Tag Archives: conservation

Homemade Kitchen ‘Scrubbies’ From Mesh Plastic Bags

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Homemade Kitchen ‘Scrubbies’ From Mesh Plastic Bags

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How We Can (Really) Fix Our Crappy Economy

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How We Can (Really) Fix Our Crappy Economy

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Colorado frackers paying tiny fines for keeping chemicals secret

Colorado frackers paying tiny fines for keeping chemicals secret

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What exactly are Colorado frackers pumping into the soil? They’re supposed to be telling us.

One of the few things that frackers need to do when they operate in fracker-friendly Colorado is post information about some of the chemicals they pump into the ground. But even that seems too hard for the industry.

Following press reports that Colorado frackers were failing to report their chemicals as required on the FracFocus website, the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission warned companies it would begin actively enforcing its rules in the summer.

Since then, 11 companies have been cited for failing to disclose their chemicals on the website. From EnergyWire:

Seven of the companies have agreed to settle the cases with $1,000 fines, and commission staff is still negotiating with one of the companies. Two cases have been continued to December, and one case, against Marathon Oil Corp., has been set for a contested hearing at the commission’s Oct. 28 meeting in the eastern Colorado city of Limon. …

Bruce Baizel, director of Earthworks’ Oil & Gas Accountability Project, said he’s glad to see the state following through on its promise of more diligent enforcement.

But he said it showed that industry groups “should be spending more on educating members about compliance with regulatory requirements and less on fighting residents over drilling in backyards.”

So frackers in Colorado have paid a total of $7,000 in fines so far. Meanwhile, they’ve spent $606,000 fighting anti-fracking ballot initiatives in four Colorado cities.


Source
Hydraulic fracturing: Colo. starts levying fines for late FracFocus reports, EnergyWire

John Upton is a science fan and green news boffin who tweets, posts articles to Facebook, and blogs about ecology. He welcomes reader questions, tips, and incoherent rants: johnupton@gmail.com.

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Colorado frackers paying tiny fines for keeping chemicals secret

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Top 10 Apps For Climate Activists

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Top 10 Apps For Climate Activists

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Lawmakers seek answers after oil gushes during Colorado floods

Lawmakers seek answers after oil gushes during Colorado floods

JohnGiez

It can be easier to tell what Colorado’s floods washed away than what they left behind.

More than 60,000 gallons of oil and other petrochemical-laced fluids are now confirmed to have been spilled from fracking operations during recent floods in Colorado — and two congressmembers are calling for a hearing into the toxic eruption.

State oil officials have been doing their best to track oil spills and equipment leaks amid floods that killed eight and destroyed 1,800 homes. In an update published Monday [PDF], the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission said it is tracking 14 “notable” oil spills that released an estimated 44,000 gallons. It is also monitoring 12 leaks of “produced” water —  an estimated 17,000 gallons of water polluted with oil and gas residue from fracking operations.

Rep. Jared Polis (D-Colo.) and Rep. Peter DeFazio (D-Ore.), the ranking Democrat on the House Natural Resources Committee, think that’s pretty effing disturbing. They sent a letter [PDF] last week to committee chair Doc Hastings (R-Wash.) asking him to schedule a hearing into the effects of leaks from Colorado’s fracking sector during the floods:

As Congress continues to consider policies to expand domestic oil and gas production, we would benefit from learning more about how disasters like this can impact local communities, states, and federal regulators. We respectfully request that you hold a committee hearing as soon as possible so that we may fully understand the potential grave consequences resulting from this flood.

We believe that the Committee and Congress would benefit from hearing firsthand accounts from local elected officials, the COGCC, EPA response team members, experts in oil and gas technology and innovation, and conservation advocates.

“Congress must deal with this issue to ensure that natural disasters do not also become public health disasters,” Polis said in a statement. “Not only have my constituents been dealing with damage to their homes, schools, and roads, they are increasingly concerned about the toxic spills that have occurred from the flooding of nearly 1,900 fracking wells in Colorado.”

John Upton is a science fan and green news boffin who tweets, posts articles to Facebook, and blogs about ecology. He welcomes reader questions, tips, and incoherent rants: johnupton@gmail.com.Find this article interesting? Donate now to support our work.Read more: Climate & Energy

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Lawmakers seek answers after oil gushes during Colorado floods

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Sunday Routine | Cristián Samper: A Break From the Wildlife, With Family

On weekends, Cristián Samper, president of the Wildlife Conservation Society, relishes downtime with his wife and two children. Continued:   Sunday Routine | Cristián Samper: A Break From the Wildlife, With Family ; ;Related ArticlesVestas Joins With Mitsubishi for Offshore TurbinesThe Texas Tribune: It’s Not the Rare Birds They Mind So Much. It’s the Watchdogs.Dot Earth Blog: Climate Panel’s Fifth Report Clarifies Humanity’s Choices ;

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Sunday Routine | Cristián Samper: A Break From the Wildlife, With Family

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11 Clever Uses for Bubble Wrap

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11 Clever Uses for Bubble Wrap

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China’s Basketball Giant Again Presses Case for Elephant Conservation

