My point was that I bet MacDoc drove there. There seems to be a mismatch between the desire for energy- specifically oil and gas- with the unwillingness to accept that producing it has hazards. This results in NIMBYism- which I will come back to later in this reply. I apologise, by the way, for the long delay, but I just spent a month on a gas werll in central Asia, being just the sort of out-of-state migrant worker you seem to abhor.It's pretty easy finding one of those sites which are complete eyesores. They are poppping up all over the place.
Ironically many NIMBYs in my country are most vehement in their opposition to wind farrms , which are sprouting everywhere.Solar, wind, water, and ethanol. Lycoming County proposed plopping a windfarm in the north-east corner of the county. It got shot down by a bunch of really off-the-wall tree-huggers, because supposedly it put some bird at risk.
Running cars on biomass derived ethanol has been tried- notably in Brazil. It has met with limited success. As with any agriculture, the process of fertilising, growing, harvesting and processing any crop all have environmental costs.I could care less about one type of bird, if it could save having a bunch of forest land carved up.
Switch grass is a type of grass which can be grown in just about any environment, and is one of the most efficient sources of producing ethanol. You can grow the stuff on the sides of highways, and in the middle section between the north-south and east-west roadways.
As I said, I work for Halliburton. I have to take waste management and environmental awareness training courses and I'm required to adhere to very strict controls imposed by both Halliburton and our customers as well as government agencies. Maybe it's different where you are. But I doubt it.That's like comparing apple-to-oranges. The potential devestation of nuclear plants is likely greater than then potential devestation of carving up forest lands. But the risks are no where near the same. Nuclear power plants are, for the most part, perfectly safe. Subsurface fracturing inherently destroys the land around it. Or seems to, due to the incredibly piss-poor job Haliburton does at respecting the land they are using.
Nobody- thanks, ironically, to the petroleum industry, who made whale oil obsolete as a fuel and lubricant , forty years before anyone ever heard of environmental activism.Whose burning whale oil?
Rubbish. In the case of the USA, coal is your major fuel for the next hundred years. Much of it will be processed to produce gas.Coal is not exactly a viable source of fuel anymore either.
I grew up in the Central Scottish Coalfield, thanks. I know what mining communities are like.There is the whole global warming issue (which is a completely separate debate altogether.) There is the issue of the devastation that coal mining leaves behind for local areas. Look up Centralia, Mt. Carmel, and Shamockin PA, as examples of just how bad coal mining is.
You are strangely parochial in your attitude to energy.And this is a great point. We need to stop using up our oil and gas at such an obscene rate.
Not sure what you mean by "other people's" oil and gas. Or "they have to find their own." The gas that is being drilled up out of PA is not being used in PA. It is going all over, not just PA. This is true of all energy resources that are not natural.
My point was that I bet MacDoc drove there. There seems to be a mismatch between the desire for energy- specifically oil and gas- with the unwillingness to accept that producing it has hazards. This results in NIMBYism- which I will come back to later in this reply. I apologise, by the way, for the long delay, but I just spent a month on a gas werll in central Asia, being just the sort of out-of-state migrant worker you seem to abhor.It's pretty easy finding one of those sites which are complete eyesores. They are poppping up all over the place.
Ironically many NIMBYs in my country are most vehement in their opposition to wind farrms , which are sprouting everywhere.Solar, wind, water, and ethanol. Lycoming County proposed plopping a windfarm in the north-east corner of the county. It got shot down by a bunch of really off-the-wall tree-huggers, because supposedly it put some bird at risk.
Running cars on biomass derived ethanol has been tried- notably in Brazil. It has met with limited success. As with any agriculture, the process of fertilising, growing, harvesting and processing any crop all have environmental costs.I could care less about one type of bird, if it could save having a bunch of forest land carved up.
Switch grass is a type of grass which can be grown in just about any environment, and is one of the most efficient sources of producing ethanol. You can grow the stuff on the sides of highways, and in the middle section between the north-south and east-west roadways.
As I said, I work for Halliburton. I have to take waste management and environmental awareness training courses and I'm required to adhere to very strict controls imposed by both Halliburton and our customers as well as government agencies. Maybe it's different where you are. But I doubt it.That's like comparing apple-to-oranges. The potential devestation of nuclear plants is likely greater than then potential devestation of carving up forest lands. But the risks are no where near the same. Nuclear power plants are, for the most part, perfectly safe. Subsurface fracturing inherently destroys the land around it. Or seems to, due to the incredibly piss-poor job Haliburton does at respecting the land they are using.
