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 For Immediate Release, February  26, 2014 Contact:  Miyoko Sakashita, (415) 632-5308, [email protected]   Legal  Petition Urges EPA to Ban Dumping of Offshore Fracking Chemicals Into  California's Ocean SAN FRANCISCO— The Center for  Biological Diversity today filed a legal petition urging the Environmental  Protection Agency to stop oil and gas companies from dumping toxic chemicals  from fracking directly into ocean waters off California.  About half the oil platforms in the  Santa Barbara Channel discharge some or all of their wastewater into the sea.  The oil industry has federal permission to dump more than 9 billion gallons of  wastewater a year directly into the ocean off California’s coast. “It’s disgusting that oil  companies dump wastewater into California’s ocean,” said Miyoko Sakashita,  oceans director at the Center. “You can see the rigs from shore, but the  contaminated waters are hidden from view. Our goal is to make sure toxic fracking  chemicals don’t poison wildlife or end up in the food chain.” Today’s petition urges the EPA to  modify an existing federal permit that allows offshore oil and gas operations  to pollute the ocean with dangerous wastewater. Such wastewater may contain  fracking chemicals used in offshore wells. The  petition also calls on the EPA to develop national guidelines for offshore  fracking pollution. Oil  companies have hydraulically fractured more than a dozen wells in recent years  in federal waters off California, where the EPA permits wastewater discharge. At  least 200 wells in state waters have also been fracked.  A recent Center analysis of 12 frack  jobs in state waters found that at least one-third of chemicals used in these  fracking operations are suspected ecological hazards. Drawing on data disclosed  by oil companies, the Center also found that more than a third of these  chemicals are suspected of affecting human developmental and nervous systems. “It came as a  complete surprise to learn that oil companies are fracking in waters off the  coast where I let my kids swim and play,” said Sakashita. “The toxic chemicals  used for offshore fracking don’t belong in the ocean, and the best way to  protect our coast is to ban fracking altogether.”  Staff  experts with the California Coastal Commission recently recommended an end to  ocean discharges, citing concerns about the danger to California’s coastal  environment from dumping of fracking and acidizing chemicals from offshore oil  wells into federal waters. The  EPA must review the petition and make a determination about whether to modify  the water pollution permit. For more on the Center’s offshore fracking campaign: https://www.biologicaldiversity.org/campaigns/offshore_fracking/index.html The Center  for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization  with more than 675,000 members and online activists dedicated to the protection  of endangered species and wild places.             |