Notice
Global Alliance for Clean Air (GACA)
Representative: Kim Yun-shin
Address: B1-939, 30, Seolleung-ro 100-gil, Seoul
Customer Service: 02-557-9677
Email: worldairday@gmail.com
Business Registration No: 310-82-06891
Sponsorship Account: Shinhan Bank 140-015-045817
Copyright ⓒ Global Alliance for Clean Air
All rights reserved.
Global Alliance for Clean Air (GACA)
Representative: Kim Yun-shin | Address: B1-939, 30, Seolleung-ro 100-gil, Gangnam-gu, Seoul | Customer Service: 02-557-9677 | Email: worldairday@gmail.com
Business Registration No: 310-82-06891
Sponsorship Account: Shinhan Bank 140-015-045817
Copyright ⓒ Global Alliance for Clean Air
All rights reserved.
The first sign of trouble appeared in 2003 when the water samples came back salty.
The remote corner of West Texas, known as the T-Bar Ranch, had long served as the City of Midland’s insurance policy for water security. Midland purchased 20,000 acres spanning Winkler and Loving Counties in 1965, waiting for the day it would need to pump water from the property.
Extra salts in the aquifer was not part of the plan.
The city’s investigation soon landed on Heritage Standard Corporation as the prime suspect. The small Dallas-based company operated oil and gas wells and a disposal well near Midland’s water source.
In 2007, the city filed a formal complaint with the state, alleging that Heritage Standard’s injection well had contaminated the groundwater. The Railroad Commission of Texas, which regulates oil and gas, ordered the company to remediate. But in 2010, Heritage Standard filed for bankruptcy.
The saga continues to this day.
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