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felszereos

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Mar 6, 2013, 2:26:09 AM3/6/13
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oops,

everybody should applicate this type of guidelines
After an outcry from
Wyoming�s governor, Matt Mead, and the energy industry that the federal
report was premature and inconclusive, more testing was conducted by the
United States Geological Survey and is being processed. The E.P.A. is also in
the midst of collecting additional water samples for study.
Renny MacKay,
a spokesman for Mr. Mead, said the governor was committed to figuring out a
long-term fix for about 20 homes whose water was found to contain
contaminants while the source of the pollution is studied.
After an outcry
from Wyoming�s governor, Matt Mead, and the energy industry that the federal
report was premature and inconclusive, more testing was conducted by the
United States Geological Survey and is being processed. The E.P.A. is also in
the midst of collecting additional water samples for study.
After an
outcry from Wyoming�s governor, Matt Mead, and the energy industry that the
federal report was premature and inconclusive, more testing was conducted by
the United States Geological Survey and is being processed. The E.P.A. is
also in the midst of collecting additional water samples for study.
�Until
there is a peer-reviewed study and a good scientific basis that indicates
that the issues related to water are related to our operations, that is not
something we are ready to address,� said Doug Hock, an Encana spokesman.

Mr. Hock said it should have come as no surprise that the E.P.A.�s two
monitoring wells showed high levels of methane and benzene because they were
drilled deep into a natural gas field.
Renny MacKay, a spokesman for Mr.
Mead, said the governor was committed to figuring out a long-term fix for
about 20 homes whose water was found to contain contaminants while the source
of the pollution is studied.
In the meantime, the state has offered to
provide cisterns for local residents, using $750,000 allocated by the Wyoming
Legislature this year. Under the plan, people here would still have to pay a
fee to have their water hauled from the nearby community of Pavillion, at a
cost that could run more than $150 per month.
For the last few years, a
small group of farmers and landowners scattered across this rural Wyoming
basin have complained that their water wells have been contaminated with
chemicals from a controversial drilling technique known as hydraulic
fracturing, or fracking.
Encana Oil and Gas (U.S.A.) Inc., which bought the
Pavillion gas field in 2004 and operates about 125 gas wells in the area, is
already providing jugs of drinking water for Mr. Locker and 20 other
households. It is unclear whether Encana will defray any of the cost of the
cistern water.
;
what are the main interests of the water facilities management?

Thanks

Orphic

unread,
Mar 6, 2013, 10:43:40 AM3/6/13
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felszereos <fabricef...@ymail.com> wrote in
news:365...@news.orange.fr:
Did a child write this?

Take it outside kiddies.
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