Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Fracking fears: dead livestock

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Fracking fears: dead livestock

    more bad publicity


    Livestock falling ill in fracking regions


    Jacki Schilke
    This cow on Jacki Schilke's ranch in northeast North Dakota lost most of its tail, one of many ailments that afflicted her cattle after hydrofracturing, or fracking, began in the nearby Bakken Shale.

    By Elizabeth Royte
    Food & Environment Reporting Network

    In the midst of the domestic energy boom, livestock on farms near oil- and gas-drilling operations nationwide have been quietly falling sick and dying. While scientists have yet to isolate cause and effect, many suspect chemicals used in drilling and hydrofracking (or “fracking”) operations are poisoning animals through the air, water or soil.

    Earlier this year, Michelle Bamberger, an Ithaca, N.Y., veterinarian, and Robert Oswald, a professor of molecular medicine at Cornell’s College of Veterinary Medicine, published the first and only peer-reviewed report to suggest a link between fracking and illness in food animals.

    The authors compiled 24 case studies of farmers in six shale-gas states whose livestock experienced neurological, reproductive and acute gastrointestinal problems after being exposed — either accidentally or incidentally — to fracking chemicals in the water or air. The article, published in “New Solutions: A Journal of Environmental and Occupational Health,” describes how scores of animals died over the course of several years. Fracking industry proponents challenged the study, since the authors neither identified the farmers nor ran controlled experiments to determine how specific fracking compounds might affect livestock.

    The death toll is insignificant when measured against the nation’s livestock population (some 97 million beef cattle go to market each year), but environmental advocates believe these animals constitute an early warning.

    Exposed livestock “are making their way into the food system, and it’s very worrisome to us,” Bamberger said. “They live in areas that have tested positive for air, water and soil contamination. Some of these chemicals could appear in milk and meat products made from these animals.”
    In Louisiana, 17 cows died after an hour’s exposure to spilled fracking fluid, which is injected miles underground to crack open and release pockets of natural gas. The most likely cause of death: respiratory failure.

    In New Mexico, hair testing of sick cattle that grazed near well pads found petroleum residues in 54 of 56 animals.

    In northern central Pennsylvania, 140 cattle were exposed to fracking wastewater when an impoundment was breached. Approximately 70 cows died, and the remainder produced only 11 calves, of which three survived.

    In western Pennsylvania, an overflowing wastewater pit sent fracking chemicals into a pond and a pasture where pregnant cows grazed: Half their calves were born dead. Dairy operators in shale-gas areas of Colorado, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Texas have also reported the death of goats exposed to fracking chemicals.

    Drilling and fracking a single well requires up to 7 million gallons of water, plus an additional 400,000 gallons of additives, including lubricants, biocides, scale- and rust-inhibitors, solvents, foaming and defoaming agents, emulsifiers and de-emulsifiers, stabilizers and breakers. At almost every stage of developing and operating an oil or gas well, chemicals and compounds can be introduced into the environment.

    Cows lose weight, die

    After drilling began just over the property line of Jacki Schilke’s ranch in the northwestern corner of North Dakota in 2009, in the heart of the state’s booming Bakken Shale, cattle began limping, with swollen legs and infections. Cows quit producing milk for their calves, they lost from 60 to 80 pounds in a week and their tails mysteriously dropped off. Eventually, five animals died, according to Schilke.

    Ambient air testing by a certified environmental consultant detected elevated levels of benzene, methane, chloroform, butane, propane, toluene and xylene -- and well testing revealed high levels of sulfates, chromium, chloride and strontium. Schilke says she moved her herd upwind and upstream from the nearest drill pad.

    Although her steers currently look healthy, she said, “I won’t sell them because I don’t know if they’re OK.”

    Nor does anyone else. Energy companies are exempt from key provisions of environmental laws, which makes it difficult for scientists and citizens to learn precisely what is in drilling and fracking fluids or airborne emissions. And without information on the interactions between these chemicals and pre-existing environmental chemicals, veterinarians can’t hope to pinpoint an animal’s cause of death.

    The risks to food safety may be even more difficult to parse, since different plants and animals take up different chemicals through different pathways.

    “There are a variety of organic compounds, metals and radioactive material (released in the fracking process) that are of human health concern when livestock meat or milk is ingested,” said Motoko Mukai, a veterinary toxicologist at Cornell’s College of Veterinary Medicine. These “compounds accumulate in the fat and are excreted into milk. Some compounds are persistent and do not get metabolized easily.”

    Veterinarians don’t know how long chemicals may remain in animals, farmers aren’t required to prove their livestock are free of contamination before middlemen purchase them and the Food Safety Inspection Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture isn’t looking for these compounds in carcasses at slaughterhouses.

