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 For  Immediate Release, September 19, 2016  Contact:Kristen Monsell, (510) 844-7137, [email protected] Obama Administration Urged to Halt Dumping of Offshore Fracking  Waste Into Gulf of Mexico Proposed Permit  Threatens Sea Turtles, Fish, Other Gulf Wildlife ATLANTA—  An Obama administration proposal to continue allowing oil companies to dump unlimited  amounts of offshore fracking chemicals into the Gulf of Mexico violates federal  law and threatens endangered marine wildlife, the Center for Biological  Diversity warned over the weekend.  In a letter to the  Environmental Protection Agency on a proposed wastewater discharge permit for  offshore oil and gas drilling activities in the eastern Gulf of Mexico, the Center  explained that the proposed permit violates the Clean Water Act because it  causes an undue degradation of the marine environment. “The permit allows the  unlimited discharge of produced wastewater, including the unlimited discharge  of chemicals used in offshore fracking and other well-stimulation treatments,”  the letter noted.  “The  EPA is endangering an entire ecosystem by allowing the oil industry to dump  unlimited amounts of fracking chemicals and drilling waste fluid into the Gulf  of Mexico,” said Center attorney Kristen Monsell. “This appalling plan from the  agency that's supposed to protect our water violates federal law and shows a disturbing  disregard for offshore fracking’s toxic threats to sea turtles and other Gulf  wildlife.” Today's  letter also points out that the EPA is relying on a 33-year-old study of waste  fluid produced by offshore platforms, despite the drilling of more than 450  wells in the area since 2010 alone. The letter urges EPA to adopt a  zero-discharge requirement for produced water and fracking chemicals, as is  required under other offshore drilling permits.  At  least 10 fracking chemicals routinely used in offshore fracking could kill or  harm a broad variety of marine species, including marine mammals and fish,  Center scientists have found. The California  Council on Science and Technology has identified some common fracking chemicals  to be among the most toxic in the world to marine animals. Fracking chemicals raise grave  ecological concerns because, among other factors, the Gulf of Mexico is  important habitat for whales, sea turtles and fish, and contains critical  habitat for imperiled loggerhead sea turtles. Dolphins and other species in the  Gulf are still suffering lingering effects from the Deepwater Horizon oil  spill.  As explained in the letter, the EPA  is proposing to allow oil companies to discharge fracking chemicals without  even knowing how much fracking has, or would, occur in the Gulf by relying on  data from 1988. Information recently obtained by the Center indicates that oil  companies were permitted to frack more than 1,200 times from more than 600  wells from 2010 to 2014 alone. And the agency is relying on more than 30-year-old  data to estimate the volume of produced water to be discharged. “The  Obama administration can’t just turn a blind eye to how offshore fracking could  hurt the Gulf’s wildlife,” Monsell added. “It’s the EPA’s  job to protect water quality from offshore fracking, not rubberstamp the  dumping of the wastewater from this dangerous, disgusting practice.”  The Center for  Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with  more than 1.1 million members and online activists dedicated to the protection  of endangered species and wild places. |