News:

FORUM HAS BEEN UPGRADED  - if you have trouble logging in, please tap/click "home"  and try again. Hopefully this upgrade addresses recent server issues.  Thank you for your patience. Forum Manager

MESSAGE ABOUT WEBSITE REGISTRATIONS
http://mahoningvalley.info/forum/index.php?topic=8677

Main Menu

Study: Fracking fluids destroyed WV forest

Started by irishbobcat, July 11, 2011, 05:10:27 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

sfc_oliver

<<<)) Sergeant First Class,  US Army, Retired((>>>

Rick Rowlands

Note how a the language is misused here.  Applying the fluid to a 1/4 acre section of land as a test is being called "destroyed WV forest". 

irishbobcat

#3
Surface spills and gas well blowouts do occur at the surface......

Why?Town

Well I guess it's a good thing that the frakers are injecting this stuff 1000s of feet underground and not applying it to the surface.

irishbobcat

And to believe their are nitwits in this area who support fracking and want this to happen in our backyard!

JUST SAY NO TO FRACKING!!!!!


Study: Fracking fluids destroyed WV forest
By Ed Brayton | 07.11.11 | 7:49 am
1 CommentShare15A new study by a U.S. Forest Service researcher found that the application of hydrofracking wastewater to a forest in West Virginia did enormous damage to the forest ecosystem, killing all ground plants and many trees.

Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility reports on the study's findings:

She looked at the effects of land application of fracking fluids on a quarter-acre section of the Fernow Experimental Forest within the Monongahela National Forest. More than 75,000 gallons of fracking fluids, which are injected deep underground to free shale gas and then return to the surface, were applied to the assigned plot over a two day period during June 2008. The following effects were reported in the study:

Within two days all ground plants were dead;
Within 10 days, leaves of trees began to turn brown. Within two years more than half of the approximately 150 trees were dead; and
"Surface soil concentrations of sodium and chloride increased 50-fold as a result of the land application of hydrofracturing fluids..." These elevated levels eventually declined as chemical leached off-site. The exact chemical composition of these fluids is not known because the chemical formula is classified as confidential proprietary information.
"The explosion of shale gas drilling in the East has the potential to turn large stretches of public lands into lifeless moonscapes," stated PEER Executive Director Jeff Ruch, noting that land disposal of fracking fluids is common and in the case of the Fernow was done pursuant to a state permit. "This study suggests that these fluids should be treated as toxic waste."

Though this was a legal discharge under WV regulations, most fracking wastewater is not disposed of in this way; it is typically either held in holding ponds (the picture at the top of this file is one such pond) or injected into deep wells to keep it away from surface waters. But the study does illustrate what would happen if there was an accidental spill or if one of those holding ponds leaked into the ground or burst and flowed into surface waters.