    Documenting the scope of the problem is difficult: Scientists lack funding to study the matter, and rural vets remain silent for fear of retaliation. Farmers who receive royalty checks from energy companies are reluctant to complain, and those who have settled with gas companies following a spill or other accident are forbidden to disclose information to investigators. Some food producers would rather not know what’s going on, say ranchers and veterinarians.

    “It takes a long time to build up a herd’s reputation,” said rancher Dennis Bauste of Trenton Lake, N.D. “I’m gonna sell my calves and I don’t want them to be labeled as tainted. Besides, I wouldn’t know what to test for. Until there’s a big wipeout, a major problem, we’re not gonna hear much about this.”

    Fracking proponents criticize Bamberger and Oswald’s paper as a political, not a scientific, document. “They used anonymous sources, so no one can verify what they said,” said Steve Everley, of the industry lobby group Energy In Depth. The authors didn’t provide a scientific assessment of impacts -- testing what specific chemicals might do to cows that ingest them, for example -- so treating their findings as scientific, he continues, “is laughable at best, and dangerous for public debate at worst.” Bamberger and Oswald acknowledge this lack of scientific assessment and blame it on the dearth of funding for fracking research and on the industry’s use of nondisclosure agreements.

    The National Cattlemen’s Beef Association, the main lobbying group for ranchers, takes no position on fracking, but some ranchers are beginning to speak out. “These are industry-supporting conservatives, not radicals,” said Amy Mall, a senior policy analyst with the environmental group, Natural Resources Defense Council. “They are the experts in their animals’ health, and they are very concerned.”

    Last March, Christopher Portier, director of the National Center for Environmental Health at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, called for studies of oil and gas production’s impact on food plants and animals. None is currently planned by the federal government.

    As local food booms, consumers wary

    But consumers intensely interested in where and how their food is grown aren’t waiting for hard data to tell them their meat or milk is safe. For them, the perception of pollution is just as bad as the real thing.

    “My beef sells itself. My farm is pristine. But a restaurant doesn’t want to visit and see a drill pad on the horizon,” said Ken Jaffe, who raises grass-fed cattle in upstate New York.

    Only recently has the local foods movement, in regions across the country, reached a critical mass. But the movement’s lofty ideals could turn out to be, in shale gas areas, a double-edged sword.

    Should the moratorium on hydrofracking in New York State be lifted, the 16,200-member Park Slope Food Co-op, in Brooklyn, will no longer buy food from farms anywhere near drilling operations -- a $4 million loss for upstate producers. The livelihood of organic goat farmer Steven Cleghorn, who’s surrounded by active wells in Pennsylvania, is already in jeopardy.

    “People at the farmers market are starting to ask exactly where this food comes from,” he said.

    This report was produced by the Food & Environment Reporting Network, an independent investigative journalism non-profit focusing on food, agriculture, and environmental health. A longer version of this story appears on TheNation.com.

    http://openchannel.nbcnews.com/_news...g-regions?lite







  • #2
    Re: Fracking fears: dead livestock

    This information does not surprise me. I remain unconvinced that fracking is a no risk energy source. I have read that operators on the ground, when questioned, do not know what chemicals they are injecting into the ground. Fracking needs to be far more heavily regulated than it currently is. If the ground water becomes contaminted you will not easily, if at all, be able to purify it.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Fracking fears: dead livestock

      What's wrong with dynamite?

      I lived through the PBB crisis in the midwest. We're not terribly smart.

      http://greatlakesecho.org/2010/06/04...0-years-later/

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Fracking fears: dead livestock

        Originally posted by DRumsfeld2000 View Post
        This information does not surprise me. I remain unconvinced that fracking is a no risk energy source. I have read that operators on the ground, when questioned, do not know what chemicals they are injecting into the ground. Fracking needs to be far more heavily regulated than it currently is. If the ground water becomes contaminted you will not easily, if at all, be able to purify it.
        I don't see how an aquifier could be decontaminated once such a disaster occurs.
        I wonder how deep these chemicals are being injected?

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Fracking fears: dead livestock

          I'm with the people on the surface. If they smell, taste crap in their water and there are wells near by. Heck, the oil company is probable (very probable) responsible.

          Lets take a look at what is going on here with fracking.

