The Insanity Of Fracking
By James Donahue
Drilling companies have been fracturing oil wells almost since the first wells were drilled in the mid-1800s. In those days they used dynamite or nitroglycerin dropped in shallow, hard rock oil wells to crack the rock and stimulate the flow of crude oil and natural gas. It also was found to be a great way of waking up tired old wells where the pumps were no longer pulling much oil to the surface.
By the 1930s, the technique was getting more refined. Well production was found to be increased by using non-explosive methods like acid or high pressure fluids, usually water mixed with sand and chemicals to fracture the rock. Now, with most of the easy oil fields exhausted, companies are using something called hydraulic fracturing to crack open deep formations of shale found to contain even more crude oil and gas.
This new practice of fracking, however, is not good for the environment, and it is destroying what is left of America’s precious fresh water supply. That is because fracking involves the pumping of millions of gallons of water mixed with chemicals and sand, at high pressure, to break up rocks and release hydrocarbons. Not only is it sucking up precious fresh water, but there appears to be a link between fracking and earthquakes that are occurring in areas where fracking has been going on.
The process also produces toxic gases that are released in the air, and there is extreme ground pollution.
Some major shale fracking operations have been occurring at the Bakken site in North Dakota, the Eagle Ford Shale site in Texas and the Marcellus Shale site in Delaware and surrounding states. But the practice has been found to be so costly and community outrage has been so strong that fracking has been stopped at many sites. Fracking is presently has also been going on in at least 17 states and oil companies have had their eye on at various other areas where it should never be allowed.
California's Kern County in Central Valley lies in the heart of the state's truck farming industry. Almonds, pistachios, grapes, cotton, carrots, onions, strawberries, citrus and a wide variety of fruits and vegetables that supply much of the nation's winter food harvest are produced here. It is considered such an important agricultural site that the area has been awarded first dibs on the water pumped from the Colorado River passing through the southern half of the United States.
The Kern County area also is suffering once again this season from a crippling drought that has been plaguing not only California but much of the Southwest. But wouldn't you know it, the area also is sitting on top of a deep underground rock formation called Monterey Shale that has the attention of the oil industry. There is an estimated 13.7 billion barrels of recoverable oil deep under the soil, twice as much as in North Dakota's Bakken Shale.
Consequently the battle is on between agricultural interests and big oil over who controls California's Central Valley agricultural lands. The Kern County site presently produces 75 percent of the state’s oil and it is considered among the largest oil producing areas in the nation. The world does not need the oil, but it sorely needs the food produced there.
The second site of concern has been Michigan, where the fracking of lands along the Great Lakes is not only depleting the largest remaining bodies of fresh water in the world, but quickly contaminating them. In Kalkaska County alone, a single fracking site contaminated 42 million gallons of water. Encana Oil & Gas Inc. planned to use 8.4 million gallons of water to fracture a single well and truck the water from the City of Kalkaska's water system. Fortunately a strong public resistance to the project caused Encana to sell its oil and gas interests and leave the area.
The world doesn't need the oil and gas as badly as it needs to preserve whatever fresh water is left.
Alternative green energy sources have been well established. The world no longer depends on the carbon fuels like it once did. But big oil interests are plunging ahead with fracking operations anyway. And it is all in the interest of big money.
By James Donahue
Drilling companies have been fracturing oil wells almost since the first wells were drilled in the mid-1800s. In those days they used dynamite or nitroglycerin dropped in shallow, hard rock oil wells to crack the rock and stimulate the flow of crude oil and natural gas. It also was found to be a great way of waking up tired old wells where the pumps were no longer pulling much oil to the surface.
By the 1930s, the technique was getting more refined. Well production was found to be increased by using non-explosive methods like acid or high pressure fluids, usually water mixed with sand and chemicals to fracture the rock. Now, with most of the easy oil fields exhausted, companies are using something called hydraulic fracturing to crack open deep formations of shale found to contain even more crude oil and gas.
This new practice of fracking, however, is not good for the environment, and it is destroying what is left of America’s precious fresh water supply. That is because fracking involves the pumping of millions of gallons of water mixed with chemicals and sand, at high pressure, to break up rocks and release hydrocarbons. Not only is it sucking up precious fresh water, but there appears to be a link between fracking and earthquakes that are occurring in areas where fracking has been going on.
The process also produces toxic gases that are released in the air, and there is extreme ground pollution.
Some major shale fracking operations have been occurring at the Bakken site in North Dakota, the Eagle Ford Shale site in Texas and the Marcellus Shale site in Delaware and surrounding states. But the practice has been found to be so costly and community outrage has been so strong that fracking has been stopped at many sites. Fracking is presently has also been going on in at least 17 states and oil companies have had their eye on at various other areas where it should never be allowed.
California's Kern County in Central Valley lies in the heart of the state's truck farming industry. Almonds, pistachios, grapes, cotton, carrots, onions, strawberries, citrus and a wide variety of fruits and vegetables that supply much of the nation's winter food harvest are produced here. It is considered such an important agricultural site that the area has been awarded first dibs on the water pumped from the Colorado River passing through the southern half of the United States.
The Kern County area also is suffering once again this season from a crippling drought that has been plaguing not only California but much of the Southwest. But wouldn't you know it, the area also is sitting on top of a deep underground rock formation called Monterey Shale that has the attention of the oil industry. There is an estimated 13.7 billion barrels of recoverable oil deep under the soil, twice as much as in North Dakota's Bakken Shale.
Consequently the battle is on between agricultural interests and big oil over who controls California's Central Valley agricultural lands. The Kern County site presently produces 75 percent of the state’s oil and it is considered among the largest oil producing areas in the nation. The world does not need the oil, but it sorely needs the food produced there.
The second site of concern has been Michigan, where the fracking of lands along the Great Lakes is not only depleting the largest remaining bodies of fresh water in the world, but quickly contaminating them. In Kalkaska County alone, a single fracking site contaminated 42 million gallons of water. Encana Oil & Gas Inc. planned to use 8.4 million gallons of water to fracture a single well and truck the water from the City of Kalkaska's water system. Fortunately a strong public resistance to the project caused Encana to sell its oil and gas interests and leave the area.
The world doesn't need the oil and gas as badly as it needs to preserve whatever fresh water is left.
Alternative green energy sources have been well established. The world no longer depends on the carbon fuels like it once did. But big oil interests are plunging ahead with fracking operations anyway. And it is all in the interest of big money.