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US Rust Belt Manufacturing Rebounds Via Fracking Boom

schnell writes: A NY Times article reports that Midwestern "Rust Belt" towns and their manufacturing economies in particular have rebounded greatly due to the U.S. resurgence in fossil fuel production. This resurgence is driven by production of shale gas and natural gas from "fracking" and other new technologies that recover previously unavailable fuel but are more invasive than traditional techniques. "Both Youngstown and Canton are places which experienced nothing but disinvestment for 40 years." "They're not ghost towns anymore," according to the article. But while many have decried the loss of traditional U.S. manufacturing jobs in a globalized world and the associated loss of high-wage, blue collar jobs, do the associated environmental risks of new "tight oil" extraction techniques outweigh the benefits to these depressed economic regions?

191 comments

  1. That's unfortunate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Because now as we speak, the EU-Commision has reopened an Anti-Rust Investigation.

  2. Something smells fishy here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Oh right, our house now, thanks to the sinkholes the fracking did!

    1. Re:Something smells fishy here... by NotDrWho · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure most common laborers in these areas lost their houses a long time ago.

      --
      SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
    2. Re:Something smells fishy here... by drfred79 · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, only 1%ers own homes now due to overly stringent environmental laws that reduce labor and increase cost of living.

      I read a hilarious article in Sunset magazine that had rich winery owners worried that their poorer neighbors might allow fracking on their land and thus empower them. I practically heard echoes of the French Aristocracy complaining that the peasants were hunting on their land again.

      Cheap energy is transferring power to the poor. Some people hate that.

    3. Re:Something smells fishy here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Another imaginary boogey - man to scare us with. Sinkholes do not result from fracking and they don't cause alien abductions. But they'd say that too if they thought anybody would buy it. Anything to serve their middle eastern masters. We would not be in a recession now if it were not for environmental quacks and others paid my middle east sheikhs to try to get fracking stopped in this country. In fact, we would be free of oil imports altogether if libtards had only not outlawed in in the state of New York.

  3. Cure is worse than the disease. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ^ See above.

    1. Re:Cure is worse than the disease. by NotDrWho · · Score: 0

      Having something with a small risk of environmental damage is a helluva lot better than having nothing at all. It's all-to-easy for those of us who are well employed and living outside of these areas to forget that.

      --
      SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
    2. Re:Cure is worse than the disease. by Cardoor · · Score: 4, Insightful

      if by 'small risk of environmental damage' you mean 'enormous active environmental damage', then yes - i agree.

    3. Re:Cure is worse than the disease. by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Like the earthquakes and poor air and drinking water quality. Quite schilling for the oil industry....

    4. Re:Cure is worse than the disease. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When their wells become contaminated, who is going to pay to have them get water? You and me, or the corporation that put those chemicals into the ground to get the "cheap" gas? It seems to me that whomever is profiting from this technique ought to be paying into an escrow account to pay for the cleanup, once the pollution is causing problems...and that be weeks or months, but might not be for years. At that point, those who benefited from the injecting of chemicals will probably not be inclined to pay.

    5. Re:Cure is worse than the disease. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When their wells become contaminated, who is going to pay to have them get water?

      I imagine it will be a lot cheaper than what we're paying their unemployment, welfare, food stamps, and medicaid now.

    6. Re: Cure is worse than the disease. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We all profit from lower energy prices.

      Oh, I guess all of us except for the people like Algore and Soros who positioned themselve to profit immensely from the cap-n-trade boondoogle.

    7. Re:Cure is worse than the disease. by operagost · · Score: 0

      OK, we'll go back to drilling more oil then.

      "Green" energy isn't ready to take over yet. Gas fracking is part of the growing pains.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    8. Re:Cure is worse than the disease. by Cardoor · · Score: 2

      Please don't beat your wife.

      Ok, I'll beat my daughter instead.

      No, please don't beat your daughter either.

      Ok, I'll beat my wife.

      huh??

