To ease looming West Texas water shortage, oil companies have begun recycling fracking wastewater

Published on by

To ease looming West Texas water shortage, oil companies have begun recycling fracking wastewater
To ease looming West Texas water shortage, oil companies have begun recycling fracking wastewater

Attached link

https://www.texastribune.org/2022/12/19/texas-permian-basin-fracking-oil-wastewater-recycling/?utm_campaign=Waterline%20Newsletter&utm_medium=email&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-8jWaq2dbe1wsvQwXpkYvLtGemys_NpDDlJqBNd74P1u4Zhkg26kWa7mOVmIDyFIiMd0vEH9JfuNOBhYqyIxkrm5an0FA&_hsmi=238734141&utm_content=238738448&utm_source=hs_email&hsCtaTracking=3c43a84e-50cc-41ab-93be-d0f422f7b8e0%7C71ef7ab7-0a40-4552-8ab4-f58d8fbf3610

Taxonomy

1 Comment

  1. I'm surprised you haven't fixed this hangover yet. In the oil wells here, we have very salty waters whose electrical conductivity is more than 150000 µ mho/cm and sometimes reaches 300.

    We were able to purify and revive oil well drilling fluid waste water (mud) with the lowest cost (about less than ten dollars for a 59-liter barrel). Also, we provide dozens of solutions for purifying very salty waters of rivers and springs.