Drilling Down on Fracking Concerns

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Original Publication Date:
2011-03-21
Posted:
Mon 11 Apr 2011 11.07 EDT
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Center for American Progress (2011)
Drilling Down on Fracking Concerns

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A Chesapeake Energy natural gas well site is seen near Burlington, Pennsylvania. Source: AP/Ralph Wilson

Tom Kenworthy, Daniel J. Weiss, Lisbeth Kaufman, Christina C. DiPasquale. Drilling Down on Fracking Concerns: The Potential and Peril of Hydraulic Fracturing to Drill for Natural Gas. 21 Mar 2011. Center for American Progress.

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A widely used oil-and-gas drilling technique, hydraulic fracturing, is spreading rapidly to develop vast reserves of natural gas trapped in deep underground shale formations.

Hydraulic fracking, however, is coming under more rigorous oversight by the press and state and federal agencies because of its contribution to air and water pollution.

This attention is welcome, both to ensure that health and safety will be protected if gas is to be more widely used as a cleaner replacement for coal in electric plants and foreign oil as a transportation fuel. We must also more accurately measure carbon dioxide and other pollution from the combustion of gas compared to coal and oil.

This issue brief explores the ecological and economic issues of “fracking,” as it is increasingly coming to be known in the areas of the country where natural gas is tapped due to the technology. Cutting to the chase, our conclusion is this—hydraulic fracturing needs to be done carefully and be well-monitored, with particular attention paid to the full scope of carbon dioxide released into our atmosphere to gauge accurately the consequences of global warming due to the expanded use of natural gas.

…Concerns about this technique led late last year to a partial moratorium in New York state on new drilling permits that allow fracking. Nationally, advocates want to repeal a 2005 congressional exemption of fracking from oversight under the Safe Drinking Water Act. Many activists also want to require drilling companies to publicly disclose the chemicals it uses, as other industries do under the Community Right to Know law. Industry historically resists such calls, though a number of companies have recently dropped their opposition, saying they will publicize the chemicals they use.

These natural gas operations also produce smog-forming pollutants, contributing to air pollution problems in places such as western Wyoming and the Fort Worth area. Indeed, natural gas wells produce so much air pollution that smog in the area around Pinedale, Wyoming is sometimes as bad as in Los Angeles. And these shale gas wells can release fugitive methane, which is a potent global warming pollutant.

In a recent investigation, for example, The New York Times reported on rivers and waterways that serve public water systems in Pennsylvania being contaminated with naturally occurring radioactive materials, such as radium, as a result of drilling activities. The series has also raised serious questions about the adequacy of oversight by state and federal agencies including the Environmental Protection Agency.

Tom Kenworthy, Daniel J. Weiss, Lisbeth Kaufman, Christina C. DiPasquale. Drilling Down on Fracking Concerns: The Potential and Peril of Hydraulic Fracturing to Drill for Natural Gas. 21 Mar 2011. Center for American Progress.

Tom Kenworthy is a Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress who focuses on energy and environmental issues. Daniel J. Weiss is a Senior Fellow and Director of Climate Strategy at the Center. Lisbeth Kaufman is a Special Assistant with the Center’s Energy team, and Christina C. DiPasquale is Associate Director of Press Relations at the Center.

See: Former Bush EPA Official Says Fracking Exemption Went Too Far

See: Supreme Court Restricts Clean Water Act

See: Clean Water Restoration Act of 2009 (S 787)

See: Flow – The War Between Public Health and Private Interests

See: Clean Water Act Definition of “Waters of the United States”

See: WATER: Rulings Restrict Clean Water Act, Foiling E.P.A.

See:The Effect of the United States Supreme Court’s Eleventh Amendment Jurisprudence on Clean Water Act Citizen Suits: Muddied Waters

See: Affirming Gasland

See: Energy Policy Act of 2005-Critique

See: Blue Covenant: The Global Water Crisis and the Coming Battle for the Right to Water

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