Radium Wells.Shale is radioactive
Radium Wells
Shale is radioactive - and that means fracking it brings radioactive materials to the surface. As previously discussed, shale is the most radioactive sedimentary layer – to find shale, you look for radiation in a gamma ray well log.If shale was not radioactive, we would not be able to find it. Drilling through it horizontally simply increases the amount of radioactive material exposed. Fracking the shale leaches the radioactive material out and transports it to the surface as flowback. Drill bits bring it back as drill cuttings. Which means that frack waste is not only laced with harmful pollutants – it’s radioactive as well – literally thousands of times more radioactive than is safe for humans and other life forms. So horizontally fracking shale solution-mines radium as a by-product. Recycled and processed frack flowback and drill cuttings are already too radioactive for the disposal wells in Ohio to take. These hazards are detailed in a new study co-authored by my pal Dr. Ron Bishop.
New Report Shows Radioactive Threat to New York if Fracking Approved
Marcellus Shale Has Significant Amounts of Radium; Fracking Will Increase Threat Over Time
Scientists Question NYS DEC’s Ability to Assess Danger and Protect Public Health
(Albany, NY) A new report issued by Grassroots Environmental Education, a New York--based non--profit organization and authored by a former staff scientist for the National Council on Radiation Protection says that horizontal hydrofracking in the Marcellus Shale region of New York State is likely to produce significantly higher amounts of radioactive waste than previously believed, putting New Yorkers in danger, and that the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation has not demonstrated the ability to properly analyze the potential impact of radiation exposure or take adequate steps to protect the public.
“Once radioactive material comes up out of the ground along with the gas, the problem is what to do with it,” says Doug Wood, Associate Director of Grassroots, who edited the report. “The radioactivity lasts for thousands of years, and it is virtually impossible to eliminate or mitigate. Sooner or later, it’s going to end up in our environment and eventually our food chain. It’s a problem with no good solution – and the DEC is unequipped to handle it.”
According to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), exposure to radium increases the risk of cancer. Radium also decays into radon, which is the second leading cause of lung cancer.
The report, Consideration of Radiation in Hazardous Waste Produced from Horizontal Hydrofracking, was authored by Ivan White, a career scientist with the Congressionally chartered National Council on Radiation Protection. There he helped develop computer programs for radiation risk assessment and assisted in the formulation of national policies on radiation protection for civilian and military personnel.
“Radioactive materials and chemical wastes do not just go away when they are released into the environment. They remain active and potentially lethal, and can show up years later in unexpected places,” writes White. ” They bio--accumulate in the food chain, eventually reaching humans. Under the proposal for horizontal hydrofracking in New York State, there are insufficient precautions for monitoring potential pathways or to even know what is being released into the environment.”
Many scientists, including senior scientists at the EPA have been similarly critical of the NYS DEC’s seemingly cavalier attitude toward radioactive waste from gas drilling. In its comments on the dSGEIS submitted in January of this year, the EPA Region 2 recommended that the DEC withdraw its conclusion that exposure to radioactive material “[did] not indicate an exposure of concern” because it was based on insufficient data. It went on to suggest that the DEC needed to demonstrate “more vigilance in proper handling and disposal” of radioactive waste.
Various disposal methods for the thousands of tons of radioactive waste expected to be produced by fracking are being contemplated by DEC, including road spreading of radioactive wastewater for dust control and de--icing, attempted treatment of radioactive wastewater through dilution at water treatment plants before discharge into rivers, and burying of this material in injection wells or private landfills.
“None of these disposal methods adequately protect New Yorkers from eventual exposure to this radioactive material,” says Wood. “Spread it on the ground and it will become airborne with dust or wash off into surface waters; dilute it before discharge into rivers and it will raise radiation levels in those rivers for everyone downstream; bury it underground and it will eventually find its way into someone’s drinking water. No matter how hard you try, you can’t put the radioactive genie back in the bottle.”
Complicating disposal planning for radioactive waste is the fact that the half--life of Radium 226, one of the radioisotopes commonly found in the wastewater and sludge from fracking in the Marcellus shale, is 1600 years. Thus, in the year 3612, half of its radioactivity will remain.