Fracking is once again in trouble. Scientists have found that what gets pumped into hydrocarbon-rich rock as part of the hydraulic fracture technique to release gas and oil trapped in underground reservoirs may not be entirely healthy.
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Environmental engineer William Stringfellow and colleagues at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the University of the Pacific told the American Chemical Society meeting in San Francisco that they scoured databases and reports to compile a list of the chemicals commonly used in fracking.
Such additives, which are necessary for the extraction process, include:
- acids to dissolve minerals and open up cracks in the rock;
- biocides to kill bacteria and prevent corrosion;
- gels and other agents to keep the fluid at the right level of viscosity at different temperatures;
- substances to prevent clays from swelling or shifting;
- distillates to reduce friction;
- acids to limit the precipitation of metal oxides.
Some of these compounds – for example, common salt, acetic acid and sodium carbonate – are routinely used in households worldwide.
But the researchers assembled a list of 190 of them, and considered their properties. For around one-third of them, there was very little data about health risks, and eight of them were toxic to mammals.
Industrial secrecy prohibits full disclosure
Fracking is a highly controversial technique, and has not been handed a clean bill of health by the scientific societies.
Seismologists have warned that such operations could possibly trigger earthquakes, and endocrinologists have warned that some of the chemicals used are known hormone-disruptors, and likely therefore to represent a health hazard if they get into well water.
Industry operators have countered that their techniques are safe, and involve innocent compounds frequently used, for instance, in making processed food and even ice-cream.
But the precise cocktail of chemicals used by each operator is often an industrial secret, and the North Carolina legislature even considered a bill that would make it a felony to disclose details of the fracking fluid mixtures.
So the Lawrence Berkeley team began their research in the hope of settling some aspects of the dispute.
Continue reading at ENN affiliate, The Ecologist.
Drilling image via Shutterstock.