As New York state ponders whether to lift its moratorium on fracking, in place since 2009, two new reports were released which compiled the results of numerous studies on its potential health and environmental
impacts. The evidence was overwhelming, as the health care
professionals and scientists involved urged Governor Andrew Cuomo to
enact a three-to-five-year extension of the moratorium.
The studies offered a response to statements from Cuomo such as “You
can have credentialed academics on both sides—one side says they have
more credentialed experts than the other side” and “I’m not a scientist.
Let the scientists decide. It’s very complicated, very controversial,
academic studies come out all different ways. Let the experts decide.”
The experts have largely decided that evidence of risks to citizens and communities from fracking are compelling.
One study,
released by PSE Healthy Energy, pointed out that, with the fracking
boom still young, “research continues to lag behind the rapid scaling of
shale gas development.” It points to an enormous increase in the amount
of scientific research and surge in peer-reviewed scientific papers in
just the last two years. It reviewed about 400 of those papers.
“In fact, of all the available scientific peer-reviewed literature on
the impacts of shale gas development approximately 73 percent has been
published since January 1, 2013,” said its report. “What this tells us
is that the scientific community is only now beginning to understand the
impacts of this industry on the environment and human populations.
Hazards and risks have been identified, but many data gaps still
persist. Importantly, there remains a dearth of quantitative
epidemiology that assesses associations between risk factors and human
health outcomes among populations.”
The study says that “there is now a lot more known about the impacts
of shale gas development than when New York’s de facto moratorium went
into effect” and provides what it calls “a cursory overview” of
currently available studies. It suggested that despite that, the
evidence is fairly compelling. It found that 96 percent of all papers
published on health outcomes point to possible negative impacts, that 87
percent of original research studies on health outcomes show potential
risks, that 95 percent of original research studies on air quality show
elevated levels of air pollutants and that 72 percent of original
studies on water quality show actual or potential contamination.
“Scientists are just now beginning to understand the health and
environmental dimensions of shale gas development,” said PSE Healthy
Energy executive director Seth B.C. Shonkoff. “While the majority of
studies published indicate that there are risks to human health, there
are still very few epidemiological studies that evaluate or model actual
health impacts. You don’t get what you expect, you get what you
inspect, and it is wise for New York to continue to look before it leaps
and wait for the information it needs to make an educated decision.”
The second study, an update of the Compendium of Scientific, Medical and Media Findings Demonstrating Risks and Harms of Fracking by
the Concerned Health Professionals of NY, similarly looks at results of
numerous studies to arrive at its conclusions, exploring sixteen areas
of potential harm from fracking.
“A significant body of evidence has emerged to demonstrate that these
activities are inherently dangerous to people and their communities,”
it says. “Risks include adverse impacts on water, air, agriculture,
public health and safety, property values, climate stability and
economic vitality.”
It too points to the dramatic increase in the amount of recent
research into fracking impacts, saying that research is just catching
up with the industry, and summarizes key studies. Given that ongoing
increase, it says that it will update its compendium every six months.
“The longer we look at fracking, the more trouble we find,” said Dr.
Larysa Dyrszka, a co-founder of Concerned Health Professionals of
NY. “There is no split debate within the scientific literature. Given
the avalanche of recent studies showing inherent problems and harms of
fracking, Governor Cuomo must enact a minimum three-to-five-year
moratorium in order to protect the water and health of all New Yorkers.”
Coming on the heels of these two omnibus studies is another new study—PSE
Healthy Energy estimated that one new study has been released each day
in the last two years—from Environment New York, titled The Spreading Shadow of the Shale Gas Boom: Fracking’s Growing Proximity to Day Cares, Schools and Hospitals.
It estimates that in the Marcellus and Utica shale region which extends
underneath New York, over 400 permits have been issued to drill within a
mile of such facilities, with Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia
already allowing fracking in the region and Maryland set to begin. Oil
and gas companies have already applied for more than 270 well permits in
New York, poised to begin drilling when and if the moratorium is
lifted, and the study says that as many as 56,000 fracking wells could
be drilled in the state.
“We have seen how dangerous gas drilling can be in other states—from
harmful air and water pollution to fires, blowouts and explosions,” said Environment
New York director Heather Leibowitz. “This report shows that if
fracking is allowed into New York, our vulnerable populations could be
exposed to unacceptable risks.”
“Governor Cuomo has announced that the state’s fracking health
review, on which he has said his decision hinges, will be completed
before the end of the year,” she said. “However, we already have strong
evidence that fracking threatens the health and safety of our children,
elderly and infirm. We’re calling on our state officials to finally ban
fracking, for the health and safety of our most vulnerable populations
and all New Yorkers.”
from here
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