A limited amount of agreement.
The gas rush has caused sloppy work the most damaging leaking of the witches brew they use for fracking which is toxic as all hell.
Natural gas itself is much preferable to coal so bring it on in that respect particularly to replace coal plants for electricity but the industry really has to be tightened up.
Riding through Allegheny National forest - the place just reeks in many areas from fracking operations.
Part of the rush is to get ahead of regulations so some operations are plain out criminal in their poor practices.
As to exempt - yeah - it's called the Haliburton clause for Dick Cheney who got it passed.
Fair article here
he rush to drill and frack as many wells as possible has created an unexpected boom in these slow economic times. Drilling permits in the Eagle Ford — a 24-county South Texas shale play — hit 1,010 in 2010, up from 94 permits in 2009 and 26 in 2008 according to state data. In the first four months of 2011 alone, 743 permits have already been issued.
But the lack of adequate regulations and enforcement — at the state and federal level — to monitor this explosion in activity could also lead to one of the greatest environmental and public health challenges of our time.
We don't have to look far to know that after energy and fracking companies set up drill pads and heavy equipment to draw out oil and gas miles below that volatile organic compounds dramatically proliferate in the air, water wells are no longer usable and people get sick as levels of toluene and xylene, and other carcinogenic chemicals are soon found in their bodies. This has been the case for Dish, a small town in the Barnett Shale play near Fort Worth.
A recent peer-reviewed study by Duke University scientists in Pennsylvania's Marcellus Shale has shown elevated levels of methane gas in groundwater near fracked gas wells.
But what makes this unfolding story more disturbing is the lack of studies to explain the impact of this activity on humans and the environment, and the inability to know what to test for because we don't even know what is being pumped into the ground. And yet the drilling intensifies.
In the 2005 Energy Policy Act, Vice President Dick Cheney drafted a clause that ensured that hydraulic fracking would be exempt from the Safe Drinking Water Act, the Clean Water Act, the Clean Air Act and other major environmental laws.
This "Halliburton loophole" stripped the EPA of any federal oversight of this new oil and gas bonanza, and threw it into the lap of state regulators. But in Texas, the Railroad Commission, which has almost sole jurisdiction over the oil and gas industry, proudly displays on its website an article titled "The current EPA study (on hydraulic fracking) is a $12 million solution in search of a problem that doesn't exist."
Furthermore, much praise was given to the Texas Legislature this session for passing House Bill 3328, which will require companies to list the chemicals and quantities of fluid used in fracking. But the watered down bill will not require them to disclose any chemicals which are considered "trade secret."
This is a huge issue everywhere
This powerful agency allows a company to use as much groundwater as needed to complete a well. In northwest Webb County, that amounts to nearly 7.56 million gallons of water to frack one well.
http://www.statesman.com/opinion/fracki ... 37949.html
Decent info here too
http://katiedid101.hubpages.com/hub/Fracking-the-US#
that water is heavily contaminated when it returns to the holding ponds...
Our look at
FRACK PITS AND IMPOUNDMENTS
Marcellus Shale gas wells are very thirsty, requiring an average of 4-million gallons of water to hydro-fracture each well. Water fracturing is preferred to other fracturing methods (nitrogen, propane, carbon dioxide foam, etc) since it can create more pressure to crack the shale, sometimes in the neighborhood of 15,000 pounds per square inch.
THE SHALE PIT LEGACY
"Many of the chemicals found in drilling and evaporation pits are considered hazardous wastes by the Superfund Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA). Upon closure, every pit has the potential to become a superfund site."
Source: Chemicals in Natural Gas Operations
Once the fracking (hydraulic fracturing) is complete, the brackish flowback liquid that comes back out of the well often amounts to 20% to 40% of the original liquids and frac fluids that were pumped over a mile deep into the shale. The fluids coming back over the first 30 days are called "flowback," and the fluids coming back after that are called "produced water."
good and worrying info here....
http://www.marcellus-shale.us/impoundments.htm