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EPA: Halliburton Issued Subpoena For Refusing To Disclose Hydraulic Fracturing, 'Fracking,' Chemical Ingredients

MATTHEW DALY   11/ 9/10 05:41 PM ET   AP

Natural Gas Drilling

WASHINGTON — The Environmental Protection Agency subpoenaed energy giant Halliburton Tuesday, seeking a description of the chemical components used in a drilling technique called hydraulic fracturing.

The EPA said it issued the subpoena after Texas-based Halliburton refused to voluntarily disclose the chemicals used in the controversial drilling practice, also known as "fracking." Halliburton was the only one of nine major energy companies that refused the EPA's request.

The agency said the information is important to its study of fracking, in which crews inject millions of gallons of water, mixed with sand and chemicals underground to force open channels in sand and rock formations so oil and natural gas will flow.

The EPA is studying whether the practice affects drinking water and the public health.

A Halliburton spokeswoman said the company was disappointed by the EPA's action.

"Halliburton welcomes any federal court's examination of our good-faith efforts with the EPA to date," said spokeswoman Teresa Wong.

The subpoena is the latest bad news for Halliburton, which has been under fire for its role in the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Investigators for a presidential panel say the company pumped faulty cement into the well that later blew out, killing 11 people and spewing more than 200 million gallons of crude oil.

The company also has faced renewed criticism over a provision in the 2005 energy law that prevents the EPA from regulating fracking. The exemption is commonly called the "Halliburton loophole," in reference to the company's pioneering role in fracking. An energy task force convened by former Vice President Dick Cheney, a onetime Halliburton CEO, had urged the EPA exemption.

Wong said the EPA's request, made in September, was overly broad and could require the company to prepare about 50,000 spreadsheets.

"We have met with the agency and had several additional discussions with EPA personnel in order to help narrow the focus of their unreasonable demands so that we could provide the agency what it needs to complete its study of hydraulic fracturing," Wong said. Halliburton turned over nearly 5,000 pages of documents last week, she said.

Drilling companies have largely sought to protect their chemical formulas, calling them proprietary. Environmentalists are concerned that the chemicals, some of them carcinogens, will taint underground water supplies.

A 2009 report prepared for the Energy Department said sand and chemicals typically account for less than 2 percent of fracturing fluids, with water making up 98 to 99.5 percent.

The EPA is taking a new look at fracking as gas drillers swarm to the lucrative Marcellus Shale beneath Pennsylvania, New York, West Virginia and Ohio and blast into other shale formations around the country.

Fracking is exempt from federal regulation. The process is touted as the key to unlocking huge reserves of clean-burning natural gas.

Supporters say the practice is safe, noting that it is done thousands of feet below ground, much deeper than most water sources. They also point out that authorities have yet to link fracking to contaminated drinking water.

The EPA said in March it will study potential human health and water quality threats from fracking. Initial results are expected in 2012.

The EPA said eight other national and regional drilling companies either fully complied with its Sept. 9 request or made unconditional commitments to provide information soon. The other companies are BJ Services Co.; Complete Production Services; Key Energy Services; Patterson-UTI; RPC, Inc.; Schlumberger; Superior Well Services Inc.; and Weatherford. All but RPC and Superior are based in Houston. RPC is based in Atlanta and Superior in Indiana, Pa.

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WASHINGTON — The Environmental Protection Agency subpoenaed energy giant Halliburton Tuesday, seeking a description of the chemical components used in a drilling technique called hydraulic fract...
WASHINGTON — The Environmental Protection Agency subpoenaed energy giant Halliburton Tuesday, seeking a description of the chemical components used in a drilling technique called hydraulic fract...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bonnie Brill
11:01 AM on 12/13/2010
When someone refuses to divulge their compounds around public health issues, there is definitely a cause for concern.

When it comes to companies like Halliburton refusing to divulge their compounds around public health issues, be afraid, be very afraid!

Business as usual...
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AGooglyMinotaur
Ahh, Theseus. It appears you are out of thread.
09:42 AM on 12/13/2010
"Less than 2%?" As though that isn't a lot. They use 8 million gallons of fracking fluid on each well they drill. Even if it's just half a percent, the chemicals would make up 40,000 gallons.

How about I fill an Olympic-size swimming pool, and the Halliburton CEO's kids can go swimming in it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GreenKate
09:05 PM on 12/11/2010
To those who say Obama is just like the GOP: would W's EPA be checking into this issue?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
02:35 PM on 12/06/2010
Greetings from Marcellus country, where water which have served families for generations have suddenly become toxic in the vicinity of fracked wells. And as for this "all happening 1000's of feet underground, this certainly doesn't account for all of the material--and there is a great deal--dumped on the surface to find its way into both streams and groundwater.

Natural gas is "clean" energy in the familiar sense of the word--unless it comes from fracked wells. How can you consider a form of energy clean which is rapidly making the local drinking water supply undrinkable? And who knows how far the damage will spread?

And yet people shout: "Government regulation is the problem. Let companies do whatever they want to do without limit and we will have utopia.'
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Steve Rockett
02:42 AM on 12/03/2010
Yes, tell us about your fracking chemicals.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
creoleguy32
Exposer of Corruption
01:31 AM on 11/29/2010
It is very sad when Nigeria beats the EPA to trying to stop the most criminal and corrupt operation in the world, which is Halliburton. Lisa Perez Jackson and Obama do a whole lot of talking and supposedly investigations after we spent a year, begging them to do this but at the end of the day-we really have no faith in the EPA nor have any faith that Obama will do nothing other than delegate and move right along to something else like a Dream Act
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Alg0rhythm
REAL change is needed now!
12:30 PM on 11/24/2010
It wouldn't take a year to do an analysis.. delay, delay. You should need very specific permits to put ANY chemicals into the ground. Period.
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02:39 PM on 12/06/2010
Yes. They claim there is no "proof" that the chemicals they use are turning up in the water supply. How will the people whose kitchen faucets now spew toxins prove any connection when the lists of fracking chemicals are kept secret.

Let the frackers fill their water coolers with water drawn from the well nearest to the last well they worked, and drink nothing else. The problem will be resolved with a bit of justice.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
forty8r
Gerrman Freethinker
04:23 PM on 11/12/2010
Whhrever you find polution, destruction, and death you will find Halliburton and Cheney making a profit on it.
10:35 AM on 11/12/2010
So glad to see something being done about this... I hope we can stop it! Read my blog at www.greenl­ivingpeace­.com
10:34 AM on 11/12/2010
So glad to see something being done about this... I hope we can stop it! Read my blog at www.greenlivingpeace.com
07:47 AM on 11/12/2010
Close that loophole. There is no reason that any procedure whatsoever should be exempt from regulation. Certainly protection of profits is not a valid reason!
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08:20 PM on 11/11/2010
Let me get this straight. EPA simply asks for a list of fracking chemicals and Halliburton responds with a 'sorry, no that's too hard we need 50,000 spreadsheets to describe it'? Total BS! Seriously, if it takes 50,000 spreadsheets to describe what you're putting in our groundwater, IT DOES NOT BELONG THERE.
11:39 AM on 11/11/2010
Forget the report...let get the EPA analysis those tailing ponds!
11:28 AM on 11/11/2010
It's telling that the term used for fracturing shale formations to obtain natural gas is "fracking", which is an expression more commonly substituted for the obscenity describing human copulation.

Another case in which what's being done to the planet is being done to us.

"Bend over, 'mericuns, ya got it comin' to ya."
11:15 AM on 11/11/2010
Wow. The EPA. Pocket of progressive political power in a growing democratic power vacuum.