Page added on November 2, 2013
An anti-fracking group in Colorado has released a series of ads blasting claims made by the oil and gas industry in the state as four communities prepare to vote on bans or moratoriums on drilling and fracking in their regions.
Fort Collins, Broomfield and Boulder voters all face ballot initiatives that would put a moratorium on fracking and drilling inside city limits for five years. Lafayette voters will consider a measure that, if passed, would amend the city charter with a community bill of rights — one that would make it illegal for any person or company to drill for oil and gas within the city limits.
Released by Frack Free Colorado and called “Frack Check”, the videos offer counterpoints to the industry’s drilling safety claims.
In one video (watch above), Weston Wilson, an EPA whistleblower who worked at the Environmental Protection Agency for 37 years, talks about the threat of groundwater contamination due to fracking. He cites a leaked EPA powerpoint slideshow from August, one that Wilson says reveals a clear link between fracking and groundwater contamination in Pennsylvania.
“The presentation concludes that the methane and other gasses released during drilling caused significant damage to the water quality there,” Wilson says in the video. “Charges from that leaked document shows that wells being fracked for gas create pathways that allow gas to migrate to shallow aquifers.”
Wilson also points to a Duke University study that found drinking water wells near fracking sites have 17-times more methane than those wells that are farther away.
“This EPA report backs up other studies like the one done by Duke University that found drinking water wells near fracking sites have 17 times more methane than those wells that are farther away.”
“It’s now clear that EPA had prior knowledge that fracking does cause contamination of groundwater and contaminate the air we breathe,” Wilson concludes.
In the second video (below), Anthony Ingraffea, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at Cornell University who has also served as a oil and gas industry consultant for more than 25 years, talks about how much fracking has changed over the years (story continues below video):
“The gas industry is going to tell anybody who is going to listen that fracking has been around since 1947,” Ingraffea says in the video. “Saying that fracking has been around since 1947 and shouldn’t be of concern now is pretty misleading. Fracking has changed tremendously in the last 65 years as have many industries. For instance, in 1947 a frack job would consist of about 1000 gallons of water or napalm going into a single well. Today fracking for shale gas or shale oil can involve 10 or more wells on one pad and collectively consuming over 50 million gallons of water and chemicals.”
Hydraulic fracturing is a controversial process of injecting water, sand, and chemicals underground at very high pressures to release natural gas. Most companies however have declined to reveal what components make up their fracking fluids, calling them “trade secrets.”
It has been less than a year since Gov. John Hickenlooper said that the state would sue any city in Colorado that bans fracking and only a few months since the state filed its first lawsuit against Longmont’s drilling rules.
The push in the four communities follows a surge in drilling around the state which has become home to a total of more than 51,000 operating oil and gas drill sites. A recent report from advocacy group Environment America reported that Colorado is the second-highest fracked state in the U.S. with 18,168 fracking wells, second only to Texas.
“Colorado has been called the ground zero of fracking,” Ana Tinsly, spokesperson for Frack Free Colorado, said in a press statement. “Gas and oil companies are virtually self-regulated, with devastating consequences, as we saw in the recent flooding of thousands of fracking sites that were allowed to be built on a flood zone. Governor Hickenlooper, in fact, is such a supporter, he once claimed to have drunk fracking fluid.”
Tinsley refers to controversial testimony Hickenlooper gave to the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources back in February.
“You can drink it. We did drink it around the table, almost ritual-like, in a funny way,” Hickenlooper said, The Washington Times reported.
Last year when Hickenlooper was invited to give the keynote address at The Atlantic’s Next Generation Energy Forum, he vigorously defended the practice and even went so far as to say that the anxiety about fracking “isn’t directly connected to the facts.”
“There’s a lot of anxiety out there, certainly with hydraulic fracturing and the kind of unorthodox technologies for the extraction of natural gas, but oftentimes that anxiety isn’t directly connected to facts,” Hickenlooper said during the forum.
