Oil & Gas Accountability Project (OGAP)

Oil & Gas Accountability Project (OGAP)

OGAP tracks drilling impacts with a watchdog’s eye: complaints, enforcement gaps, industry claims, and the fine print of regulation. The hook is accountability — who reports what, who inspects, who pays, who fixes. In boom country, the technical work happens fast and the paperwork trails behind. OGAP exists to pull that trail forward into view, turning scattered incidents into patterns that regulators and communities can’t easily ignore.

Source: Earthworks (2009) Read More

Obama’s gifts to extractive industries continue with defense of Bush mining policy

Obama's gifts to extractive industries continue with defense of Bush mining policy

In April 2010, Earthworks criticized the Obama administration for defending a Bush-era policy allowing unlimited toxic mine waste dumping on public lands, arguing the move contradicted stated commitments to environmental reform. The organization framed the decision as another example of federal policy favoring extractive industries over water protection, public lands stewardship, and community health.

Source: Earthworks (2010) Read More

Pit Pollution

Pit Pollution

Reports of pollution from open waste pits highlighted risks associated with storing drilling byproducts on-site. Wildlife mortality, groundwater concerns, and surface runoff raised questions about containment practices. Waste management remains one of the less visible — yet consequential — aspects of shale development.

Source: Earthworks (2004) Read More

Hydraulic Fracturing of Oil and Gas Wells

Hydraulic Fracturing of Oil and Gas Wells

A nuts-and-bolts explainer of the process: drilling, casing, perforation, high-pressure fluid, sand, and chemical additives — engineered force applied underground to release gas. It’s operational clarity in a debate that often floats above the mechanics. The hook here is not ideology — it’s process: how a well becomes productive, where failures can occur, and why “how it’s done” matters when water, cement, and pressure are the core ingredients.

Source: Earthworks (2010) Read More
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