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EPA Finds Fracking Can Impact Drinking Water, Shifts Emphasis from Earlier Report to Focus on Risks
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A high-pressure gas line spanning a canal in an oil field over the Monterey Shale formation near Lost Hills, Calif., in 2014. Credit David McNew/Getty Images
cnbc.com - by Robert Ferris | Tom DiChristopher - December 13, 2016
The Environmental Protection Agency's final report on a five-year study finds hydraulic fracturing can in fact contaminate drinking water in some cases.
The EPA's presentation of the final assessment marks a significant change in the way the report was initially presented in 2015. Energy companies seized on that presentation because it said the EPA found no "widespread, systemic impact" on drinking water supplies.
CLICK HERE - EPA - Executive Summary, Hydraulic Fracturing Study - Final Assessment 2016
ALSO SEE RELATED ARTICLE - Reversing Course, E.P.A. Says Fracking Can Contaminate Drinking Water
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