          When a well is drilled we are going through various layers laid by either God or evolutionary forces of mass transport.
          http://www.water.ca.gov/groundwater/...rated_zone.png

          Then we run sensors which measure the rock properties that we drilled through to generate logs. The squiggle lines,
          http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_XDhgYlcSKO.../s400/res1.jpg

          Here is an interpretation of such logs identifying the types of rock we drilled through. The ones we are interested in are sandstone layers (think beach sand). I am simplifying things here as there are other rock types that can store HC.
          http://www.spec2000.net/text128fp/dip12.jpg

          Then the well is completed to isolate each zone that may have fluids that flow from the others. Cement is used to do this. Here we see where the first interval was drilled, casing set, cemented and drilling started on the next interval. The cementing is very very important as the BP disaster has shown us in a HUGE way. Petroleum Industry KNOWS this and it is controlled.
          http://www.cementing.com.cn/Upload/F...0152813664.jpg

          Finally the well completion looks like this
          http://www.lanl.gov/science/NSS/issu...tap_illus1.jpg

          http://wewantcsg.com.au/file/well-se...aa05ab683c.jpg
          That cement MUST be good but it does degrade with YEARS. The Earth is shifting and this stuff is not rubber.

          Now when we want to frac a Zone.
          Hydraulic Fracking involves injecting a fluid into the formation under significant pressure that makes existing small fractures larger and creates new fractures.
          http://loga.la/haynesville-shale-new...ace-Casing.jpg

          Now when we Hydrofrack we are injecting frac fluids under huge pressures. We want to crack the rock 2000-3000 m under ground !!!!
          http://www.pioga.org/photo_images/177_large.jpg
          http://www.convertfromoiltogas.com/i...s_fracking.png
          This force may, I repeat may, result in the cement used to complete the well to crack and open up a conduit to zones ABOVE. This is one option if the cement job is weak or the pressures generate are too much for the cement.

          Another option is that we cause the fractures we generate to travel through layers above that which we are interests us may also occur.
          http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...-HydroFrac.png
          Another option is that there may be closed fractures in zones that were due to tectonic shifting. There is no easy way to detect these and how much of this is present. If they are there then we have a big problem.
          http://ars.els-cdn.com/content/image...001417-gr8.jpg
          The frac pressure we generate could open them and they may never close them again. Moving upward is in the direction of reduced resistence whence a preferred direction of flow.

          Which is it? God knows.
          Last edited by Shakespear; November 30, 2012, 01:36 PM.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Fracking fears: dead livestock

            Originally posted by Chomsky View Post

            Does this pic seem photoshopped to you?
            The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance - it is the illusion of knowledge ~D Boorstin

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Fracking fears: dead livestock

              It seems to me that the ground water and air will be already compromised by the presence of oil and gas in the ground. Oil and gas is already a mix of toxic chemicals. So the real question is how much more chemical is added and is this significant compared to existing hyrocarbons.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Fracking fears: dead livestock

                Originally posted by reggie View Post
                Does this pic seem photoshopped to you?

                looks ok to me.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Fracking fears: dead livestock

                  Originally posted by Shakespear View Post
                  I'm with the people on the surface. If they smell, taste crap in their water and there are wells near by. Heck, the oil company is probable (very probable) responsible.

                  And that in a nutshell is the problem with anecdotal evidence.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Fracking fears: dead livestock

                    Originally posted by metalman View Post
                    looks ok to me.
                    Awesome!

                    Guess we ALL better STOP eating Beef!!! Isn't that the underlying purpose of this article? Don't know yet, but I'm not afraid to ask & consider.

                    While I haven't done so yet, a thorough investigation of the non-profit behind this is in order before drawing conclusions, because propaganda is a tricky thing, especially in our current digital world.
                    The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance - it is the illusion of knowledge ~D Boorstin

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Fracking fears: dead livestock

                      Originally posted by Ken Jaffe View Post
                      ...“My beef sells itself. My farm is pristine. But a restaurant doesn’t want to visit and see a drill pad on the horizon,” said Ken Jaffe, who raises grass-fed cattle in upstate New York...

                      Chuckling to myself. What a bunch of hypocrites. Did those folks from the restaurant ride their bicycles out there to inspect that "pristine" cattle farm? Does this farmer deliver his beef that "sells itself" to NYC on-the-hoof (now that's one cattle drive I would love to see)? I wonder how those NY restaurants heat the water to wash their dishes and table linens? Didn't all that stainless steel equipment in their kitchens start life as minerals dug out of a mine somewhere using machinery run by...gasp...hydrocarbons? And the "fresh" fish they serve to their non-red-meat patrons...was that caught in the East River or flown in overnight from the Gulf Coast?

                      It's really quite simple folks. If you want to put a stop to oil and gas drilling
                      all you have to do is stop using the stuff.

