Hydrofracking Poses Serious Risks to Human Health

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Fracking, Shale gas, Oil, Energy, Hydraulic fracturing, EPA, Wyoming, Environmental Protection Agency

Hydrofracking Poses Serious Risks to Human Health

Earlier this month, the Environmental Protection Agency published a report linking hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, to contaminated well-water in Wyoming. While copious anecdotal evidence has hinted at fracking’s dangers, the EPA’s report is among the first to conclusively document the presence of industrial pollutants in groundwater. This smoking gun proves that fracking confers risks to human health — risks that justify suspending the practice.

First, a few words on what, exactly, the EPA found. In a nutshell, fracking is the process of injecting pressurized fluid into underground shale deposits to force natural gas out of the rock and up to the surface. The composition of this fluid is a trade secret — by and large, frackers are not required to reveal the ingredients of their strange brews. Thanks to a modicum of voluntary disclosure, however, we do know that fracking fluid can contain up to 29 different carcinogens. We also know that keeping all that fluid safely sealed within the fracking well is very difficult, and that the cocktail often escapes into the surrounding rock.

That, apparently, is what happened in Pavillion, Wyoming, where EPA scientists identified numerous compounds — including benzene in concentrations 78 times higher than safe standards — associated with fracking in nearby pit wells. In response, the Agency for Toxic Substances has recommended that citizens of Pavillion switch to alternate water sources and ventilate their bathrooms to prevent their homes from blowing up. No word yet on whether Pavillionites find this advice reassuring.

Citizens who have followed the fracking debate were likely not surprised by the EPA’s findings. Since fracking took off in the early 2000s, it has been implicated in an array of ominous maladiesflammable faucets; and, most recently, earthquakes in Ohio. Yet even as the anecdotal evidence has mounted, fracking has continued apace. The practice has accelerated in states with huge shale deposits such as Pennsylvania, and New York lifted its moratorium this summer. While the EPA’s report may lead some states to rethink their position on fracking, I suspect that hydraulic fracturing will continue unimpeded. Accounts of malodorous water, unexplained headaches and nosebleeds, and the death of livestock have not slowed the drilling of wells; I doubt that finding benzene in groundwater will.

The EPA’s discovery may have vindicated the long-standing suspicions of environmentalists, but nobody’s rejoicing. Fracking improves companies' ability to access natural gas reserves, and natural gas provides plenty of benefits: It produces fewer carbon emissions than other fossil fuels; it is cheap, plentiful, and not imported from a Middle Eastern dictatorship; and it provides income to poor farming communities. For these reasons, numerous pragmatic environmentalists have embraced natural gas as a transitional fuel that can supplant coal and oil until wind and solar are ready for prime time. If fracking were demonstrably safe, environmentalists would have reason to accept it. 

But environmental groups tend to adhere to the precautionary principle: The notion that the burden of proof falls on industry to demonstrate that its practices are not harmful. Shoot later; ask questions first. Environmentalists have long avowed that, in the absence of conclusive scientific evidence either way, we should have refrained from fracking — especially given the abundant anecdotal evidence that suggests it is harmful — and conducted more rigorous tests. Then we should have tested fracking again, and a third time, and however many subsequent trials it took to determine beyond a shadow of a doubt that the practice was safe. (This espousal of the precautionary principle stands in opposition to the Obama administration, which avers that fracking can go ahead while the EPA conducts its review.)

For their caution, green groups are tarred as anti-progress obstructionists who won’t be happy until every person in America exchanges their car for a horse. But most mainstream environmental non-profits aren’t fundamentally against the exploitation of natural gas — they only oppose industrial practices, like fracking, whose actual or potential costs outweigh their benefits. The Environmental Defense Fund, for example, acknowledges that natural gas will inevitably be part of the U.S.'s energy portfolio, but also believes that fracking, as presently practiced, is too shadowy and dangerous to continue unreformed.

But can fracking be cleaned up, or does it inherently pose "fat-tailed risk" — i.e., seemingly improbable consequences that are more likely than we realize, and so terrible that they aren't worth risking? That's a question currently beyond the purview of this article or any other, since we don't fully understand the connections between fracking and groundwater contamination, methane seepage, and those pesky earthquakes. With extensive modifications to the process, it may be possible to frack reasonably safely; or fracking may be intrinsically dangerous and impermissable. We don't know. But we do know that, in the face of uncertainty, caution pays off.

Time and again throughout modern history, fat-tailed environmental risks have been manifested, with disastrous outcomes. Spraying mosquitoes with DDT seemed like a great idea, until we wiped out most of North America's birds. We went ahead and mined every seam of coal we could find in Appalachia, and discovered only after the fact that we'd caused thousands of deaths through respiratory problems and mercury poisoning. Fukushima and Deepwater Horizon luridly demonstrated the perils of taking on outsized risk. And, of course, climate change is fat-tailed risk writ large: Burning fossil fuels has been fun, but now we're confronting the possibility that global temperatures might rise 6 degrees this century and leave large parts of the Earth uninhabitable.

