Called hydrofracturing, or fracking for short, gas companies blast large volumes of water, sand and chemicals underground to create enough pressure to crack open hydrocarbon-rich shale and extract its embedded natural gas.
A group of Duke researchers last year published a peer-reviewed article in the academic journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that became one of the most read articles on its website. The study found elevated levels of methane in wells with drinking water close to fracking sites in Pennsylvania.
Daniel Fine, a director at the New Mexico Center for Energy Policy, spoke for about an hour at a regular John Locke Foundation meeting Monday, telling those in attendance that drilling for natural gas was indeed safe. He questioned the Duke study in part by quoting Michael L. Krancer, the secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, who called the study statistically and technically biased in testimony before the subcommittee on Water Resources and Environment, Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure on Nov. 16.
There is a total rejection of that study, Fine said Monday.
Despite Fine's assertion, the researchers previously have addressed several of the issues that he brought up. Fine said he and others would help set up a response to Duke, environmentalists and the mass media, which will mount an opposition to hydrofracking in North Carolina.
The researchers previously have said they would welcome further studies. They say they are not anti-fracking, but want to know more about what chemicals are pumped into the ground and what effects the drilling will have on drinking water.
Some more greenie BS, I live in the middle of fracking.
Most anti-frac groups are liberal.
So I’m going to create a study which links frac’ing to terminations of human fetuses in the womb. Once I show that frac’ing kills the unborn, all Progressives will jump on board without hesitation.
Peer-reviewed, as in by those who pee on things?
Sounds like the studiers never bothered to check how much methane was in the water wells before the fracking began. Or whether the methane reflected the characteristics of the source being tapped by fracking. So at the best it’s an open question. If fracking is done properly, none of the natural gas goes anywhere except up the gas well shaft.