Unfortunately our state legislature has proven itself to be out of control and fracking is no exception. It appears inevitable the House will fast track final approval this week only be signed by a bought and paid for governor. This is a little of what we have to look forward to:http://openchannel.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/06/08/12106895-oil-boom-brings-wealth-and-waste-to-north-dakotaAccording to data obtained by ProPublica, oil companies in North Dakota reported more than 1,000 accidental releases of oil, drilling wastewater or other fluids in 2011, about as many as in the previous two years combined. Many more illicit releases went unreported, state regulators acknowledge, when companies dumped truckloads of toxic fluid along the road or drained waste pits illegally.State officials say most of the releases are small. But in several cases, spills turned out to be far larger than initially thought, totaling millions of gallons. Releases of brine, which is often laced with carcinogenic chemicals and heavy metals, have wiped out aquatic life in streams and wetlands and sterilized farmland. The effects on land can last for years, or even decades.Compounding such problems, state regulators have often been unable — or unwilling — to compel energy companies to clean up their mess, our reporting showed.
6/8/2012 3:54:45 PM
The market will deal with it
6/8/2012 4:02:25 PM
what amazes me are all the landowners that support this knowing what it has done in other areas...taking the chance on ruining thier property for a quick buck
6/8/2012 4:12:34 PM
why do you hippies hate our freedoms?
6/8/2012 4:14:16 PM
So what is the story on the volume of gas available? I've heard that recent estimates are magnitudes lower than previous estimates. I haven't research fracking enough to really have an opinion on it, but on the surface, I'm against it. I'm also against it if the volume of available gas isn't enough to create a long-term industry in the state (risk isn't worth the reward).Also, the OP references enforcement issues, not fracking issues. If the state won't enforce laws/regulations, then that's the state's problem, not the company's. In other words, if fracking was indeed safe in ever other aspect, and these were the issues, then I'd have much less of a problem with it, in fact, I'd support it. My concern is the actual damage from fracking, the well failure rate, etc., not the enforcement of waste disposal.[Edited on June 8, 2012 at 4:26 PM. Reason : .]
6/8/2012 4:25:54 PM
Fracking causes all kinds of ecological damage. The most direct thing on people is when chemicals leak into the water table and come through your faucets. Brown water, acid water, and water with methane in it are all well-documented. Areas near fracking industry have ridiculously high rates of cancer.If you want a good documentary to watch on it watch GasLand.
6/8/2012 4:32:06 PM
Yes, I've heard all of that, just haven't really delved into the sources and details. Is there some unbiased, independent research on the topic?FWIW, most "documentaries" I've seen on such topics are from activists fighting for one side of the argument...
6/8/2012 4:38:38 PM
Potential spills and leaks aside, think of how much water fracking uses (~4.5 million gallons PER well), and then think of how often and how pronounced droughts have been in the state of NC alone in just the past few years. Next, think about how these potential shale deposits sit right under the majority of major water sources in the Piedmont. I can't fathom how anyone thinks this is a good idea while natural gas prices are so depressed at the same time water resources in this state are already at a premium.It's worth noting that for the first time in two years that no county considered in drought condition. First time in two years. 36 counties are listed as "abnormally dry".
6/8/2012 4:48:25 PM
Sorry if that's not what you wanted to hear. It's the truth though. Fracking is an incredibly destructive and dirty industry.
6/8/2012 4:58:13 PM
6/8/2012 5:00:32 PM
That may be the case. I've already said I hadn't researched this much, but I'm not going to take Internet Guy's post as absolute truth.And it has nothing to do with what I want to hear. I already said that with what little research I've done, I'm against fracking, for precisely the reasons that have been stated ITT; however, I haven't heard/looked at what I'd call reputable sources very much. I've heard from environmental activists/left-wingers and I've heard from environmental destroyers/businessmen/right-wingers. Much like any issue, I'm sure the truth lies in between them.[Edited on June 8, 2012 at 5:05 PM. Reason : /]
6/8/2012 5:05:22 PM
I just don't see (other than my own cynical musings*) the need to pass all of this RIGHT THIS VERY MOMENT given how low the price of natural gas is. *I see this as a giant pre-emptive strike by the right to both play the "energy independence" card as well as to get ahead of any future regulations and environmental protections to which they will assuredly be grandfathered out of.Repeal the fracking exemption from the Clean Water Act!
6/8/2012 5:45:11 PM
This is probably one of the best and most convincing articles I've seen yet:http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2011/05/02/1100682108Basically Duke reseachers found higher concentrations of methane in groundwater near fracking wells (I'll go hunting for others articles I've seen but this was by far the most convincing to me)There are also some recent concerns over the geology in NC, which is a bit different than where fracking has previously occurredhttp://www.charlotteobserver.com/2012/05/20/v-print/3252218/fracking-in-north-carolina-could.html[Edited on June 8, 2012 at 6:14 PM. Reason : I'm pretty sure comprehensive EPA study comes out at the end of 2013?]
