VIDEO: "Chemicals in Natural Gas Operations"- 
http://www.endocrinedisruption.com/chemicals.videoplayer.php   
 
(To order a DVD copy free of charge, visit 
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Chemicals in Natural Gas Operations
Theo Colborn, Ph.D.

 
Introduction: 
 
As natural gas production rapidly increases across the U.S., its associated 
pollution has reached the stage where it is contaminating essential life 
support systems - water, air, and soil - and causing harm to the health of 
humans, wildlife, domestic animals, and vegetation. This project was designed 
to explore the health effects of products and chemicals used in drilling, 
fracturing (frac’ing, or stimulation), recovery and delivery of natural gas. It 
provides a glimpse at the pattern(s) of possible health hazards posed by the 
chemicals being used. There are hundreds of products in current use, the 
components of which are, in many cases, unavailable for public scrutiny and for 
which we have information only on a small percentage. We therefore make no 
claim that our list is complete. 
 
Toxic chemicals are used at every stage of development to reach and release the 
gas. Drilling muds, a combination of toxic and non-toxic substances, are used 
to drill the well. To facilitate the release of natural gas after drilling, 
approximately a million or more gallons of fluids, loaded with toxic chemicals, 
are injected underground under high pressure. This process, called fracturing 
(frac’ing or stimulation), uses diesel-powered heavy equipment that runs 
continuously during the operation. One well can be frac’ed 10 or more times and 
there can be up to 28 wells on one well pad. An estimated 30% to 70% of the 
frac’ing fluid will resurface, bringing back with it toxic substances that are 
naturally present in underground oil and gas deposits, as well as the chemicals 
used in the frac’ing fluid. Under some circumstances, nothing is recovered. 
 
Drilling or reserve pits are found on most well pads. They hold used drilling 
muds, frac’ing fluids and the contaminated water (produced water) which 
surfaces with the gas. Produced water is found in most regions where gas is 
extracted and continues to surface for the life of the well (20 to 30 years). 
It is a common practice to haul it in "water trucks" to large, central 
evaporation pits. Many of the chemicals found in drilling and evaporation pits 
are considered hazardous wastes by the Superfund Comprehensive Environmental 
Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA). Upon closure, every pit has 
the potential to become a superfund site. 
 
Potable and arable water resources in the West are already marginal and 
especially vulnerable to contamination. Mountain watersheds that provide 
drinking and irrigation water for vast numbers of people downstream are at risk 
of contamination as a result of the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) leasing of 
hundreds of thousands of acres of underground mineral and gas resources to 
energy developers. Just as there is no accounting for what happens to the 
millions of gallons of fluids used to drill and fracture each well, there is no 
accounting for the source of the water being taken to complete these processes, 
how much of the fluid is water, and where and in what condition it is returned 
to the watershed. 
 
In addition to the land and water contamination issues, at each stage of 
production and delivery, tons of toxic volatile compounds, including benzene, 
toluene, ethylbenzene, xylene, etc., and fugitive natural gas (methane), escape 
and mix with nitrogen oxides from the exhaust of diesel-driven, mobile and 
stationary equipment to produce ground-level ozone. Ozone combined with 
particulate matter less than 2.5 microns produces smog (haze). Gas field 
produced ozone has created a serious air pollution problem similar to that 
found in large urban areas, and can spread up to 200 miles beyond the immediate 
region where gas is being produced. Ozone not only causes irreversible damage 
to the lungs, it is equally damaging to conifers, aspen, forage, alfalfa, and 
other crops commonly grown in the West. Adding to this is the dust created by 
fleets of diesel-driven water trucks working around the clock hauling the 
constantly accumulating condensate water from well
 pads to central evaporation pits. 
 
All meaningful environmental oversight and regulation of the natural gas 
production was removed by the executive branch and Congress in the 2005 Federal 
Energy Appropriations Bill. Without restraints from the Clean Water Act, Safe 
Drinking Water Act, Clean Air Act, and CERCLA, the gas industry is steamrolling 
over vast land segments in the West. Exploitation is so rapid that in less than 
6 months in one county, 10 new well pads were built on the banks of the 
Colorado River, the source of agricultural and drinking water for 25 million 
people downstream. Spacing has dropped from one well pad per 240 acres to one 
per 10 acres. From the air it appears as a spreading, cancer-like network of 
dirt roads over vast acreage, contributing to desertification.
 
 


      
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