海角大神

Boom or bust? Rush for oil, gas comes with side effects.

Oil spills make a big splash on national news, but wastewater spills are a more common occurrence and can be harder to clean up.

|
Charlie Riedel/AP
Wesley Graves looks over a crater left after a saltwater disposal pipeline ruptured on his ranch near Snyder, Texas, April 22. Equipment failure is a major cause of oilfield wastewater spills.

The recent oil and gas boom has left many fossil-fuel rich US states to contend with with an unseemly side effect. Between 2009 and 2014, some聽180 million gallons of wastewater generated during oil and gas extraction has聽sullied the land in Texas, North Dakota, California, Alaska, Colorado, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Wyoming, Kansas, Utah and Montana, according to Associated Press analysis of data from regulatory agencies in those states.

The incidents stemmed from a variety of equipment malfunctions, such as rupturing pipes and overflowing storage tanks, and even some deliberate dumping. In many ways, spilled wastewater spills,聽which saturate the land with highly salty and often heavy metal laden-water, can be more detrimental to the land than oil spills that tend to grab headlines.

"Oil spills may look bad, but we know how to clean them up and ... return the land to a productive state," Kerry Sublette, a University of Tulsa environmental engineer and specialist in treating the despoiled landscapes, told AP. "Brine spills are much more difficult."

The briny water comes from deep within the Earth itself, the remnants of prehistoric oceans trapped deep underground. When fossil fuel companies inject water and chemicals into the ground to free hidden stores of oil and gas, in a process known as hydraulic fracturing, the briny water rises to the surface where it mixes with the fracking water.

The companies doing the extraction are responsible for disposing of that water, but breaches in pipelines and storage tanks can send the water gushing over the land, contaminating cropland and water bodies where livestock drink.

One New Mexico farmer described wastewater's effect on his land as "death by a thousand bee stings."

Industry officials say they are well aware of the concerns relating to spills and companies do their best to prevent such incidents and take responsibility for cleaning up after inadvertent spills.

"You're going to have spills in an industrial society," said Katie Brown, spokeswoman for Energy In Depth, a research and education arm of the Independent Petroleum Association of America, told AP. "But there are programs in place to reduce them."

However, the AP found that over time, the number of spills have increased rather than decreased, likely a product of heightened oil and gas production.

"In 2009, there were 2,470 reported spills in the 11 states; by 2014, the total was 4,643. The amount of wastewater spilled doubled from 21.1 million gallons in 2009 to 43 million in 2013 before dipping to 37.6 million last year," AP reported.

The New Mexico Environment Department鈥檚 website, 鈥淓ven with good management practices in place, spills and unauthorized discharges can and do occur鈥 If you are responsible for a spill, you have an obligation under a number of New Mexico laws to report it to NMED and take appropriate corrective actions to mitigate the effects upon health and the environment.鈥 The NMED requires that a spill of any quantity that could injure humans, plants, or animals be reported.

A flood of oil money from out of state has transformed small towns and provided hope in the form of jobs and a relatively stable income, . However, with this boom has come new environmental and health risks from spilled wastewater, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.聽Cases such as these have prompted some other countries with similar significant energy needs to examine fracking with reservations.

"Shale gas is not the solution to the UK's energy challenges," Friends of the Earth energy campaigner Tony Bosworth . "We need a 21st century energy revolution based on efficiency and renewables, not more fossil fuels that will add to climate change."

This report includes material from the Associated Press.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to Boom or bust? Rush for oil, gas comes with side effects.
Read this article in
/Environment/2015/0908/Boom-or-bust-Rush-for-oil-gas-comes-with-side-effects
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe