“La sabiduría de la vida consiste en la eliminación de lo no esencial. En reducir los problemas de la filosofía a unos pocos solamente: el goce del hogar, de la vida, de la naturaleza, de la cultura”.
Lin Yutang
Cervantes
Hoy es el día más hermoso de nuestra vida, querido Sancho; los obstáculos más grandes, nuestras propias indecisiones; nuestro enemigo más fuerte, el miedo al poderoso y a nosotros mismos; la cosa más fácil, equivocarnos; la más destructiva, la mentira y el egoísmo; la peor derrota, el desaliento; los defectos más peligrosos, la soberbia y el rencor; las sensaciones más gratas, la buena conciencia, el esfuerzo para ser mejores sin ser perfectos, y sobretodo, la disposición para hacer el bien y combatir la injusticia dondequiera que esté.
MIGUEL DE CERVANTES Don Quijote de la Mancha.
La Colmena no se hace responsable ni se solidariza con las opiniones o conceptos emitidos por los autores de los artículos.
26 de agosto de 2014
Fracking Link to Birth Defects Probed in Early Research
By Isaac ArnsdorfAug 25, 2014 11:30 PM GMT-0430
Photographer: Julia Schmalz/Bloomberg
A natural gas production site at the Marcellus Shale formation in Camptown, Pennsylvania, Oct.19, 2011.
The first research into the effects of oil and gas development on
babies born near wells has found potential health risks. Government
officials, industry advocates and the researchers themselves say more
studies are needed before drawing conclusions.
While the
findings are still preliminary, any documented hazards threaten to cast a
shadow over hydraulic fracturing, or fracking -- the process of
blasting chemicals, sand and water deep underground to extract fuel from
rock that’s helped push the U.S. closer to energy self-sufficiency than
at any time since 1985.
“It’s not really well understood how
the environment interacts with genetics to produce these birth defects,”
said Lisa McKenzie of the Colorado School of Public Health,
who conducted research published in January in the journal
Environmental Health Perspectives. “We really need to do more study to
see what the association is, if any, with natural gas development.”
McKenzie
and her colleagues discovered more congenital heart defects in babies
born to mothers living near gas wells in Colorado. Two studies, which
have not been peer reviewed, showed infants born near fracking sites in Pennsylvania were more likely to have low birth weight, a sign of developmental problems. In Utah,
local authorities are investigating a spate of stillbirths after tests
found dangerous levels of air pollution from the oil and gas industry.
Photographer: Ty Wright/Bloomberg
Two studies, which have not been peer reviewed, showed infants born near fracking sites... Read More
Mitigate Risks
“The question isn’t are there
risks, the question is are there rules and regulations in place that
effectively mitigate these risks and deal with problems should they
occur, and the answer is yes,” said Steve Everley, a spokesman for
Washington-based Energy In Depth, an industry-funded group that promotes
fracking. “The body of scientific knowledge has to advance gradually
and you have to look at all of these things and the full spectrum. You
can’t just look at this one individual or this group of studies.”
In published research,
McKenzie and her colleagues found that babies born to mothers living
with more than 125 wells within a mile (1.6 km) of their homes showed a
30 percent increase in congenital heart defects compared with those with
no wells within 10 miles. The abnormalities, based on 59 available
cases in Colorado,
ranged in severity and could have resulted from genes or environmental
causes other than fossil-fuel extraction, according to McKenzie.
Mothers’ Genetics
The
study wasn’t conclusive because it didn’t account for different types
of wells, water quality, mothers’ behavior or genetics, the Colorado
Department of Public Health and Environment said in an e-mailed
statement. The state’s oil and gas rules are the most stringent in the
nation, said Larry Wolk, the department’s director and chief medical officer.
“I
would tell pregnant women and mothers who live, or who at the time of
their pregnancy lived, in proximity to a gas well not to rely on this
study as an explanation of why one of their children might have had a
birth defect,” Wolk said in the statement. “Many factors known to
contribute to birth defects were ignored in this study.”
