I'm not so sure he's up to speed on the issue that those who don't want their land/minerals produced won't allow it so it won't happen. Well, he's in the UK ...
http://www.forbes.com/sites/timworstall/2011/12/10/fracking-does-co...
Anyway, enjoy.
80)
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The author of the Forbes article sees this as a game changer - maybe not in a good way. He has 2 links to other reports that are worth browsing.
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I agree with the Forbes writer that it really points out what should not be done in fracking, not that all fracking is bad. It ridiculous to think that fracking is going to be safe everywhere - or dangerous everywhere. However, it will be regulated everywhere.
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Here are the links - the first one is excellent and puts the epa report into layman's language
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http://arstechnica.com/science/news/2011/12/how-the-epa-linked-frac...
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http://www.propublica.org/article/feds-link-water-contamination-to-...
HANG-
Its a game changer in terms of the public debate, but if policy were driven by the scientists and engineers, it would change little, if anything.
Everyone needs to realize that the aquifer in the area is also a coal bed methane system. Yes, it appears that chemicals from surface pits may have contaminated drinking water wells, although that is not conclusive.
In the areas were chemicals consistent with fracing fluids were discovered - these were deeper monitoring wells, essentially drilled as twin off-sets to gas wells that had been fraced, in the same formation that had been fraced. If they hadn't found fracing chemicals, the service company didn't do its job.
Kind like testing asphalt and discovering it contains hydrocarbons, or testing swimming pool water and finding chlorine. Next they'll find bacteria living on my toilet seat!
BINGO!!
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dbob, to tell the truth I left out that tidbit about the coal bed methane and those chemicals - this well was also constructed poorly. That's why the report is best read for how NOT to do fracking. There will be places where for various reasons fracking should not happen.
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but, how many people will read past the headline? and, how many people will come to check the bacteria on your toilet seat?
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hummm ... that reminds me, the wife wants me to change the toilet seat before Xmas guests come :)
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This science is fairly new and I expect some false starts and problems before it's worked out. But, the worse thing we could do is quit - we yanked the tax credits from solar and wind 30 years ago and we could have been a lot further down the road of alternatives today. It would be a crime to our grandchildren to allow ourselves to be afraid to pursue natural gas. But, we cannot do it recklessly either - or the public will put the brakes on all fracking.
Guys, sorry, this one is a bit of a soap box for me - I like HANGs comment that this is a poster child for how fracing should not be done. to further that, my understanding is that this is a poster child for how fracing was done in CBM prior to 2004-2005.
I think it would help to get more articles like this out there to help folks understand the disconnect between fracing depth and the aquifer in shale development:
http://www.halliburton.com/public/pe/contents/Papers_and_Articles/w...
Personally, If an area wants to ban fracking, more power to them, so long as I can cut off natural gas, gasoline, and oil delivery to them, as well as electricity derived from petroleum products.
It's almost like folks waking up one day and realizing that beef comes from cows, not all cows live a happy and stress free life, and deciding they don't want ranching in their area, but are happy to eat a hamburger from meat made in another state or country.
Purely from a sustainability standpoint, we need to connect people where their resources come from, be it from cattle fattened on a feedlot, natural gas, or something else. Continuing to consume the same product produced out of sight, out of mind, while protesting its development close to home is a slippery slope.
Sesport (II):
Not so much in the 'smack the author in the head' genre, but as to industry's reservations in the reported interpretation of the results:
Energy in Depth: Six Questions for EPA on Pavillion
Enjoy!
Thanks for posting this Dion. I found their specific objections interesting and posted them below ... But, the full article is very worth reading! Plus, EID included FOOTNOTES, I love footnotes to see where their data came from.
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It's no wonder that the general public is confused. It's easy to pull out both a pro and an anti fracking headline from the report - but, there are many, many more negative reports in the media. No one reads the details ...
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1) Why the huge difference between what EPA found in its monitoring wells and what was detected in private wells from which people actually get their water?
2) After reviewing the data collected by Region 8, why did EPA administrator Lisa Jackson tell a reporter that, specific to Pavillion, “we have absolutely no indication now that drinking water is at risk”? (video available here)
3) Did all those chemicals that EPA used to drill its monitoring wells affect the results?
4) Why is the author so confident that fracturing is to blame when most of his actual report focuses on potential issues with casing, cement and legacy pits?
5) 2-BE or not 2-BE? That is the question.
6) Is EPA getting enough potassium?
Interestingly, the potassium levels detected in EPA’s first monitoring well declined by more than 50 percent from October 2010 to April 2011, while the potassium level in EPA’s second monitoring well increased during that same period. Only natural variations in groundwater flow and/or composition could have accounted for this"
http://www.energyindepth.org/six-questions-for-epa-on-pavillion/
In general, I agree that EPA tends to be alarmist, but, regarding potassium chloride EID doesn't seem to understand basic chemistry. When potassium chloride dissolves in water, it separates into potassium ions and chloride ions, so saying potassium chloride is a "different chemical entirely" from potassium and chloride is pure hogwash.
Obed:
I think the idea that EID was posing was that just because you find K+ and Cl- doesn't necessarily mean that it came from KCl. K+ could have just as easily come from KOH / K2CO3 present in caustic ash with solvated chlorides already present (from naturally occurring NaCl brines for instance). The EPA report doesn't really get into what the source(s) of these ions are. High levels of potassium and chloride are linked to produced water as well as from well treatments and not necessarily just from frac contamination.
Yes, I guess it would depend on the relative concentrations of the various positive ions and negative ions. If K+ and Cl- were present in about equal concentration and at a higher concentration than other ions, that might be good evidence that potassium chloride was the source, but even then it wouldn't prove the potassium chloride came from frac contamination.
I like the tracer in fracking fluid idea. That would provide more accountability by being able to trace fluids.
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This is now a bill before the Texas legislature. Is there any reason why this would not be a good idea???
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http://www.capitol.state.tx.us/tlodocs/82R/billtext/html/SB00772I.htm
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Shale drilling and lithium extraction are seemingly distinct activities, but there is a growing connection between the two as the world moves towards cleaner energy solutions. While shale drilling primarily targets…
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