Lawmakers Finally Ready to Crack Down on Hydraulic Fracturing

Hydraulic fracturing or "fracking," a controversial natural gas drilling practice that involves the use of large quantities of a toxic fluid mixture to facilitate gas extraction, has enjoyed exemption from environmental laws for too long. On Tuesday Democratic representitives Dianna DeGette, Maurice Hinchey, and Jarred Polis introduced legislation aiming to reverse Bush era measures that had exempted fracking from regulation under the Safe Drinking Water Act and other environmental laws in 2005. In the Senate, Democrat Bob Casey introduced similar legislation.

"Families, communities, and local governments are upset that the safety of their water has been compromised by a special interest exemption, and we join them in that frustration," Rep Polis Dem/Co.

The above exemption stemmed from a controversial 2004 EPA study which stated that hydraulic fracturing posed "no threat to drinking water." Although the report took considerable fire from independent researchers, and government whistleblowers, it was a major factor in influencing congress to exempt hydraulic fracturing from the Safe Drinking Water act.

The new legislation would also repeal the natural gas drilling industry's Bush era exemption from the Federal Emergency Planning and Community Right To Know acts. Currently the exact compositions of these fluids are largely unknown to the public, though benzene and many other known carcinogens are known to be present in the fracking mixture. Environmental experts believe that up to 90% of the chemicals used are toxic to humans

The Hydraulic Fracturing process, invented by Haliburton, is especially useful in squeezing a bit more gas from older wells, and extracting natural gas from shale formations. Fracking involves injecting huge volumes of water laced with benzene and hundreds of other toxic chemicals, deep into the earth. Although the chemicals are injected well below the water table, as much as 60% of the fluid is later recovered and sometimes stored above ground in open pits. In recent years many groundwater contamination incidents have occurred damaging groundwater, and human health, while raising serious questions regarding the validity of the 2004 EPA study.

Fracking critics, myself included, widely speculate that then VP Dick Cheney, a former Haliburton exec, was behind the 2005 exemptions.

"It's time to fix an unfortunate chapter in the Bush administration's energy policy and close the 'Halliburton loophole' that has enabled energy companies to pump enormous amounts of toxins, such as benzene and toluene, into the ground that then jeopardize the quality of our drinking water," Rep. Hinchey Dem/NY

 

 

 

 

 

Oil and Gas Drilling Poses Threat To Humans and The Environment

Oil and natural gas drilling companies have long maintained that the hydraulic fracturing process used in creating natural gas wells poses no threat of groundwater contamination. The federal Government has overwhelmingly agreed with this assessment, allowing the industry waivers under many federal environmental laws.

The process, commonly known as “fracking,” involves injecting huge volumes of water laced with benzene and hundreds of other toxic chemicals, deep into the earth. Although the chemicals are injected well below the water table, as much as 60% of the fluid is later recovered and often stored above ground in open pits. There is growing evidence that hydraulic fracturing poses a great threat to groundwater quality and public health.

In recent years many groundwater contamination incidents have occurred raising serious questions regarding a 2004 EPA study which stated that hydraulic fracturing poses no threat to drinking water. Although The report took major fire from independent researchers, and government whistleblowers, it still caused congress to exempt hydraulic fracturing from the Safe Drinking Water act.

Recently the Federal Bureau of Land Management (BLM) documented benzene contamination in Sublette County, Wyoming ground water. Since 2000 the area has seen well over 3000 new oil and gas wells.

In San Juan County, New Mexico the New Mexico Oil Conservation Division (NMOCD) has cited over four hundred cases of ground water contamination. The area has seen almost 5000 new wells since 2000. The contamination is said to stem from oil and gas waste pits. These pits are lawful only because oil and gas companies are exempted from the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, which sets standard for hazardous waste handling procedures.

Benzene, an organic solvent linked to several rare and debilitating blood disorders such as aplastic anemia, myelodysplastic syndromes, and acute myelogenous leukemia, is just one of the hundreds of chemicals used in the hydraulic fracturing fluid. The exact compositions of these fluids are largely unknown to the public because Congress has all but completely exempted oil and gas exploration companies from the Federal Emergency Planning and Community Right To Know acts. Environmental experts believe that up to 90% of the chemicals used are toxic to humans.

The federal government should impose all of its environmental laws on all industries. It’s difficult not to speculate that if oil and gas companies were not blatantly trampling these laws, they would not require so many legal loopholes and exemptions.