EOG Resources

FrackPop Rank:
307
Order:
32
About:
Original Publication Date:
2010-01-07
Posted:
Tue 24 Aug 2010 06.22 EDT
Re-published/Updated:
Publication Type:
Author:
Source:
EOG Resources (2010)
EOG Resources

/app/uploads/frack_files/eog.jpg

From EOG website:

EOG Resources, Inc. is one of the largest independent (non-integrated) oil and natural gas companies in the United States with proved reserves in the United States, Canada, Trinidad, the United Kingdom and China. EOG Resources, Inc. is listed on the New York Stock Exchange and is traded under the ticker symbol “EOG.”

An EOG blew out in Clearville PA. on June 4, 2010.

From Sourcewatch:

On June 4, 2010, a western Pennsylvania natural-gas well owned by EOG Resources Inc. blew out, releasing an undisclosed amount of gas and drilling fluids before being contained about 16 hours later, as reported by the Wall Street Journal and The Boston Globe.

Operators at this site were preparing to extract gas after through [hydrofracking]]. In a press release, the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection stated that it would “aggressively investigate” the Marcellus Shale well blowout and that it would take the “appropriate enforcement action.”

“As a result, the well released natural gas and flowback (fracturing) fluid onto the ground and 75 feet into the air,” the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection said in the press release. It should be noted that EOG Resources is the new namesake for the company formerly known as Enron.

See: EnCana Buries Hydraulic Fracturing Pit Sludge in Unlined Pit May 14, 2009

See: U.S. (EPA): Elimination of Diesel Fuel in Hydraulic Fracturing Fluids Injected into Underground Sources of Drinking Water During Hydraulic Fracturing of Coalbed Methane Wells

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

See: Committee Democrats Release New Report Detailing Hydraulic Fracturing Products: Chemicals Used in Hydraulic Fracturing

See: Hydraulic Fracturing Applicability of the Safe Drinking Water Act and Clean Water Act Science Advisory Board Discussion

See: EPA Findings on Hydraulic Fracturing Deemed “Unsupportable”

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

See: Natural gas: the commodity world’s ugly duckling

See: This Website is a Crash Course In Fracking

See: Affirming Gasland

See: The Next Drilling Disaster?

See: Natural Gas Industry Shills Use the Media to Mislead the Public – Here’s How to Spot Them

See: Molly Ivins: Keeping Our Eyes on the Ball

Item added to cart.
0 items - $0.00