Wednesday, April 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

Homes near fracking have more pollutants: study

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Sep, 2021 02:57 PM
  • Homes near fracking have more pollutants: study

VANCOUVER - A new study has found homes close to fracking oil and gas wells in British Columbia have higher levels of certain organic pollutants, which may lead to short- and long-term health effects.

Élyse Caron-Beaudoin, lead author and a professor in the department of health and society at the University of Toronto, Scarborough, says researchers took water and air samples from the homes of 85 pregnant women in the Peace River area of B.C. for one week.

She says pregnant women were recruited for the study because of the potential negative health effects of living close to natural gas wells, including higher rates of pre-term births, low birth weight and heart malformations.

Caron-Beaudoin says results showed that air samples in the homes had higher levels of chemicals used in fracking such as acetone and chloroform, and those contaminants were found in their study subjects.

She says Canada is one of the largest producers of natural gas in the world using fracking, a process that injects fluids deep underground to release the gas, yet there are no studies on the potential health impacts of the industry.

B.C. has about 10,000 active wells, and the study says the area could potentially see an increase in their number to more than 100,000.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. restricts travel in the province

B.C. restricts travel in the province
Solicitor General Mike Farnworth, who is also the minister of public safety, says the new orders are being brought in using the extraordinary powers of the Emergency Program Act. The order goes into effect today and expires on May 25. Breaking rules come with $575 fine.

B.C. restricts travel in the province

Canada secures millions of vaccine booster shots from Pfizer for future: Trudeau

Canada secures millions of vaccine booster shots from Pfizer for future: Trudeau
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the deal with Pfizer includes options to add 30 million doses in both 2022 and 2023, and an option for 60 million doses in 2024.

Canada secures millions of vaccine booster shots from Pfizer for future: Trudeau

Trudeau says travel restrictions necessary

Trudeau says travel restrictions necessary
Trudeau says it's necessary because there has been a concerning surge of COVID-19 cases and the emergence of more variants of concern in certain parts of the world.

Trudeau says travel restrictions necessary

COVID-19 spread seems to be easing: Tam

COVID-19 spread seems to be easing: Tam
Dr. Theresa Tam says average case counts have more than doubled over the past month, with upwards of 8,400 infections reported daily over the last week.    

COVID-19 spread seems to be easing: Tam

Neighbours help to foil break and enter in progress: Surrey RCMP

Neighbours help to foil break and enter in progress: Surrey RCMP
34 year old Tyson Cole of Surrey, has been charged with Break and Enter and Unlawfully in Dwelling House. He was remanded in to custody.

Neighbours help to foil break and enter in progress: Surrey RCMP

Liberals survive second confidence vote on budget

Liberals survive second confidence vote on budget
The amendment called for the budget to be revised because, the Conservatives claimed, it will add "over half a trillion dollars in new debt that can only be paid through higher job-killing taxes," including more than $100 billion in new spending that the Conservatives dubbed "a re-election fund."

Liberals survive second confidence vote on budget