Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Texas awash in oil, but nary a drop to drink.

Courtesy of Mother Jones:  

Beverly McGuire saw the warning signs before the town well went dry: sand in the toilet bowl, the sputter of air in the tap, a pump working overtime to no effect. But it still did not prepare her for the night in June when she turned on the tap and discovered the tiny town where she had made her home for 35 years was out of water. 

"The day that we ran out of water I turned on my faucet and nothing was there and at that moment I knew the whole of Barnhart was down the tubes," she said, blinking back tears. "I went: 'Dear God, help us.' That was the first thought that came to mind." 

Across the Southwest, residents of small communities like Barnhart are confronting the reality that something as basic as running water, as unthinking as turning on a tap, can no longer be taken for granted. 

Three years of drought, decades of overuse and now the oil industry's outsize demands on water for fracking are running down reservoirs and underground aquifers. And climate change is making things worse. 

In Texas alone, about 30 communities could run out of water by the end of the year, according to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. 

Nearly 15 million people are living under some form of water rationing, barred from freely sprinkling their lawns or refilling their swimming pools. In Barnhart's case, the well appears to have run dry because the water was being extracted for shale gas fracking. 

The town—a gas station, a community hall, and a taco truck—sits in the midst of the great Texan oil rush, on the eastern edge of the Permian Basin. 

A few years ago, it seemed like a place on the way out. Now McGuire said she can see nine oil wells from her back porch, and there are dozens of RVs parked outside town, full of oil workers. 

But soon after the first frack trucks pulled up two years ago, the well on McGuire's property ran dry.

I cannot think of a more ironic story than this one. At least not recently.

Texas is the very epitome of trading your soul for profit, and in this case it has taken on a material form as they have traded money making oil for live giving water.

I read years ago that someday wars will not be fought for oil, land, or power. They will be fought over water, and they will make the great wars of the past pale by comparison.

23 comments:

  1. Anonymous2:54 PM

    The Bush family already has been buying water rights all over the place. These people know how to profit from other people's misery. No doubt Perry, Cheney and the other bloodsuckers are invested too.

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  2. Anonymous2:55 PM

    Time to start charging these fracking outfits the same price for extracting a barrel of oil they get out of the ground for every barrel of water they take out of the ground to get the oil and stop paying them subsidies to do it! What they are doing to our environment is nothing short of rape! Make them pay for their own rape kits (permits)!

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  3. Anonymous2:57 PM

    I've seen several Facebook postings pointing out that you cannot eat or drink oil or money...and that if we continue on this insane course of sacrificing everything for profit, we will die of thirst and malnutrition, by the millions.

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  4. Anonymous3:06 PM

    Assuredly is proof that the state government in TX doesn't take care of their own! Glad as hell I don't live in that state!

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    1. Anonymous6:28 PM

      Yes, how true. While Texas is running out of water and continues in its longest-ever drought, Rick Perry is running about mocking and blocking all efforts to take care of the environment and denouncing those who claim that climate change is occurring.

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  5. Anonymous3:07 PM

    Alaska is going to make a lot more money from our clean and abundant sources of water than we ever made from oil. Remember how people laughed at Wally Hickel's proposed water pipeline to SoCal? Well, that doesn't seem too far fetched now does it? I'm looking to get in on the ground floor for water futures, from AK to the drought ridden points south. Let's sell them our water, instead of them coming up here looking for it.

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    1. Anonymous8:09 PM

      Try it! Likely your Canadian neighbors won't take too kindly to that. Pump it elsewhere and there will be no recharge.

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  6. Anonymous3:46 PM

    One word: Dune.

    Read the novel or watch the movie.

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  7. lostinmn3:48 PM

    But fracking is good for the economy right? North Dakota's looking just as scary. Will take ten years but they'll be wanting to divert to Missouri River to frack away.

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  8. Anonymous3:55 PM

    As we say out West... "Whisky's for drinking. Water's for fighting over."

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  9. Anonymous4:04 PM

    Crow Texas....it's what's for dinner.......