    9. Re:Cure is worse than the disease. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Problem is that if an area gets to choose between environmental damage and absolutely no employment whatsoever or some type of work so a future is possible (even if the future is being able to move to a city where there is a chance > 0 of finding gainful employment), the environment will be set aside.

      The real people to blame are not the residents. They just want enough money to put food on the table without having to resort to growing pot or selling moonshine. Blame the people who cut funding to solar energy, the Congress that allowed China to seize the US's solar panel market by hacking into companies, then six months later, dumping panels for cheaper than rare earths until the US industry was bankrupt, then hiking prices.

    10. Re:Cure is worse than the disease. by mnooning · · Score: 2

      The "fracking is bad" ideas are in the movies because they need bad guys in movies to create excitement. There are in reality only very small risks. No, I am not a shill. I am a retired person who took the time to look into it.

    11. Re:Cure is worse than the disease. by Cardoor · · Score: 1

      "retired" in the 'borat' sense?

      that explains it.

      (sorry, couldn't resist).

    12. Re:Cure is worse than the disease. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do know that a lot of those solar energy subsidies that Congress cut were going straight into the pockets of Chinese companies, right? They were already under cutting US & other nations due to the cozy relationship that they have with the Chinese govt along with their export limits of rare earth minerals. Hiking prices after most of the competitors are gone is the name of the game.

    13. Re:Cure is worse than the disease. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "When their wells become contaminated..."

      Nothing like Begging the Question, huh?

      You know how many wells there are in, say, PA? Like a metric butt-load. Know how many are polluted by fracking? About a handful.

      Those videos of people lighting their water on fire? Notice how they never mention they've been having that problem for decades?? That doesn't play into the 'fracking is bad' line that they are pushing, you see...

    14. Re:Cure is worse than the disease. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have 3 water wells all within 400 yards of a fracked well. They are as pure as they have ever been, that is, several times more pure than municipal water. We've had them tested several times over the last 10 years. Nope, tell the oil sheikhs you work for that the anti-fracking hysteria they paid for only works on hysteria prone untutored liberals.

    15. Re:Cure is worse than the disease. by operagost · · Score: 1

      Natural gas is a great improvement over oil, in both efficiency and the environment, and it works EVERYWHERE for EVERYONE NOW. Not 10 years from now, not for skyscrapers in the cities, not only in remote areas or on shorelines, not for the rich elitists, but EVERYWHERE for EVERYONE NOW.

      It costs less, helping low income people to heat their homes, and while fracking itself is a concern I think the reduced pollution and carbon dioxide emissions balance it out.

      But some jackass who modded me down doesn't understand that. Hopefully, you do.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    16. Re:Cure is worse than the disease. by Cardoor · · Score: 1

      when you take into account the methane escapes and its 30-70x higher potency than co2 as a greenhouse gas, the process of fracking negates your argument many times over. (add onto that all the soil and water issues.. and well.. )

  4. Transition fuel by mdsolar · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Fracking for natural gas seems to be happy with a price of $4/MMBTU so long as we treat it as a strategic fuel and don't link it up with the $10/MMBTU international market. So, it can support onshoring of manufacturing for a while. But, Midwest wind is selling power purchase agreements at essentially the fuel cost for natural gas generation using combined cycle power plants. The cost of wind is likely to fall further. So, natural gas may end up being just a foretaste of low cost energy boosting onshored manufacturing as renewable energy displaces it.

    1. Re:Transition fuel by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      There will be no low cost energy, there will be no reserves. It's just a quick cash grab.

      Not quite true. There is a huge supply that will last much longer than 4 years. But there will continue to be a cash grab.

