Huh? Read CARE favorite Paul Driessen to find out the TRUTH about hydraulic fracturing.
Fractured fairy tales
Greens hate natural gas and fracking, but costly, parasitic
wind energy can’t live without it
Paul Driessen
Horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing
have boosted shale gas production from zero a few years ago to 10% of all US energy
supplies in 2012, observes energy analyst Daniel
Yergin. Fracking has also increased US oil production 25% since 2008 – almost
all on state and private lands, and in the face of more federal land and resource
withdrawals, permitting delays and declining
public land production.
In the process, the fracking revolution created 1.7
million jobs in oil fields, equipment manufacturing, legal and information
technology services, and other sectors. It will generate over $60 billion this
year in state and federal tax and royalty revenues, reduce America’s oil import
bill by $75 billion, and save us $100 billion in imported liquefied natural
gas, concludes a new IMF Global Insight analysis.
A
resurgent American petroleum industry could add “as many as 3.6 million jobs by
2020, and increase the US gross domestic product by as much as 3 percent,” says
Citigroup’s “Energy 2020” report. Fracking is bringing new
jobs and revenues to states underlain by shale deposits, and could give our
nation over a century of hydrocarbon energy that will keep prices low for fuel
and petrochemical feed stocks.
That means more manufacturing and other jobs for
millions of graduates and unemployed workers, and new prosperity for the “Rust
Belt” and other areas. “Plunging natural gas prices have turned the US into one
of the most profitable places in the world to make chemicals and fertilizer,”
says the Wall
Street Journal. It’s also “slashed costs for makers of energy-intensive
products such as aluminum, steel and glass.”
It could make North America energy independent
and even a net exporter of natural gas. In fact, this amazing new technology could turn
the United States into the world’s
#1 oil producer within just a few more years.
For people still concerned about “catastrophic
manmade global warming” (despite 16 years of stable global temperatures), unconventional
gas also provides a way to cut carbon dioxide emissions by up to 40% using
clean-burning fuel that costs a third less than oil on a per BTU basis, notes
Danish economist Bjorn Lomborg. The USA’s CO2 emissions are now at their lowest
levels in 20 years, because of natural gas, a sluggish economy, and the
retirement of 100-200 coal-fired power plants due to an EPA regulatory
onslaught that is based heavily on agenda-driven, slipshod and even fraudulent
and illegal science.
Logic and common sense would engender
unprecedented public, political and even environmentalist support for hydraulic
fracturing and expanded oil and gas production. Indeed, that is Governor
Romney’s perspective and policy. Unfortunately, Team Obama remains largely
opposed to domestic drilling, fixated on “renewable” energy, despite having
already wasted
some $97 billion on wind, solar and algae projects – and poised to unleash
a boxcar of new EPA and BLM rules designed to usurp state control and restrict
or hyper-regulate fracking on federal, state and private lands alike, win or
lose on November 6.
Team Obama justifies its stance by citing public
anxiety over fracking. It fails to mention that this anxiety has been nurtured
and orchestrated by a host of environmental pressure groups whose existence,
monetary sustenance and political power depend on a steady stream of new
eco-hobgoblins. Their fractured fairy tales about this game-changing energy
technology would be as funny as the Rocky and Bullwinkle tales, if the
economic, employment, national security and environmental consequences weren’t
so serious.
Hydraulic fracturing devastates
their mantra that we are running out of oil and gas. It annihilates their incessant
assertions that hydrocarbons are the energy of the past, and renewables
are the future. In reality, wind and solar cannot live with cheap natural
gas (because they cannot possibly compete with it) and cannot live without it
(because they only work 20% of the time and need gas as constant backup power).
Consequently, the anti-fracking factions have
concocted a hodgepodge of eco-scares, each one more absurd and indefensible
than the last.
Burning
tap water.
Yes, you can ignite methane at your kitchen faucet, if your well was drilled through gas-bearing rock formations and
was not properly cemented and sealed to keep gas out. (Eternal
Flame Falls in New York’s Chestnut Ridge Park is one example of natural
methane leakage.) But fracturing zones are thousands of feet below groundwater
supplies; production wells use cement and steel casing that extends hundreds of
feet below the surface; and sensitive instruments monitor downhole activity, to
ensure that valuable gas does not escape into near-surface formations or the
atmosphere.
Groundwater contamination. Fracking fluids are 99.5% water and sand. The other
0.5% is made up of chemicals that fight bacterial growth, keep sand particles
suspended in the liquid and improve production. The vast majority used today
are found in household items that Americans use safely every day – including
cheese, beer, canned fish, dairy desserts, shampoo and cosmetic products. New
fluids like those developed by FamilyJoule
and Halliburton represent the new kinds of entirely nontoxic and biodegradable
chemicals that almost all drillers are now using.
Steadily
improving technologies, techniques and regulations minimize risks even further.
For instance, heavy plastic liners are now commonplace under drilling rigs,
storage tanks and containment pits. Along with modern drilling and well casing
methods, they help make the likelihood of chemical or salt contamination of
groundwater a minuscule fraction of what is posed by winter salting of icy
roads.
Wastewater
and water depletion.
In addition to changing
the composition of fracking fluids (and making that information readily
available online), to address concerns about water use and wastewater
disposal, drilling companies increasingly recycle the water they use. Devon and
other companies have recycled hundreds of millions of gallons, and some 90% of
water produced in the Marcellus shale region of New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio
and West Virginia is now reused. Moreover, the amount of water used in fracking
is far less than what is required to grow corn and process it into ethanol.
Earthquakes. Fracturing rocks does
cause cracking that can be measured with ultra-sensitive equipment. But these
micro-seismic events measure around 0.8 on the Richter Scale, about what is
caused by a car
passing by. Even loaded dump trucks register only a 3 (the minimum that can
be felt by humans), and property damage does not begin until level 5. Deep
injection of water for geothermal energy development or enhanced oil
recovery operations (or to dispose of petroleum, municipal or industrial
wastewater) has caused detectable seismic activity; however, of more than
800,000 injection wells nationwide, only about 40 were actually felt at the
surface. Rules and practices increasingly address these injection well issues.
Fracking regulations. State and local regulation
and cooperation with industry, constant refinements and improvements in rules
and practices, and accommodation to public concerns about water, drilling and
fracking fluids, road congestion, community impacts and other issues have been
ongoing for decades. That is part of the reason that 2.5 million instances of
fracking worldwide (over 1 million in the USA) since 1949 have not caused any
serious harm. That’s a safety record any industry would envy.
Unfortunately,
environmentalist fractured fairy tales cost us energy, jobs, revenue and prosperity
– for no ecological benefit. The ultimate
irony is Europe, where Big Green opposition to fracking and nuclear power is
ushering in a coal-burning
renaissance. Germany and other central EU countries will be building 10,600
megawatts of new coal-fired electrical power plants during the next four years!
Meanwhile,
green power mandates have already pushed Germany’s electricity prices to the
second highest in Europe (32 cents per kWh, compared to an average of 10 cents
in the USA) – and the average
German household faces another big rate hike over the next year. Countless
jobs are also at risk.
America has the world’s largest
reserves of oil, gas and coal. We need access to these deposits, under rational
regulations that reflect reality, instead of eco-fairy tales. We need people in
the White House, Congress and government bureaucracies who can distinguish
between fact and fiction, understand how to produce real energy, jobs and
revenues, and don’t have an agenda to “fundamentally transform” our nation.
Paul Driessen is senior policy advisor for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow and Congress of Racial
Equality, and author of Eco-Imperialism: Green power - Black
death.
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