Corning, NY — Prior to his press conference in Corning to discuss his plans to ban
frack drilling wastes in New York landfills, Howie Hawkins, the Green Party nominee for Governor of New York, will tour the area around the Chemung County Landfill in Lowman.
The day after Democratic gubernatorial candidate Zephyr Teachout canceled her Elmira appearance, Hawkins met with residents living near the Chemung County Landfill who are concerned about
the frack drilling wastes being taken there.
What I want to make clear today is that I also oppose the import and treatment of out - of - state
frack drilling waste in New York State.
Even the pro-fracking Republican candidate Rob Astorino signed a law as Westchester County Executive in December 2012 to ban the import and treatment of
frack drilling waste in his county.
Not exact matches
Though the fluids were natural and not the byproduct of
drilling or hydraulic fracturing, the finding further stokes the red - hot controversy over
fracking in the Marcellus Shale, suggesting that
drilling waste and chemicals could migrate in ways previously thought to be impossible.
Hawkins says he would ban
fracking in New York and prevent the import and treatment of out - of - state
drilling waste.
Since 2008, ProPublica has reported about hundreds of cases of water contamination in more than six states where
drilling and
fracking are taking place as well as the difficulties of handling the vast quantities of
waste the
drilling processes produce.
In the push for quick deployment, and quick profits, we have cut corners in many areas (think deep sea
drilling,
fracking, interstate transit systems,
waste handling, tar sands, the threat of [coronal mass ejections] to our electronic and power systems... this could go on...).
The problem is that treating oil and gas
waste from
fracked wells remains particularly tricky because the industry is still allowed to keep secret information about which chemicals
drillers use when injecting fluids to crack open shale formations to release oil and gas.
The climate movement is pointing out that unconventional fossil fuel extraction techniques (
fracking, tar sands excavation, deep - water
drilling, mountaintop removal coal mining) are leaving or will leave toxic
wastes and scars on the landscape as the fossil fuel industry gouges and lacerates the earth in search of combustible fossil resources.
«But EPA's current standards don't apply to
fracked oil wells that also contain gas — gas that the
drillers often just
waste by venting or flaring it away.»
A coalition of environmental organizations is suing the Environmental Protection Agency, claiming federal regulators have for three decades failed to update rules for disposing of
fracking and
drilling wastes that may threaten public health and the environment.