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Water

A New Boom in Natural Gas Threatens Drinking Water

By Mark Clayton, Christian Science Monitor. Posted September 18, 2008.


Water and chemicals injected at high pressure can extract more gas and may threaten drinking water in places like New York and Texas.
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After decades of declining US natural-gas production, an advanced drilling system so powerful it fractures rock with high-pressure fluid is opening up vast shale-gas deposits.

Instead of falling, US gas production is rising, with up to 118 years worth of unconventional natural gas reserves in 21 huge shale basins, an industry study in July reported. Such reserves could make the nation more energy self-sufficient and provide more of a cleaner bridge fuel to help meet carbon-reduction goals urged by environmentalists. Shale gas reserves have a powerful economic lure.

Companies, states, and landowners could all reap a windfall in the tens of billions. Some also predict lower heating costs for residential gas users as production increases. Now, scores of natural gas companies are fanning out from Fort Worth, Texas, where hydraulic fracturing of shale has been done for at least five years, to lease shale lands in 19 states, including Pennsylvania and New York.

But some warn that by expanding hydraulic fracturing of shale, America strikes a Faustian bargain: It gains new energy reserves, but it consumes and quite possibly pollutes critical water resources. "People need to understand that these are not your old-fashioned gas wells," says Tracy Carluccio, special projects director for Delaware Riverkeeper, a watchdog group worried about a surge in new gas drilling from New York to Pennsylvania and from Ohio to West Virginia. "This technology produces tremendous amounts of polluted water and uses dangerous chemicals in every single well that s developed."

Traditional gas wells bore straight into porous stone, using a few thousand gallons of water during drilling. But dense shale has gas locked inside. Hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, and horizontal drilling unlock it. Each hydraulically fractured horizontal well can require from 2 million to 7 million gallons of fresh water mixed with sand and thousands of gallons of industrial chemicals to make the water penetrate more easily.

This frac-water mixture is blasted at high pressure into shale deposits up to 10,000 feet deep, fracturing them. The sand lodges in the cracks, propping them open and providing a path for the gas to exit after external pressure is released. Besides using vast amounts of groundwater, scientists and environmentalists worry that toxic frac water 30 percent or more remains underground and may years later pollute freshwater aquifers.

Millions of gallons of frac water come back to the surface. It could be treated, but in Texas it is most often reinjected into the ground. Millions more gallons of produced water flow out later during gas production. This flow, too, is often tainted with radioactivity and poisons from the shale. Often stored in pits, that waste can leak or overflow while awaiting reinjection.

Simply put: "Each of these wells uses millions of gallons of fresh water, and all of it is going to be contaminated," Ms. Carluccio says.

"Industry spokesmen say such fears are overblown. The wells we drill & are insulated with concrete," says Chip Minty, a spokesman for Devon Energy, an Oklahoma City-based gas company that pioneered hydraulic fracturing in the Barnett shale formation beneath Fort Worth, Texas. "The purpose is to protect any kind of aquifer or ground water layer. Those processes are controlled by regulatory agencies, and that keeps us safe from any kind of aquifer pollution."

A pioneer in "best practices," Devon has also developed a way to purify and reuse frac water. But those techniques are costly and not widely used at present. Whether such practices will be required elsewhere is an open question.

Targets for this new kind of drilling

One huge target is the Marcellus shale basin that spans large parts of New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West Virginia. States are eager to get to get new revenues and so are many landowners lining up to sign leases.

"I'll be glad to welcome the crews with open arms," writes Al Czervic in the Catskill Commentator, an online publication. "Drill here, my friends," he writes, "Drill here. And then, drill some more."


Digg!

See more stories tagged with: natural gas, clean water, drilling

Mark Clayton is a staff writer for the Christian Science Monitor.

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View:
HEMP FOR FUEL! and much MORE!
Posted by: garry minor on Sep 19, 2008 2:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We keep hearing about the lack of clean water, the need for clean fuels and affordable health care, world hunger, our own nations obesity, the need for millions of jobs here at home, and yet we hear nothing about the one resource on the planet that can provide us with food, fuel, shelter, medicine, pleasure, spirituality, and unity,.... Kaneh bosm, cannabis, hemp!
Hemp is the #1 source of biomass on the planet and grows with little or no fertilizer, herbicides, or pesticides to foul the soil and water, in climates and conditions other crops won't grow.
Hemp is at the very minimum four times more efficient per acre than corn, kenaf, or sugar cane for ethanol production. Farming just six to eight percent of our farmland in hemp would satisfy our current demands for oil and gas. Henry Ford built and fueled a car primarily with hemp, it's cellulose plastic panels ten times stronger than steel. Neither he or Diesel intended to run their engines with petroleum. Synthetic plastics were derived from cellulose technology. Cellulose plastics could be ground up as fertilizer, not poisoning our soil.
One acre of hemp equals four of timber for pulp and you harvest it every year, tree's take a lifetime. All paper, plastics, packagings, paints, varnishes, fuels, lubricants, textiles, insulations, plywood, structural components, many health foods, cosmetics, and medicines, over 25,000 Earth friendly products can all be made with it!
Canvas is Dutch for cannabis. For thousands of years all ships sails, netting, rope, clothing, and much more were made from cannabis fibers, which are the longest and strongest in nature. The oldest human relic is a piece of hemp cloth. Hemp is far superior to cotton, which is in fact the worst crop for our soil. Washington, Jefferson, and Franklin all grew hemp. It was legal to pay taxes with it in Colonial America, you could have been jailed for not growing it. The War of 1812 was fought over it. The early Pioneer's wagons were covered with it. This Nation could not have been founded without it.
In 2000, Dr. Manuel Guzman of Complutense University in Madrid Spain redicovered what our Goverment found in 1974, that THC injected into tumors, detroyed the tumor with no negative side effects whatsoever. They also irrigated healthy rat's brains with THC for seven day's and found no physiological or neurological damage. In 2005 Dr. Xia Zhang of the University of Saskatchewan found that THC promotes the growth of brain cells. THC has also been found superior in treating Alzheimers and may even prevent it. Cannabis is also very helpful in treating epilepsy, autism, chronic pain, arthritis, asthma, emphysema, migraine, MS, ALS, ADHD, OCD, lupus, cystic fibrosis, tuberculosis, depression, diabetes, obesity, muscular dystrophy, glaucoma, herpes, Parkinsons, Huntingtons, Tourettes, Crohn's disease, and more. All mammals, birds, fish, and reptiles have cannabinoid receptors throughout their body that work independent of those that govern the heart and breathing which is why cannabis cannot kill you and also why it is so helpful.
The hemp seed is the single most nutritiously complete food source on the planet. Our Government stockpiles it as a strategic food source under Executive order #12919. It is the best source of Essential Fatty Acids. Reintroduced to our diets it could alleviate many of the above mentioned diseases and end world hunger.
The United States of America is the only major nation not growing industrial hemp. China is growing 40% of the worlds crop and they are developing new technologies for plastics, plywood, textiles, and more that will keep us at a financial and strategic deficit for years....even more so!
Hemp re-industrialization in the United States will create millions of earth friendly jobs from the farm to the factory, begin a redistribution of wealth, make health care affordable for all, feed the hungry, and promote social harmony!

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