Current:Home > ScamsEPA Finding on Fracking’s Water Pollution Disputed by Its Own Scientists -Infinite Edge Capital
EPA Finding on Fracking’s Water Pollution Disputed by Its Own Scientists
View
Date:2025-04-28 08:39:12
An Environmental Protection Agency panel of independent scientific advisers has challenged core conclusions of a major study the agency issued in June that minimized the potential risks to drinking water from hydraulic fracturing.
The panel, known as the Science Advisory Board (SAB), particularly criticized the EPA’s central finding that fracking has not led to “to widespread, systemic impacts on drinking water resources in the United States.” The oil and gas industry has seized on the conclusion to argue that broad concerns about fracking’s impact on drinking water are overblown.
The SAB’s 30 members, from academia, industry and federal agencies, said this and other conclusions drawn in the executive summary were ambiguous or inconsistent “with the observations/data presented in the body of the report.”
“Of particular concern is the statement of no widespread, systemic impacts on drinking-water resources,” the SAB wrote in a preliminary report. “Neither the system of interest nor the definitions of widespread, systemic or impact are clear and it is not clear how this statement reflects the uncertainties and data limitations described in the Report’s chapters.”
The panel said that the EPA erred by not focusing more on the local consequences of hydraulic fracturing. “Potential impacts on drinking-water resources are site specific, and the importance of local impacts needs more emphasis in the Report. While national-level generalizations are desirable, these generalizations must be cautiously made…A conclusion made for one site may not apply to another site.”
The EPA also should have discussed in far greater depth its own investigations into residents’ complaints of water contamination in Dimock, Pa., Parker County, Texas and Pavillion, Wyo., the panel said. In each case, EPA scientists and consultants found early evidence of contamination but the agency ended the investigations before further monitoring or testing could be done.
The SAB’s assessment is part of the peer review of the nearly 1,000-page draft assessment issued by the EPA to address public fears about the possible effects of fracking on drinking water.
The SAB conducted meetings over several days in Washington, D.C. in late October to gather public comment on the EPA draft study. The SAB’s preliminary report for detailing its concerns was released in early November. It plans to continue discussion during a four-hour long teleconference on December 3. The panel lacks the authority to compel changes to the report and can only issue recommendations to the EPA.
Launched five years ago at the behest of Congress, the water study was supposed to provide critical information about the production method’s safety “so that the American people can be confident that their drinking water is pure and uncontaminated,” said a top EPA official at a 2011 hearing.
But the report was delayed repeatedly, largely because the EPA failed to nail down a key component: the prospective, or baseline, sampling of water before, during and after fracking. Such data would have allowed EPA researchers to gauge whether fracking affects water quality over time, and to provide best industry practices that protect drinking water.
EPA had planned to conduct such research, but its efforts were stymied by oil and gas companies’ unwillingness to allow EPA scientists to monitor their activities, and by an Obama White House unwilling to expend political capital to push the industry, an InsideClimate News report from March showed.
Still, the EPA report determined for the first time that fracking had fouled drinking water. The finding was a notable reversal for the Obama administration, which, like its predecessors, had long insisted that fracking did not pose a threat to drinking water.
The EPA report confirmed that there were “specific instances” when fracking “led to impacts on drinking water resources, including contamination of drinking water wells.”
The SAB plans to issue its draft recommendations in January 2016 and the final report in late spring, according to David Dzombak, the panel’s chairman and head of the department of civil and environmental engineering at Carnegie Mellon University. While the EPA is not obligated to act on the SAB’s recommendations, Dzombak said, the agency’s office usually sends a letter of response.
veryGood! (66)
Related
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- Proof Below Deck's Fraser Olender Might Be Dating a Charter Guest After Season 11 Kiss
- Sports Illustrated Union files lawsuit over mass layoffs, alleges union busting
- One Life to Live Actress Amanda Davies Dead at 42
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Australia, Italy and others halt funding to U.N. agency over claim staff involved in Hamas attack on Israel
- France’s president gets a ceremonial welcome as he starts a 2-day state visit to Sweden
- ‘Expats,’ starring Nicole Kidman, was filmed in Hong Kong, but you can’t watch it there
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- After Alabama pioneers nitrogen gas execution, Ohio may be poised to follow
Ranking
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Kourtney Kardashian posts first look at new baby: See the photo
- London police fatally shoot a suspect reportedly armed with a crossbow as he broke into a home
- Look what the Chiefs made airlines do: New flight numbers offered for Super Bowl
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Haiti cracks down on heavily armed environmental agents after clashes with police
- Connecticut still No. 1, but top 10 of the USA TODAY Sports men's basketball poll is shuffled
- What is Tower 22, the military base that was attacked in Jordan where 3 US troops were killed?
Recommendation
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
Super Bowl winners and scores: All-time results for every NFL championship game
Better Call Saul's Bob Odenkirk Shocked to Learn He's Related to King Charles III
When a white supremacist threatened an Iraqi DEI coordinator in Maine, he fled the state
Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
Thailand may deport visiting dissident rock band that criticized war in Ukraine back to Russia
In gridlocked Congress, unlikely issue of cellphones in schools forges bipartisan bonds
Highlights from the 2024 Sundance Film Festival