Coast Guard drops proposal to allow shipment of toxic fracking wastewater

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Environment America

WASHINGTON, DC – In a win for clean water and public health, today the U.S. Coast Guard quietly dropped its proposal to allow barges on the nation’s rivers and inter coastal waterways to transport toxic fracking wastewater.
 
“Shipping thousands of barrels of toxic wastewater down the rivers we drink from was a recipe for disaster,” said Rachel Richardson, director of Environment America’s Stop Drilling program. “For the sake of our drinking water and our safety, we’re glad to see this bad idea put to rest.”
 
Fracking — the controversial drilling technique by which large volumes of water, sand and chemicals are injected underground — creates vast quantities of toxic wastewater often laced with cancer causing chemicals and even radioactive material.
 
An Environment America Research & Policy Center report found that fracking operations produced 280 billion gallons of such wastewater in a single year—enough to cover D.C. in a 22-feet deep cesspool.
 
Despite its often dangerous contents, fracking wastewater is not considered hazardous by the federal government, and its transport, treatment, and disposal is governed by a patchwork of inadequate federal and state regulations. 
 
The October 2013 Coast Guard proposal came in response to a specific request by a tank barge, and was immediately met with widespread criticism. More than 98 percent of the 70,000 public comments submitted on the plan — including over 29,000 collected from Environment America — were opposed. More than 100 organizations also called on the Coast Guard to drop its proposed policy.

While shipments of fracking waste could still be approved on a case-by-case basis, Environment America noted that no such approval has ever been granted. Clean water advocates said they would remain vigilant and advocate against future applications to ship fracking waste by barge. 

“Until we ban fracking altogether, we need to limit Americans’ exposure to its harmful pollution every way we can,” said Richardson. “We’ll continue to work with our allies to keep fracking waste off barges and rivers altogether.”