How I learned to stop worrying and love fracking

onthebottom

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http://www.csmonitor.com/Environmen...-I-learned-to-stop-worrying-and-love-fracking

How I learned to stop worrying and love fracking

Fracking has drawn the ire of environmentalists but new reports document the economic benefits of tapping shale gas resources. They also suggest that many of the environmental concerns are either overstated or unfounded.

Critics of hydraulic fracturing say economic and energy security shouldn't come at the expense of the environment. The controversial practice, dubbed fracking, has become the cause du jour in advocacy circles. A report from Colorado-based IHS, however, finds the oil and natural gas boom in the United States is starting to bring benefits to American families. IHS said increased energy production in the United States could put more money in the pocketbooks of U.S. families and add strength to an already recovering job market. The Energy Department, meanwhile, says that, relatively speaking, natural gas is one of the best fuel options around because of its low carbon intensity. The economic and environmental attributes aren't enough to quiet fracking opponents, however.

The U.S. Energy Department's Energy Information Administration said in a monthly report for August the United States imported 1.4 million cubic feet of natural gas during the first six months of the year. That's down more than 20 percent compared to the same period in 2011. In terms of marketed production of natural gas, the EIA said the United States posted nearly 12.6 million cubic feet for the six months of the year, an 8.2 percent increase from the same period in 2011.

IHS said the steady increase in oil and natural gas production means economic gains are starting to trickle down to American families. Last year, energy companies added millions of barrels worth of production to their U.S. portfolios through hydraulic fracturing. IHS said the energy boom added more than 2.1 million direct and indirect jobs to the U.S. economy last year. That should reach the 3.3 million mark by the end of the decade. For actual monetary gains, increased wages and lower energy and manufacturing costs should add another $2,000 per year to American incomes by 2015, an increase of more than 60 percent from last year. (Related Article: Pessimism and Optimism over Utica Shale)

Supporters of hydraulic fracturing say the practice has been around for decades with few problems. The process employs huge quantities of water, sand and a trace amount of harmful chemicals used to coax oil and natural gas out of underground shale formations. Last week, the U.S. Geological Survey said hydraulic fracturing fluids spilled into a Kentucky creek killed off the federally threatened Blackside dace, a small species of minnow. Drilling was also blamed for small tremors in parts of the U.S. Midwest and the EPA is investigating groundwater wells to see if anything associated with fracking has contaminated drinking water supplies. Those threats have sparked concerns that fracking isn't worth the economic benefits.

IHS said U.S. utility companies have idled more coal-fired power plants as a result of the natural gas boom. It said in a recent report that many of the environmental concerns are either overstated or unfounded. The Energy Department said fossil fuels should meet 80 percent of the global demand for energy through 2040. Advocacy groups say that's precisely the problem with fracking, though, at least in terms of natural gas, the EIA said it's an "environmentally attractive fuel compared with other hydrocarbon fuels." The Energy Department said it's also the fuel of choice when it comes to efforts to stem greenhouse gas emissions, an issue at the heart of fossil fuel critics. While environmental groups are right to fret over long-term projections for fossil fuels, for natural gas it may be a case of a simple fear of nothing more than change.
 

nobody123

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lol! IHS. A Koch-bros think tank (now THERE'S an oxymoron if ever there was one) finds that trickle-down economics works in spite of what reality has to say about it, and that an incredibly dangerous industry is a-OK. Shame on the so-called media outlets that just cut-and-paste their garbage press release verbatem though. It's a sorry state of gerblism out there nowadays, and that's the truth.

None of the “news” stories or the press release mentions the research and the report was supported by the American Chemistry Council, America’s Natural Gas Alliance, the American Petroleum Institute, the Fertilizer Institute, the US Chamber of Commerce–Institute for 21st Century Energy, the National Association of Manufacturers, the Natural Gas Supply Association, Rio Tinto, and the Society of the Plastics Industry.

Knowing who the “supporters” are, it makes you wonder why the cover of the 73 page report doesn’t sport a cheerleader or two. Nothing but good news in the report, and I wouldn’t have expected otherwise from an industry supported report.

http://blog.shaleshockmedia.org/2013/09/06/ihs-clones-again/
 
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onthebottom

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nobody123

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Here's a thought. Instead of posting the fact-free and insipid happyspeak of an industry press release (disguised as a news item), how about some actual investigative pieces on fracking? Here's a few to get you started.

Fracking poisons wells.
The test results also showed the group of wells contained dozens of other contaminants, including low levels of chemicals known to cause cancer and heavy metals that exceed the agency’s “trigger level” and could lead to illness if consumed over an extended period of time. The EPA’s assurances suggest that the substances detected do not violate specific drinking water standards, but no such standards exist for some of the contaminants and some experts said the agency should have acknowledged that they were detected at all.

