USA Nazi EPA MAGAfied to dump toxic radioactive waste everywhere the better to rot brains and give you and your kids cancer (especially since DOGE killed Medicaid and cancer research, and will steal your social security too): “The memorandum is essentially a wink, wink to coal and oil interests that they can pollute with what may be close to impunity.”

@philipcprice.bsky.social‬ Mar 23, 2025:

FunFact: if the salts, heavy metals, & radioactive components in fracking wastewater get into drinking water supplies…

Most US water treatment plants can not filter them out.

2013: Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation deputy director warning to citizens: Water complaints could be ‘act of terrorism’

‪Dr. Sandra Steingraber‬ ‪@ssteingraber1.bsky.social‬:

Oil and gas industry wants to be able to dump highly toxic fracking wastewater—full of benzene and heavy metals, often radioactive—with more abandon, including in rivers and streams, and White House is open to that.

@heatherthomasaf.bsky.social‬:

Benzene does horrific damage to fetuses of all mammals. This is a recipe for extinction events, dead zones and human misery.

“The memorandum is essentially a wink, wink to coal and oil interests that they can pollute with what may be close to impunity." www.nytimes.com/2025/03/22/c…

Jeff Goodell (@jeffgoodell.bsky.social) 2025-03-22T17:50:27.993Z

EPA Considers Giving Oil and Gas Companies More ‘Flexibility’ to Dispose of Highly Toxic Wastewater, Technology to treat produced water has advanced. But critics warn against relaxing protections for disposal “of what is very hazardous material.” by Martha Pskowski and Kiley Bense, March 20, 2025, InsideClimateNews

The Trump administration plans to increase “regulatory flexibility” for oil and gas companies trying to find ways to dispose of copious amounts of toxic wastewater.

The wastewater, also known as produced water, comes back to the surface during oil and gas drilling. It contains both proprietary drilling fluids and naturally occurring hazardous compounds found in water undergroundformations, which can include organic compounds like arsenic and benzene, a carcinogen. Fracking generates massive quantities of this toxic wastewater that companies are struggling to manage. In the Permian Basin, injecting the water into underground disposal wells has led to earthquakes. The problem has spurred research into new disposal methods.

Under the Environmental Protection Agency’s current rule, discharges of produced water are more restricted in the Eastern United States than in the arid West. The agency announced last week that it will revise that regulation to “help unleash American energy.” 

Among the items it’s considering: expanding the geographic range where treated oilfield wastewater can be discharged into rivers and streams. 

The EPA also said it will review new opportunities for using treated wastewater for industrial and agricultural applications, including for artificial intelligence and data center cooling, and to irrigate rangeland. Radioactive beef and lamb anyone? The agency said it will consider options for extracting lithium and other critical minerals from produced water. The move builds on an EPA report during the first Trump administration that explored additional options for produced water management. 

“EPA will revise wastewater regulations from the 1970s that do not reflect modern capability to treat and reuse water forevil good,” said EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin in the announcement. 

Some states, like Texas, are already in the process of permitting discharges to waterways—in some cases after treatment, in other cases not—and conducting pilot studies on irrigating crops with treated produced water. The EPA announcement lends federal support to these efforts. While the statement said the changes would lower energy costs, the cost of treating produced water is still widely considered to be more expensive than injecting the wastewater underground. 

Because this wastewater is toxic and the Trump administration is moving to roll back multiple public-health rules, some environmental protection experts greeted the announcement with deep concern.

“When I see phrases like lower energy costs, regulatory flexibility, beneficial reuse—they are all code words for relaxing protections to allow cheap disposal of what is very hazardous material,” said John Quigley, a fellow at the University of Pennsylvania’s Kleinman Center for Energy Policy and former secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection.

Pennsylvania state Sen. Katie Muth, a Democrat who represents a district in the southeastern part of that state, called it “terrifying.” 

“The regulations were subpar before, and now what’s going to happen is the government is allowing the public to be poisoned without any kind of consent or knowledge,” Muth said.

