‘Conclusive Link’ Between Fracking, Aquifer Contamination Found In Texas
Source: www.commondreams.org | Original Post Date: June 6, 2014 -
Written by Jon Queally of www.commondreams.org
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License.
Scientists say water samples from Texas man’s well show identical chemical signatures from nearby gas drilling operations.
Independent scientists who have reviewed a
water analysis conducted by state authorities of a Texas resident’s
drinking well say the chemical signatures found in the water may provide
“the nation’s first conclusive link” between fracking operations and aquifer contamination.
Though a state investigation—conducted by the
Texas Railroad Commission in response to an official complaint filed by
landowner and Parker County resident Steve Lipsky—said it found the
chemical analysis of the water inconclusive, experts shown the results
say the commission was simply wrong. “And not just by a little,” reports
local ABC-affiliate WFAA News who shared the results with several scientists, “but by a lot.”
Lipsky said he has long believed that nearby
hydraulic fracturing by the Range Resources company was to blame for the
increasing amounts of methane and other chemicals in his drinking
water. Since 2010, he says, growing amounts of methane have been seeping
into the groundwater beneath his land – enough of it so that he can
literally light the water coming out of his well on fire.
Range Resources says there is no connection
between the methane in Lipsky’s well and their drilling, but scientists
shown the results from the water analysis—specifically one called an
isotopic analysis—say the chemical composition shows they are an exact
match to the gas being fracked at two nearby drilling sites—called
Butler and the Teal—within the Barnett Shale deposit.
“The methane and ethane numbers from the
Butler and Teal production are essentially exactly the same as from
Lipsky’s water well,” said earth scientist Geoffrey Thyne of Wyoming,
who reviewed the data for WFAA. “It tells me that the gas is the same, and that the gas in Lipsky’s water well was derived from the Barnett formation.”
And soil scientist Bryce Payne of
Pennsylvania—who himself conducted testing Lipsky’s water in 2013—agreed
with that assessment and told WFAA the gas in Lipsky’s water (referred
to in the state’s report as “well number 8″) is clearly the result of
fracking operations.
“The gas from well number 8 is coming from the Barnett and it’s coming nearly straight from the Barnett,” Payne said.
Thyne and Payne separately told WFAA that
they believe the test results could represent the nation’s first
conclusive link between fracking and aquifer contamination, even if the
state commission has so far refused to acknowledge the weight of the
evidence.
“What we seem to have here is the first good example that that, in fact, is happening,” said Thyne.
Watch the entire WFAA report as it aired for local Texas residents on Thursday night:
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