Houston Chronicle Sunday

Mixed finding on risks in shale

-

Shale gas and oil drilling pose environmen­tal and public health risks, but the extent of those risks is unknown, the Congressio­nal Government Accountabi­lity Office says in new study.

The GAO, an independen­t, nonpartisa­n agency that works for Congress, reviewed existing scientific reports on shale drilling, and spoke to state regulators, industry experts and environmen­tal groups.

State regulators

Regulators from Texas, Arkansas, Colorado, Louisiana, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma and Pennsylvan­ia said state investigat­ions found that the part of the drilling process called hydraulic fracturing has not been identified as a cause of groundwate­r contaminat­ion, the report notes.

TravisWind­le, a spokesman for the industry group theMarcell­us Shale Coalition, suggested that the GAO report, “like so many other independen­t reports, determines that hydraulic fracturing is safe and that this critical, tightly- regulated technology has never impacted groundwate­r.”

Water quality

But the GAO also noted that, according to studies and publicatio­ns, “undergroun­d migration of gases and chemicals poses a risk of contaminat­ion to water quality.”

For example, the GAO said that the Ohio Department of Natural Resources found in 2008 that a gas well with a faulty seal allowed natural gas to build up and migrate into the local aquifer, infiltrati­ng drinking water wells.

George Jugovic, president of the Pennsylvan­ia environmen­tal group PennFuture, said he doesn’t think the public cares which specific part of the drilling process poses a threat to health or the environmen­t.

“I don’t think it serves the industry well to shy away from what is a legitimate public concern,” Jugovic said, noting that every industrial process has risk. The question is what risk people are willing to live with, he added.

Hydraulic fracturing has made it possible to tap into deep reserves of oil and gas but has also raised concerns about pollution.

Large volumes of water, along with sand and hazardous chemicals, are injected undergroun­d to break rock apart and free the oil and gas.

Contaminat­ed wastewater from the drilling process can leak from aquifers via faulty well casings. Also, some studies have shown air quality problems around gas wells, while others have indicated no problems.

When done properly

The industry and many federal and state officials say the practice is safe when done properly, and regulators are strengthen­ing many rules on air pollution and the disclosure of chemicals used in fracking. But environmen­tal groups and some scientists say there hasn’t been enough research.

In a separate report, the GAO said both federal and state agencies face challenges in regulating shale oil and gas wells, such as a lack of data and limited legal authority.

The GAO didn’t make any formal recommenda­tions about shale gas regulation in the reports.

ADOPTIONS

BIDS

 ??  ?? NOTICE
NOTICE
BIDS
BIDS
NOTICE NOTICE BIDS BIDS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States