7 Comments on "‘Frack Check’ Videos Blast Claims Made By Oil And Gas Industry"
J-Gav on Sat, 2nd Nov 2013 5:24 pm
Sounds like Hickenlooper has had one glass too many of fracking fluid …
Any time people listen to industry mouthpieces or the political slimeballs they’ve bought and paid for, they’re going to be in for a rude awakening.
bobinget on Sat, 2nd Nov 2013 5:28 pm
Whiting’s Revelation Will Completely Change the Shale Revolution
By Tyler Crowe | More Articles | Save For Later
October 31, 2013 | Comments (0)
Fracking has been around for years, but only recently have we been able to use it economically. Since fracking became a profitable venture, exploration and production companies have been experimenting with a whole bunch of different methods to make it as efficienct as possible, and Whiting Petroleum (NYSE: WLL ) has come across quite possibly the most effective method yet.
By employing a new technique for fracking known as “plug and perf” instead of the more common technique — known as a “sliding sleeve fracture” — the company has achieved initial production rates 50%-75% better than neighboring competitors in the Bakken region. Other Bakken producers like Halcon Resources (NYSE: HK ) have started to sue Whiting’s method, and are having success as well. The methods used by Whiting are proving to be the most effective method for the Bakken, and could have a major impact on the shale drilling business going forward. Tune into the video below to find out how this could change the direction of many drillers, and why EOG Resources (NYSE: EOG ) and Continental Resources (NYSE: CLR ) are likely to follow suit.
bobinget on Sat, 2nd Nov 2013 5:31 pm
CPG has gone to cemented liners and P&P over two years ago, and is using it in all their their plays including the UNITA basin.
In CPGs Canadian Viewfield Bakken they are reaching payout in six months.
With pad drilling, P&P companions infill drilling and water floods they are projecting. 30% recovery rate in their Bakken play.
EOG is now testing waterflood in the US Bakken.
Imagine a 30 % recovery rate in the US Bakken and TF with 900 billion barrels in place.
lifted from an oil and gas chat room
sunweb on Sat, 2nd Nov 2013 6:19 pm
In our lives, without a doubt, we need our snowmobiles. We need our wave runners, our four wheelers, and our big trucks for groceries. We need lights on everywhere to tell us what to buy all night long, we need wall size television sets, our golf carts for exercise and our electric can openers. We need our oil and natural gas, by golly. We don’t need no frackin’ water.
From the Curmudgeon Vignettes, read more at:
http://sunweber.blogspot.com/2011/07/curmudgeon-vignettes.html
All of us inadvertently support fracking – driving anywhere, using “renewable energy” devices, doing industrial gardening with hydroponics or high tunnels, buying bananas at the grocery store, watching NASCAR. Our lifestyle is supported by a global infrastructure of fossil fuels and machines.
For fracking, oil sands and the northern pipeline supporters, I have this suggestion. Move your home next to a fracking well and put down your water well along side or better move your grandchildren there. Move your grandchildren by the oil sand works in Canada in the poisonous air, next to the polluted waters and environmental degradation. Let the pipeline filled with toxic fluid come along next to your home here in lovely Northern Minnesota.
http://sunweber.blogspot.com/2012/01/walk-walk.html
We will do anything and everything to maintain our present personal level of energy use and the comfort it affords us. We will do anything and everything to the earth, to other people and even to ourselves to continue on this path. And if we don’t have the energy level we see others have, we will do anything and everything to the earth, to other people and even to ourselves to attain that level. The proof of this assertion is simple; we are doing it.
From: The Curmudgeon Report
http://sunweber.blogspot.com/2011/02/curmudgeon-report.html
BillT on Sun, 3rd Nov 2013 1:20 am
You can live forever without oil.
You can live 3 days without water.
Nuff said…
SteveK on Sun, 3rd Nov 2013 6:28 pm
Waterless… http://www.gasfrac.com/proven-proprietary-process.html
baptised on Mon, 4th Nov 2013 12:42 am
Good point BillT. But you can live upto 28 days without water. The 3 days is a old wifes tell.