Doctors for the Environment Australia (DEA) has, for years, been warning governments that coal seam gas (CSG) mining is toxic to public health.
It said in a 2011 inquiry into聽the management of the Murray Darling Basin that CSG may have 鈥渁dverse effects on human health by contamination of drinking and agricultural-use water, and air鈥.
鈥淐ontaminants of concern include many of the chemicals used for fracking, as well as toxic substances produced through this process and mobilised from the sedimentary regions drilled. Some of these compounds can produce short-term health effects and some may contribute to systemic illness and/or cancer many years later.鈥
Public health is not mentioned in discussions around CSG mining, DEA said, although the public is being exposed to dangerous health hazards. Publicly available information on the chemicals used in CSG mining is inadequate, as is their assessment and regulation.
Evidence from several countries shows that environmental exposures may put people at risk 鈥渁nd these concerns have led to moratoria on further mining operations鈥.
聽and not suitable for agricultural or domestic purposes. Flowback water and produced water from CSG fracking can also contain volatile organic compounds and radioactive substances.
A 2011 report from the聽 at the University of East Anglia, Britain, noted that 鈥渇lowback fluid is likely to be of greater concern than that of the fracturing fluid itself, and is likely to be considered as hazardous waste in the UK鈥.
It said聽, held in evaporation ponds, can also be released into the local atmosphere and inhaled.
聽risks human health and fugitive emissions from the production process contribute to overall greenhouse gas emissions.聽This colourless, odourless, flammable gas, even at levels of 5%, can form an explosive mixture.
Victorian residents recently won a of $23.5 million, after being evacuated from their homes in Cranbourne鈥檚 Brookland Greens Housing Estate due to explosive levels of methane gas from a neighbouring landfill.
The large volumes of methane erupting from the Condamine River present serious health and safety concerns. It is not only the effects of each chemical that may be dangerous, but the potential for unpredictable chemical combinations.
BTEX chemicals聽
The chemicals benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene and xylene (BTEX) are frequently found together in petroleum compounds. These chemicals, known as volatile organic compounds (VOCs), easily vapourise, so people can be exposed through drinking water, bathing or breathing in vapour.
Long-term exposure to benzene, even in very small amounts, can affect bone marrow, cause聽anaemia, increase聽the risk of leukaemia聽and can affect foetuses.
聽can damage the nervous system, liver and kidneys, and ethylbenzene is a possible human carcinogen.聽
DEA said the fracking process 鈥渃an release BTEX from natural gas reservoirs, allowing them to escape into aquifers or the surrounding air鈥. BTEX chemicals have been found after at least two fracking operations in Queensland.
The federal environment department鈥檚 of the impacts of proposed CSG operations in the Murray-Darling Basin noted: 鈥淣o data has been made available to examine the possible implications of hydrocarbons, for example, BTEX, in associated water.鈥澛
DEA concluded that 鈥渢he Environmental Impact Assessment processes used have been inadequate and inconsistent and have failed to assess health impacts appropriately and have not protected the public health鈥.聽
Salt dangers
Water expert Professor聽, who was commissioned to do an independent expert appraisal of the Baking Board waste storage facility at Chinchilla with a capacity for 15 million tonnes, said that as salt does not biodegrade in the environment; it 鈥渉as an infinite environmental residence time鈥.
He said salt storages聽鈥渘eed to be maintained on a permanent basis (decades or longer) or until the salt is re-mined and removed from the facility.聽Failure to do so will guarantee that the salt will eventually contaminate the local environment including groundwater and surface water.鈥
A 10-year action plan and landfill disposal for 10鈥15 years is a risky postponement, not a solution.
