Thursday, July 21, 2011

Franking in Sarnia-Lambton to Continue - Should It Be Stopped?

C Is For Cinderella Stamp
Creative Commons License photo credit: cliff1066™


More franking concerns continue. In Sarnia Ontario, also know as the chemical valley many plants are dependent on the availability of natural gas for raw chemical production. With such a high demand for cheap natural gas fracking seems to make sense for increasing availability. The problem with this is the current unknown of consequences of franking an the exposure to radiation and toxic chemicals. Below is the expand report of the concerns of the Sarnia and Lambton county representatives.

stopfrackingontario wrote:

Chemical Valley industries are arranging to use shale gas supplies that very likely could be contaminated with radon, given how these gas feedstocks are extracted through fracking — a technique that is used to retrieve gas from shale rock located very deep underground. Two Texas companies have agreed to send this shale gas from the northeastern United States to the Nova Chemical plant in Sarnia, and there is wider industry support for these imports of gas from fracking.

For the sake of the health and safety of the residents of Sarnia-Lambton — and others around the region — it is important that we apply the precautionary principle to this issue. We should assume that shale gas could come with radon contamination, if we cannot prove otherwise.

This gas is from shale that often contains significant quantities of uranium, as well as the products of its radioactive decay, including radium and radon, a colourless, odourless, and intensely radioactive gas. Because it is common in many rock formations throughout North America and elsewhere, radon is responsible for most of our daily exposure to damaging radiation. Radon gas that seeps up from subterranean rock formations often accumulates in basements — sometimes resulting in dangerous levels. Lung cancer caused by breathing radon contaminated air already is estimated to cause 25,000 deaths per year in the United States alone and is the second most frequent cause of lung cancer, after cigarette smoking.

 

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