Page added on January 6, 2012
Federal regulators are considering retesting water supplies at a small town in Pennsylvania that residents say have been contaminated by natural gas drilling.
Just a month after declaring water in Dimock safe, officials from the Environmental Protection Agency are taking another look after new evidence suggested that drinking water could be polluted worse than originally thought.
“EPA is considering next steps including conducting some samples of well water in the area,” the EPA told Reuters on Thursday, after receiving hundreds of pages of data from Dimock residents.
Federal officials have visited affected residents this week, some of whom have been without fresh drinking water since drilling by energy company Cabot Oil & Gas began three years ago.
About a dozen Dimock households are running out of water after state regulators said in November that Cabot could halt trucked deliveries of water to residents.
The last planned truck arranged by environmentalists arrived on Tuesday.
The EPA is conducting a national study on the impacts of the natural gas extraction technique called fracking, which involves injecting chemical-laced water and sand into wells to release gas in shale rock and which is widely used across Pennsylvania.
Environmentalists say fracking pollutes fresh water as fluids seep from drilling wells into aquifers and other supply sources. A recent EPA study showed that harmful chemicals from fracking fluids were likely present in a Wyoming aquifer near the town of Pavillion.
Industry denies that fracking, which is being done across the United States, poses a threat to drinking water.
4 Comments on "EPA may retest PA. water near fracking"
SilentRunning on Fri, 6th Jan 2012 2:14 pm
Nothing to see here – move along. The Frackers say that the water supplies are safe, so just believe them. Put your faith in Big Oil/Big Gas/Big Carbon. After all, why would huge corporate interests ever lie to you?
Kenz300 on Fri, 6th Jan 2012 4:16 pm
The Republicans in Congress want to end the EPA so that their corporate friends can make the profits and the taxpayers can worry about any clean up. Too bad it is not possible to clean up toxic ground water.
Felix on Fri, 6th Jan 2012 6:27 pm
I hope that we all can drink and eat money because there will be no water or food to eat in a near future.
MrBill on Fri, 6th Jan 2012 9:08 pm
I wonder, if frack’ns so safe, why does the industry need the “Cheney Rule” to hide behind so it does not have to disclose the contents of it’s fracking fluids?