Right now, we have compelling reasons to believe that fracking contaminates water and presents a danger to human health (and let's not even mention the earthquakes). Those risks are too great to let fracking continue unabated: The precautionary principle commands us to shut the practice down pending further review. Someday, a radically different form of hydraulic fracturing may meet environmental and risk-aversion standards; today, fracking is too dangerous to permit.

Photo Credit: Marcellus Protest

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Ben Goldfarb

Ben Goldfarb is a first-year Master's student at the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies and Co-Editor in Chief of Sage Magazi...

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Ben Goldfarb

Warner, which do you think is more "anti-modern" - embracing a future in which humans draw unlimited energy from the wind and sun using advanced engineering techniques; or one in which we continue to burn liquefied dinosaurs until we run out of black crud? What's more "anti-human" - fighting to protect a town's water supply, or privileging industrial gains over people's health? Your argument that the EPA is too extreme has, at least, a basis in logic, and could form the foundation of a debate. Your claim that environmentalists are anti-human Nazis bent on returning us to the dark ages, however, is ludicrous and disgusting. You're out of line, and just plain wrong.

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The science is there, the proof is all around us. It is documented but now it's the EPA that is causing the problem. All the science in the world will never convince the greedy industry types until it affects their water, air and land value. Only then will we hear them say it must be stopped.

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As an organic farmer in the Marcellus Shale "fairway" of PA, I have spent two years looking into the current impacts and long-term risks of unconventional drilling for shale gas. I have assembled much of that into this PowerPoint presentation - "The Case for a Moratorium" http://go.to/marcellusstop

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The first thing I thought when I heard about fracking is this: I hope that more research takes place to either prove or disprove these findings, and if it is true, that it is fixed. That hope is made slightly less of a fairytale thanks to articles like this bringing the issue to public attention.

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What energy source is ready to step up & take over from fossil fuels? Are we willing to stop our economy because accidents happen and claims are made without proper scientific analysis?

Have you seen what has happened to natural gas prices since horizontal completions have developed?

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Ben ~

How sad that whenever the EPA tries to live up to the P part of it's mandate, it's demonized by unbiased scientists like Senator James Inhofe, Governor Rick Perry and Rush Limbaugh. These guys are scientists, right? No, well at least they're neutral observers with nothing to gain by challenging the EPA's findings. I mean, forcing secret toxic goo into the ground at high pressure — where's the possible harm in that, right?

Again we see what happens when our economy, based on our not "getting it," collides with taking reasonable precautions which might effect some well-heeled constituent's third quarter bottom line.

I'm glad the EPA is watching out for me. Some fracking shareholder sure as hell isn't going to.

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Sorry, but this EPA is the most left-wing, most anti-business, most anti-capitalist, most big-government, most extreme iteration of the agency ever seen. It's findings should be viewed with suspicion especially since these wild-eyed claims have not been duplicated by other agencies, universities, or research firms. Even Jake's wordage of his comment is suspicious: "this report is evidence that we need to stop fracking." That smacks of agenda as opposed to science and shows how environazis will light on ANYTHING that supports them no matter its veracity. There are no compelling reasons here.

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31 Replies

  • Darwin Long 5 months ago Lets see, which is worse? An Enviro...

  • Rick Collins 5 months ago Whoa, we're speaking re EPA-ve...

  • George Thomas 5 months ago "most left-wing, most anti-bus...

Lets see, which is worse? An Environazi who wants to insure clean air and water or a profit pig who is only interested in more money for himself at the expense of everyone else?

I think I'll go with the clean water and air.

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  • Warner Todd Huston 5 months ago Yes, yes, yes, yawning here. And wh...

Yes, yes, yes, yawning here. And while we are living in bark shacks and drinking river water because you pure enviro-lovers have eliminated modernity and all our jobs and commodities, we can thank you for returning us to a brutally short life of grubbing in the dirt. Thanks environuts. You're anti-human ideology is just great. The truth is there is a good middle way, paying attention to good profit AND safeguarding the environment, but this extremist left-wing EPA is NOT the one to implement that.

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  • Darwin Long 5 months ago Go to Wyoming Warner - Drink Deeply...

  • Jordan Eipper 5 months ago Either way, Mr. Huston, the use of ...

  • Warner Todd Huston 5 months ago No thanks. Your Kool-aid is not som...

Go to Wyoming Warner - Drink Deeply.