“Any suggestion that water from these wells is safe for domestic use would be preliminary or inappropriate,” said Ron Bishop, a chemist at the State University of New York’s College at Oneonta, who has spoken out about environmental concerns from drilling.
http://www.propublica.org/article/so-is-dimocks-water-really-safe-to-drink
Fracking is a suspect in polluted drinking water in Arkansas, Colorado, Pennsylvania, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia and Wyoming, where residents have reported changes in water quality or quantity following fracturing operations.
http://www.nrdc.org/energy/gasdrilling/

oooh goodie. It's not just the water, either....
MarkWest, based in Denver, operates large natural gas facilities. A previous DEP report found some of the state's highest levels of gas drilling air pollution in Washington County, including toxic compounds such as benzene, toluene and formaldehyde. Other gas drilling firms and companies operate in the area, too.

Long-term exposure to benzene can affect the immune system and cause cancer, while toluene can cause excessive sleepiness, confusion and, with long-term exposure, brain damage.

Patrick Creighton, a spokesman for the Marcellus Shale Coalition, an energy industry group, said, "Air quality across our region, and the nation, is sharply improving thanks to expanded natural gas use."

Brown said one of the most worrying findings was the extremely high levels of air pollution found inside two homes that are about 1,000 feet from a gas processing station. Western Pennsylvania tends to have high levels of air pollution, but the levels found in the two homes were up to four times higher than the local average.

Brown said the group is collecting more data and pushing ahead to refine ways to advise people who are worried about nearby natural gas activity.
http://www.ctvnews.ca/health/fracki...tudy-of-drilling-s-impact-on-health-1.1426014
Why, the whole thing seems rather, errrr, shaky!
Before January 2011, Youngstown, Ohio, which is located on the Marcellus Shale, had never experienced an earthquake, at least not since researchers began observations in 1776. However, in December 2010, the Northstar 1 injection well came online to pump wastewater from fracking projects in Pennsylvania into storage deep underground. In the year that followed, seismometers in and around Youngstown recorded 109 earthquakes, the strongest registering a magnitude-3.9 earthquake on Dec. 31, 2011. The well was shut down after the quake.

Scientists have known for decades that fracking and wastewater injection can trigger earthquakes. For instance, it appears linked with Oklahoma's strongest recorded quake in 2011, as well as a rash of more than 180 minor tremors in Texas between Oct. 30, 2008, and May 31, 2009.
http://www.nbcnews.com/science/fracking-practices-blame-ohio-earthquakes-8C11073601
But hey, at least natural gas is better for the environment than coal, right?
The methane leaks that researchers from the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES) and from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) recorded ranged from 6 to 12 percent of annual production – worrisome because many researchers, including those from the EDF, say that if natural gas leaks at more than 3.2 percent overall, any climate change benefit from switching away from coal for electricity generation and burning natural gas instead will be lost.

This point bears restating: the federal officials who did actual site testing found leaks of methane at least double the rate that most experts say nullify natural gas' climate benefits over coal.
http://www.desmogblog.com/2013/08/13/edf-greenwashing-fracking-climate-impact
aw frack!
 

onthebottom

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http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324094704579065432802151184.html

More on Fracking and the Poor

Last week we reported on a study showing that the U.S. oil and natural gas revolution may be the country's best antipoverty program, and the evidence keeps coming. A new report from IHS Global Insight estimates that fracking added the equivalent of a cool $1,200 to real household disposable income on average in 2012.

Lower costs for raw materials were passed on to consumers via lower home heating and electricity bills and lower prices for other goods and services. Wages also increased from a surge in industrial activity. On present trend, IHS predicts that unconventional oil and gas will contribute more than $2,000 a year by 2015 and $3,500 by 2025.

Overall the industry lifted economic growth by $283 billion last year—$533 billion in 2025—and was responsible, ahem, for $74 billion in federal and state tax payments. The politicians should be doing cartwheels that the figure will rise to $138 billion in 2025.

IHS's particular focus is on what the study calls a growing manufacturing renaissance aided by the boom in affordable energy. It's a classic American story of innovation, human ingenuity, risk-taking and capital investment, not subsidies or the 47 federal job-training programs. The irony Washington will never appreciate is that fracking has done more for the less fortunate in the Obama years that all of its ministrations combined.

A version of this article appeared September 9, 2013, on page A16 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: More on Fracking and the Poor.
 

blackrock13

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http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324094704579065432802151184.html

More on Fracking and the Poor

Last week we reported on a study showing that the U.S. oil and natural gas revolution may be the country's best antipoverty program, and the evidence keeps coming. A new report from IHS Global Insight estimates that fracking added the equivalent of a cool $1,200 to real household disposable income on average in 2012.