McKenzie said she’s starting another four-year study, funded by the American Heart Association,
that focuses on a subset of the cases to determine their precise
exposures to pollutants and other risk factors, such as the parents’
occupations.
“I think it’s up to each individual to look at the
data and make their own decision on whether or not they’re concerned,”
McKenzie said. “The data do tell us with more wells in the area there
are more congenital heart defects, although there are a lot of
limitations in the data and when we start looking at it more closely,
that may or may not stand up.”
Separate Investigation
A separate investigation
into 22 anomalies in unborn children in Garfield County, Colorado, in
2013 found no underlying cause after examining factors including
proximity to active oil and gas wells, the state’s public health
department said in May. The county has more than 2,000 oil and gas
wells, according to FracFocus.org, an industry-sponsored website.
Kathleen Sgamma, a spokeswoman for the Western Energy Alliance, an industry group whose members include Anadarko Petroleum Corp. (APC) and Pioneer Natural Resources Co. (PXD),
said exploration and production companies are funding more research on
health effects and are working to reduce emissions by installing
equipment and adjusting practices.
“It’s way too early to jump
to conclusions,” Sgamma said. “It’s a real big leap that I don’t think
you can draw at this time at all, if ever, to say that because air
pollution can cause birth defects, that’s exactly what’s happening.”
Birth Defects
Two
Pennsylvania studies, however, found increases in low birth weight near
gas drilling. They haven’t been published in peer-reviewed journals.
Infants
born within 2.5 kilometers (1.6 miles) of fracking sites were about 60
percent more likely to have low birth weight, according to a review of
Pennsylvania birth records from 2004 to 2011 by researchers from Princeton University, Columbia University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The study was presented at the annual meeting of the American Economic Association in January.
That research echoed a December working paper by Elaine Hill, then an economics graduate student at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York,
which found that babies born to mothers living within 2.5 kilometers of
a gas well during pregnancy had lower average birth weights after
drilling than before. The results were consistent between piped public
water and well water, suggesting the exposure came from air pollution or
stress, Hill said in the paper.
Birth Weight
Low
birth weight leads to higher health-care expenses and greater likelihood
of needing special education, amounting to a total cost to society of
about $96,500 per child, according to the paper. Previous research has
shown a link between air pollution and low birth weight in general, Hill
said in the study.
In Utah’s Uintah Basin, where at least 17
drillers operate, the air has dangerously high levels of ozone and other
toxins from oil and gas emissions, according to measurements by
researchers at the University of Colorado
at Boulder in the first two months of 2012 and 2013. The basin has more
than 11,000 oil and gas wells, with proposals for almost 25,000 more,
the researchers said in the study,
published in March in the journal Environmental Science &
Technology. The area sits atop about 1.32 trillion barrels of oil, one
of the largest oil shale deposits in the world, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
Summer Smog
The rural area’s air pollution was equivalent to the annual exhaust of 100 million cars and worse than Los Angeles’s
smog in the summer, according to the article. High ozone levels are
known to cause breathing problems and early death, the researchers said.
Concerns surfaced this summer that the pollution might
contribute to infant deaths in Vernal, a city of about 10,000 in the
Uintah Basin.
Last year, a midwife named Donna Young delivered a
stillborn baby for the first time in 19 years. At the funeral, she said
she noticed the cemetery had a number of recent graves with single
dates.
Official figures on infant mortality in 2013 aren’t yet
available, according to the state’s Office of Vital Records and
Statistics. So Young examined obituaries, counting 12 deaths in 2013, up
from four a year earlier, three in 2011 and two in 2010. The rate
appears to be six times the national average, according to Utah
Physicians for a Healthy Environment.
“Whenever you see a
pollution nightmare, if you look hard enough you’re going to have a
public health nightmare,” said Brian Moench, a Salt Lake City
anesthesiologist and president of the physicians’ group. “There’s enough
evidence to suggest that this is a serious problem.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Isaac Arnsdorf in New York at iarnsdorf@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Bob Ivry at bivry@bloomberg.net Philip Revzin