A basketball giant revisits an orphanage for tiny victims of the ivory trade. View this article: China’s Basketball Giant Again Presses Case for Elephant Conservation ; ;Related ArticlesDot Earth Blog: China’s Basketball Giant Again Presses Case for Elephant ConservationWill Hurricane Lull Blunt Coastal Shifts?Hopefully, Hurricane Lull Won’t Blunt Coastal Shifts ;

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China’s Basketball Giant Again Presses Case for Elephant Conservation

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The Texas Tribune: Texas, Where Oil Rules, Turns Its Eye to Energy Efficiency

A diverse coalition is racing to institute a plan to increase energy and water efficiency upgrades that supporters say could help Texas improve its conservation record. Excerpt from:   The Texas Tribune: Texas, Where Oil Rules, Turns Its Eye to Energy Efficiency ; ;Related ArticlesU.S. Revives Aid Program for Clean EnergyMisgivings About How a Weed Killer Affects the SoilMagazine: Into the Wildfire ;

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The Texas Tribune: Texas, Where Oil Rules, Turns Its Eye to Energy Efficiency

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Oil and fracking chemicals spill into Colorado’s floodwaters

Oil and fracking chemicals spill into Colorado’s floodwaters

TXsharon

Fracking equipment overwhelmed by floodwaters in Weld County, Colo, northeast of Denver.

Heavy rains returned to Colorado on Sunday and hampered rescue efforts after last week’s flash floods. The confirmed death toll has risen to seven, and hundreds are still unaccounted for. An estimated 1,500 homes are destroyed. Some 1,000 people in Larimer County, north of Boulder, were awaiting airlifts that never came on Sunday — they were called off because of the foul weather.

The floods have also triggered other problems that have gotten a lot less media attention: Fracking infrastructure has been inundated and its toxic contents have spilled out. Pipelines that transport fossil fuels are sagging and snapping under pressure. Tanks that store chemicals and polluted water are being overwhelmed and toppling over. Oil and gas wells are flooding.

The Boulder Daily Camera reports:

Lafayette-based anti-fracking activist Cliff Willmeng said he spent two days “zig-zagging” across Weld and Boulder counties documenting flooded drilling sites, mostly along the drainageway of the St. Vrain River. He observed “hundreds” of wells that were inundated. He also saw many condensate tanks that hold waste material from fracking at odd angles or even overturned.

“It’s clear that the density of the oil and gas activity there did not respect where the water would go,” Willmeng said. “What we immediately need to know is what is leaking and we need a full detailed report of what that is. This is washing across agricultural land and into the waterways. Now we have to discuss what type of exposure the human population is going to have to suffer through.” …

A spokesman for the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission said the agency is aware of the potential for contamination from flooded drilling sites, but there simply is no way to get to those sites while flooding is ongoing and while resources are concentrated on saving lives.

The Denver Post interviewed a farmer who ignored evacuation orders and watched as floodwaters overwhelmed a drilling operation on his land and released some oil. The newspaper also reported that at least one oil pipeline was confirmed to have been broken open by the floodwaters. From the article:

Oil drums, tanks and other industrial debris mixed into the swollen [South Platte River] flowing northeast. …

One pipeline has broken and is leaking, Weld County Emergency Manager Roy Rudisill. Other industry pipelines are sagging as saturated sediment erodes around the expanding river.

East Boulder County United, a group that fights fracking, has been posting photographs on its Facebook page of fracking tanks and other equipment toppled over or submerged by floodwaters. Blogger TXsharon has also been posting updates and photographs.

Meanwhile, experts are beginning to discuss the links between climate change and the floods. The flooding was worsened by drought and wildfires, both of which have been linked to global warming and which left the ground dry and hard. That reduced the amount of water that the soil could absorb from the unusual late-summer inundation.

“This was a totally new type of event: an early fall widespread event during one of the driest months of the year,” Brad Udall of the University of Colorado-Boulder told National Geographic News. “As the climate warms further, the hydrologic cycle is going to get more intense.”

Climate Central notes that it “will take climate scientists many months to complete studies into whether manmade global warming made the Boulder flood more likely.” But the wild weather hitting the state lately fits general climate change projections:

An increase in the frequency and intensity of extreme precipitation events is expected to take place even though annual precipitation amounts are projected to decrease in the Southwest. Colorado sits right along the dividing line between the areas where average annual precipitation is expected to increase, and the region that is expected to become drier as a result of climate change.

That may translate into more frequent, sharp swings between drought and flood, as has recently been the case. Last year, after all, was Colorado’s second-driest on record, with the warmest spring and warmest summer on record, leading to an intense drought that is only just easing.

Might the fracking industry have worsened Colorado’s floods by contributing to climate change, then spilled its toxic chemicals into those floodwaters? That would be a cruel double-punch.

John Upton is a science fan and green news boffin who tweets, posts articles to Facebook, and blogs about ecology. He welcomes reader questions, tips, and incoherent rants: johnupton@gmail.com.Find this article interesting? Donate now to support our work.Read more: Business & Technology

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Oil and fracking chemicals spill into Colorado’s floodwaters

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