Lower costs for raw materials were passed on to consumers via lower home heating and electricity bills and lower prices for other goods and services. Wages also increased from a surge in industrial activity. On present trend, IHS predicts that unconventional oil and gas will contribute more than $2,000 a year by 2015 and $3,500 by 2025.

Overall the industry lifted economic growth by $283 billion last year—$533 billion in 2025—and was responsible, ahem, for $74 billion in federal and state tax payments. The politicians should be doing cartwheels that the figure will rise to $138 billion in 2025.

IHS's particular focus is on what the study calls a growing manufacturing renaissance aided by the boom in affordable energy. It's a classic American story of innovation, human ingenuity, risk-taking and capital investment, not subsidies or the 47 federal job-training programs. The irony Washington will never appreciate is that fracking has done more for the less fortunate in the Obama years that all of its ministrations combined.

A version of this article appeared September 9, 2013, on page A16 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: More on Fracking and the Poor.
Ask the people of Pavilion Wyoming, Barnheart Texas and Dimock Pennsylvania how they feel about fracking and whether they think it's worth $1200.
 

onthebottom

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You guys crack me up, from a country strip mining dirty oil... Hillarious.
 

nobody123

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You guys crack me up, from a country strip mining dirty oil... Hillarious.
Why? Because two wrongs always make a right? Or because many of us are also opposed to the way the tar sands are being handled as well and you find consistency to be humorous?


http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324094704579065432802151184.html

More on Fracking and the Poor

...A new report from IHS Global Insight estimates that

Hurray!! More industry press releases masquerading as journalism. (actually, the same one that opened the thread, no?) This is lovely! Let's fire a few more reporters now that we don't need them anymore. Drinks all 'round!
 

nobody123

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I said you wouldn't like it.
Sure. But there's "someone with an opposing view presented facts and well-reasoned arguments that counter my position in a thought provoking manner" flavoured don't like it, and there's "someone smeared feces all over the wall again" flavoured (*shudder*) don't like it. This, alas, tends towards the latter.
 

fuji

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What we really need is a lot more nuclear power generation, to reduce the need for fossil fuel. We won't eliminate fossil fuel use, but we could reduce it substantially.
 

oil&gas

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. Nothing will stop fracking with oil trading above $100 amidst an economic
downturn. A pull back of oil price to a level where tight oil production is no
longer profitable would likely only result in a temporary decrease of fracking
activities. Extra taxation and more regulation ciould help to alleviate the
environmental damage fracking causes but politically difficult if possible.
 

fuji

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It is worrying that we haven't figured out how to make our economy viable without fossil fuels.

The price of oil is only going up, and while we may never hit "peak oil" in the direst sense, in many ways we already have. New sources of oil are increasingly costly.

There is a graph or there correlating the frequency and severity of recessions with the price of oil. Guess what, quite a lot of our economic problems can be traced directly and indirectly back to the price of oil.

We need to work harder on reducing our reliance on oil.
 

onthebottom

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What we really need is a lot more nuclear power generation, to reduce the need for fossil fuel. We won't eliminate fossil fuel use, but we could reduce it substantially.
While I agree the tree huggers hate that most of all.... when was the last time a new power plant was approved....

Energy production, and it's price, is a KEY component of the economy - picking winners/losers is what Obama has done (Solyndra) to much disaster and one of the reasons he's dragging his feet on Keystone. We need an all-of-the-above energy strategy for economic development.
 

groggy

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. Nothing will stop fracking with oil trading above $100 amidst an economic
downturn. A pull back of oil price to a level where tight oil production is no
longer profitable would likely only result in a temporary decrease of fracking
activities. Extra taxation and more regulation ciould help to alleviate the
environmental damage fracking causes but politically difficult if possible.
We're stuck needing dirty oil sands oil and environmentally dangerous tight oil, as well as needing the very risky deep oil just to maintain present levels of oil and liquids.
The info has been out there that we should have moved on to greener options, but disinformation and politics have kept us from saving ourselves. To cut out those more environmentally risky fuel options would be to drive oil prices to a global economic nightmare.
 

onthebottom

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We're stuck needing dirty oil sands oil and environmentally dangerous tight oil, as well as needing the very risky deep oil just to maintain present levels of oil and liquids.
The info has been out there that we should have moved on to greener options, but disinformation and politics have kept us from saving ourselves. To cut out those more environmentally risky fuel options would be to drive oil prices to a global economic nightmare.
I think it's fair to say that economics have kept greener energy options at bay - they are too expensive and inefficient.

Don't think about the rich west, we can afford to be inefficient and expensive, think about the half of the works that lives in Asia and the emerging middle class - expensive energy means many more poor people.
 
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