In the past few weeks there has been a flood of reports linking hydraulic fracking with recent shallow earthquakes across America and elsewhere, with a particularly damning report coming from the UK. I had not pieced this together myself until recently and have since had growing concern for this topic. The Oklahoma earthquakes from yesterday prompted my inquiry into this matter and I found scores of info online afterwards.A simple google search yields the following results.UK firm says shale fracking caused earthquakeshttp://www.reuters.com/article/2011/11/02/uk-gas-fracking-idUSL5E7M220J20111102Fracking May Have Caused 50 Earthquakes in Oklahomahttp://www.care2.com/causes/fracking-may-have-caused-50-earthquakes-in-oklahoma.html
11/6/2011 1:32:57 PM
Dammit Battlestar Galactica!
11/6/2011 1:38:17 PM
It makes sense to me.
11/6/2011 1:52:46 PM
It sure can. but not enough to worry or regulate about.
11/6/2011 3:03:16 PM
11/6/2011 4:37:05 PM
I wonder what the tremors are from excavating a quarry or building a large building is?
11/7/2011 2:48:30 AM
seriously though, human activity has been shown to trigger earthquakes before... traditional drilling, building of dams, etc have all caused tremors. The thing is, these tiny fracking earthquakes are too small to cause damage.The 2008 Earthquake in China that killed almost 70,000 people was thought to have been triggered by building a dam (the weight of the water in the reservoir can be tremendous) [Edited on November 7, 2011 at 7:10 AM. Reason : ]
11/7/2011 7:02:07 AM
mother fracker
11/7/2011 1:13:40 PM
We all know it's because when I frack my girlfriend, it causes the ground beneath to shake. Seriously, I don't know if we should ban the practice outright, but it's worth studying. As they start refining fracking techniques, it may cause more trouble down the road. Yes, it may be rare when it does, but even a minor earthquake can cause problems for a town or city that wasn't built to handle one.
11/8/2011 4:25:27 PM
id be more concerned about ground water contamination
11/8/2011 4:29:24 PM
11/8/2011 9:20:47 PM
^^and You can tell by how quickly these companies want to gobble up land leases and get to drilling/fracking before proper assessments can be made so that they'll be grandfathered into any future laws or regulations.
11/8/2011 9:48:56 PM
http://www.thisamericanlife.org/radio-archives/episode/440/game-changerAnd everybody's watched Gasland, right?
11/9/2011 1:30:58 PM
so?
11/9/2011 2:08:30 PM
?
11/9/2011 2:13:38 PM
11/9/2011 3:03:41 PM
^^ What do you think we should have taken away from watching Gasland? What I got was a deep desire to lease my land to gas drillers, if only they wanted to do so.
11/9/2011 5:47:41 PM
That deserves an explanation. Any rational person wouldn't have come away from that film with that thought.
11/9/2011 6:55:39 PM
You're dealing with the Quark of TSB. He'd sell his mother if he saw a profit motive in it. Hail the Almighty Dollar!!!
11/9/2011 7:01:37 PM
^ If that's his M.O. then his comment makes perfect sense.
11/9/2011 7:46:50 PM
It's like watching Food, Inc. and immediately buying a boat load of Tyson and Monsanto stock. . .
11/9/2011 8:02:41 PM
Well, no, I'd never do that. I try to keep my portfolio diversified through Index funds. Look, the movie looked to be propaganda to me, so I watched it with an extremely skeptical eye. When it was over, I was wrong, it wasn't really meant to be propaganda, he just showed it like it was. But what it was, was not that bad. People that sold drilling rights to their land for a boatload of cash found themselves with natural gas in their wells. Neat to watch, but not that big a deal. I grew up on a farm with well water. We drank the pesticides. And pesticide is far worse than anything they would be getting out of their wells. Of course, this is assuming everything was as it was portrayed in the film. Post viewing reading on the internet proclaimed the film showed only half the story. Natural gas was common in water wells in the area long before anyone began drilling there. And according to the libertarian rag reason magazine, which I trust until found lacking, the instances of bad well casings which leaked natural gas were reasonably compensated (either buying the land outright or providing alternative water supplies). While it would be better if bad things never happened to anyone, that is impossible, so as long as those inadvertently harmed by the system are compensated thoroughly, why should we object? http://reason.com/blog/2011/06/27/reasontv-the-truth-about-frack
11/9/2011 11:38:42 PM
I'll see your "I grew up on a farm and we drank pesticide-tainted well water just fine" ancedote -and raise you a "I live next to a quarry. The trees around the quarry are dead and I got a rash from showering until I installed a water softener."