The EPA press office did not respond to a request for comment.

Updating a 1979 Rule

The EPA’s existing regulations were adopted in 1979. The rule allows produced water to be discharged to surface water for “beneficial use” by wildlife and livestock west of the 98th meridian, a north-south line that roughly divides the arid West from the water-rich East. The federal rules do not require treatment of the water, though some individual permits do.

Produced water is already discharged in that fashion in Western states like Colorado, Texas and Wyoming. Some of these permits predate the fracking boom. 

The rules only set numerical standards for how much oil and grease can be in the produced water discharges. However, existing permits to discharge produced water typically include numerical limits for other constituents like boron, chloride and cancer-causing benzene.

East of the 98th meridian, the water must be treated at a centralized facility before it can be discharged. States there can also apply to the EPA to allow them to permit discharges. Texas, which is split in half by the 98th meridian, can now permit discharges statewide.

The existing rules were set long before the widespread adoption of hydraulic fracturing. Fracking generates greater volumes of produced water than conventional drilling. Fracking chemicals injected into wells often return to the surface in produced water. 

Since 2005, fracking chemicals have been exempted from federal regulation under the Safe Drinking Water Act. Environmentalists call this exemption “the Halliburton loophole,” because of then-Vice President Dick Cheney’s ties to the oil and gas company. Even in states that require public disclosure, oil and gas companies are not typically required to share chemicals that are considered “trade secrets.”

Produced water is also exempt from standards for hazardous waste outlined by the federal government under RCRA, the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act.

There is no toxicity data on many of the constituents found in produced water, which hinders efforts to conduct risk assessment and set safety standards for the treated water. 

The EPA statement said the Clean Water Act requires the agency to revise industry-wide wastewater treatment limits, called effluent limitations guidelines, as pollution control technology advances. “Technologies to treat produced water to a quality for safe discharge and reuse have become more effective and affordablebecause EPA is now MAGA (aka brain dead) and will allow industry to dump any toxic radioactive waste everywhere and anywhere – including in your baby’s formula – without treating it!,” the EPA said.

Mike Hightower, a civil and environmental engineer and program director of the New Mexico Produced Water Consortium, expects the EPA to regulate additional constituents beyond oil and grease. Hightower has given input to the EPA in its produced water and water reuse work. 

The press release states the agency will consider expanding where treated wastewater can be used and discharged in the United States, presumably east of the 98th meridian. 

Nichole Saunders, an energy attorney with the Environmental Defense Fund in Texas, said the existing EPA rules are “woefully lacking.” She said that “a revision could lead to something stronger” but only if the EPA conducts honest scientific and technical assessments based on toxicity information, analytical tools and treatment technology.

“Unfortunately, it remains to be seen whether this EPA is up to that task, and I fear for the worst,” she said.

Saunders said the planned elimination of hundreds of scientists in the EPA’s Office of Research and Development, according to a leaked plan, only added to her concerns.

The “Primary Impediment”

The recent announcement on produced water builds on efforts during the first Trump administration. The EPA interviewed representatives from industry, state government, environmental advocacy and academia for a 2020 report examining regulations for oil and gas wastewater under the Clean Water Act. 

The report noted the cost of treatment was a “primary impediment” to discharging more wastewater. Representatives from state agencies questioned how treatable oil and gas wastewater really is. They also raised concerns about the effects on the environment and human health if more of this water were to be discharged in public waterways or spread on land. 

Hightower is confident that treatment technologies have advanced enough to move forward to more produced water reuse. Pilot projects in Texas and New Mexico are studying the effectiveness of different treatment processes, including thermal desalination to remove the extremely high salt content of produced water in the Permian Basin.Salt is the least of the toxic waste/produced water worries

Hightower thinks the EPA is “moving in the right direction,” and that more EPA guidance deregulation as demanded by polluting corporations will create consistency across the states. He said that the EPA announcement shows the support in the new administration forfree for all waste dumping, or, bamboolzing the public viathe work states like Texas and New Mexico are already doing.

