Updated: New Report: Reckless Endangerment while Fracking the Eagle Ford Shale

by TXsharon on September 19, 2013

in Eagle Ford Shale, health

Regulators evacuate from dangerous levels of pollution, residents left trapped

Washington, DC – A new report released today, September 19th, provides an important window into a disturbing national pattern regarding the oversight of fracking-enabled oil and gas development: regulators, charged with protecting the public, are actively avoiding evidence that fracking is harming the public. The report focuses on Karnes County, TX in an attempt to illuminate a growing national pattern of absentee regulators.

“This isn’t living anymore. It’s just existing, and wondering what you are going to breathe in next,” said impacted Eagle Ford Shale resident Mike Cerny in his interview with the report author.

Reckless Endangerment while Fracking the Eagle Ford Shale:
Government Fails, Public Health Suffers and Industry Profits from the Shale Oil Boom

reckless_endangermentREPORT MATERIALS:

From the report SUMMARY (7 pages)
In an unprecedented investigation of oil and gas operations and government oversight in Texas’s Eagle Ford Shale, Earthworks reports a toxic mix of irresponsible industry operators, negligent regulators, and the families who suffer the consequences. Specifically, Reckless Endangerment while Fracking the Eagle Ford, reveals:

      • Residents faced with industry pollution desperate for help,
      • Regulators documented pollution so dangerous that they evacuated,
      • Regulators took no recorded action to protect or warn residents, nor penalize polluting companies; and
      • Residents are still living with the dangerous air pollution including cancer-causing toxics like benzene.

Oil and gas operations in shale formations release chemicals to air, water, and soil that are hazardous to human health.

Government shares the blame for these releases because rules governing oil and gas development don’t protect the public. Adding insult to injury, state regulators don’t reliably enforce these rules. By failing to deter reckless operator behavior, regulators practically condone it, thereby increasing health risks for residents living near oil and gas development.

Media:

No penalties for chronic polluter in Eagle Ford — report
Mike Lee, E&E reporter
Published: Thursday, September 19, 2013

Report Slams Eagle Ford Shale Regulators for Health Hazards, Lax Oversight
September 19, 2013
By Mary Tuma

UPDATED: Air Pollution from Fracking in Eagle Ford Shale Threatens Health, Report Claims
by Forrest Wilder Published on Thursday, September 19, 2013

Watchdog group says public may be at risk living in Eagle Ford Shale area
by Joe Conger / KENS 5
Posted on September 19, 2013

Environment News Service
Air Pollution Destroys Health of Texas Fracking Communities
Sharon Guynup
September 20, 2013 (ENS)

TCEQ Responds: (links provided by me)

In a statement, TCEQ said it had collected “several millions of data points for volatile organic compounds” in the Barnett and Eagle Ford Shale plays. ”Overall, the monitoring data provide evidence that shale play activity does not significantly impact air quality or pose a threat to human health.”

TCEQ criticized Earthworks’ account as incomplete. “[T]heir report does not point out that Marathon personnel were contacted and made aware of the [TCEQ] team’s findings” and the leaking valve was fixed the same day, an agency statement said. TCEQ did not address why its inspectors apparently did not notify nearby residents or take canister samples.

Note: Video taken at the Marathon Sugarhorn facility shows an ongoing pattern of emissions from June 2012 through March 2013. This is clearly not a one-time event or a minor problem.

Earthworks’ Response:

TCEQ’s nondenial confirms our reports findings.

TCEQ isn’t responsible for making sure the oil and gas industry doesn’t poison our air or water “overall”, they’re responsible for making sure it isn’t poisoned, period.

That TCEQ apparently thinks “but we told the polluter about the problem” is an adequate regulatory response tells you all you need to know about how they prioritize Texans’ health vs oil industry profits.

Texas is sadly accustomed to being taken to the woodshed regarding indifference to oil and gas production’s environmental and health impacts. But this problem isn’t unique to Texas. Across the country, the US EPA is ignoring its own data about fracking’s health impacts, too. It’s no wonder communities across the country are passing ballot initiatives banning fracking-enabled oil and gas development.

{ 3 comments… read them below or add one }

Tim Ruggiero September 21, 2013 at 8:48 pm

The TCEQ is almost as useless as the TRRC. So Marathon fixed one single leaking valve and that’s what their hanging their hat on? And how exactly can they reach any conclusion on air quality when they aren’t actually testing the air, much more criticize EW data as being ‘incomplete’?

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TXsharon September 21, 2013 at 11:16 pm

My best guess would be hubris.

Reply

Anymous September 22, 2013 at 7:10 pm

Both of these Tx. Agencies are worthless as tits on a bore hog!, ha.

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