REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

Don't frack with Michigan

POSTED BY: DREAMTROVE
UPDATED: Friday, July 29, 2011 04:50
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Friday, July 29, 2011 1:33 AM

DREAMTROVE


40 years after the US stopped spraying agent orange on Vietnam, babies are still being born without brains. 1/4 of the country is irreversibly contaminated as the result of between 12 and 19 million gallons of halogenated hydrocarbons poured onto the country.

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Horizontal Fracking - Unacceptable Risks
Hydraulic horizontal fracking poses unacceptable risks to public health, safety and the environment. The number of documented spills, blowouts, leaks, trucking accidents and pollution from normal drilling activities is shocking. Below is an abbreviated list...

*Colorado - 206 chemical spills were linked to 48 cases of water contamination in 2008 alone. In Parachutte, CO, 1.6 million gallons of fracking fluid leaked and were transported by groundwater. According to state records, it seeped out the side of a cliff, forming a frozen waterfall 200 feet high. It melted into a tributary of the Colorado River. (ProPublica and Vanity Fair).

*Durango, Colorado - an emergency room nurse almost died of organ failure after handling the clothes of a rig worker who had been splashed in a fracking fluid spill. The doctors were unable to learn the chemical makeup of the fluid because the information is proprietary - companies are not required to disclose the contents of chemicals used. (ProPublica, 11/13/08, Abrahm Lustgarten)

*New Mexico - toxic fluids seeped into water supplies at over 800 drilling sites in 2008. (Vanity Fair, “A Colossal Fracking Mess” June 21, 2010).

*Wyoming - benzene, a common chemical used in fracking, was discovered throughout a 28-mile long aquifer. (ProPublica, 12/31/09)

*Wyoming - Upper Green River Basin reported ozone levels above those of Los Angeles on its worst days. The Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality urged the elderly and children to avoid strenuous outdoor activity. (AP news article printed in TC Record Eagle, March 2011)

*Sublette, Wyoming - toxic compounds used in fracking including benzene were found at 1500 times safe level in 88 drinking water wells, documented by the US Bureau of Land Management in July, 2008. Researchers returned in September to take more samples. They were unable to open the water wells - monitors showed they contained so much flammable gas that they were likely to explode. (Pro Publica, “Buried Secrets: Is Natural Gas Drilling Endangering US Water Supplies?” Abrahm Lustgarten,
Nov 13, 2008).

*Dish, Texas - Mayor Calvin Tillman describes how carcinogenic air pollution from drilling has ruined the quality of life for residents, who report problems with nausea, headaches, breathing difficulties, chronic eye and throat irritation and brain disorders. Trees are dying and horses have fallen ill. The town hired an environmental firm to collect air samples and found high levels of 15 chemicals used in fracking fluid, including benzene, toluene and xylene. In June, 2010, tests by the Texas Railroad Commission showed high levels of arsenic, barium, chromium, lead and selenium in residential water wells. (Texas Oil and Gas Accountability Project).

*Texas Commission on Environmental Quality found pollutants from methane gas drilling in the Barnett Shale were greater than those produced by all vehicular traffic in the Dallas/Fort Worth area.

*Texas - a hospital system in six counties with gas drilling reported a 25% asthma rate for children. This is over three times the state average. (New York Times article 2/26/11, “Regulation Lax As Gas Wells Tainted Water Hits Rivers”)

*Texas - The Endocrine Disruption Exchange (TDEX) independent research organization based in Colorado analyzed the health effects of 61 chemicals used in fracking in Texas in April, 2009. Of the tested chemicals, 1⁄4 were classified as volatile, meaning they can become airborne and can be swallowed, inhaled, or can reach skin. More than 90% are harmful to brain, nerves, lungs and digestive system. 80% affect the heart, blood and kidneys. 67% affect the immune system. (Texas Oil and Gas Accountability Project).

*Arkansas - The US Geological Survey has reported more than 800 earthquakes in central Arkansas from
September 2010 to January 2011. The earthquakes have caused damage to homes such as cracks in walls and driveways. Geologists believe the earthquakes could be the result of frack fluid waste disposal in injection wells. A 6-month moratorium was established in January on the building of new injection wells.
Louisiana - 16 cattle mysteriously and abruptly dropped dead after drinking fluid adjacent to a gas drilling rig. (ProPublica, Abrahm Lustgarten, 4/30/09).

*Clearville, Pennsylvannia - livestock dropped dead after suffering motor skill breakdowns, likely resulting from high arsenic levels in the soil due to flowback fluid leaks.

*Dimock, PA - New Years Day, 2009, a well exploded from leaked gasses due to improper cementing of the well casing (according to the PA Department of environmental Protection.) A similar explosion which occurred in Ohio blew a house off its foundations and left a neighborhood with no drinkable water.