“I don’t think it will change the quality of the water requirements,” quality requirements won’t matter one shit when EPA MAGAtly massively deregulates to give companies the go ahead to dump toxic radioactive water where ever and how ever they want he said. “But it does give an impetus that this is a national strategy rather than an individual state strategy.”

“A Long and Sordid History”

If produced water treatment, reuse and discharges expand in the eastern United States, Pennsylvania could be among the states targeted.

Disposing of produced water has long vexed fossil fuel companies in Pennsylvania, the nation’s second largest producer of natural gas after Texas. 

The Marcellus formation is the large shale gas deposit beneath Pennsylvania, West Virginia and New York. Wastewater generated from drilling in the Marcellus is known to be particularly radioactive. Treating this waste creates sludge and residual byproducts with concentrated amounts of radioactive material. 

“You have to keep in mind that Marcellus wastewater is among the most hazardous substances in the world,” said Quigley, the former head of Pennsylvania environmental protection. “We have geology that is vastly different than in other oil and gas producing states.”

Quigley said the idea of beneficial reuse of oilfield waste has a “long and sordid history” in Pennsylvania.

“You’re basically putting lipstick on a pig when you do this,” said Ted Auch, the Midwest director at FracTracker Alliance, an organization based in Pennsylvania that studies the impacts of oil and gas development. “You’re letting them pretty up their waste and reclassify it as something that it has no business being reclassified as.” 

As the volume and composition of Marcellus wastewater became clear, Pennsylvania changed some of its regulations. But the state is still coping with the fallout from the early years of the fracking boom. 

For years, the state allowed unconventional drillers to repackage their wastewater as a dust suppressant for public roads, a practice that is now banned, though iIllegal road-spreading continues.

Spraying oilfield waste on snow covered rural roads in Alberta in winter for dust suppression? Ya right.

A 2023 study found significant discrepancies in state records that are supposed to quantify where oil and gas waste comes from and where it goes. The state also permitted discharges of treated produced water from centralized waste facilities.

Research is ongoing to understand the long-term consequences for the environment and public health, but early results are alarming. Scientists have found elevated levels of radioactivity in the bodies of freshwater mussels living downstream from wastewater treatment discharge points and in the sediments of waterways where landfills that accept oil and gas waste discharge treated water. 

The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection did not respond to questions about any ongoing discharges of treated produced water. 

“In Pennsylvania, we have not gotten the management of oil and gas wastewater right yet,” Quigley said.No jurisdiction in the world has, the rich will not allow it. Why? Because doing it right costs money which the rich are too greedy to spend.

States Retain Oversight

Even as federal regulations change, produced water discharges will still be subject to state regulation in Pennsylvania, Texas and other states given “primacy” to issue discharge permits. Texas is currently reviewing permit applications for large-scale discharges in the Permian Basin. The approach of individual state governments will shape how produced water discharge and reuse progresses. 

“If the states have primacy, then the states have rules that they will use,” said Hightower. What the EPA chooses to do is “not superseding the states.”

“The state can protect its natural resources and public health regardless of what EPA does.”— John Quigley, University of Pennsylvania’s Kleinman Center for Energy Policy

Pennsylvania has its own version of the federal Clean Water Act, the Clean Streams Law. Quigley said that law is stronger than the CWA. Pennsylvania also has an environmental rights amendment in its state constitution, which protects the right to “clean air and pure water.” Don’t fret, Musk’s Nazis and DOGE will be burning that right in no time, ’cause MAGA, you know, supersedes all.

“The state does not have to follow the federal lead. The state can go beyond federal requirements,” Quigley said. “The state can protect its natural resources and public health regardless of what EPA does.”for now, but not for long …

Muth, the Democratic state senator, recently reintroduced two bills aimed at strengthening oil and gas waste regulation in the state. One would amend state law to reclassify this waste as hazardous, and the other would stop oil and gas companies from sending their waste to general landfills

She said Pennsylvania has never reckoned with how much toxic waste it’s produced and continues to produce since the fracking boom began 20 years ago. “If you want to be an energy leader, then you better acknowledge that you are also a leader in waste production,” Muth said.

