This is a guest post by Alisha Mims, cross-posted from Ring of Fire.
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As the devastating flooding in Colorado continues, some Colorado residents are wondering why no one is talking about flooded oil and gas wells from fracking. According to several reports and photographs from Coloradans, oil and gas tanks are tilted and, in some cases, overturned. Residents are deeply concerned about potentialย contamination.
Residents have been posting photos of the flooded condensate tanks, which hold fracking wastewater,ย on Facebook, as well as sending testimonies and pictures to the drilling reform-awareness blog,ย Bluedaze, created by TXsharon. One Colorado resident sent this e-mail toย Bluedaze:
I see youโve noticed the underwater wells in Weld County, Colorado. Amazing; weโve emailed the Denver TV stations, other media, and state and local politicians. Weโve sent pictures that our members have taken. Itโs like the media and politicians have been TOLD not to say anything about it. There has been no mention of the gas wells on the Denver newscasts either last night or this evening although all stations have had extensive and extended flood coverage. You can see underwater wells in the background of some of the newscast videos, and yet the reporters say absolutelyย nothing.
Hereโs a picture one of our members took yesterday in Weld County, Colorado. Weโve got tons more on our website. Check it out. The tanks are tipping and, in some cases, have fallen over. They have to be leaking toxins into the flood waters. There have to be hundreds if not thousands of underwater well pads in Weld County as a result of theย flooding.
Source: East Boulder County United viaย Facebook
Boulder, Colorado news site, theย Daily Camera, reports that Colorado Oil and Gas Association President Tisha Schuller said industry officials are monitoring the effects of the flooding. A spokesman for the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission said his agency is aware of the โpotential for contamination,โ but that there is no way to access flooded drilling sites at thisย time.
According to theย Daily Camera, northeast Boulder County and southwest Weld County are inundated with thousands of oil and gas wells and โassociated condensate tanks and ponds.โ Industry officials have said that many operators โshut inโ or closed down well operations in preparation for theย flooding.
A spokesman for the Department of Natural resources asserted that many operators also added โsecurityโ to tanks, such as chains to prevent them from floating away. Yet aerial photographs have reportedly shown โfloating and driftingโ tanks in someย areas.
Andrew Barth, a city spokesman with the Boulder Office of Emergency Management said that local officials are โwell aware of the potential problems from drilling wells,โ but that they will have to wait to address the issue until the flooding subsides and resources that are currently focused on the โimmediate threat to lifeโ can beย allocated.
โWeโve seen those same pictures, and we are concerned,โ Barth told the Daily Camera. โWe are going to go out and look at those once weโre out of the immediate search and rescueย phase.โ
Fracking activist Cliff Willmeng spent two days documenting flooded drilling sites in Weld and Boulder counties. He reportedly saw โhundredsโ of swamped wells and many condensate tanks tipped at odd angles andย overturned.
โItโs clear that the density of the oil and gas there did not respect where the water would go,โย he said. โThis is washing across agricultural land into the waterways. Now we have to discuss what type of exposure the human population is going to have to sufferย through.โ
Willmeng and other activists believe the first step in addressing the issue is for drilling companies to release a detailed report of exactly what is leaking from the tanks. As has been the experience with the secretive fracking industry in the past, it will likely prove difficult, if not impossible, to get companies to release suchย information.
Source: Frack Files viaย Facebook
Source: Cliff Willmeng via the Dailyย Camera
Source:ย Cliff Willmeng via the Dailyย Camera
Alisha is a writer and researcher with Ring of Fire. Follow her on Twitter @childoftheearth.
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