A PA Landfill Polluted Streams For Decades; Fracking Waste Is Making It Even Worse
YUKON, Pa.In a rural pocket of western Pennsylvania, along the leafy banks of Sewickley Creek, a small, jagged pipe juts just above the waterline, its cement casing carpeted in moss. The pipe releases treated wastewater into the creeka popular spot for kayaking and fishingfrom a landfill that handles some of the states most toxic industrial waste, including from oil and gas drilling.
Two new signs on the opposite shore correct the impression of a forgotten relic. Warning! Hazardous Waste Discharge Point, they read. Arsenic, lead, cyanide, cadmium, hexavalent chromium, and more are permitted substances for discharge at this site. The Max Environmental Technologies landfill has been out of compliance with requirements set under the Clean Water Act for most of the past three years and with the federal hazardous waste law, the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, known as RCRA for short, since July 2023.
Pollution has taken a toll on the creek: Scientists at the University of Pittsburgh and Duquesne University tested Max Environmentals outfall and found radioactivity in the sediment downstream of the discharge point was 1.4 times higher than upstream. The researchers connected this radioactivity to the landfills intake of oil and gas waste, which spiked earlier in Pennsylvanias fracking boom. I wouldnt eat the fish. I wouldnt swim in the water, said John Stolz, a professor of environmental microbiology at Duquesne, who co-authored the study and has researched oil and gas waste in Pennsylvania for 15 years. EPA water quality data for Sewickley Creek shows that much of it is classified as impaired.
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Wastewater production, meanwhile, skyrocketed from around 168 million gallons per year before the boom in 2003 to more than 3.3 billion in 2023. This waste poses enormous regulatory challenges for state and federal authorities because it is highly toxic and often radioactive. Options for disposing of it have ranged from injecting it underground, a practice linked to earthquakes in other states, to repackaging the often extremely salty water as a dust suppressant for public roads, where it can contaminate soil and waterand of course, sending it to landfills. Each of them is deeply flawed as a long-term solution.
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https://insideclimatenews.org/news/23022025/pennsylvania-landfill-pollution-problems-fracking-waste/