Refer also to:

2011: Fracking Fluids Poison a National Forest. New Peer Reviewed Study Details Changes in Soil Chemistry and Devastation of Trees and Plants

2011 & 2012 How Encana/Ovintiv dumps it’s toxic waste in Alberta, land agents lie to landowners telling them it’s free fertilizer:

Encana/Ovintiv dumping waste heavy (illegally) at Rosebud; it reeked of hydrocarbons. From Page 7, A Landowner’s Guide to Drilling Waste Disposal from Oil and Gas Wells by industry’s self regulator: “In this method, drilling wastes are sprayed at very low application rates. … Wastes containing hydrocarbons are not allowed to be disposed of by this method.”

2012: Treatment plants ineffective in hydrocarbon removal

2012:

2013: Arsenic Uptake in Homegrown Vegetables from Mining-Affected Soils

2013: What to do with all the oil field dregs, some of it radioactive, some of it toxic, and there’s more and more of it

2013: Sewage Plants Struggle To Treat Wastewater Produced By Fracking Operations

2013: Out Of Control: Nova Scotia’s Experience with Fracking for Shale Gas, Analysis Reserve Pit Sludge from Fracing for Radioactive Material (TENORM)

2014: As Fracking Booms, Growing Concerns About Toxic, Radioactive Wastewater

2014: Scientists Find ‘Alarming’ Amount Of Arsenic In Groundwater Near Texas Fracking Sites; New perspectives on the effects of natural gas extraction on groundwater quality

2014: Germany EPA Frac Report Released: Risks Associated with Fracing are Too High; “So far, no company has been able to present a sustainable waste management concept”

2015: Hell Called … They want their ‘Salad Dressing’ Back: California farmers use oil firms’ waste to irrigate food. “There has been a gentleman’s agreement to promote deregulation”

2016: Will waste water kill fracing? EPA bans disposal of frac waste at public treatment plants. Injecting it causes seismicity, recycling it is costly, using it to irrigate and landspraying it contaminates food, dumping it into waterways kills fish, pits filled with it leak, breathing it in aerosols corrodes lungs. What will companies do with it?

2016: Frac’d Food: Could using toxic oilfield waste to irrigate crops be the end of food as we know it?

2016: The Most Horrific Frac Deregulation Yet? US EPA preparing for “widespread” radioactive frac waste contamination of drinking water or because it’s already happened? EPA’s proposed “protective regulation” to allow dramatically higher levels of radioactivity in drinking water

2017: Amazing New study: Hazardous Chemicals Go Unregulated in Routine Oil and Gas Operations. Chemical regulations that govern hydraulic fracturing do not apply to numerous other uses of same chemicals on oil & gas development fields. (The toxic secrecy is much worse in Canada)

2019: Colorado study shows toxic chemicals up to 2,000 feet from frac sites; Benzene (carcinogen), toluene (neurotoxin, notably damages the brain in children) and ethyltoluenes found at up to **10 times** recommended levels 500 feet from frac operations. “Secret exposure to chemicals that our own EPA reports as a potential hazard to human health is unconscionable.”

2019: Radioactive frac waste piling higher and higher; Groundwater used by families showing significant increases in radium. Montana regulator, DEQ, trying to increase radiation limit for frac waste up four times, four times more than allowed in any other state.

2019: Study: Oil Gas Industry Wastewater spread on roads to control dust & ice in at least 13 states, including Pennsylvania, poses threat to environment & human health; Ohio regulator tests on Aquasalina/Nature’s Own Source (made with frac waste, spread on roads, sold at Lowes and to cities for years) showed combined radium 226 & 228 exceeded USEPA Safe Drinking Water limits by average factor of 300

2020: America’s Radioactive Secret: Oil & gas wells produce nearly a trillion gallons of toxic waste a year in America. It could be making workers sick and contaminating communities (in Canada too). “Us bringing this stuff to the surface is like letting out the devil … It is just madness.”

