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Tag Archives: hydraulic fracturing

Hashtag Fracking

Hashtag Fracking

Amidst the host of this year’s forthcoming Twitterverse epitaphs will be yet another neoliberal linguistic invention (think along the same lines as previous ones: globalization and/or glocalization): fracking. Hydraulic fracturing (as it is formally known) is a mix of fracturing and cracking.  It is the energy industry practice of exploding shale rock material thousands of meters […]

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Nordhaus and McKibben – Following Up

Nordhaus and McKibben – Following Up

I wanted to note some follow-up discussion to material that I have flagged here recently at the blog.  The first was my post On the Denialists from March 2nd.  The NY Review of Books has printed a reply to William Nordhaus’s refutation of the claims of the climate denialists, that I discussed at earlier post.  […]

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To Frack or Not to Frack?

To Frack or Not to Frack?

Why Not Frack? is the title of an article in a recent issue of the “NY Review of Books.”  One of the best environmental journalists we’ve got, Bill McKibben, is the author.  McKibben, of course, is more than just a journalist.  He’s a ground-breaking thinker and, in recent years, a very serious and effective activist.  […]

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Do the Right Thing – Shale Gas Edition

Do the Right Thing – Shale Gas Edition

(Thanks to ProPublica for this graphic.) Thankfully, we are, slowly but certainly, entering a new ballgame on hydraulic fracturing.  Yes, we need the gas trapped in shale – in the medium term.  Long term:  renewables.  But, for now, as we transition to renewables, we’ve got to reduce the carbon footprint of the electric power, transportation […]

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More Fracking Controversy, Continued

More Fracking Controversy, Continued

In the post below, I wrote about the recent and instantly controversial study from Cornell that calls into question the greenhouse gas advantage that natural gas was assumed to have over coal and oil.  This BBC article, for instance, points out what may seem like the obvious:  As one very involved British geologist says “By […]

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More Fracking Controversy

More Fracking Controversy

You may be entirely aware by now that the controversy over shale gas resources and their extraction by hydraulic fracturing heated up last week with the publication of an important paper in Climatic Change, a well-respected scientific journal.  (Here is a great little video on what exactly the heck hydraulic fracturing is – aka hydrofracking […]

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Hydraulic Fracturing – More Public Health Implications

Hydraulic Fracturing – More Public Health Implications

I’ve said this any number of times:  Environmental protection is much more about public health than it is about the natural environment.  Every time you hear somebody tear down the EPA or some other environmental protection agency, just remember that sometimes they may be the only thing standing between you and lung disease, cancer and […]

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Gas, Renewables and Fracking

Gas, Renewables and Fracking

(Here’s a great graphic from DOE’s Energy Information Administration that shows how we deploy energy in the US.  Gas is a big factor.) I caught this comprehensive but succinct item at the NYT recently:  Time to Tap the Bounty of U.S. Natural Gas.  It lays out the fact of the astonishing ballooning of new, proven […]

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Environmental Protection – NY/NJ Region (and beyond)

Environmental Protection – NY/NJ Region (and beyond)

I attended this recent biannual conference examining key and emerging environmental issues in the EPA Region 2 area.  It was organized by Columbia Law School’s Center for Climate Change Law (CCCL).  There was a lot of interesting discussion of climate change and air pollution, including some of the critically important ins and outs of litigation […]

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To Frack or Not to Frack

With abject apologies to the Bard, this is just a note on the potentially enormous question of how much do we want to get at the vast amounts of shale gas available, worldwide, and what price is there to be paid.  I’ve written about the implications for greenhouse gas reductions in exploiting the enormous reserves […]

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