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		 Exclusive: 
		California used 70 million gallons of water in fracking in 2014 
		
		 
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		[April 03, 2015] 
		By Rory Carroll 
		  
		 SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - California oil 
		producers used 214 acre-feet of water, equivalent to nearly 70 million 
		gallons, in the process of fracking for oil and gas in the state last 
		year, less than previously projected, state officials told Reuters on 
		Thursday. 
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			 The practice of fracking has been criticized in the state, which 
			is suffering from a drought so severe that Governor Jerry Brown 
			announced the first-ever mandatory 25 percent statewide reduction in 
			water use on Wednesday. 
			 
			Despite pressure from environmentalists, Brown has not called for a 
			halt to fracking in the state, saying it is not a major drain on 
			water supplies. 
			 
			“Hydraulic fracturing uses a relatively small amount of water – the 
			equivalent of 514 households annually” per well, said Steven Bohlen, 
			the state oil and gas supervisor. 
			 
			About 100,000 gallons of water is used on average per well, he said. 
			
			  Previous industry estimates said that fracking used about 100 
			million gallons of water in California a year. 
			 
			Hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, occurs when water and some 
			chemicals are injected deep underground at high pressure to break up 
			rock and release oil and gas into wells. 
			 
			Environmentalists argue that fracking is an unwise use of water, 
			given the state's ongoing, multi-year drought. They also say it has 
			the potential to contaminate fresh drinking water supplies. 
			 
			Bohlen said that not all of the water used for fracking is fresh 
			water. Some portion of it is “produced” water, or water that comes 
			to the surface during oil drilling that is not suitable for drinking 
			or agricultural use. 
			 
			
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			The industry brought 387,000 acre-feet of produced water to the 
			surface last year, Bohlen said. Of that, two-thirds was put back 
			into the aquifers from which it came or was used to produce more oil 
			through drilling techniques including steam flooding and cyclic 
			steam injection. 
			 
			The remaining third was put into underground injection, evaporated 
			in surface ponds, or cleaned up for beneficial use, he said. 
			 
			About 25,000 acre-feet of produced water is used for beneficial use 
			in the San Ardo, Cawelo, and Arvin water districts, he said. 
			 
			A law passed last year requires oil producers to report the sources 
			of water used in all oil and gas extraction as well as where the 
			water goes. 
			 
			The first data report is due April 31 and will be made public soon 
			after, Bohlen said. 
			 
			(Reporting by Rory Carroll; Editing by Ken Wills) 
			
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