If
the Californian drought was bad before this disaster, it just got a
whole lot worse," nearly 3 billion gallons of oil industry
wastewater had been illegally dumped in aquifers through at least
nine disposal wells. "
Cali'
has been surviving on ancient water from aquifers, why not mix it up
with fracking fluids. Deliberate or not, this shit happens. Fracking
is lunacy in almost every way imaginable.
This
catastrophe aside, I still don't understand how a fossil fuel company
can be allowed to inject waste products into the earth. Oh that's
right, they own us and our planet, they can do what ever they want.
One
day, as our biosphere unravels, these people and those who enabled
them will be put to the sword. It will be very bloody and viscous
those last days of life on this planet and the people who have kicked
our biosphere over the cliff know it and are preparing their armies
and militarising their police forces in anticipation.
As
California Water Resources Dwindle, New Fears Over Drilling Waste
Contamination
Situation described as
'unfolding catastrophe' as investigation finds oil drilling companies
injected untold amounts of waste into protected groundwater reserves
2
February, 2015
With
the blessing of California state regulators, drilling companies have
injected an untold amount of toxic wastewater left over from fracking
and other drilling operations into aquifers, according to
an investigation by the San
Francisco Chronicle published
on Sunday.
In
October, it was confirmed that
nearly 3 billion gallons of oil industry wastewater had been
illegally dumped in aquifers through at least nine disposal wells.
According to data reviewed by The
Chronicle, it
is now evident that more than 170 such wells injected a mix of "briny
water, hydrocarbons and trace chemicals," including acid, into
aquifers suitable for drinking and irrigation.
This
information about the extent of the aquifer contamination comes as
the state's historic drought continues to push many desperate
municipalities to tap groundwater reserves for drinking water and
agricultural irrigation.
"It
is an unfolding catastrophe, and it’s essential that all oil and
gas wastewater injection into underground drinking water stop
immediately," Kassie Siegel, director of the Climate Law
Institute at the Center for Biological Diversity, toldThe
Chronicle.
The
practice first came to light in July 2014 when state regulators shut
down 11 waste disposal wells in Kern County over fears of possible
groundwater contamination.
The
Chronicle reports
on the source of the wastewater injection problem, which they say
dates back to 1983 when EPA officials agreed to allow the state's
Division of Oil, Gas and Geothermal Resources responsibility for
enforcing the federal Safe Drinking Water Act:The agreement listed, by name, aquifers considered exempt, where oil companies could legally inject leftover water with a simple permit from the division. If state regulators wanted to add any aquifers to the list, they would need EPA’s approval.
But there were two signed copies of the agreement, said Steven Bohlen, the division’s new supervisor. Eleven aquifers listed as exempt on one copy weren’t included on the other. The state and the oil companies considered those aquifers exempt — perfectly suitable places to dispose of wastewater. The EPA didn’t.
"We cannot tell, nor can the EPA, which version is correct," said Bohlen, appointed by Gov. Jerry Brown last year.
The bureaucratic confusion didn’t stop there. In some cases, the state treated entire aquifers as exempt when, in fact, only specific portions of them had been approved for oil industry use. In other instances, the state issued injection permits for aquifers that the EPA had never declared exempt, Blumenfeld said.
Water
classified as containing 500 parts per million or less of dissolved
salts and other materials is considered high quality and safe to
drink. The state aims to protect all water that registers below 3,000
ppm.
According
to state officials, tests of nearby drinking-water wells show no
contamination thus far.
However,
the federal EPA has threatened to seize control of regulating the
waste-injection wells, and the state has a February 6 deadline to
present a comprehensive plan to fix the problem and prevent future
contamination of supposedly off-limits drinking water wells.
NEVER MIND! Help is on its way! Lol
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