Universities Testing Water From Ohio, Monongahela & Allegheny Rivers

by Duane Nichols on December 14, 2012

Universities Testing Water

Three Rivers QUEST Program

Primarily from article by Casey Junkins, Wheeling Intelligencer, December 10, 2012

Saying they want to prevent carcinogenic trihalomethanes from forming in the region’s water supply, officials with West Virginia University and Wheeling Jesuit University are checking major rivers for pollution.

Wheeling Jesuit biology professor Ben Stout joined others in Pittsburgh last week to take a sampling of the Ohio and Allegheny rivers as part of the Three Rivers QUEST, a federally funded program designed to monitor water quality in these rivers, as well as the Monongahela River. The Allegheny meets with the Monongahela River in the heart of Pittsburgh to form the Ohio River, which flows southward through the upper Ohio Valley.

Even though he admits that bromide – the chemical whose presence can lead to trihalomethanes – can occur naturally, Stout said bromide is commonly found in rivers near areas that have heavy Marcellus Shale natural gas activity.

He said officials want to collect data from various points along all three rivers every two weeks for one year to see how much the region’s gas drilling is impacting the water supply.”We need to see exactly what is getting into our water. That way, we can take action now before it is too late,” Stout said.

In addition to cancer, exposure to trihalomethanes can cause liver damage or decrease nervous system activity, according to the Centers for Disease Control.

After gas drillers pump millions of gallons of fracking fluid – consisting mostly of water and sand, but also including different chemical combinations that vary per the choice of the driller – into a production well, much of this substance flushes back up through the well. The fracking fluid combines with minerals and mud from the earth to create the briny wastewater that contains bromide.

Gas drillers have also been known to use ethylene glycol, a substance found in antifreeze, in their fracking fluid. Some others have used formaldehyde, which the Occupational Safety and Health Administration identifies as “reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen.”

See the web site for the WVU Three Rivers QUEST Program here.

Leave a Comment

Previous post:

Next post: