Drinking Water – Citizens Report https://citizensreport.org a digital channel commited to health & medical rights. Wed, 17 Jan 2024 09:06:12 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.24 https://citizensreport.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/cropped-cr-icon-1-32x32.png Drinking Water – Citizens Report https://citizensreport.org 32 32 Frequent Shallow Fracking Threatens Drinking Water https://citizensreport.org/2015/08/11/shallow-fracking-contaminates-drinking-water/ https://citizensreport.org/2015/08/11/shallow-fracking-contaminates-drinking-water/#respond Tue, 11 Aug 2015 15:23:30 +0000 http://www.citizensreport.org/?p=6468 Fracking, a technique designed to recover gas and oil from shale rock, is a controversial process. Opponents of fracking argue that the drilling process could contaminate the water table, but its supporters claim that the practice is carried out at such depths that contamination would be impossible. However, according to a recent survey from Stanford […]

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Shallow Fracking Could Contaminate Drinking Water

Researchers have uncovered that shallow fracking is much more common than previously thought, reviving concerns about the contamination of the nation’s drinking water.

Fracking, a technique designed to recover gas and oil from shale rock, is a controversial process. Opponents of fracking argue that the drilling process could contaminate the water table, but its supporters claim that the practice is carried out at such depths that contamination would be impossible.

However, according to a recent survey from Stanford University, shallow fracking is more widespread than previously thought. The evidence that fracking is happening at the same depth as water sources has raised concerns that it could be a threat to America’s drinking water.

The Survey and Results

Hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” is the process of drilling and injecting fluid into the ground at a high pressure in order to fracture shale rocks to release natural gas inside.
Via: Telegraph

Stanford University conducted the first survey on fracking in the United States, which found that the technique was used at shallow depths in 16 percent of publicly recorded sites in 27 states. Scientist Robert Jackson and his colleagues studied the depths in which the fracking procedure was carried out in relation to the water table.

Researchers used FracFocus well data from 2008-2013 and found the depths of fracking drilling is inconsistent. Some wells stretched deeper than 3 miles, while others were found to be as shallow as 100 feet.

For the fracking well to be considered shallow, it must be drilled less than a mile deep. Researchers found that 12 of 27 states had at least 50 shallow wells. Texas, Arkansas and California had the most shallow wells, at  2,872, 1,224 and 804 wells, respectively.

Supporters of the oil-gathering technique claim that the process is carried out underground at more than a mile below the surface. However, the study found that out of 44,000 wells, about 7,000 were fracked around the same depth as drinking water sources.

Environmental Concerns

Fracking is an extremely controversial process because many believe that it contaminates groundwater and leads to air quality degradation.
Via:Daily Kos

Many are worried that fracking has severe environmental costs. The process not only uses a large amount of water, but it also has the potential to contaminate water with fracking fluid or methane. The most dangerous wells are those that are shallow and use about one million gallons of water.

“Studies have shown that when these high-pressure wells fracture the bedrock, the cracks can extend as much as 2,000 feet upward. This provides an opportunity for the chemical-laced water used in fracking to migrate to the shallower depths of the water table.  And the smaller the gap between drilling and surface water, the greater the chance of interaction,” according to Robert Jackson in an article from Inside Climate News.

If the fracking is carried out more than a mile underground, which is deeper than 5,000 feet, fracking’s supporters claim that it would be impossible leak into a to a shallow aquifer at around 1,000 feet. But the study reveals many previously known shallow wells, creating a heightened level of apprehension about the practice.

FracFocus is an industry-backed database where the information posted is voluntary, which means that the findings may be incorrect. The amount of shallow fracking wells could actually be much greater.

A few states where the data was likely to be inaccurate are Illinois, Indiana and Kentucky and Michigan. The fracking companies present in these states did not report data to FracFocus.

The EPA conducted an investigation where they discovered fracking-related water contamination, but concluded it wasn’t a widespread problem. This conclusion shocked researchers and environmentalists tracking the studies.

Another issue that Stanford researchers brought up is the fact that extensive safeguards for shallow fracking operations are not required by regulators, especially in states like Arkansas, California and Wyoming. However, some states have updated their fracking laws since the study was released.

The study authors urge states to require companies to monitor water near shallow drilling sites before and after, and to report the chemicals used in their fracking operations.

