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8450


Date: September 19, 2013 at 08:42:10
From: Vim/PA, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Shocking photos and an update from CO frkg flood zone

URL: http://www.texassharon.com/2013/09/16/shocking-photos-and-an-update-from-the-colorado-fracking-flood-zone/


See link.
Also, this video appears on that page.
A concise statement of the situation.


Responses:
[8453] [8452]


8453


Date: September 19, 2013 at 09:09:38
From: dreamz, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Colorado's floods - should be more concerned about sewage


Colorado floods: low risk from fracking chemicals

Colorado's floods have killed at least eight people and damaged some
18,000 homes – will the region also suffer a lingering legacy of
pollution from fracking operations that were inundated in the disaster?

Groups opposed to fracking have raised the alarm over images of
storage tanks shifted off their foundations at oil and gas drilling sites.

In the short term, at least, neighbours of those wells should probably
be more concerned about sewage and toxic spoil from old mining
operations.

"From a public health perspective, the caution to the public is to avoid
contact with contaminated floodwaters," says Mark Salley,
communications director with the Colorado Department of Public
Health and Environment.

Crude oil concern

Raw sewage is the biggest worry, as several wastewater treatment
plants were flooded. For the most part, people should be safe if they
keep out of the floodwaters, but three rural communities are being
warned to boil drinking water.

Floodwaters may also be contaminated with toxic waste washed from
tailings left by gold and silver mining, says Linda Figueroa, a
wastewater engineer at the Colorado School of Mines in Golden.
"There's a lot of abandoned mine sites in the Colorado mountains."
However, she expects the problem to quickly dissipate once the flood
recedes.

The Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission is now assessing
the status of flooded drilling sites. In a statement issued on 18
September, it said: "Most locations observed to this point have found
tanks and well pads to be intact and in place, but teams are still early in
their assessment work".

Most of the drill sites flooded had already been fracked, and were
actively producing oil or gas – so chemicals added to fracking fluids
should not have been on site.

The main concern is crude oil stored in tanks near the wells, in
particular a report that one tank, from a site operated by Anadarko
Petroleum, has released almost 20,000 litres of oil into the South Platte
river, south of the town of Milliken.


Responses:
None


8452


Date: September 19, 2013 at 08:57:15
From: Leslie, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Shocking photos and an update from CO frkg flood zone



And this is worse down stream on the S.Platte all along the farming and ranching areas.

Have also heard one news report of a 5,000 gallon oil tank that leaked into the mess and many oil and fracking wells flooded.

This will effect crop and range lands which effects our food. Keep in mind this stuff will keep goign downstream to the other range and crop areas just at harvest time.


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