Fracking
boom sucks away precious water from beneath the ground, leaving cattle dead,
farms bone-dry and people thirsty
The Guardian, Suzanne Goldenberg in Barnhart, Texas, Sunday 11 August 2013
Beverly
McGuire saw the warning signs before the town well went dry: sand in the toilet
bowl, the sputter of air in the tap, a pump working overtime to no effect. But
it still did not prepare her for the night last month when she turned on the
tap and discovered the tiny town where she had made her home for 35 years was
out of water.
"The
day that we ran out of water I turned on my faucet and nothing was there and at
that moment I knew the whole of Barnhart was down the tubes," she said,
blinking back tears. "I went: 'dear God help us. That was the first
thought that came to mind."
Across the
south-west, residents of small communities like Barnhart are confronting the
reality that something as basic as running water, as unthinking as turning on a
tap, can no longer be taken for granted.
Three years
of drought, decades of overuse and now the oil industry's outsize demands on
water for fracking are running down reservoirs and underground aquifers. And
climate change is making things worse.
In Texas
alone, about 30 communities could run out of water by the end of the year,
according to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality.
Nearly 15
million people are living under some form of water rationing, barred from
freely sprinkling their lawns or refilling their swimming pools. In Barnhart's
case, the well appears to have run dry because the water was being extracted
for shale gas fracking.
The town —
a gas station, a community hall and a taco truck – sits in the midst of the
great Texan oil rush, on the eastern edge of the Permian basin.
A few years
ago, it seemed like a place on the way out. Now McGuire said she can see nine
oil wells from her back porch, and there are dozens of RVs parked outside town,
full of oil workers.
But soon
after the first frack trucks pulled up two years ago, the well on McGuire's
property ran dry.
No-one in
Barnhart paid much attention at the time, and McGuire hooked up to the town's
central water supply. "Everyone just said: 'too bad'. Well now it's all
going dry," McGuire said.
Ranchers
dumped most of their herds. Cotton farmers lost up to half their crops. The
extra draw down, coupled with drought, made it impossible for local ranchers to
feed and water their herds, said Buck Owens. In a good year, Owens used to run
500 cattle and up to 8,000 goats on his 7,689 leased hectares (19,000 acres).
Now he's down to a few hundred goats.
The drought
undoubtedly took its toll but Owens reserved his anger for the contractors who
drilled 104 water wells on his leased land, to supply the oil companies.
Water
levels were dropping in his wells because of the vast amounts of water being
pumped out of the Edwards-Trinity-Plateau Aquifer, a 34,000 sq mile water
bearing formation.
"They
are sucking all of the water out of the ground, and there are just hundreds and
hundreds of water trucks here every day bringing fresh water out of the
wells," Owens said.
Meanwhile,
residents in town complained, they were forced to live under water rationing.
"I've got dead trees in my yard because I haven't been able to water
them," said Glenda Kuykendall. "The state is mandating our water
system to conserve water but why?... Getting one oil well fracked takes more
water than the entire town can drink or use in a day."
Even as the
drought bore down, even as the water levels declined, the oil industry
continued to demand water and those with water on their land were willing to
sell it. The road west of town was lined with signs advertising "fresh
water", where tankers can take on a box-car-sized load of water laced with
industrial chemicals.
"If
you're going to develop the oil, you've got to have the water," said Larry
Baxter, a contractor from the nearby town of Mertzon, who installed two frack
tanks on his land earlier this year, hoping to make a business out of his well
selling water to oil industry.
By his own
estimate, his well could produce enough to fill up 20 or 30 water trucks for
the oil industry each day. At $60 (£39.58) a truck, that was $36,000 a month,
easily. "I could sell 100 truckloads a day if I was open to it,"
Baxter said.
He rejected
the idea there should be any curbs on selling water during the drought.
"People use their water for food and fibre. I choose to use my water to
sell to the oil field," he said. "Who's taking advantage? I don't see
any difference."
Barnhart
remained dry for five days last month before local work crew revived an
abandoned railway well and started pumping again. But residents fear it is just
a temporary fix and that next time it happens they won't have their own wells
to fall back on. "My well is very very close to going dry," said
Kuykendall.
