America's Radioactive Secret
In 2014, a muscular, middle-aged Ohio man named Peter took a job trucking waste for the oil-and-gas industry. The hours were long he was out the door by 3 a.m. every morning and not home until well after dark but the steady $16-an-hour pay was appealing, says Peter, who asked to use a pseudonym. This is a poverty area, he says of his home in the states rural southeast corner. Throw a little money at us and by God well jump and take it.
In a squat rig fitted with a 5,000-gallon tank, Peter crisscrosses the expanse of farms and woods near the Ohio/West Virginia/Pennsylvania border, the heart of a region that produces close to one-third of Americas natural gas. He hauls a salty substance called brine, a naturally occurring waste product that gushes out of Americas oil-and-gas wells to the tune of nearly 1 trillion gallons a year, enough to flood Manhattan, almost shin-high, every single day. At most wells, far more brine is produced than oil or gas, as much as 10 times more. It collects in tanks, and like an oil-and-gas garbage man, Peter picks it up and hauls it off to treatment plants or injection wells, where its disposed of by being shot back into the earth.
One day in 2017, Peter pulled up to an injection well in Cambridge, Ohio. A worker walked around his truck with a hand-held radiation detector, he says, and told him he was carrying one of the hottest loads hed ever seen. It was the first time Peter had heard any mention of the brine being radioactive.
The Earths crust is in fact peppered with radioactive elements that concentrate deep underground in oil-and-gas-bearing layers. This radioactivity is often pulled to the surface when oil and gas is extracted carried largely in the brine.
https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-features/oil-gas-fracking-radioactive-investigation-937389/