Nobody- thanks, ironically, to the petroleum industry, who made whale oil obsolete as a fuel and lubricant , forty years before anyone ever heard of environmental activism.Whose burning whale oil?
Rubbish. In the case of the USA, coal is your major fuel for the next hundred years. Much of it will be processed to produce gas.Coal is not exactly a viable source of fuel anymore either.
There is the whole global warming issue (which is a completely separate debate altogether.) There is the issue of the devastation that coal mining leaves behind for local areas. Look up Centralia, Mt. Carmel, and Shamockin PA, as examples of just how bad coal mining is.
I grew up in the Central Scottish Coalfield, thanks. I know what mining communities are like.Yoou are strangely parochial in your attitude to energy.And this is a great point. We need to stop using up our oil and gas at such an obscene rate.
Not sure what you mean by "other people's" oil and gas. Or "they have to find their own." The gas that is being drilled up out of PA is not being used in PA. It is going all over, not just PA. This is true of all energy resources that are not natural.
Saudi Arabia. Kuwait. Iraq. Libya. Indonesia. Nigeria.
Other people. Countries whose populations are modernising and growing and just might want that oil themselves in a generation or so.
But Americans burned it. Because it was cheaper and environmentally easier to do that, than to produce their own.
Where did you think the United States gets it's cheap oil? Texas?
By the way, I don't blame you personally for the gas guzzling habits of all Americans, so sorry if I seem harsh. But do consider , before you object to energy production in your own home area, the effects your reluctance may have on other people around the world, whose governments are even less fit to make decisions than yours or mine.
But do, by all means, monitor your local government and bitch like hell if you think they are lax, or in the pockets of anyone. That's not just your right. It's your duty.
Other people. Countries whose populations are modernising and growing and just might want that oil themselves in a generation or so.
But Americans burned it. Because it was cheaper and environmentally easier to do that, than to produce their own.
Where did you think the United States gets it's cheap oil? Texas?
By the way, I don't blame you personally for the gas guzzling habits of all Americans, so sorry if I seem harsh. But do consider , before you object to energy production in your own home area, the effects your reluctance may have on other people around the world, whose governments are even less fit to make decisions than yours or mine.
But do, by all means, monitor your local government and bitch like hell if you think they are lax, or in the pockets of anyone. That's not just your right. It's your duty.
You can say that again!
Oh. You did.
I think that may explain the general lack of concern over our lack of a comprehensive, reality-based energy policy.The more I learn, the worse I think our chances are.

The link won't work for me.
If done right, drilling should leave very little surface evidence; as with any cleanup, the result depends how much time , trouble and money is spent. I could take you to producing wells that you would be unaware of till you were within thirty feet- no more footprint than a garden shed. But not everyone, everywhere is held to that standard.
As for damage at depth- it can happen. Generally, the people who try to keep things right on surface try to keep it right subsurface too. Sloppy ain't good.
I haven't seen the movie. It appears many of its truth claims are suspect, but I don't think it matters. From what I understand, these arguments against natural gas typically miss the big picture.
I've not read through the whole thing, but I'm a little suspicious that nearly all the "active" water well sampling is centred on Dimock.Looks like some claims in the movie may turn out accurate. A new Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences paper finds methane contamination in groundwater sampled from wells within about 1 KM of gas wells. Chemical and isotopic analyses indicate that the methane was formed at depth. Science has a quick write-up (http://news.sciencemag.org/sciencenow/2011/05/study-high-tech-gas-drilling-is-.html?etoc), and the article is available online (http://www.nicholas.duke.edu/cgc/pnas2011.pdf). I haven't read the article yet, but I'll try to this evening.

France to ban fracking of fossil fuels
By Peggy Hollinger in Paris
Published: May 11 2011 22:39 | Last updated: May 11 2011 23:06
French lawmakers have voted to ban a controversial technique used to extract shale gas and oil that opponents say contaminates the environment.
If the vote by the lower house of parliament passes the Senate next month, France will be the first country to ban hydraulic fracturing, also known as fracking. The process injects water, chemicals and sand into rock formations to break them open and extract previously unattainable fossil fuel deposits.
The overwhelming vote by the National Assembly follows months of protest across France against a technique that environmentalists say threatens to pollute the water table. Many were outraged at the beginning of the year when it was discovered that several exploration permits had been granted without public consultation. The issue has become highly political as the government prepares for a difficult presidential campaign next year.
what do they know![]()
Who wants to play "name the fallacy?"
Indeed.Who wants to play "name the fallacy?"