So what is
a town like Barnhart to do? Fracking is a powerful drain on water supplies. In
adjacent Crockett county, fracking accounts for up to 25% of water use,
according to the groundwater conservation district. But Katharine Hayhoe, a
climate scientist at Texas Tech University in Lubbock, argues fracking is not
the only reason Texas is going dry – and nor is the drought. The latest shocks
to the water system come after decades of overuse by ranchers, cotton farmers,
and fast-growing thirsty cities.
"We
have large urban centres sucking water out of west Texas to put on their lands.
We have a huge agricultural community, and now we have fracking which is also
using water," she said. And then there is climate change.
West Texas
has a long history of recurring drought, but under climate change, the
south-west has been experiencing record-breaking heatwaves, further drying out
the soil and speeding the evaporation of water in lakes and reservoirs.
Underground aquifers failed to regenerate. "What happens is that climate
change comes on top and in many cases it can be the final straw that breaks the
camel's back, but the camel is already overloaded," said Hayhoe.
Other
communities across a bone-dry south-west are resorting to extraordinary
measures to keep the water flowing. Robert Lee, also in the oil patch, has been
hauling in water by tanker. So has Spicewood Beach, a resort town 40 miles from
Austin, which has been trucking in water since early 2012.
San Angelo,
a city of 100,000, dug a pipeline to an underground water source more than 60
miles away, and sunk half a dozen new wells.
Las Cruces,
just across the border from the Texas panhandle in New Mexico, is drilling down
1,000ft in search of water.
But those
fixes are way out of reach for small, rural communities. Outside the RV parks
for the oil field workers who are just passing through, Barnhart has a
population of about 200.
"We
barely make enough money to pay our light bill and we're supposed to find
$300,000 to drill a water well?" said John Nanny, an official with the
town's water supply company.
Last week
brought some relief, with rain across the entire state of Texas. Rain gauges in
some parts of west Texas registered two inches or more. Some ranchers dared to
hope it was the beginning of the end of the drought.
But not
Owens, not yet anyway. The underground aquifers needed far more rain to
recharge, he said, and it just wasn't raining as hard as it did when he was
growing up.
"We've
got to get floods. We've got to get a hurricane to move up in our country and
just saturate everything to replenish the aquifer," he said. "Because
when the water is gone. That's it. We're gone."
Related Articles:
Fracking raises risk of contaminated drinking water: study
Fracking push blinding government to greener energy, say campaigners
Dutch bank refuses loans to businesses involved in shale gas
Fracking push blinding government to greener energy, say campaigners
Dutch bank refuses loans to businesses involved in shale gas
"Recalibration of Free Choice"– Mar 3, 2012 (Kryon Channelling by Lee Carroll) - (Subjects: (Old) Souls, Midpoint on 21-12-2012, Shift of Human Consciousness, Black & White vs. Color, 1 - Spirituality (Religions) shifting, Loose a Pope “soon”, 2 - Humans will change react to drama, 3 - Civilizations/Population on Earth, 4 - Alternate energy sources (Geothermal, Tidal (Paddle wheels), Wind), 5 – Financials Institutes/concepts will change (Integrity – Ethical) , 6 - News/Media/TV to change, 7 – Big Pharmaceutical company will collapse “soon”, (Keep people sick), (Integrity – Ethical) 8 – Wars will be over on Earth, Global Unity, … etc.) - (Text version)
“… 4 - Energy (again)
The natural resources of the planet are finite and will not support the continuation of what you've been doing. We've been saying this for a decade. Watch for increased science and increased funding for alternate ways of creating electricity (finally). Watch for the very companies who have the most to lose being the ones who fund it. It is the beginning of a full realization that a change of thinking is at hand. You can take things from Gaia that are energy, instead of physical resources. We speak yet again about geothermal, about tidal, about wind. Again, we plead with you not to over-engineer this. For one of the things that Human Beings do in a technological age is to over-engineer simple things. Look at nuclear - the most over-engineered and expensive steam engine in existence!
Your current ideas of capturing energy from tidal and wave motion don't have to be technical marvels. Think paddle wheel on a pier with waves, which will create energy in both directions [waves coming and going] tied to a generator that can power dozens of neighborhoods, not full cities. Think simple and decentralize the idea of utilities. The same goes for wind and geothermal. Think of utilities for groups of homes in a cluster. You won't have a grid failure if there is no grid. This is the way of the future, and you'll be more inclined to have it sooner than later if you do this, and it won't cost as much….”
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