6/8/2012 6:12:25 PM
6/8/2012 7:48:27 PM
no, you're reading the graph wrong, areas that are a few hundred meters from active fracking sites have many times higher groundwater methane concentrations when compared with areas that are a few thousand meters away from active fracking sites. I doubt geology changes that significantly within a few kilometers[Edited on June 8, 2012 at 8:16 PM. Reason : NOte that these groundwater samples were taken at the same depths of typical residential wells ]
6/8/2012 8:13:31 PM
Nm[Edited on June 8, 2012 at 11:23 PM. Reason : I read the study]
6/8/2012 11:18:33 PM
6/10/2012 11:27:21 AM
Hmm...I take it you have no idea how government regulation works. If the inspectors find evidence the drillers aren't abiding by the regulations then they get punished somehow, be it fines or closure of a million dollar well since it cannot be operated safely. Is it a perfect system? No. inspectors get lazy. they get stupid. But from what I've read the regulations in question are not expensive to obey, it is just that early well drillers didn't know what they were doing as the regulations did not yet exist to tell them what the minimum standards for fracking should be.
6/10/2012 6:44:27 PM
I like how you talk about lazy, stupid regulators and don't even mention the thing we've had the most problems with: government officials friendly to the industry hire industry insiders to guard the process.
6/10/2012 6:50:52 PM
I like how the government already has too many regulations, but we shouldn't hold early well drillers responsible for cleaning up their mess because there weren't any government regulations to tell them what to do.]
6/10/2012 7:16:06 PM
Libertarian FAIL
6/10/2012 8:22:45 PM
To me, the Duke study suggests that faulty wells might not be the only cause of pollution, but fracking, especially around some suspect geologic formations, may allow methane to migrate up to drinking water depths. In which case, some fracking wells will be inherently polluting even if the industry gets the "minimum casing thickness", etc right.Thats not set in stone, because there is still a lot of science to be done, but I think there is enough evidence for that to be a legitimate question of the industry.
6/10/2012 8:27:56 PM
6/10/2012 9:33:22 PM
6/11/2012 12:33:25 AM
6/11/2012 11:11:34 AM
*says we can regulate industry without regulation by suing for damages**passes law limiting or even removing liability for corporations*Hey, the General Assembly tried it with drug companies last year, why not with this? The gas companies are Job Creators.
6/11/2012 1:47:20 PM
^ That's called Libertopia.
6/11/2012 4:52:11 PM
6/12/2012 9:23:21 AM
6/12/2012 9:57:14 AM
6/12/2012 9:28:34 PM
Bad at logic. Bad at grammar.
6/12/2012 10:24:38 PM
Doesn't matter how you get the energy. There are always people that will bitch about something.
6/13/2012 8:50:41 AM
6/13/2012 9:23:56 AM
5 years? And that's enough to be economically viable? Risk isn't worth this reward. 40+ yr supply + strict regulations + strict oversight + strict monitoring + some of the past "issues" with fracking being resolved, then yeh. But 5 years? GTFO.
6/13/2012 10:35:58 AM
Pennsylvania resident here. All you have to look forward to for now is conservatives mindlessly supporting fracking 100% because of the dollas and jobs and NO MORE ALLEGIANCE TO SAUDI OIL SHIEKDS and you'll be lucky if they even acknowledge the possibility of environmental externalities existing at all.What you have to look forward to in the long run is cancer.[Edited on June 13, 2012 at 1:42 PM. Reason : .]
6/13/2012 1:41:47 PM
The final decision ultimately lies with the landowners...hopefully the majority of them will just refuse to lease the mineral rights.
6/13/2012 1:45:07 PM
Let's hope that the government doesn't force it via imminent domain (thanks Kelo, worst decision SCOTUS has made in the last 30 years!).I'm on the fence about fracking, I don't know enough about the technical side of it. I've heard extremely passionate arguments about whether or not it's safe from lots of folks.Whether or not it is, there are serious issues in that limited liability exposure can encourage potentially unsafe practices. "Tort reform" laws have had a lot of really bad unintended consequences.
6/13/2012 1:55:02 PM
Oh, and for the record, there wont be dollas, as the companies will immediately start working with your State government to make sure they pay no taxes at all if not get subsidies.
6/13/2012 2:00:52 PM
6/13/2012 2:51:00 PM
And be aware that if you don't own your own mineral rights that whomever does can set up shop/build roads on your land to get to them...
6/13/2012 3:34:05 PM
If a river runs through my property, can I build a dam and deprive people of water that live downstream?
6/13/2012 4:23:55 PM
6/13/2012 4:28:54 PM
Yeah, we don't try to regulate chemical plants.
6/13/2012 4:35:18 PM
If fracking wasn't potentially dangerous to water supplies (both through contamination and depletion), then why did the industry lobby (championed by Dick Chaney) for the exemption to The Clean Water Act?
6/13/2012 4:42:21 PM
^^^what's that called? deflection?i think it's quite obvious that it has a serious potential to contaminate drinking water.
6/13/2012 4:43:26 PM
6/14/2012 10:18:39 AM
6/14/2012 11:59:26 AM
Tightly regulate it, severely limit its use, and continue to research, since there's a lot we don't know yet.[Edited on June 14, 2012 at 12:58 PM. Reason : ]
6/14/2012 12:57:36 PM
6/14/2012 1:18:33 PM
Try real hard Loneshark, and maybe you can argue against people that actually exist instead of the imaginary tree-hugging ELF luddite in your mind.[Edited on June 14, 2012 at 1:19 PM. Reason : .]
6/14/2012 1:19:24 PM