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 Message Boards » » They fracked my water! Page [1]  
aaronburro
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aha, I enjoyed this bit on NPR (OMG LIBERAL BIAS!!!) today. good shit.

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=104565793
Quote :
"

Face-Off Over 'Fracking': Water Battle Brews On Hill



by Jeff Brady

Morning Edition, May 27, 2009 · Environmentalists and the natural gas industry are getting ready for a battle in Congress over something known as "hydraulic fracturing."

"Fracking," as the industry calls it, involves injecting a million gallons or more of water and chemicals deep underground to pry out gas that's locked away in tight spaces.

Environmentalists want the federal government to regulate the practice because, in some cases, fracking may be harming nearby water wells. The industry says regulation should be left up to the states.

Hydraulic fracturing allows drillers to dramatically increase production. The chemicals pumped underground with the water help drillers bore through the hard rock. The pressure used is tremendous — about 300 times a typical garden hose. That creates small cracks in the rock that allow gas to escape.

Steve Harris believes that pressure also ruined his well. He lives on 14 acres south of Dallas. Shortly after a driller fracked a nearby well, he and his neighbors noticed a change in water pressure.

"When you'd flush the toilet — in the back where the bowl is — water would shoot out the top of the bowl," says Harris.

When he took a shower, there was a foul odor, and the water left rashes on his grandson's skin. His horses stopped drinking from their trough, and there was an oily film on top of the water.

Similar stories are popping up around the country. In Ohio, a couple's house blew up when gas from their water well filled their basement. A woman in Colorado blames her health problems on the chemicals used for fracking.

For the most part, people nearby don't even know what chemicals are being injected into the ground — companies don't have to report that.

Theo Colborn, who founded The Endocrine Disruption Exchange, based in Paonia, Colo., has spent years trying to figure out what chemicals the industry is using, with some success. She says removing the exemption fracking has been given from the Safe Drinking Water Act would bring some much-needed light to the industry.

"Believe me, we have a lot of good people within our federal agencies that would love to be working on this issue and addressing it. And they can't — it's hands-off right now," says Colborn.

Generally, the Environmental Protection Agency regulates anything that could affect underground drinking water supplies. But in 2005, the industry successfully lobbied for the exemption for fracking from the Safe Drinking Water Act. That leaves regulation up to the states, which don't have the kind of resources the EPA does.

"We have no evidence that hydraulic fracturing is causing problems," says Lee Fuller, vice president of government relations for the Independent Petroleum Association of America. Without evidence of problems, he says there's no reason to pile on more regulation.

"I think people need to have more faith in the regulatory agencies that are watching it very closely and their ability to respond to issues if they arise," says Fuller.

But environmental groups are lobbying Congress to get that exemption overturned as hydraulic fracturing becomes increasingly common. Halliburton, which pioneered hydraulic fracturing, says about 35,000 wells are fracked each year.

Gwen Lachelt of the Oil and Gas Accountability Project says that politically, now is the time for those on her side of this issue to move.

"We have a different presidential administration. We have new regions of the country that are now experiencing oil and gas development," says Lachelt. "New York City is a case in point. ... Companies are wanting to drill natural gas wells in New York City's drinking watershed."

Several City Council members have expressed concern over that idea, and there's been talk of finding a way to ban drilling in that region.

But the natural gas industry argues that more regulation will push up prices. To be sure, hydraulic fracturing is, in part, responsible for the low natural gas prices consumers are paying now.

Colorado School of Mines professor Geoffrey Thyne understands that. Still, he wants the industry to start encouraging more scientific research on fracking.

"Let's prove to everybody what we're saying — that's there's absolutely no danger — but let's do it in a rigorous way we can defend," says Thyne.

Thyne says the industry also could agree to stop using harmful chemicals in the process. Already, several of the largest drillers have agreed to stop using diesel, which can poison groundwater with benzene."


the first bolded part is, to say the least, quite dubious... the second bolded one, frankly, is how the industry ought to proceed. As much as I harp on AGW, at least I do so with evidence to the contrary, as opposed to the misguided notion that "hey, there's no evidence otherwise, so pound sand!" Especially when we;'ve got a guy's toilet exploding the day after you pump tons of shit in to the ground.

It's also extremely questionable how in the hell any one could argue "hey, we don't need to regulate chemicals being pumped in to the ground," especially when we don't even know what is being pumped in to the ground. Is it HCl acid? Is it benzene? I mean, shit! If it were just water, i might be able to go with that argument. But it aint.

so, fire away.

oh, and you didn't think I'd make this thread without a BSG pic, do ya?

5/28/2009 12:08:34 AM

GrumpyGOP
yovo yovo bonsoir
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I've never watched BSG, but I'm at least somewhat familiar with the reference.

I basically agree with your assessment, though I'd add that we should put some sort of defined moratorium on the practice until we get some evidence. Time it to coincide with the summer, when natural gas is somewhat less necessary. Find out of it's fucking shit up and then either ban it or let them start back up. Frankly, I don't see how it couldn't be fucking shit up, but I will listen to credible analysis (that is, analysis that doesn't come exclusively from companies involved).

5/28/2009 12:21:24 AM

Smath74
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Quote :
"Shortly after a driller fracked a nearby well, he and his neighbors noticed a change in water pressure."

5/28/2009 12:26:57 AM

Mindstorm
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Yeah, sounds like another justifiable Environmentalist & Industrialist face-off is about to occur.

The whole injecting chemicals into ground water business doesn't sound very good at all. Doesn't seem like a hard battle for the environmentalists to win.

5/28/2009 12:31:50 AM

Willy Nilly
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Quote :
"Frankly, I don't see how it couldn't be fucking shit up"

5/28/2009 7:43:33 AM

LoneSnark
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They are breaking up the ground, so yes, it should have an impact. But the question of whether or not it is harmful should not take more than a day or so to prove. As such, a moratorium would be absurd: just go run the damn tests already. Go do a water quality test in the nearby wells. Maybe the chemicals they are injecting are unsafe for humans then test the wells for that chemical (diesel is easy to find) and ban the injection of these chemicals. If breaking up the rock is releasing pockets of unsafe underground mineral deposits into the water table, then test for them.

That those against a practice that has been going on for decades have no definitive proof that it is harmful, that convinces me that it is not. It seems comonsensical to bank the injection of diesel, but banning fracking seems silly. If the only demonstrable problem is impacting the water pressure at nearby wells, that can be regulated with very little effort. If the effects damage wells or water pumps, then install stronger equipment and sue the driller for the extra costs. You can even pass a law requiring the driller make such upgrades to local wells before starting the process, but any more would cause harm to the drillers which far outweighs any benefits to the well users.

5/28/2009 10:40:29 AM

DrSteveChaos
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I think there's an important aspect to this debate being overlooked, that is:

Quote :
"Environmentalists want the federal government to regulate the practice because, in some cases, fracking may be harming nearby water wells. The industry says regulation should be left up to the states."


I mean, unless we have evidence that this is causing problems across state lines (i.e., polluting larger aquifers, like the Ogala Aquifer), why not leave this as a state-level issue? States are just as capable of regulating or banning the practice if they think it's harmful.

5/28/2009 11:35:05 AM

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