To ease looming West Texas water shortage, oil companies have begun recycling fracking wastewater
Published on by Water Network Research, Official research team of The Water Network
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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-f58d8fbf3610Taxonomy
- Water Reuse & Recycling
- Industrial Water Reuse
- Reuse
- Fracking
- Hydraulic Fracturing Fluids
- Fracking Technology
1 Comment
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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.