Africa Water, Sanitation & Hygiene Africa water, Sanitation Mar- Apr 2015 Vol.10 No.2 | Page 33

Water Quality New Dangers Found In Produced Water By Sara Jerome Produced water appears to contain two harmful chemicals that researchers previously did not know about, according to a For more produced water news and analysis, check out Water new study. Online’s Produced Water Solution Center. Image credit: “Oil Well,” the great 8 © 2012, used under an Attribution 2.0 Generic license: https:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ “Harmful levels of ammonium and iodide have now been found in wastewater from conventional oil and gas production plus the more controversial practice of hydraulic fracturing, known as fracking. The chemicals, pulled up from the earth, arrive at the surface at concentrations high enough to harm aquatic life and form cancer-causing compounds when mixed with the chlorine in tap water,” according to Science News. The study, published this month in Environmental Science & Technology, noted the dangers these chemicals may pose. “Bromide, iodide, and ammonium in surface waters can impact stream ecosystems and promote the formation of toxic brominated-, iodinated-, and nitrogen disinfection byproducts during chlorination at downstream drinking water treatment plants. Our findings indicate that discharge and accidental spills of oil and gas wastewater to waterways pose risks to both human health and the environment,” the study said. Treating produced water may not be enough to make it safe. “The researchers found high levels of both ammonium and iodide in many samples. Even treated wastewater had levels of ammonium up to 50 times higher than the maximum levels found to be safe by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,” the report said. According to the pro-fracking industry group Energy from Shale, fracking is safe. “Hydraulic fracturing is safe and well-regulated by federal and state agencies. The technologies and processes continue to be improved, guided by industry standards developed from experiences in the field and which undergo rigorous review before adoption,” the group says. FAST FACTS Did you know? • Some 2.5 billion people – two-thirds of whom live in Asia, and a quarter in sub-Saharan Africa – still use unimproved sanitation facilities and 748 million people are without clean water. • If you think about it, that’s a sizeable chunk of the world’s population (more than 7 billion, in case you are wondering!). • There’s more: Women and girls are disproportionately affected. • How so? The distances travelled, especially in unprotected areas, to get water and the lack of safe, private toilets make women and girls more vulnerable to violence. This can also be an impediment to girls’ education and takes time away from income-generating activities. • Women and girls also bear the main burden of water collection in developing countries. In fact, an analysis of 25 countries in sub-Saharan Africa revealed that 71 per cent of the water collectors in the region are women and girls, and just one day women collectively spend an in estimated 16 million hours fetching water (men, 6 million in comparison). • We did the math: 1 million hours = 114 years = more than a century! Now, times that by 16… WHAT?! • The next time you grab a glass of water or walk on over to the bathroom, remember: • Sustainable