Unique Quality Products
Protect West Texans From Toxic Pollution
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Sponsor: The Rainforest Site
Pollution from fossil fuel drilling in the Permian Basin is threatening the environment and health of people in West Texas.
The Permian Basin oil producing region encompasses about 63,834 square miles in western Texas and southeastern New Mexico, extending to 29,000 feet underground, making it one of the thickest hydrocarbon producing regions in the world1.
Oil companies have been drilling in the Permian since the 1920s, but horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing brought a new boom to the region in the past decade. In 2015, Congress lifted the U.S. ban on the export of crude oil, further boosting domestic production.2.
According to the International Energy Agency, U.S. crude oil will account for 80 percent of the growth in global oil supply over the next seven years, and most of that oil will come from the Permian3.
With that oil comes record-breaking production of natural gas and natural gas liquids, along with the processing, storage, and transportation that these products require. This requires a massive buildout of plants, tanks, pipes, and other infrastructure most of which release air pollution.
Sulfur dioxide is a dangerous air pollutant that harms people and animals, and acidifies soil and water. Short-term exposures to SO2 can harm the human respiratory system and make breathing difficult. People with asthma, particularly children, are especially sensitive to these effects of SO24.
A 2018 study, published in the American Chemistry Society’s Environmental Science and Technology, found that health costs in Odessa (Ector County) attributable to SO2 air pollution are greater than many of Texas’ heavily industrialized Gulf Coast counties5.
Industry self-reported sulfur dioxide releases from flaring activity around Odessa are causing levels of air pollution more than double the national health-based standard throughout the county, including at churches and residences6.
“Since 2013, oil and gas companies have flared almost a trillion cubic feet of natural gas in the Permian with virtually no protection for the communities that have to breathe the results,” said Colin Leyden, Director at the Environmental Defense Fund6. “The Texas Railroad Commission has ignored years of pressure to address the problem. We’re calling on the EPA to make sure Texans have the basic safeguards they deserve.”
We cannot allow the residents of West Texas to suffer because their leaders are failing to meet the federal health-based National Ambient Air Quality Standard for human exposure to sulfur dioxide (SO2). Sign the petition below and demand the EPA redesignate Ector County, Texas, under the National Ambient Air Quality Standard.