New report on the threats to drinking water from hydraulic fracturing

Amy Mall, Senior Policy Analyst, NRDC, Boulder, Colorado
Posted on Monday 25th January 2010

Our colleagues at the Environmental Working Group today released a new report on some of the chemicals used in hydraulic fracturing fluids. EWG concludes that companies that drill for natural gas and oil are skirting federal law by using petroleum distillates in hydraulic fracturing fluids. "These distillates include kerosene, mineral spirits and a number of other petroleum products that often contain high levels of benzene, a known human carcinogen that is toxic in water at minuscule levels."

According to EWG, the petroleum distillates used in a single well could contain enough benzene to contaminate more than 100 billion gallons of drinking water to unsafe levels--more than 10 times as much water as the state of New York uses in a single day.

* * * This post originally appeared on NRDC's Switchboard.

Amy Mall serves as Senior Policy Analyst for Natural Resources Defense Council in Boulder, Colorado. NRDC is a non-profit organization dedicated to protecting the environment, people and animals. NRDC was founded in 1970 and is comprised of more than 300 lawyers, scientists and policy experts, with more than one million members and e-activists.

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