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Either way, Mr. Huston, the use of softcore Nazi imagery in this (or any other) thinking-person's forum is sincerely offensive to some and lands woefully beneath the caliber of discourse that PolicyMic is shooting for.

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No thanks. Your Kool-aid is not something I'm interested in imbibing. The folks at Guyana might beckon you, but not me.

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Not Kool-Aid, just water. Why is it that its more important that the oil companies make money than the ranchers whose land they are destroying? Or the city dwellers whose water they are polluting? Why is big business more important than small or individual businesses? Why is your car more important than a child's life?

Where do you live Warner? Lets start fraking in YOUR water supply. Remember the Cuyahoga River in the 60's? Or Love Canal? What will it take for you to learn that profit at the expense of the ability to exist on the planet is a no win game?

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You love to set up strawmen. This is why you enviros are worthless to talk to: "Why is it that its more important that the oil companies make money than the ranchers whose land they are destroying?" Who the heck said THAT?? I sure as heck didn't! You are an extremist that sets up false dichotomies based on fearmongering instead of engaging in real discussions. There are no level headed enviros. So many are anti-human, anti-modernity, Luddites that should be ignored.

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Warner, which do you think is more "anti-modern" - embracing a future in which humans draw unlimited energy from the wind and sun using advanced engineering techniques; or one in which we continue to burn liquefied dinosaurs until we run out of black crud? What's more "anti-human" - fighting to protect a town's water supply, or privileging industrial gains over people's health?

Your argument that the EPA is too extreme has, at least, a basis in logic, and could form the foundation of a debate. Your claim that environmentalists are anti-human Nazis bent on returning us to the dark ages, however, is ludicrous and disgusting. You're out of line, and just plain wrong.

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I have no problem with renewable energy research. But it is idiotic to cast aside and legislate away energy sources we do have to pursue sources that currently CANNOT supply the energy we need. And again, you set up strawmen that you conveniently knock down and that is why you prove to be the sort of nuts that want to send us back to the dark ages. You enviros are tedious. You enviros are little different than the extremists that gave us the 18th Amendment and alcohol prohibition. . And you know what sort of mess that made. This extremism always leads to no good

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Gonna side with Warner on this one. Banning fracking is short-sighted and, frankly, stupid. The enviro-nuts he refers to, do in-fact, set up these calamitous either-or scenarios. The very obvious answer to this is figure out how to do fracking without contaminating the water supply. Companies have already figured out how to do it, and most new fracking sites aren't nearly as devastating as this article and the other posters are implying it to be. Also, worth noting, oil profit margins aren't that high relative to other industries, and they employ hundreds of thousands of people.

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I have no problem with banning fracking IF it is scientifically proven to be injurious. But so far the science is only kindly termed "mixed." There are a lot of wild-eyed claims by the anti-science EPA, and a whole lot of frothy exclamations coming from the mouths of enviros, but the science simply doesn't stand up.

Again, Jake's reply on this thread is telling. He celebrates that we've "finally" found some way to destroy the fracking industry. This is the attitude that enviros have. They are looking for any hooks to hang their banning hats on whether there is real science behind it or not.

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Ethan, I agree that, if we can devise a way to frack without using harmful chemicals, it's at least worth considering. That's also the position of many environmental groups; I don't think most enviros think about things in the stark black-and-white terms you describe. We're aware that natural gas will be part of America's energy portfolio, but believe it has to be cleaned up first. I disagree. though, with your idea of what is short-sighted: I think it's short-sighted to frack despite evidence that it may be harmful, and only realize in retrospect that you made thousands of people sick. That's far more reckless than banning it until we can be 100% certain it's safe. Not sure what oil profit margins have to do with anything.

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Warner ~

So when did this good EPA turn into this bad EPA? Right around the time they started monitoring CO emissions? Right around that time?

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Warner ~

Jordan isn't talking about your accepting any ideas, just in the way you are expressing yours.

Using the term environazi is quite unnecessary. Besides, Rush might sue you for plagiarism.

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If I saw you guys attacking left-wingers here for extreme language, I'd be more apt to accept the scolding. But this is a left-wing site that allows left-wing name-calling rhetoric to go on unaddressed. So, it's a bit hard for me to take your scolding seriously. I should also say that the "Nazi" part of that is just slang. I certainly do not equate all enviros to Nazis. Now PETA members.... that's another thing! (LOL)

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Excuse me. This has absolutely nothing to do with the discussion under way, so please feel free to ignore. I happened to see the first sentence-and-a-half of your comment, above, on the little feed on the Home Page...and almost choked on laughter.

Warner Todd Huston, if you knew how many times we lefty-leaners had privately complained to each other that policymic is too conservative; you'd probably laugh, too.

OK, where do we go from here; now that we've recognized we all have imperfect perception?

Shalom, y'all.

