A U.S. Environmental Protection Agency official tells an Ohio fracking conference that a study of the threat to drinking water from the shale-drilling process won’t be completed until 2016.
That’s the word from Jeanne Briskin, coordinator of hydraulic fracturing research at the EPA’s Office of Research and Development. She spoke Tuesday at a two-day conference on the subject in Cleveland.
The Akron Beacon Journal reports that Briskin said the EPA could release a preliminary report late next year. She described the work as “complex research.”
Congress in 2010 directed the agency to investigate the threat to groundwater and air from the controversial hydraulic-fracturing process in Ohio and other states.
Critics say it is harmful to the environment.
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
AI for the Defense: Should Insurers or Law Firms Pay?
Florida Woman Drives Elevated Pickup Over Lamborghini Sports Car in Parking Lot
Travelers to Expand Homeowners Insurance Offering in California
Trump Says Iran Wants Hormuz Open in Tussle Over War’s End