Fracking Update: These are the Texas Towns Running Out ...
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Sep 13, 2013 - West Texas is dying as the number of small towns without water due to fracking ... Here's what climate scientists are telling us will happen if we don't avoid the .... But a 1.5 meter rise would wipe out the California Delta and a lot of the .... We have many, many trillions of real estate at risk around the world.Fracking Update: These Are The Texas Towns Running Out Of Water
A month after the story broke,
the people of West Texas are, literally, praying for rain. The region
has experienced heavy droughts in recent years. Despite the droughts,
however, Texas is famous for denying the science behind things like
climate change and evolution,
and also for voting over and over again to de-regulate the oil and gas
companies that are consuming the area’s water supply with fracking.
The sad truth, though? Faced with the certainty that
the fracking they voted for has pushed their habitat too far past the
tipping point and an uncaring state government that denies such a basic
tenet of reality as causation, what can the people of Texas do except pray?
You can read more about this latest fracking-related environmental catastrophe below, in an article that originally appeared on our sister site, Gas 2.
Texas Fracking Update: Barnhart, TX is Out of Water
Beverly McGuire has lived in Barnhart, TX for more
than thirty years. Like many Texans, she probably didn’t give fracking
much thought before her town ran 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 in a Guardian
interview last month, blinking back tears. “I went, ‘Dear God, help us.’
That was the first thought that came to mind.”
Despite those prayers, however, Texas has suffered
years of sustained drought. On top of that, the oil and gas industry’s
demand for water used in fracking are running down reservoirs and
aquifers, and contaminating whatever’s left. Rapidly-increasing climate change is working against Texas’ cattle industry,
as well, making things even worse for the people of West Texas towns
like Barnhart, and any other towns in Briscoe, Burnet, or Comal
counties.
As we reported last month, about 30 communities across West Texas could be out of water before the end of this year, according to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality‘s
September 4th update to their drought report. As a nod to the
commenters who doubted the veracity of that article because the facts
came from “some chick expert” and I didn’t “name the towns”, here are a
few of the towns listed as running out of water in “180 days”, “90
days”, and “45 days”. It’s not a complete list, nor does it tell the
whole story, but the message is clear: fracking is killing Texas.
Here’s the list …
… and the key to the chart breaks down something like this …
- E – Emergency – Could be out of water in 45 days or less.
- P – Priority – Could be out of water in 90 days or less.
- C – Concern – Could be out of water in 180 days or less.
- W – Watch – Has greater than a 180 day supply of water remaining.
… here’s hoping the people of Texas wake up quickly
enough to save part of their state, at least. If I know anything about
Texans, though, the people of these towns are too busy burning science
books and clutching their shotguns while praying for rain and blaming
the black guy. Possibly also the Mexicans. Texas kind of has it coming,
is my point. Glenda Kuykendall, I think, may be the best example of
Texan cluelessness so far, saying “We are in the United States, in
American, where this should not happen.”
Sorry, Glenda. You seem to misunderstand the notion of “consequences”. We reap what we sow.
You can watch the Guardian’s interview of Glenda and Beverly and the rest of the
Beverly HillbilliesWest Texas gang start to turn on each other and start blaming the
problem on the farmers that have private wells in the video, below.
Enjoy!
Sources: the Guardian, NPR.
Keep up to date with all the hottest cleantech news by subscribing to our (free) cleantech newsletter, or keep an eye on sector-specific news by getting our (also free) solar energy newsletter, electric vehicle newsletter, or wind energy newsletter.
Read more at http://cleantechnica.com/2013/09/13/fracking-update-these-are-the-texas-towns-running-out-of-water/#ke6gY5mp9sHu3mGW.99
Fracking Update: These Are The Texas Towns Running Out Of Water
A month after the story broke,
the people of West Texas are, literally, praying for rain. The region
has experienced heavy droughts in recent years. Despite the droughts,
however, Texas is famous for denying the science behind things like
climate change and evolution,
and also for voting over and over again to de-regulate the oil and gas
companies that are consuming the area’s water supply with fracking.
The sad truth, though? Faced with the certainty that
the fracking they voted for has pushed their habitat too far past the
tipping point and an uncaring state government that denies such a basic
tenet of reality as causation, what can the people of Texas do except pray?
You can read more about this latest fracking-related environmental catastrophe below, in an article that originally appeared on our sister site, Gas 2.
Texas Fracking Update: Barnhart, TX is Out of Water
Beverly McGuire has lived in Barnhart, TX for more
than thirty years. Like many Texans, she probably didn’t give fracking
much thought before her town ran 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 in a Guardian
interview last month, blinking back tears. “I went, ‘Dear God, help us.’
That was the first thought that came to mind.”