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Indeed, I would laugh. Mostly because it is absurd to say this site isn't mostly left-leaning. I will say that this site is not an extremist, left-wing site, of course. Policymic isn't as idiotic as many out there which is why I bother myself with it. But it should be pretty obvious that this is a left leaning site. There are a small handful of conservatives but almost all the articles and the bulk of the commenters are left-leaners here. It is neither good nor bad, it's just a fact. But, like I said, it is worth sticking around because it is at least a serious minded site for the most part.

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Warner ~

I'd love to see a role-call of who is on this site and how they would self-dentify. I know of a group of more left-wing types as you state, as well as a group of the usual suspects on the other side, and a bunch who I just couldn't say because I haven't read enough of their postings to determine.

I also question these mythic left-wing flamethrowers you bring up. I would call out anyone for referring to someone as a Nazi, unless they were talking about an actual Nazi, or else used in the Seinfeld "Soup Nazi" kind of way. That just isn't cool around here, no matter who does it.

Please, if someone crosses the line, be my guest to call them out on it, regardless of where on the political spectrum they live.

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Bet you've never called out a one of them, Jeff. Say, John Awbrey, for instance? Still I don't complain much about individuals for their rhetoric. I think it a waste of time and a bit silly to wring hands about it. We are all adults and if we can't take an occasional jab, then we should stay out of the "kitchen" of politics talk. Now, how do you feel about religion and sports!? LOL

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We could talk about Tim Tebow and cover sports and religion at the same time. I'm sure he's another subject we disagree about, Warner...

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LOL. If you really want to get into sports, it would be a one-sided conversation, though. I can't stand the so-called "professional" sports and I think all sports should be removed from our schools, too. But we digress.

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Warner ~ I think it's a good thing to try and have some standards here. I'm sure we could both point to other sites where it's nothing but name-calling. Is that what you want? I don't believe it is. Let's focus on ideas as much as we can and try and be respectful of those whom we disagree, like we are now.

Tell you what, Warner. Next time Jon calls you or anybody a Nazi-something, you'll have to get in line to call him out on it, because I'll be there ahead of you. But it's not a realistic notion, because Jon has such a treasure trove of words at his command that he's unlikely to ever stoop to such a simplistic reference as "Nazi-something."

Why throw a hamburger when you've got a good sirloin in the fridge?

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It's not much of a standard if only "Nazi-somethings" are eschewed, is it? Still, we are wasting time on this thread going on about things that have nothing to do with the original topic and we should probably just move on. I think I hate digressions more than name calling! LOL Stinking Nazi-digressors, they are.

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The usual suspects on here, myself, Aubrey, Susan, Jeff, Max, Warner etc, we all tend to fall to the right or the left. It's not particularly imbalanced in regards to us. The more casual users and contributors on the site however, do trend, slightly, to the left, which is natural. PolicyMic is based in NYC and primarily the users are young people around college age. But it is far more centrist than it appears, and even the people here who tend to the left still are fairly pragmatic about their politics, and when exposed to a right leaning viewpoint that isn't polemical, they're receptive

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Ethan ~

Thanks. I was wondering where the Policymic Secret Lair was located.

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Gee, look at the crap I started by answering Warner in kind.

Starting a new article based on fracking vs alternatives. Looks interesting right now.

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You turn your back for one minute around here and look what happens.

This new method doesn't involve angels, does it?

You should check out the article on PM about the mega-quarry. Same issue: groundwater.

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Whoa, we're speaking re EPA-verified fracking-related groundwater poisoning in a Wyoming community. Relax with the Tea Party agenda, and consider the disaster for these people. Their health is threatened and their real estate is now worth nothing. The brakes need to be put on this dangerous industry

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2 Replies

  • Warner Todd Huston 5 months ago And you are taking at face value th...

And you are taking at face value the EPA's claims when few other sources agree with them.

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  • Rick Collins 5 months ago Many other sources agree with EPA. ...

Many other sources agree with EPA. And those that disagree have a financial stake in continuing unrestained fracking.

Until we are all comfortable with info that fracking is safe, the stakes are too high to wing it so profiteers can profit.

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"most left-wing, most anti-business, most anti-capitalist, most big-government, most extreme iteration of the agency ever seen"

Do you know of any objective studies contradicting any results published by the EPA? The EPA is not responsible for the anecdotal reports mentioned in this article. Nor has it proposed a ban on fracking.

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Amazing piece, Ben. I heard a great segment on NPR about the EPA's findings and agree with you that this report is evidence that we need to stop fracking until we can minimize the environmental risks.

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  • Rick Collins 5 months ago Amazing that it is acceptable that ...

Amazing that it is acceptable that the chemicals injected into our ground be considered a "trade secret"....how the hell is this allowed???

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