2020: Yet another study proves how toxic frac waste water is, finds 201 compounds in it, including carcinogens, that can “directly contaminate drinking water sources”

2021: Turn toxic radioactive frac waste into bathing water to burn your babies’ skin off? To ingest, breath and live with? “It’s economically prohibitive to clean the water.” What do oil & gas companies hate more than anything? Spending money to clean up their deadly pollution, on the environment or to protect public health and our drinking water. Terrifying: Water management market for oil and gas production in the U.S. was worth $33.6 **billion** in 2018 (for their use, not ours!)

2021: Pennsylvania: Delmont-based Penneco Environmental Solutions’ frac waste injection rears secretive toxic radioactive head. Dr. Ned Ketyer: “Fracking has a toxic and radioactive waste problem that has never been adequately addressed and solved.”

2021: “Nightmare Contaminant” Forever Chemicals (PFAS) Use in Drilling & Frac’ing in More than 1,200 Wells in Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Texas, Wyoming between 2012 and 2020, including by Encana (in Canada too?). Records obtained from US EPA under Freedom of Information Act

2021: Brilliant courageous Justin Nobel to PA DEP’s Bureau of Radiation Protection at “Policy Hearing on Closing Hazardous Waste Loopholes” about oil & gas companies “screwing their own workers.” Critical issue in frac fields, including in Canada, because of the massive volumes of radioactive waste generated (Radium 226 persists for 1,600 years)

2023: Texas: 58,199 wells frac’d (some by Encana/Ovintiv) in 9 years with 6.1 billion lbs “trade secret” chemicals, nearly 100,000 lbs PFAS (extremely toxic at low levels) “forever” chemicals and precursors.

2024: Toxic tenacious PFAS chemicals, used widely in pesticides despite EPA denial, injected in frac’ing are damaging our health

2024: CAPE New Brunswick calls for permanent frac ban. Dr. Margaret McGregor: “Fracking introduces carcinogenic, mutagenic, and endocrine-disrupting chemicals into the local environment—and that has serious health repercussions.”

2024: Justin Nobel’s book, Petroleum 238, on oil, gas ‘n frac industry’s radioactive waste secret now available: “More Radioactivity Than at Chernobyl.” Jesse Lombardi: “In every single oilfield you will find these oilfield waste treatment centers churning radioactive waste around like pancake mix”

2024: Oilfield worker (frac’er? radioactive waste handler?) covered in sour crude oil (or frac waste?) “so strong and noxious” entire Weyburn General Hospital was contaminated and evacuated, source later “bagged and tagged.”

2025: USA Nazis killing the EPA the better to kill you with. Intelligence never was a feature of fascists, follow the Cult Leader is easier than using one’s own brain.

2025: Silent Crisis: Climate change causing 80% decline in insect populations in Costa Rica’s Área de Conservación Guanacaste; 50% of insect species worldwide face rapid decline. No worries, humans can eat plastic when food is no more.

2025: Oil and gas waste discharge point into waterways killed “everything.” Penn State U study indicates frac waste dumping increased radium in mussels; suggests radioactivity is bioaccumulating

2025: EPA’s IRIS (Integrated Risk Information System, created in 1985) measures threat of toxic chemicals. Musk’s Nazis intend to kill it. Hello toxicity and frac pollution everywhere. Eliminating use of IRIS’ chemical assessments “completely off the deep end.”

2025: Filament28:

The one entity Donald Trump cannot control is First Nations, on both sides of the border. This may become an important deterrent to his attempting to claim more ownership of land and water than has been agreed on in treaties.

Hakuin to Filament28:

…I don’t know…. Would you call rounding up all aboriginals and sending them to extermination camps “control”? Because that is what they plan to do.

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