 

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Algae Attacks https://citizensreport.org/2014/08/11/toxic-algae-is-poisoning-americas-waters/ https://citizensreport.org/2014/08/11/toxic-algae-is-poisoning-americas-waters/#respond Mon, 11 Aug 2014 20:17:35 +0000 http://www.citizensreport.org/?p=3635 Four hundred thousand people in Ohio are without clean drinking water. Their water, which is sourced from Lake Erie, is contaminated with microcystin. This dangerous toxin is the by-product of a particular blue-green algae. If the water were to be ingested, it could cause liver damage, as well as other less serious complications. Lake Erie’s algae is the result […]

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Four hundred thousand people in Ohio are without clean drinking water. Their water, which is sourced from Lake Erie, is contaminated with microcystin. This dangerous toxin is the by-product of a particular blue-green algae. If the water were to be ingested, it could cause liver damage, as well as other less serious complications.

Lake Erie’s algae is the result of agricultural pollution – the #1 source of fresh water pollution in the United States. Large farms using tons of fertilizer are the culprit. When excess fertilizer runs off into the water system, it carries with it phosphorus, which algae thrives off of.

The Guardian.com reports that the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) forecasts a larger than average outbreak of toxic algae this year.

Read more on this subject here.

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No Respect For Clean Water https://citizensreport.org/2014/08/05/big-agro-no-respect-for-clean-water/ https://citizensreport.org/2014/08/05/big-agro-no-respect-for-clean-water/#respond Tue, 05 Aug 2014 20:22:17 +0000 http://www.citizensreport.org/?p=3587 America’s 67th largest city is without clean water. The Elephant in the room The number one cause of fresh water pollution in the United States is agricultural runoff. Animal manure and fertilizers contain high levels of nitrogen and phosphorus. When that waste enters fresh water systems, the natural levels are thrown out of whack. The […]

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America’s 67th largest city is without clean water.

The Elephant in the room

The number one cause of fresh water pollution in the United States is agricultural runoff. Animal manure and fertilizers contain high levels of nitrogen and phosphorus. When that waste enters fresh water systems, the natural levels are thrown out of whack. The excess nitrogen and phosphorus can cause a harmful algal bloom (HAB). According to an Ohio news source, a HAB is capable of producing a number of toxins that may pose a risk to human and animal health.

Trouble in Lake Erie

This is exactly what happened in Toledo, Ohio and surrounding areas. Their water has been contaminated and it is now unsafe for drinking and for the sick to bathe in. Boiling the water won’t make it safe, neither will filtering it. The state’s governor has declared a state of emergency and activated the National Guard.

Looking Ahead

The only good that can come of this is if Americans hold Big Agro, who wants to side-step the Clean Water Act, accountable. If we do not do that, our towns may also be left without water to drink.

Read the New York Times behind the scenes story to learn more.

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Poisoning West Virginia’s Water https://citizensreport.org/2014/04/09/poisoning-west-virginias-water/ https://citizensreport.org/2014/04/09/poisoning-west-virginias-water/#respond Wed, 09 Apr 2014 19:10:16 +0000 http://test.tigerdesign.me/?p=2736 On  the morning of Thursday, January 9, 2014, the people of Charleston, West Virginia, awoke to a strange tang in the air off the Elk River. It smelled like licorice. The occasional odor is part of life in Charleston, the state capital, which lies in an industrial area that takes flinty pride in the nickname Chemical […]

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On  the morning of Thursday, January 9, 2014, the people of Charleston, West Virginia, awoke to a strange tang in the air off the Elk River. It smelled like licorice. The occasional odor is part of life in Charleston, the state capital, which lies in an industrial area that takes flinty pride in the nickname Chemical Valley. In the nineteenth century, natural brine springs made the region one of America’s largest producers of salt. The saltworks gave rise to an industry that manufactured gunpowder, antifreeze, Agent Orange, and other “chemical magic,” as The Saturday Evening Post put it, in 1943. The image endured. Today, the Chemical Valley Roller Girls compete in Roller Derby events with a logo of a woman in fishnet stockings and a gas mask. After decades of slow decline, the local industry has revived in recent years, owing to the boom in cheap natural gas, which has made America one of the world’s most inexpensive places to make chemicals.

At 8:16 a.m., a resident called the state Department of Environmental Protection and said that something in the air was, in the operator’s words, “coating his wife’s throat.” Downtown, the mayor, Danny Jones, smelled it and thought, Well, it’s just a chemical in the air. It’ll move. A few minutes passed. “I stuck my mouth up to a water fountain and took a big drink, and I thought, We’re in trouble,” he recalls. People were calling 911, and the state sent out two inspectors. Eventually, they reached a chemical-storage facility run by Freedom Industries, a “tank farm,” with seventeen white metal pillbox-shaped containers clustered on a bluff above the Elk River.

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