The Wall Street Journal released this article last week. It takes a look at several of the major issues currently facing the natural gas industry and works to separate fact from fiction. I'm curious to know what you guys think of its results.
Tags: Chesapeake, drilling, energy, fracking, gas, natural, water
Seems like "Yes We Can" has become "Why We Can't"...
Maybe articles like this one can help get us back on track...huh?
Like most things associated with the Shale Gas, little evidence and lots of opinions go a look way. Reminds me of the smoking industry - how many people have their water wells tested for all sorts of things before drilling is done.
Here in California we get the same screams - but here we have faults deep enough so that oil and gas come to the surface in many places and we have effects coming from secondary/enhanced recovery. We have had uplifts and subsidences of a few to 10s ft.
By the way, I did a study three decades ago that suggested that the losses of swamps and wetlands along the LA coast may reflect production of large oil, gas, and water from the onshore, near, and off shore developments.
So yeah given the injection of water at 10,000psi so effects may occur along fractures and faults
What is the big deal about saying what is in the 0.5-1.0% of the fracking liquids (including benzene, remember that Perrier bottled water starts with spring water contaminated by benzene but is treated before putting in the bottle).
In researching the decades-old Tuscaloosa Trend and the immense wealth it has generated for many, I find it deeply troubling that this resource-rich formation runs directly beneath one of the poorest communities in North Baton Rouge—near Southern University, Louisiana—yet neither the university ( that I am aware of) nor local residents appear to have received any compensation for the minerals extracted from their land.
This area has suffered immense environmental degradation…
ContinuePosted by Char on May 29, 2025 at 14:42
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