Despite those prayers, however, Texas has suffered
years of sustained drought. On top of that, the oil and gas industry’s
demand for water used in fracking are running down reservoirs and
aquifers, and contaminating whatever’s left. Rapidly-increasing climate change is working against Texas’ cattle industry,
as well, making things even worse for the people of West Texas towns
like Barnhart, and any other towns in Briscoe, Burnet, or Comal
counties.
As we reported last month, about 30 communities across West Texas could be out of water before the end of this year, according to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality‘s
September 4th update to their drought report. As a nod to the
commenters who doubted the veracity of that article because the facts
came from “some chick expert” and I didn’t “name the towns”, here are a
few of the towns listed as running out of water in “180 days”, “90
days”, and “45 days”. It’s not a complete list, nor does it tell the
whole story, but the message is clear: fracking is killing Texas.
Here’s the list …
… and the key to the chart breaks down something like this …
- E – Emergency – Could be out of water in 45 days or less.
- P – Priority – Could be out of water in 90 days or less.
- C – Concern – Could be out of water in 180 days or less.
- W – Watch – Has greater than a 180 day supply of water remaining.
… here’s hoping the people of Texas wake up quickly
enough to save part of their state, at least. If I know anything about
Texans, though, the people of these towns are too busy burning science
books and clutching their shotguns while praying for rain and blaming
the black guy. Possibly also the Mexicans. Texas kind of has it coming,
is my point. Glenda Kuykendall, I think, may be the best example of
Texan cluelessness so far, saying “We are in the United States, in
American, where this should not happen.”
Sorry, Glenda. You seem to misunderstand the notion of “consequences”. We reap what we sow.
You can watch the Guardian’s interview of Glenda and Beverly and the rest of the
Beverly HillbilliesWest Texas gang start to turn on each other and start blaming the
problem on the farmers that have private wells in the video, below.
Enjoy!
Sources: the Guardian, NPR.
Keep up to date with all the hottest cleantech news by subscribing to our (free) cleantech newsletter, or keep an eye on sector-specific news by getting our (also free) solar energy newsletter, electric vehicle newsletter, or wind energy newsletter.
Read more at http://cleantechnica.com/2013/09/13/fracking-update-these-are-the-texas-towns-running-out-of-water/#ke6gY5mp9sHu3mGW.99
The following however I was able to quote:
Texas is Fracked Update: Barnhart is Out of Water
Beverly McGuire has lived in Barnhart, TX for more
than thirty years. Like many Texans, she probably didn’t give fracking
much thought before her town ran 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 in a Guardian
interview last month, blinking back tears. “I went, ‘Dear God, help us.’
That was the first thought that came to mind.”
Despite those prayers, however, Texas has suffered
years of sustained drought. On top of that, the oil and gas industry’s
demand for water used in fracking are running down reservoirs and
aquifers, and contaminating whatever’s left. Rapidly-increasing climate change is working against Texas’ cattle industry,
as well, making things even worse for the people of West Texas towns
like Barnhart, and any other towns in Briscoe, Burnet, or Comal
counties.
As we reported last month, about 30 communities across West Texas could be out of water before the end of this year, according to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality‘s
September 4th update to their drought report. As a nod to the
commenters who doubted the veracity of that article because the facts
came from “some chick expert” and I didn’t “name the towns”, here are a
few of the towns listed as running out of water in “180 days”, “90
days”, and “45 days”. It’s not a complete list, nor does it tell the
whole story, but the message is clear: fracking is killing Texas.
Here’s the list …
… and the key to the chart breaks down something like this …
- E – Emergency – Could be out of water in 45 days or less.
- P – Priority – Could be out of water in 90 days or less.
- C – Concern – Could be out of water in 180 days or less.
- W – Watch – Has greater than a 180 day supply of water remaining.
… here’s hoping the people of Texas wake up quickly
enough to save part of their state, at least. If I know anything about
Texans, though, the people of these towns are too busy burning science
books and clutching their shotguns while praying for rain and blaming
the black guy. Possibly also the Mexicans. Texas kind of has it coming,
is my point. Glenda Kuykendall, I think, may be the best example of
Texan cluelessness so far, saying “We are in the United States, in
American, where this should not happen.”
Sorry, Glenda. You seem to misunderstand the notion of “consequences”. We reap what we sow.
You can watch the Guardian’s interview of Glenda and Beverly and the rest of the Beverly Hillbillies
West Texas gang start to turn on each other and start blaming the
problem on the farmers that have private wells in the video, below.
Enjoy!
Sources: the Guardian, NPR.
end quote from:
http://gas2.org/2013/09/11/fracking-update-barnhart-texas-is-out-of-water/
http://gas2.org/2013/09/11/fracking-update-barnhart-texas-is-out-of-water/
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