Highway Fatality Rates Quadruple In US Oil Boom States

International Business Times

Published Jul 11, 2014 11:17AM ET

Updated Jul 11, 2014 11:45AM ET

Highway Fatality Rates Quadruple In US Oil Boom States

By Meagan Clark - The unstoppable oil boom in the U.S. is creating so much heavy machinery and truck traffic over roads in North Dakota and Texas that those states' road budgets are unable to keep up, and traffic accidents and drilling state traffic fatalities have more than quadrupled since 2004, an Associated Press analysis and U.S. census data, show.

Traffic fatalities and serious injuries increased 7 percent last year compared to 2012 in the Texan Eagle Ford shale fields and fatalities increased 13 percent in the Texan Permian Basin oil fields, according to the Texas Department of Transportation. In La Salle County, Texas’s second-largest oil producer, car crashes more than doubled last year compared with 2003.

“Everybody is concerned about the number of fatalities,” La Salle County, Texas Judge Joel Rodriguez Jr. told Bloomberg.

In North Dakota, traffic fatalities decreased slightly last year from 2012, but have increased about 30 percent since 2007, according to data from the state’s Department of Transportation. In North Dakota’s drilling counties, traffic fatalities have increased 350 percent in the last decade, driven by a 43 percent surge in population, according to Insurance Journal.