Annapolis—As a state senate committee held hearings on a number of bills related to “hydraulic fracturing,” or “fracking,” Environment Maryland Director Tommy Landers issued this statement:
“We have already seen the many dangers of fracking in other states, especially nearby Pennsylvania. We think it’s important to look at the evidence before us, and we believe the evidence available today compels us to ban fracking in Maryland. This dirty drilling practice is simply more risky than it’s worth for our state.
We are at a critical fork in the road. As the state spends money on future energy infrastructure, we can either invest in more fossil fuel equipment that will only lead to more costly damage to our environment and public health, or we can invest in energy efficiency and truly clean, renewable energy that will help stabilize our energy costs over time, stabilize our climate, and clean up our air and water. We cannot afford to continue investing in dirty energy. Marylanders have said they agree with that. In a recent poll, 73% of Marylanders said they’d want any new power plant to use renewable energy, not more fossil fuels.
It’s important to look at the many costs that fracking would likely incur to the citizens of Maryland. Over the course of the entire fracking process, these are some of the many costs to society of fracking:
Drinking Water Contamination – In rural areas where fracking occurs, most residents rely on groundwater for household and agricultural use. If this water source is contaminated, it can take years, decades, or even centuries to clean naturally. It can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars to remove toxic contaminants from groundwater, so residents must use costly methods of water replacement such as potable water delivery, which, for example, cost an estimated $350,000 in Colorado. Surface water contamination can also cause a need for expensive extra water treatment by local facilities.
Health Problems – In Texas, Colorado, and Pennsylvania, residents living near fracking sites have experienced health problems such as rashes, blisters, headaches, nausea, eye irritation, and respiratory problems. These health impacts lead to economic costs of treatment, prescription drugs, workplace absenteeism, and reduced productivity. It is also a dangerous job for oil and gas workers, who are at risk for accidents resulting in death and long-term health problems such as silicosis.
Damage to Natural Resources – Fracking can lead to more runoff pollution due to clearing forested land for well sites. Especially in western Maryland, scenic and economically valuable natural places like Deep Creek Lake could be threatened. Also, the Chesapeake Bay could be harmed by spills of fracking wastewater.
Impacts on Public Infrastructure and Services – The process of delivering water to a single well site causes as much damage to roads as nearly 3.5 million car trips, which means local governments will have to pay to repave roads more often. Fracking can also lead to increased demand for water, emergency response services, and affordable housing.
Broader Economic Impacts – When people come into a rural area to drill, they create “boomtowns” that end up worse off in the long run. It can also harm the value of residents’ homes and damage their agricultural livelihood due to livestock exposure to wastewater.
Oil and gas companies rarely cover the economic, health, and environmental costs of fracking, and taxpayers are ultimately the ones who must bear this burden. The risk of allowing fracking in our state is too high for the taxpayers to bear.”
Fracking is used worldwide, and has been in use for over 60 years. If all these "worst cases" were true, A.) We'd no longer be fracking, B.) Areas would be much more polluted/destroyed from it.
ReplyDeleteFracking is here to stay, whether or not enviro-nazis want it to be. It's proven, not only to increase production, but that it is, safe. These same loonies protest the XL pipeline expansion, yet always seem to gloss over the fact that the safest mode of transportation for oil/gas is through a pipeline.
this is completely FALSE information. u know how we know? because he sites NO sources of information. all they want to do (these MD communists) is take our freedoms and make us poor by making driving to work, church and to groc store unaffordable.
ReplyDeletelook up gasland if you want to see what damage the gas companies are doing behind everyones back. they hide all of the damage that they do.
ReplyDeleteMaryland could have an energy policy that would remove our debt issues, give us clean-green energy, and provide tens of thousands of jobs for our people...yet we will not drill, even though New Your just finished their voluminous study and says it is OK...we will continue our democratic imposed moritorium while we vote to tax our people for wind mills! Unbelievable! Marylanders...take back your state.
ReplyDelete-Delegate Mike McDermott
People don't want this but when a wind turbine is proposed they all complain it gives you headaches.Let them go back to horses and candles.
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ReplyDeleteplease!! gasland has been proven to have nothing to do with fracking. it has to do with natural gas in the surrounding wells not caused by fracking, been there for years. another words another lie so the uneducated voters scream. get educated
328-A propaganda movie won't convince me. The hundreds of thousands of fracked wells speak for themselves. If it was as dangerous as it is accused of being, it would've been banned decades ago. Of course, there are "bad actors", companies that do not follow the laws and attempt to skirt regs to save money. Not defending those clowns, but I am defending the industry. Domestic production is secure, safe, and keeps $$$ at home.
ReplyDeleteI'd rather employ an American than fund a terrorist.
You can always tell an article written by a libtard, as it is as long as war and peace, and full of falsities.
ReplyDeleteAre you surprised -- this is Maryland
ReplyDeleteI suppose Tommy drove a car and not his bike for this speech. Hey Tommy, how about the beating the nature is taking from the wind farms? With all of this dangerous method, why is south dakota not on fire every day? Live in the real world sir, not some fantasy,
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