Thursday 15 June 2017

Food Irrigated With Fracking Water May Require Labels In California

A new bill proposed in California would require all produceirrigated withfracking wastewaterto come withwarning http://www.homedepot.com/b/Outdoors-Garden-Center-Landscaping/N-5yc1vZbx51 labels.

The bill, which Assemblyman Mike Gatto (D)introduced on Monday, would require any crops grown with water that had previously been injected into rock formations to free oil and gas reserves and sold to consumers in the state to be labeled. The warning would read, "Produced using recycled or treated Sprinkler System oil-field wastewater."

"Consumers have a basic right to make informed decisions when it comes to the type of food that ends Sprinkler System Installation Richardson up on the family dinner table," Gatto said in a press release from his office. "Labeling food that has been irrigated with potentially harmful or carcinogenic chemicals, such as those in recycled fracking water, is the right thing to do."

Federal officials, environmentalists and the petroleum industry remain intensely divided on how safe fracking, or hydraulic fracturing, is. Debates over fracking largely revolve around whether the practice contaminates nearby groundwater, but an increase in farmers hydrating their crops with treated, previously injected water purchased from oil companies has aroused new concern.

Areport released last month by the California Council on Science and Technology did not discover strong evidence of dangerous chemicals in the recycled water -- but it also found that state regulators did not have an adequate testing process and that there was"not any control in place to prevent [contamination] from happening."

It's a risk Gatto believes people should be informed of.

"No one expects their lettuce to contain heavy chemicals from fr acking wastewater," he said. "Studies show a high possibility that recycled oil-field wastewater may still contain dangerous chemicals, even after treatment."

Least Environmental Senators



Least Environmental Senators

2012 LCV Scorecard: Lowest Scores In The Senate

The following 17 senators all scored under 10 in the League of Conservation Voters' 2012 National Environmental Scorecard.

The senators' scores are based on 14 votes on bills related to offshore drilling, Gulf restoration, oil subsidies, power plant air pollution and other environmental topics.

While over a dozen senators received fewer than 10 points, 37 senators received over 90 points on LCV's 100-point scale.

(Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)



http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/fracking-water-food-label-bill-california_us_55d38099e4b07addcb44544a

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