Tag Archives: congress

Science Lags as Health Problems Emerge near Gas Fields

Source : Propublica

On a summer evening in June 2005, Susan Wallace-Babb went out into a neighbor’s field near her ranch in Western Colorado to close an irrigation ditch. She parked down the rutted double-track, stepped out of her truck into the low-slung sun, took a deep breath and collapsed, unconscious.

A natural gas well and a pair of fuel storage tanks sat less than a half-mile away. Later, after Wallace-Babb came to and sought answers, a sheriff’s deputy told her that a tank full of gas condensate—liquid hydrocarbons gathered from the production process—had overflowed into another tank. The fumes must have drifted toward the field where she was working, he suggested.The next morning Wallace-Babb was so sick she could barely move. She vomited uncontrollably and suffered explosive diarrhea. A searing pain shot up her thigh. Within days she developed burning rashes that covered her exposed skin, then lesions. As weeks passed, anytime she went outdoors, her symptoms worsened. Wallace-Babb’s doctor began to suspect she had been poisoned.

“I took to wearing a respirator and swim goggles outside to tend to my animals,” Wallace-Babb said. “I closed up my house and got an air conditioner that would just recycle the air and not let any fresh air in.”

Wallace-Babb’s symptoms mirror those reported by a handful of others living near her ranch in Parachute, Colo., and by dozens of residents of communities across the country that have seen the most extensive natural gas drilling. Hydraulic fracturing, along with other processes used to drill wells, generates emissions and millions of gallons of hazardous waste that are dumped into open-air pits. The pits have been shown to leak into groundwater and also give off chemical emissions as the fluids evaporate. Residents’ most common complaints are respiratory infections, headaches, neurological impairment, nausea and skin rashes. More rarely, they have reported more serious effects, from miscarriages and tumors to benzene poisoning and cancer.

ProPublica examined government environmental reports and private lawsuits and interviewed scores of residents, physicians and toxicologists in four states—Colorado, Texas, Wyoming and Pennsylvania—that are drilling hot spots. Our review showed that cases like Wallace-Babb’s go back a decade in parts of Colorado and Wyoming, where drilling has taken place for years. They are just beginning to emerge in Pennsylvania, where the Marcellus Shale drilling boom began in earnest in 2008.

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Protect Your Drinking Water, Sign the Petition for a National Ban on Fracking!

Many members of our group would be content if a) hydraulic fracturing was banned in karst regions and b) for drilling activities in all other locations, good, solid, stringent regulations and protections are put in place along with the inspector workforce to enforce them.

However, there are others that feel the only solution is an outright ban on fracking nationwide.  For example, this group, Food & Water Watch.  With all of the recent recognition by state and town leadership of the dangers these processes pose – it might be an angle to consider.  Very informative video; sign their petition to Congress:

Fracking is a type of gas drilling that injects millions of gallons of hydraulic fluids – a mixture of chemicals, water and sand – into a well to create pressure that cracks open rock underground, releasing natural gas. This process can deplete and contaminate local water, damage the environment and threaten public health.

We’re calling for a national ban on fracking. You can learn more by watching our short animation below, and signing our petition to Congress.

Watch the Video and Sign the Petition >>

The Dirty Secret of Natural Gas

The latest communication from the Sierra Club…

Did you know that communities in Wyoming sometimes have worse air quality days than Los Angeles due to natural gas drilling?1 Or that hydraulic fracturing – the drilling method used by the oil and gas industry – creates polluted wastewater which includes radioactive materials and toxic chemicals?

Unfortunately, oil and gas lobbyists have succeeded in carving out loopholes in the Safe Drinking Water Act and the Clean Air Act, leaving communities all over the country to suffer from the effects of unregulated drilling – dirty air and polluted drinking water.

Tell your representative that it is time to close these loopholes and protect our air and water from oil and gas drilling.

Companies involved in hydraulic fracturing should have to report the chemicals they pump underground, and their injection wells should be covered by the protections provided by the Safe Drinking Water Act. In addition, they should be required to meet Clean Air Act standards, just like other industries across the United States.

Tell Congress to end the environmental exemptions for the oil and gas industry.

People should not have to worry about the safety of their drinking water or breathe dirty air because of natural gas drilling. It’s time to close the loopholes in environmental laws that allow natural gas companies to evade government oversight and pollute our air and water.

Sincerely,

Deborah Nardone
Sierra Club Natural Gas Reform Campaign

EPA Formally Requests Information From Companies About Chemicals Used in Natural Gas Extraction

Source : EPA.gov

As hydraulic fracturing expands across the U.S. to recover gas reserves in hard to reach rock formations, there is a growing concern about the health and environmental impacts of this practice. EPA is undertaking a scientific study at the request of Congress to investigate the impacts that hydraulic fracturing may have on drinking water. EPA will use a transparent, peer-reviewed process and independent sources of information. The results of the study will be announced in 2012 and will be used to inform the public of identified risks and to contribute to evaluating the need for legislative or regulatory reforms.

As part of the study’s information gathering process, EPA has issued voluntary requests for information to help the Agency examine the potential impacts that hydraulic fracturing may have on drinking water. This request will help both provide data where there is a lack of adequate information and contribute to resolving any scientific uncertainties surrounding hydraulic fracturing. The information requested in the voluntary letters includes the chemicals used in hydraulic fracturing fluid, data on the impacts of the chemicals on human health and the environment, and substances released from natural gas wells into the environment after hydraulic fracturing.

Go here to read the press release.

For information on hydraulic fracturing: http://www.epa.gov/hydraulicfracturing