11/10/2011 3:21:00 AM
^^ roflmao
11/10/2011 7:37:17 AM
The film did do some truth-warping and a few facts were questionable, but yeah overall its premise bears out.
11/10/2011 10:06:28 AM
LoneSnark lol
11/10/2011 12:43:36 PM
11/10/2011 12:46:10 PM
^ This.
11/10/2011 12:53:43 PM
11/10/2011 1:01:31 PM
11/10/2011 2:45:41 PM
Fracking has been going on for more than 30 years, and EPA chief Lisa Jackson is on record saying that she has never heard of a single case of the practice contaminating groundwater.
11/11/2011 9:55:29 AM
Link to Lisa Jackson?also the type of fracking known as High Volume, horizontal hydraulic fracturing has really only been used for like 10 years, taking off in 2005 after it was exempted from the safe drinking water act.[Edited on November 11, 2011 at 10:22 AM. Reason : nm google helped me out]
11/11/2011 10:20:52 AM
11/11/2011 11:21:41 AM
11/11/2011 11:40:30 AM
But if something has been studied and is being studied, then lack of evidence of harm is strong evidence there is no harm. However, let us assume there was harm. Then what? Poverty is a real issue. Mankind needs energy. Just like my water well has been sacrificed to our collective need for transportation and food, is it unreasonable to suggest something other than a ban should be suggested in the production of energy? The state of North Carolina offers support to well users to make their systems less prone to contamination. The county I lived in also subsidized filtration systems for those living in designated basins prone to pollution buildup. These are sensible alternatives to banning activity we all really want. It really is the case that whatever we do tends to pollute the environment. It is unfair to single out new industries just because they are new. This is not to say a ban is off the table. But I'd make it as local as possible. Give the county voters the information and let them decide whether to ban such drilling or allow it and use the revenue to offset the harm done.
11/11/2011 11:59:59 AM
http://epw.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=PressRoom.PressReleases&ContentRecord_id=23EB85DD-802A-23AD-43F9-DA281B2CD287EPA chief Lisa Jackson testifying before congress earlier this year.
11/11/2011 12:11:05 PM
11/11/2011 4:35:27 PM
11/11/2011 5:28:08 PM
Fortune tellers and coffin manufacturers aren't causing people's water to become ignitable. . .
11/11/2011 5:43:06 PM
One might think from that fact that fortune tellers and coffin manufacturers shouldn't be licensed and regulated.
11/11/2011 5:58:03 PM
11/11/2011 6:32:04 PM
11/11/2011 7:50:27 PM
11/12/2011 10:10:59 AM
11/12/2011 10:39:12 AM
11/12/2011 10:50:55 AM
Is it your position that no one in the "Environmental Movement Uses False Science to Scare Us to Death" and that "Ecological Apocalypse" is a real worry? That said, not exclusively. I worked for an oil services company for about a year and got to know their engineers pretty well.
11/13/2011 10:52:31 AM
WRAL did a segment on this the other day that I just happened to catch.This woman's groundwater had gotten contaminated after fracking and just holding a lit match near her running faucet would cause a little burst of flame.Apparently, the gas company now just delivers jugs of clean water to her weekly/monthly.
11/13/2011 12:50:40 PM
Someone told me that lonesnark was arguing benzene and other industrial chemicals were perfectly safe to drink because Haliburton gave it the QA Seal of approval. I said to myself, no, there's no way that even somebody as intensely dense as Lonesnark would be that foolish.And then:
11/14/2011 1:56:50 PM
So if a company can bribe, con, scare or dupe enough local yahoos in a community then it's a-ok for them commit environmental plunder?
11/14/2011 2:57:54 PM
^^ "Don't you owe me $100?" ^ Assuming they pay the damages then sure. Otherwise we'd need to shut down the whole of modern civilization because everything we do commits some form of environmental plunder. If the political system says you can do something and those harmed by your behavior are properly compensated then why shouldn't you be able to do something? [Edited on November 14, 2011 at 3:37 PM. Reason : .,.]
11/14/2011 3:33:50 PM