                      Originally posted by Chomsky View Post
                      ...“People at the farmers market are starting to ask exactly where this food comes from,” he said...
                      Tell 'em it comes from China... ;-)

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Fracking fears: dead livestock

                        Originally posted by GRG55 View Post

                        Chuckling to myself. What a bunch of hypocrites. Did those folks from the restaurant ride their bicycles out there to inspect that "pristine" cattle farm? Does this farmer deliver his beef that "sells itself" to NYC on-the-hoof (now that's one cattle drive I would love to see)? I wonder how those NY restaurants heat the water to wash their dishes and table linens? Didn't all that stainless steel equipment in their kitchens start life as minerals dug out of a mine somewhere using machinery run by...gasp...hydrocarbons? And the "fresh" fish they serve to their non-red-meat patrons...was that caught in the East River or flown in overnight from the Gulf Coast?

                        It's really quite simple folks. If you want to put a stop to oil and gas drilling
                        all you have to do is stop using the stuff.
                        THANK you!

                        Be kinder than necessary because everyone you meet is fighting some kind of battle.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Fracking fears: dead livestock

                          Raz,
                          Around here-- SW of San Antonio, TX, the main gas strata is around 7,000 to 8,000 ft deep. For perspective, my water well is 500' and it's the third layer of water we hit as we drilled. The first two were clear and pure, but had too much salt. (This entire area was underwater for eons and gradually the land rose and the water receded to the present Gulf of Mexico.)
                          Previous oil wells ran around 5-7,000' mostly so the gas is being found just a little deeper. It varies somewhat. This is the Eagle Ford Shale play.
                          Water around here is usually from two sources--existing wells originally made for farm irrigation but sold to the gas companies instead or from new wells drilled. Usually, a well will be pumped over a few weeks' time to fill a large plastic-lined pond. With luck one pond can serve several gas wells by using temporary aluminum piping and auxillary pumps if needed. After fracking's done, the liner can be taken up and the pond bulldozed back to level land if the landowner prefers. Mostly, I'd expect they'll remain to provide livestock watering or wildlife habitat.
                          I was told a local commercial water company pulls from a 12,000' well, but I haven't confirmed that. It does have good water, though.
                          I have had my well water commercially tested before any drilling started in our area. Cost me a couple thousand but it's effectively an insurance policy. I do not expect to collect on the policy. I had no hydrocarbons when tested and have detected no effects after a couple of years of drilling and fracking within about a half mile of my well.
                          It seems a little scary when an article collects every true or alleged possible ill effect and puts it into one place. I read lots of allegations in Chomsky's find, but little proof. if my testing shows proof, I'll let you know. Don't hold your breath.
                          Meanwhile, I have personally been on a 3 hour pad tour of my local drilling operation and have been impressed by the professionalism and cleanliness of the operation. My daughter home-schools my grandchildren and we invited some more home-schoolers and all went over for a visit. I finally learned how the heck they make that turn to horizontal drilling.
                          Hope this helps. Stetts

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Fracking fears: dead livestock

                            Reggie,
                            Not sure, but in another life I was a dairy farmer in WI, milking a herd of 50 holsteins. Calving during winter was always a little dicey and on rare occasions I'd have an unexpected calving at night where the calf's tail would freeze. If that happened, it was likely it would lose the ear tips as well. Looked just like the photo. Just sayin'.
                            Meanwhile, I think Metalman's got it nailed.
                            Hope this helps. Stetts

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Fracking fears: dead livestock

                              Originally posted by GRG55 View Post

                              Chuckling to myself. What a bunch of hypocrites. Did those folks from the restaurant ride their bicycles out there to inspect that "pristine" cattle farm? Does this farmer deliver his beef that "sells itself" to NYC on-the-hoof (now that's one cattle drive I would love to see)? I wonder how those NY restaurants heat the water to wash their dishes and table linens? Didn't all that stainless steel equipment in their kitchens start life as minerals dug out of a mine somewhere using machinery run by...gasp...hydrocarbons? And the "fresh" fish they serve to their non-red-meat patrons...was that caught in the East River or flown in overnight from the Gulf Coast?

                              It's really quite simple folks. If you want to put a stop to oil and gas drilling
                              all you have to do is stop using the stuff.



                              Tell 'em it comes from China... ;-)

                              GRG55 --

                              I get your point completely - oh no, they have to see a drill pad! The optics are bad!

                              On the other hand, the issue of poisonous chemicals getting into groundwater and the rest of the environment (and food chain) is a legitimate concern. Perhaps people would "stop using the stuff" if the issue were made more pressing -- and "solutions" like fracking taken off the board a priori.

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X