But anti-energy activists
promote falsehoods about this vital, safe job-creating technolog. They
inhabit a callous parallel universe and wage war on cheap energy, jobs and the
poor
By Paul Driessen
Signs of pride and prosperity were evident all over Williamsport and the gorgeous northern Pennsylvania countryside around it.
Friendly, happy people greeted us. New cars, trucks, hotels and restaurants
sparkled in a clean, bustling downtown. New roofs topped barns and houses, while
late model tractors worked the fields. Formerly dirt roads are now paved.
Men and women again have high-paying jobs, young people are
coming back instead of moving away, their salaries are supporting other
businesses and jobs, and many are taking college programs in oilfield technical
and business specialties, Vince Matteo told me. As president and CEO of the
Williamsport/Lycoming County Chamber of
Commerce, he’s witnessed the transformation.
“98 percent of the change has been positive,” he says. Contributions
to United Way
are increasing each year, county infrastructure has improved enormously, and
environmental impacts are minimal.
Visits to several Anadarko
Petroleum drilling and fracking sites explained why. The operations are far
more high-tech than what I had seen previously on rigs in the Rocky Mountains,
off the Louisiana and California coasts, and last fall in Alberta’s oil
sands region. Hydraulic fracturing was first employed in Kansas in 1947.
But steadily improved fracking
technology is now combined with computers, down-hole sensors and
microseismic instruments. Drilling equipment, lets crews send a bit 6,000 feet
down and 8,000 feet laterally into Marcellus Shale formations – and end up
within three feet of their intended target!
The operations are conducted from atop a multi-layered felt
and impermeable plastic pad, surrounded by a berm, to keep unlikely spills from
contaminating farm and forest land. Multiple wells are drilled from a single pad
and “kicked out” horizontally in various directions. The drilling rig is
skidded a short distance to four or five more locations around the pad, the
entire array is fractured at high pressure, and short wellheads are installed
to collect natural gas, and send it to local and interstate pipeline networks.
A nearby impoundment is also lined with plastic to hold
water for fracturing operations. Topsoil removed to prepare the pad and pond is
stored nearby. As operations are finished, the land is reclaimed, topsoil is
replaced, and local grasses, flowers and shrubs are planted, to create meadows
for deer and wild turkeys – or anything else the landowners prefer. To launch
20-40 years of hydrocarbon production from a 15,000-acre (23-square-mile) area
requires barely 2% surface disturbance, most of it for just a few months.
Once the work is completed, the area quietly and
unobtrusively produces decades of energy – and revenue for farmers, wildlife organizations,
hunting groups, and local, state and federal treasuries.
Hydraulic
fracturing takes place some 5,500 feet (almost four Empire State Buildings)
below the water table. To prevent groundwater contamination, pipe penetrating
the first seven hundred feet is surrounded by layers of steel casing and
specialized cement. During the drilling and fracturing process, even rainwater
collected from the drill pad is saved and used. Some of the water used to
fracture the shale is also recovered during gas production; this “flowback” water
itself is filtered, treated and reused.
The hydraulic fracturing process requires
some 2.0-4.2 million gallons of water per well, but fresh or brackish water
works equally well. A 2013 Ceres
study concluded that hydraulic fracturing consumed 75 billion gallons of
water per year on average nationwide, in 2011 and 2012. EPA
says fracking consumes 70-140 billion gallons a year nationally, and the Texas
Water Resources Board estimates that Lone Star State oil and natural gas companies used
27 billion gallons of water for fracking statewide in 2011. However, Texas homeowners used
495 billion gallons for lawns and gardens, the TWRB found (18 times what
fracking consumed), and household landscape irrigation nationwide consumes
nearly 3 trillion gallons of water
annually, according to EPA (21-43 times the EPA and Ceres estimates for hydraulic
fracturing).
Even
more revealing, according to the U.S. Department
of Energy, fracking requires just 0.6 to 5.8 gallons of water per million
Btu of energy produced. By comparison, “renewable” and “sustainable” corn-based
ethanol requires 2,510 to 29,100 gallons per million Btu of usable energy – and
biodiesel from soybeans consumes an astounding and unsustainable 14,000 to
75,000 gallons of water per million Btu!
As
to chemical contamination, fracturing fluids are 99.5% water and sand. Moreover,
the 0.5% chemicals portion is increasingly basic, nontoxic household or kitchen
stuff. Anadarko’s chemicals today are only “slickeners” (to help the sand get
further into cracks created by the pressurized water) and “biocides” that
prevent bacterial buildup in the well pipes. Which chemicals are used for any
single well in the United States can be determined by going to www.FracFocus.org
– and every EPA, DOE and other study conducted to date has concluded that
fracking has never contaminated a single US well.
Hydraulic
fracturing has created 1.7 million new direct and indirect jobs in the United States,
with the total likely to rise to 3 million jobs over the next seven years, IHS
Global Insight reports. It has injected billions into North
Dakota, Pennsylvania, Texas and other state
economies. It’s added $62 billion to federal and state treasuries, with that
total expected to rise to $111 billion by 2020.
By 2035, U.S. oil and
natural gas operations could provide over $5 trillion in cumulative capital
expenditures into the economy, while generating over $2.5 trillion in
cumulative additional government revenues.
In the process,
fracking has revived America’s
petrochemical, steel and other manufacturing industries, and reinvigorated
American ingenuity and economic competitiveness. One shudders to think how
awful the US
unemployment, part-time employment and economic picture would be in its
absence.
This game-changing technology has also transformed US, EU
and global
political equations and power structures. With the United
States, Argentina, Britain,
China, Israel and many other
countries collectively sitting atop centuries’ worth of now economically
producible oil and natural gas, OPEC and Russia
can no longer control prices and threaten customer nations. For poor developing
countries, natural gas from shale provides fuel to generate abundant,
affordable electricity that will transform lives.
Then why do Hollywood and radical greens celebrate misleading
films like Gasland
and Promised
Land – even after Phelim McAleer and Ann McElhinney’s documentary FrackNation
completely demolished Gasland‘s lies
and half-truths? Why do outfits like Food and Water Watch and the Sierra Club,
and ill-informed activists like Yoko Ono, continue to scream hysterical nonsense
about the process?
Follow the money – and the ideology. Big Eco is big
business, and big egos. It seeks ever more power and every greater control
over our lives. Fracking threatens all of that.
“What you get in your mailbox is a never-ending stream of
crisis-related shrill material designed to evoke emotions,” former National
Audubon Society COO Dan Beard once admitted, “so that you will sit down and
write a check” – or click the “Donate Now” button. This
multi-billion-dollar-per-year industry would collapse without the crisis du jour it conjures up, with help from the
news media, politicians and regulators.
Deep Ecology adherents view
fossil fuels as evil incarnate, and believe fervently in “peak oil” and Climate
Armageddon. They are frustrated that fracking guarantees a hydrocarbon
renaissance and predominance for decades to come, and helps reduce carbon
dioxide emissions without massive economic sacrifice.
They also tend to be well-off, and clueless about the true
sources of modern living standards. They have disturbingly callous attitudes
about people who have lost their jobs because of Mr. Obama’s war on coal and cheap
energy – and about poor rural New York
families that are barely hanging onto their farms, unable to tap the
Marcellus Shale riches beneath their land, because Governor Cuomo refuses to
lift his moratorium on fracking. Many don’t give a spotted owl hoot about the world’s impoverished billions, whose
hope for better lives depends on the reliable, affordable electricity that “frack
gas” can help bring.
These shameful attitudes hurt
people and planet. We need to frack for a better, cleaner, happier world!
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