The resulting total of 270 reported oil and gas spills are posted for your review at
http://www.toxicstargeting.com/MarcellusShale/drilling_spills_profiles. These spills and uncontrolled releases reportedly caused fires, explosions, massive pollution releases, contaminated drinking water sources, home evacuations, tainted farmland and widespread threats to wetlands, streams, ponds, aquifers and other "sensitive receptors." Many of these DEC-reported problems have exceeded clean up standards for decades.
In short, DEC's own data document systematic, on-going failures to prevent oil and gas drilling pollution impacts or to clean them up. It is imperative that DEC resolve those regulatory shortcomings prior to issuing new drilling permits. Otherwise, the City of New York's reservoirs, other critical water supply sources and the environment of the Marcellus region as a whole could become irreparably contaminated.
Widespread Oil and Gas Hazards
Among those 270 oil and gas spills, a total of 65 reportedly do not meet clean up standards up to
26 years after being reported.
The remaining 205 spills reportedly meet clean up standards, but many of these oil and gas spills apparently were administratively closed as meeting clean up standards simply by being transferred from DEC's Spills Unit to its Division of Mineral Resources.
DEC's own information documents many spills are never remediated because the Division of Mineral Resources determined that no further action can be taken. Those cases routinely involve oil and gas contamination that spreads extensively in rivers, lakes, streams and wetlands and exceeds clean up standards. Many of those oil and gas releases reportedly have continued for decades. Notable spills include:
Much,
MUCH more here:
http://www.toxicstargeting.com/MarcellusShale/dSGEIS_comments