Christopherson to study economic impact of gas drilling in Marcellus Shale

FrackPop Rank:
38
Order:
77
About:
Original Publication Date:
2010-05-06
Posted:
Tue 24 Aug 2010 06.25 EDT
Re-published/Updated:
Publication Type:
Author:
Source:
AAP News | College of Architecture, Art & Planning | Cornell University (2010)
Christopherson to study economic impact of gas drilling in Marcellus Shale

/app/uploads/frack_files/cornellaap.png

/app/uploads/frack_files/christopherson.jpg

Susan Christopherson, J. Thomas Clark Professor of City and Regional Planning, has received a $100,000 grant from the Ithaca-based Park Foundation to study the economic effects of the proposed drilling in the Marcellus Shale, a rock formation that extends from New York south into Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West Virginia.

Christopherson has proposed conducting a $300,000 study that will examine issues such as the effects of the increase in gas drilling on schools, public health, and transportation systems.

The research project will be supported by several funders. “The question is, ‘What is going to be the cumulative effect of this kind of activity?’” says Christopherson, who specializes in economic development. “People are looking at this question from an environmental perspective, but no one is looking at it from an economic perspective.”

Christopherson worries about a “boom town” effect created by the surge of companies that want to extract natural gas from the Marcellus Shale. “We have had these periodically in the U.S. like the Gold Rush, where you get lots of people coming into an area in order to extract natural resources and then leaving,” she says.

Her hope is that the gas drilling could create a long-term investment in the economy of the Southern Tier. “I think they could do that,” she says, “but it has to be done very carefully. There has to be careful planning for the economy and to protect the environment. What people rarely recognize is that good environmental planning will also produce better economic outcomes.”

See: Economic Implications of Marcellus Shale Natural Gas Development: Potential Impacts on Tourism, Agriculture, and Housing

See: Under the surface : fracking, fortunes and the fate of the Marcellus Shale

See: The Next Drilling Disaster?

See: As You Sow – Corporate Accountability, Shareholder Action, and ToxicsReduction

See: Systems Approach to Energy Transitions: Watkins Glen Conference, March 30-31

See: Marcellus Shale Coalition

See: Coalbed Methane Development: The Costs and Benefits of an Emerging Energy Resource

See: Ceres Principles – Corporate Environmental Conduct

Item added to cart.
0 items - $0.00