
Drilling Threatens Drinking Water, details how the chemicals in gas
drilling could endanger clean water in Texas. “Texans need to be positive
that there are no toxic chemicals in their tap water,” said Alejandro Savransky
of Environment Texas. “Drilling for natural gas should not come at the expense
of our drinking water." To extract natural gas,
drillers often inject a toxic mix of fluids into the ground to create fractures
which allow natural gas to flow to the surface. This process can force toxic
substances already underground into drinking water. Some of the pollutant laden
fluids drillers inject remain underground, and can also end up contaminating
water supplies. The fluids recovered by
drillers can contaminate water as well. The recovered fluids are frequently
stored in open-air pits, which have the potential to leak or flood, and can
overwhelm local water treatment facilities. Also, the amount of water needed
for the process- often millions of gallons- may drain local watersheds. In some
cases, it has caused streams to run dry. In late 2007, three families near Grandview,
Texas noticed changes in their well water just after a natural gas well within
a couple of hundred yards of their properties was hydraulically fractured. At
first their water ran dry, and then the water returned with extremely high
pressure, blowing out pipes. Within days, five goats and a llama had died. All
three families noticed strong sulfur smells in their water, which became
unusable. Showering caused skin irritation. The Railroad Commission of Texas
acknowledged that testing of well water found toluene and other contaminants. “Similar stories exist across the nation.
Industry dismisses them as anecdotal and ordinary citizens are left with the
expense of testing and meeting a burden of proof that is unreasonably slanted
in industry's favor. Industry should prove its practices are not endangering
public health and safety. Establishing damage after the fact is too late,”
said Sharon Wilson with Texas Oil and Gas Accountability Project. “Texas does not
have any regulations specific to hydraulic fracturing, and communities have
lost confidence in the state's interest in protecting human health. Federal
regulation and full disclosure is essential to ensure we have minimum
protections in Texas.” Due in part to a 2005
exemption to the Safe Drinking Water Act, the EPA cannot fully regulate gas
drilling. Moreover, the federal government does not require drillers to
publicly disclose the fluids they use in some of their processes and only 5
states out of 32 states with gas drilling require public disclosure. The report
includes data collected from states that require drillers to disclose the
chemicals used in drilling. “Texas does not require drillers
to disclose the fluids they use,” said Savransky. “So Texans do not know what
toxic chemicals might be threatening our drinking water.” "We are
blessed with an abundance of natural gas in Texas," said State Rep. Lon
Burnam (D-Fort Worth). "But if we don't take some concrete steps to
protect our even more precious air and water resources, that blessing could
quickly turn into a curse." “While we don’t know all of
the chemicals used in gas drilling, we know that the list can include
carcinogens, chemicals affecting organ function, and endocrine
disruptors,” said Savransky. Environment Texas asks that
drillers be required to disclose the chemicals they use, as well as where and
how much they use them. The group also calls for gas drillers to replace toxic
chemicals with safer alternatives. The group said that a variety
of regulations and improvements are necessary: improved monitoring, in order to
better catch gas or chemical leakage, improved disposal methods for recovered
drilling fluids, and assurance that drillers are not operating in locations
that may lead to the contamination of drinking water. Some are hoping natural gas
will gain prominence as part of our energy mix, but natural gas still emits a
significant amount of global warming pollution. “We need to protect our taps
from this threat,” said Savransky, “That means we need to make sure drillers
employ the best practices available, and that we hold them accountable for
their mistakes. We should do everything we can to protect our drinking water.” ###
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