*Dimock, PA - in Sept., 2009, 8,000 gallons of fracking fluid leaked from faulty supply pipes into wetlands, poisoning streams and killing fish. Drinking water turned brown and corrosive and would ignite when a match was held to it as it came out the tap. People reported dizziness, headaches and skin sores from showering. In October 2009, the PA Dept. of Environmental Protection shut down water wells in the area due to major contamination of the aquifer. (Source Watch - Marcellus Shale).

*Clearfield County, PA - June 2010, a gas well blew out, releasing over one million gallons of gas and drilling fluid before being contained nearly 16 hours later.

*Avella, PA - fumes escaping from tanks holding 21,000 gallons of flammable fluid exploded, producing 200-foot flames and burning for 6 hours. Three workers were injured.

*Bradford County, PA - A Chesapeake Energy well blew near the surface, probably from a cracked well casing. Thousands of gallons of fracking fluid spilled over the containment walls into fields, farms, areas where cattle graze. Some of the fluid found its way into Towanda Creek, a tributary to the Susquehanna River. Seven families were evacuated from their homes. (4/20/11 AP news and Huffington Post).

*New York Times 2/27/11 - internal documents obtained from the EPA revealed that wastewater from deep shale drilling contains radioactivity at hundreds or even thousands of times the maximum allowed by the federal standard for drinking water. This wastewater is often hauled to sewage plants which are not designed to treat it, and then discharged into rivers. Here in Michigan, the wastewater or flowback fluid will be dumped into injection wells where the upward migration into drinking water and aquifer is highly possible (refer to Arkansas earthquakes - two fault lines run through Northern Michigan. Also refer to Chris Groebbel paper on injection wells in Michigan. Thousands of previously drilled wells could act as a conduit for the upward migration of toxic and radioactive fracking waste into ground water aquifers).

*Horizontal fracking is increasing in use. Every year, thousands of new wells are drilled. According to ProPublica, 12/31/09, Abrahm Lustgarten, “The government estimates that companies will drill at least 32,000 new gas wells annually by 2012. That could mean more than 100 billion gallons of hazardous fluids will be used and disposed of each year...” Billions and billions of gallons of fresh groundwater will be contaminated and removed FOREVER from the hydrologic cycle.

Do we really want this in Michigan???

Information compiled by Anne Zukowski



Now consider the amount of fracking fluid used:
Quote:

2.4 billion gallons of fracking fluid used last year.

Going under names like "brine" and "diesel" but typically being 2% haloalkanes by weight, a group comprising some of the most deadly chemical WMDs. That's 48 million gallons of the most potent chemical weapons, WMDs, being used against the United States each year. Compare that with the last administration's high end estimate of half a million gallons of WMDs that Saddam Hussein was supposed to have possessed.


That's what a ship is, you know - it's not just a keel and a hull and a deck and sails, that's what a ship needs.

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Friday, July 29, 2011 2:00 AM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


Not to go off on too much of a tangent, but we were still spraying Agent Orange here at home long after we stopped spraying it in 'Nam.

I watched thousands of square miles of West Texas be put under clouds of 2, 4, 5T (the active ingredient in Agent Orange) - to get it to "stick" better to the mesquite trees it was being sprayed on, it was mixed with diesel fuel and then spread via crop duster airplanes. This was in the summer of '79, and it went on well after that as well.

Of course, just like the fracking frackers, we were told it was all "safe"...

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Friday, July 29, 2011 4:50 AM

DREAMTROVE



Yes, they will always tell you it is safe, and also tell you that black is white, they are essentially the same thing, as they are both colors.


Those among us who are not chemists should take the following precautions:

1) Any time someone in power assures you that something is safe, assume they are lying. If it were safe, they'd never mention it, they're only mentioning it to quell rumors started by people who know the science. There's no need to deny a crime you didn't commit.

2) Chemical compounds with similar names are not the same, those with similar functions are more worrisome. Halogenated hydrocarbons such as mustard gas and agent orange are chemically fairly similar in how they behave, and similar to the haloalkanes used in the military today, and used in fracking fluid. They are very different from table salt, even though both contain chlorine.

To say that they are putting "salt" on the roads when they are actually spraying it with haloalkanes is chemical nonsense. That's like saying that a person who is dead can come into work today on the grounds that they are not sick.

It would be far closer to say that a road being sprayed with haloalkanes was being sprayed with mustard gas or agent orange, but more accurate to say that these are a more dangerous variants of the same CFC products.



That's what a ship is, you know - it's not just a keel and a hull and a deck and sails, that's what a ship needs.

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