Yet another report reveals that fracking in California has contaminated aquifers during a historical drought.…
One of America’s greatest assets are the abundant
natural resources that helped elevate a new country into a world-class
nation, and over the past century a world leader. Of all this nation’s
resources, fossil fuels are far and away the single-most valuable in
driving the industrial revolution and enriching one industry above all
others except maybe banking and agriculture. Obviously, America’s
abundant water supply should be considered as precious a natural
resource as petroleum, but that is not a consideration the fossil fuel
industry shares regardless that not only is water crucial to
agriculture, it is a fundamental necessity of human life. Water is also a
fundamental necessity for the oil industry that could not care less how
their extraction processes contaminate water used for agriculture, or
human consumption. This week, yet another report reveals that fracking
in California has contaminated aquifers during a historical drought.
In July, California state regulators, Department of Gas and Geothermal Resources (DOGGR), shut down
eleven fracking wastewater injection wells over concerns that what
precious water the severely drought-stricken state has left is being
contaminated with toxins and carcinogens; particularly in highly
productive agricultural areas. According to its due diligence, the
agency the oil industry and repugicans hate above all others, the
Environment Protection Agency (EPA), promptly ordered a report within 60
days to determine if the oil industry did indeed poison what little
water California has left and what extent, if any, the damage might have
on the agriculture industry and drinking water supply.
This past week, with little to no mention in the
conservative media, the California State water Resources Board issued a
report to the EPA confirming
that yes, at least nine of the eleven fracking sites were deliberately
dumping poisoned waste water directly into central California aquifers.
The waste water is laden with extremely hazardous toxins and
carcinogenic chemicals used in fracking and the aquifers the industry
destroyed are protected by both state laws as well as the federal Safe
Drinking Water Act. Of course, both repugicans and the oil industry
(read Koch brothers) can not countenance either California’s
environmental protections or the Safe Drinking Water Act as evidenced by
a campaign pledge by repugican Jeff
Denham, promising an all-out federal drive to abolish California’s water
regulations permanently.
According to the damning report,
over 3 billion gallons of poisoned waste-water was illegally injected
directly into central California aquifers, and that water samples
collected at water supply wells tested in the proximity of the fracking
injection sites all had extremely high levels of known carcinogenic
chemicals such as arsenic. Arsenic, besides being a cancer-causing
agent, also weakens the human immune system. The arsenic is combined
with a toxin used in rat poison, thallium, that was found in water
supplies in and around the fracking injection sites. The water wells are
useless as a safe drinking-water resource as well as worthless for the
state’s very substantial agricultural industry.
A professor of environmental studies at the
University of Redlands, Timothy Krantz, warned that these toxic
chemicals and carcinogens pose a very serious threat to public health.
He said, “The fact that high concentrations are showing up in multiple
water wells close to waste-water injection sites raises major concerns
about the health and safety of nearby residents.” Unfortunately, it is
likely that the full extent of poisoned water is still not, and may not,
be known for some time because the Central Valley Water Board has only
tested 8 out of 100 nearby water wells. The State Water Resources Board
is concerned that at least 19 other fracking injection sites are still
currently contaminating protected aquifers in the agriculture-rich
Central Valley region which already has some of the state’s worst air
and water pollution. Pollution directly attributable to the highly
dangerous impact of oil companies’ increasing and careless use of the
controversial oil extraction technique; that does not include dumping
the poisoned water into the aquifer after the extraction process is
finished.
Besides poisoning water needed by the agriculture
industry and California citizens, the oil industry’s wanton fracking is,
without question, exacerbating
the historically severe drought throughout the state and not just the
agriculture-rich Central Valley. In fact, over 80% of California is
experiencing the beginning of a decade-long (at least) “extreme” drought
conditions a handy little map
gives a clue to how devastating the drought is for the state. For any
intelligent human being, reports that billions upon billions of toxic
fracking waste water is being pumped directly into “protected aquifers”
Central Valley residents rely on for basic survival just does not make
sense; except to repugicans dependent on oil industry donations.
While the citizens of California are conserving every drop of water, the oil industry is using
at least 140,000 to 150,000 gallons “per fracking site” every day of
the year; permanently deleting it from the water cycle, mixing in poison
and cancer-causing chemicals, and putting it into whatever water their
fracking process has not yet robbed and poisoned. Still, Central Valley repugican Jeff Denham is openly campaigning on permanently
eliminating water regulations and lying that the EPA’s American Waters
Act will seize Californians’ property if they have a man-made pond in
their backyard.
An attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity,
Hollin Kretzmann, said these new revelations prove state regulators have
failed to protect Californians’ health, dwindling water supply, as well
as the environment from fracking. He, and many Californians are
demanding that Governor Jerry Brown take immediate action to prevent an
even bigger water emergency in drought-stricken California. He said,
“Much more testing is needed to gauge the full extent of water pollution
and the threat to public health, but Governor Brown should move quickly
to halt fracking to ward off a surge in oil industry wastewater that
California simply isn’t prepared to dispose of safely.” It is not just
that California is ill-prepared to safely get rid of the poisoned water,
the state can hardly afford to lose even one more gallon of the
precious necessity, and not just for agriculture use either.
One of the biggest misconceptions driven by
corporate agriculture regarding preserving what little water is left is
that it is crucial to save California billions of dollars in lost
profits. A great deal of the water shortage is due to the past few years
of irresponsible over-planting by huge corporate farms, up and down the
state, of water intensive crops; particularly almonds. Almonds, like
most nut crops, are a luxury commodity for export that not only fail to
generate many jobs other than low-wage farm labor, exports are not
taxed. The state, counties, and local communities are not profiting from
corporate agriculture that is draining wells the oil industry has
poisoned and permanently collapsed aquifers that will never, never ever,
be replenished.
The real travesty, and it is a travesty, is that
both California and the federal government have adequate regulations in
place to protect the state’s water supply for human and agricultural
use. However, like every regulation affecting the fossil fuel industry,
they do not apply according to the persistent industry practice of
disregarding both the law and health of Americans. That the industry is
wasting what precious little water resources Californian’s depend on for
survival is, although beyond the pale, a typical oil industry practice
with typical repugican support.
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