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cali

(114,904 posts)
Sun Sep 29, 2013, 05:18 PM Sep 2013

Frackers Guzzle Water as Texas Goes Thirsty

In summer, the bison on Thunderheart Ranch opt for the feathery shade of a mesquite tree as temperatures reach 100. This land, just a handful of miles from the Mexican border, was once known as The Wild Horse Desert, lawless, rough brush country where, in a good year, 21 inches of rain fell and in a bad year, less than a dozen descended from the clouds. “My grandfather used to say we get two 10-inch rains and never get the other inch,” says Hugh Fitzsimmons, owner of the 13,000-acre ranch.

Fitzsimmons hails from an old Dimmit County family that has several large holdings in the area 100 miles southwest of San Antonio. He also serves on the local Wintergarden Groundwater District and spends a good deal of his time worrying about the falling water levels in the underground aquifer that serves the sparsely populated county.

Even as fall officially begins in Texas and temperatures dip into the low nineties, 97% of the state is suffering from an extended drought that is pitting neighbor against neighbor in a battle over water. Lakeside restaurants are closed, boat docks stand high and dry, farmers are at odds with suburban gardeners, and small town wells are depleted. In the state’s booming Oil Patch, the earth is cracked and the grass is brittle, but water is still gushing to hundreds of hydraulic fracturing operations. It’s water in, energy and dollars out at a gold-rush pace that some say cannot continue.

<snip>

Drillers working the Eagle Shale Formation in South Texas use approximately 15,000 acre-feet (nearly 4.9 billion gallons) of water annually — about half the annual recharge in normal years — from the Carrizo-Wilcox Aquifer under Dimmit and its neighboring counties, according to the Southwest Research Institute, the non-profit, San Antonio-based research and development organization. To put that in perspective, the Environmental Protection Agency estimates the average U.S. household uses about 100,000 gallons of water a year.

Read more: http://nation.time.com/2013/09/29/frackers-guzzle-water-as-texas-goes-thirsty/#ixzz2gJpTxM6x


11 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Frackers Guzzle Water as Texas Goes Thirsty (Original Post) cali Sep 2013 OP
At some point, the repukes are going to start losing these areas.... just don't understand what CAG Sep 2013 #1
One third of Texas' water is poured on turf grass Link Speed Sep 2013 #2
At least THAT water gets recycled into the overall ecosystem derby378 Sep 2013 #3
There is a new law prohibiting homeowner associations from outlawing drought-tolerant landscaping jsr Sep 2013 #9
Really? A State law? Link Speed Sep 2013 #10
Yes, it's Senate Bill No. 198: jsr Sep 2013 #11
Well, isn't this what Texas wanted? nt kelliekat44 Sep 2013 #4
Yep. Earth_First Sep 2013 #5
Nope. derby378 Sep 2013 #6
Recommend! KoKo Sep 2013 #7
Kicked and recommended. Uncle Joe Sep 2013 #8

CAG

(1,820 posts)
1. At some point, the repukes are going to start losing these areas.... just don't understand what
Sun Sep 29, 2013, 05:53 PM
Sep 2013

the delay is all about, other than the fearmongering these people continuously hear from Faux news and from their pulpits on Sundays.

 

Link Speed

(650 posts)
2. One third of Texas' water is poured on turf grass
Sun Sep 29, 2013, 06:23 PM
Sep 2013

But we never hear about that, do we?

We hear about farming and fracking, but never about idiot homeowners and their beloved, non-native St Augustine-carpeted lawns.

derby378

(30,252 posts)
3. At least THAT water gets recycled into the overall ecosystem
Sun Sep 29, 2013, 06:39 PM
Sep 2013

If anyone thinks they can reclaim the water that's been flushed into a fracking well, good luck to them - that water is essentially gone forever.

And forever is a very long time.

jsr

(7,712 posts)
9. There is a new law prohibiting homeowner associations from outlawing drought-tolerant landscaping
Sun Sep 29, 2013, 09:37 PM
Sep 2013

and water conservation measures.

 

Link Speed

(650 posts)
10. Really? A State law?
Sun Sep 29, 2013, 09:49 PM
Sep 2013

Excellent.

My property is a meadow that was created by John Greenlee

http://www.greenleeandassociates.com/

I watered it maybe a total of five hours last year.

Four of those waters were fueled by wine. "Fuck yeah, let's go water this shit."

Way to go, Tejas.

jsr

(7,712 posts)
11. Yes, it's Senate Bill No. 198:
Sun Sep 29, 2013, 10:17 PM
Sep 2013

SECTION 1. Section 202.007(a), Property Code, is amended to read as follows:
(a) A property owners’ association may not include or enforce a provision in a dedicatory instrument that prohibits or restricts a property owner from:
(1) implementing measures promoting solid-waste composting of vegetation, including grass clippings, leaves, or brush, or leaving grass clippings uncollected on grass;
(2) installing rain barrels or a rainwater harvesting system;
(3) implementing efficient irrigation systems, including underground drip or other drip systems; or
(4) using drought-resistant landscaping or water-conserving turf.
SECTION 2. This Act takes effect September 1, 2013.

derby378

(30,252 posts)
6. Nope.
Sun Sep 29, 2013, 06:57 PM
Sep 2013

In fact, we just shut down a fracking project in Dallas County. City Council couldn't muster enough votes to approve it.

Only thing is, seems like someone behind the scenes is trying to restart the project and ram it through the bureaucracy.

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