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  10. Anonymous4:24 PM

    Gryphen, you have touched on something that my friend and I have talked quite a bit about. We live in Wisconsin, and there is always wrangling over the rights of the Great Lakes, our largest source of fresh water (Great Lakes Compact). We find it very interesting that Republicans, through redistricting, have entrenched themselves in the states surrounding these lakes. Walker was going around the country raising insane amounts for his recall, and now his reelection. He's gone more than he is home. I can't help but think he is promising some of his famous "no bid contracts" to wealthy Texas assholes. If not now, they have positioned themselves to have their hands on one of the most valuable future resources in the country. Frightening.

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    1. Anonymous8:10 PM

      Good thing that the Great Lakes Compact includes Canadian provincial executives, too.

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    2. Anonymous4:24 AM

      Living in northwestern Lower Michigan we worry constantly about the increasingly looney ideas about our Great Lakes. Only 2% of the water in the Great Lakes is replaceable, the rest is glacial. It must be preserved. But tell that to the GOP; all they see is dollar signs at the thought of drilling for gas or oil. So we all die of thirst. Our cars can keep going and our homes will be warm. For whatever succeeds us on this planet . . . .
      Beaglemom

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  11. fromthediagonal5:06 PM

    ... and they will make the great wars of the past pale by comparison...
    Gryphen, that is absolutely true, and it is not far away.
    I am content to be on a short leash as far as my own life is concerned, but I fear for the well being of the next generations.

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    1. Anonymous5:44 PM

      I posted a comment yesterday about all of the reasons to stay in AK and not move south and water is a very important one that I forgot to include. I feel for you down there. It's nice to know that we have a pretty secure source of water for eons but if the world falls apart I have to learn to hunt, fish and gather, and really that would suck as I'm not proficient in any of those things, and have done one of them only a few times and it was unpleasant.

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  12. Anonymous5:41 PM

    You people down there complainin' about your lack of water just need to get yourselves some glaciers and then global warmin' will melt 'em and you've got some water...

    Oh, wait, never mind....

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  13. Sally in MI6:29 PM

    Hoekstra lost his Senate bid in MI partially because he is all for drilling in Lake Michigan. Yup, let's put them oil rigs right in our fresh water source. What could go wrong? After all, TransCanada never has spills...oh wait...

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    1. Anonymous4:21 AM

      We also have to fight the fracking crowd here in Michigan. Why do people always want to destroy our water supplies? One would think that fresh water will always be available but it won't. Just look at the deserts that are growing and growing in Asia, Africa, Australia and in our own Southwest. This summer The Weather Channel keeps showing how one plume of dry, desert air after another is keeping the storms that help provide North America with fresh rainwater, albeit by way of storms and hurricanes, from developing. And then there's the future contamination of rivers and streams when the ocean levels rise a few more inches and start to affect near inland coastal waters. So why, when we have known for some time that the great deep Midwest aquifers are drying up do we suddenly want to frack deep into the earth's crust? We recently signed petitions to put the fracking question on the ballot in November. Unfortunately, knowing how dumb voters can be, especially when Big Money takes over the airwaves, the result could be disastrous. Just think - Michigan is now anti-union as a result of a ballot initiative that should never have happened.
      Beaglemom

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  14. Anonymous6:37 PM

    Drill baby, drill!

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    1. Anita Winecooler7:45 PM

      "Abundant God given fungible commodity underfoot" My Ass.

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  15. Anita Winecooler7:53 PM

    "The town—a gas station, a community hall, and a taco truck—sits in the midst of the great Texan oil rush, on the eastern edge of the Permian Basin."

    Think about that for a second. What kind of revenue can they have? What's their tax base?

    I keep seeing these pro fracking commercials touting how safe and responsible the drilling is, and I read article after article about them raping billions of gallons of water that becomes a polluted toxic mess. Don't worry, we'll seal your wells with concrete, etc etc etc. What good is sealed wells in a drought?


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  16. Does that mean God is turning his back on Texas for hating women?

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