When it comes to estimating the volume of salt likely to be generated, Khan stated that the 鈥減roduct salt鈥, had been miscategorised as 鈥済eotechnically benign鈥 and 鈥渕arginally dissolvable鈥. 鈥淚n fact the salt can be expected to be composed primarily of sodium bicarbonate 鈥 all highly water-soluble salts.鈥
The draft report calculation of the 5 million tonne volume of toxic salt, likely to be generated over the estimated 30-year lifespan of the industry (and thus the potential risk it poses), is far too small when gauged at the volume of water currently produced by the existing 8600 CSG wells聽in Queensland,聽which is the only concrete figure applicable.
The total proposed CSG wells by the industry in Queensland are many more than the present 8600 assessed by the聽Queensland聽Office of Groundwater Impact Assessment.
Local daily temperatures are higher than 20掳C most days of the year, rising to the 40s in summer. Both mean exponential increases in the total volume of toxic salts that will be produced.
Khan concluded that 鈥渁n operation such as this to be a high risk鈥, because the 鈥渓ikelihood of contaminating groundwater and surface water over the long term is considerable鈥.
Khan鈥檚 2013 report to the New South Wales Chief Health Scientist stated that 鈥渟tored concentrates and residuals from produced water treatment pose risks to adjacent soils, surface water and groundwater鈥.
He said produced water 鈥渃an be effectively treated鈥 using water treatment technologies, however, such processes 鈥渕erely concentrate the salts and other contaminants, rather than eliminate them鈥.
鈥淒isposal by landfill or land application poses environmental risks unlikely to be manageable over the long term.聽This is because the hazardous substances [salts] in produced water are non-degradable and their ongoing effective containment may only be achieved for a finite period.鈥
No accountability
An Australian Petroleum Production & Exploration Association (APPEA) spokesperson聽at a meeting on the draft brine management action plan聽last year聽said he believed that the health and environmental consequences of CSG extraction and its by-products and wastes were not the mining industry鈥檚 responsibility, and that the public should pay for their management and disposal.
鈥淲aste is waste, and all wastes should be treated the same, and the industry should not have to be responsible for its own waste,鈥 he said.
Farmers are directly financially responsible for any contaminants found in beef produced, and the Property Identification Code system can trace responsibility back to each farm. Why should the mining industry be any less accountable, particularly when its waste is permitted to contaminate our water?
CSG is a short-term industry, with a maximum lifespan of 30 years. The agricultural industry will continue to grow food, communities, gross domestic product and jobs, as will the tourism industry, if they are not destroyed by poisoned water.
When former Independent MP Tony Windsor negotiated the water trigger legislation in 2011, he said: 鈥淐SG and coal mining projects can no longer be given the green light unless independent scientific advice concludes they won't damage our precious water resources.鈥
Even shadow environment minister Greg Hunt said during debate on the water-trigger law, which eventually received bipartisan support, that: 鈥淲e do not play dice with our underground water resources, our aquifers, the resources of the Murray Darling Basin or the Great Artesian Basin; we simply do not take risks on that front.鈥
The facts show that successive governments鈥 refusal to put a moratorium on CSG and coal mining until waste disposal problems are resolved means they continue to gamble with the country鈥檚 most important natural resource 鈥 clean water.
The CSG brine management report stated that conclusions are based on medium-term solutions. But salt is a persistent long-term problem. A 10-year plan is useless when salt is a toxin that doesn鈥檛 break down.
Queensland鈥檚聽coal seam gas brine management 聽said that the priority in managing saline waste (after trying to manufacture saleable products) is 鈥渄isposing of the brine and salt residues in accordance with strict standards that protect the environment鈥.
Page 5 of the 2012 聽states that: 鈥淭he operator must: dispose brine and salt away from sensitive receiving environments.鈥 That means the CSG industry must get out of the Murray-Darling Basin catchment.聽
APPEA the Queensland government that regulated waste landfill is the best management option. If so, the only environmentally responsible solution is to stop production of CSG until a long-term solution can be found for the safe disposal of industry聽wastes.
[Elena Garcia and Glen Beasley are regenerative graziers on the Western Downs in聽Queensland.]