ABOUT
Smart discussion of the latest science and news on toxins in your food, water, and air, and what government agencies should be doing to protect public health. Written by EWG staff.
DONATE TO EWG!
Help us protect your health and environment! Please donate $5 to EWG today.
GET EWG'S TIPS & ACTION ALERTS
Sign Up here to receive email updates and tips from EWG and stay informed on the issues that matter most to you.
ENVIROBLOG VIA EMAIL
Don't Let Your Child Be a Back Seat Smoker
Pesticide Defenders Say the Darndest Things
Marine brass wants to limit Camp Lejeune water report
SEARCH ENVIROBLOG
FEATURED
Toxins in our Kids' Foods: Where is the FDA?
Why, oh why is there plastic in my aluminum water bottle?
Fluoride in Your Water: How much is too much?
Borax: Not the Green Alternative It's Cracked Up to Be
Test Your Knowledge of Cosmetics Safety: 8 Myths Debunked
EWG's Tips to avoid BPA exposure
EWG on TV
Cutting the Pork from U.S. Farm Bill
Sunscreen safety & DC drinking water
Perchlorate in people, kids' personal care products & plastics, and sunscreen
BPA in baby formula & safe cosmetics
What can I do about fluoride in my water?
What is new carpet treated with? What can I do?
Are stainless steel water bottles safe?
Is mineral-based makeup safer?
PEOPLE TALKING TOXICS
TALK TO US
Did we miss something? Email Enviroblog.
« Study: Toxic Chemicals Are Lowering Children's IQ | Main | California: The Wild West of Fracking »
Concerned about Drilling in New York? So are scientists.
By Leeann Brown, press secretary

New York is considering lifting its moratorium on hydraulic fracturing, an oil and gas drilling technology in which large volumes of water, sand and chemicals are injected into the ground at high pressure.
Drillers are hungrily eyeing the New York state portion of the Marcellus Shale, a vast, natural gas-rich formation that sweeps down the Appalachian chain from near the Canadian border to Kentucky. Before drilling begins, the state has proposed regulations to monitor fracturing, or fracking, which is mostly exempt from federal regulations under the Clean Water Act, Clean Air Act, and the Safe Drinking Water Act.
What's the problem, if drilling and fracking will be regulated? The regulations are weak. So weak that federal agencies, including the U.S. Geological Survey, have written to the N.Y. Department of Environmental Conservation highlighting their shortcomings and warning that natural gas exploitation could endanger private water wells, municipal aquifers and New York City's drinking water supply.
Regarded as impartial and authoritative on drilling issues, USGS has warned that New York state's "one-size-fits-all" approach to regulating drilling activity could fail to protect source water and natural geographic features.
The federal agency pointed out the state's lack of data on underground freshwater sources and underground faults. If drilling and hydraulic fracturing were permitted directly underneath faults, it said, contaminants could flow upward into underground aquifers.
The USGS is not the only federal agency with concerns over New York. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has separately warned the state's regulators that they are unprepared to regulate a boom in shale gas drilling. The EPA contends state technocrats have understated the severity of radioactive pollution associated with drilling and don't know how such contaminants would be disposed of.
The up side of drilling -- jobs and revenues, is modest. The down side, if anything goes wrong, is incalculable. So our question is - why chance it?
Image licensed to David F. Bacon under a Creative Commons license http://www.research.ibm.com/people/d/dfb/screensavers.html