      Gas fracking is the big dog in the energy market right now, and driving down pricing in the electrical market. But below about $3.5/Mbtu, profitability drops below the point where it makes sense to add new extractions, so new development slows to a crawl. At the same time, gas fired generation steadily increases due to the low cost, thus the overall energy market dependance on nat gas increases. Once this dependency reaches a tipping point, the gas companies can raise prices significantly. This price spike will be temporary, as it will invite more extractions, and thus increase supply. So you will see a cyclic price pattern combined with some extreme spikes during periods of excessive demand (primarily very cold weather). The greater the dependency becomes, the bigger the cycles and spikes will become, with added uncertainly a periods of huge price spikes.

    2. Re:Transition fuel by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Particularly in the Midwest, wind power is shaving off gas price excursions http://will.illinois.edu/nfs/R... so the manufacturing consequences of your scenario seem irrelevant.

    3. Re:Transition fuel by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      While there have been some localized pricing events driven by wind production credits, you'll have a hard time finding anyone knowledgeable in energy markets that would argue the overall driver is gas. Small, local perturbations are irrelevant to the big picture, and even those could change drastically with even minor policy adjustments.

    4. Re:Transition fuel by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      So.... We are not discussing Midwest manufacturing? Not quite sure how Midwest conditions are not relevant.....

    5. Re:Transition fuel by xdor · · Score: 1

      Maybe you missed the natural gas and propane shortages that occurred in the north-central regions last winter due the Canadian pipe-line explosion.

      I totally agree that everyone should move to southern California so we don't waste all this energy just keeping people from freezing to death in these regions, but until that's practical you might notice that some people actually need this stuff.

    6. Re:Transition fuel by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Actually cheap natural gas and wind go hand in hand. You use Natural gas as a backing fuel for wind. If natural gas gets cheap enough you can turn it into clean burning diesel and jet fuel. Electricity is fine for many things but you will not see an electric airliners or long haul truck anytime soon. I also do not see the US electrifying all of it's railways anytime soon.

      As to natural gas as a strategic fuel export might be a requirement strategically. Europe gets a lot of it's gas from Russia and may very well need to import a lot very soon if Russia keeps acting like the USSR under Stalin.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    7. Re:Transition fuel by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Because fracking itself is driven by the bigger energy picture.

    8. Re:Transition fuel by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Electricity is fine for many things but you will not see an electric airliners or long haul truck anytime soon. I also do not see the US electrifying all of it's railways anytime soon.

      I agree that electrifying the railways isn't likely to happen, but it would still be a good idea. I'd go so far as to say it would be a better idea than running long-haul trucks off of natural-gas-derived synthetic diesel. Heck, I'd even rather see the trains running off the synthetic diesel, just because the fuel economy is so much better.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    9. Re:Transition fuel by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      OK, so while Midwest wind is cheap and getting cheaper and abundant and getting more abundant, natural gas can go do its own thing?

    10. Re:Transition fuel by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Exactly when cheap NG is cheap enough you can use it to make synth fuels for vehicles like trains, trucks, and aircraft. I do wonder if battery power would work for tractors? Weight is not an issue and range sure is not. The question would be is if they use too much energy for a practical battery. Of course a battery swap might be a simple solution for that.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    11. Re:Transition fuel by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      I see you have lots of questions on this topic.

      Natural gas exploration has boomed because it is the low cost option for reliable electrical generation, not because of, but in spite of anything wind has done. Local pricing is clearly not the central driver. You can assume reality is different if you like.

    12. Re:Transition fuel by afidel · · Score: 2

      Natural gas basically just subsidizes the cost of drilling, the profit comes from the liquid petroleum fraction, that's why BP recently pulled out of their holdings in SE Ohio, their test wells were all much drier than expected resulting in wells that had ROIs well below other global areas so they shifted their capital elsewhere. So as long as they can find large pockets of wet gas there will be as much supply as the transportation network can handle, and if they're finding enough wet gas then liquification will become economical and we'll start shipping natural gas to Europe, which will have interesting geopolitical impacts as it will neuter Putin.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    13. Re:Transition fuel by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      You just don't seem to have a point here. Midwest wind contracts go for 2.5 cents per kWh which is the fuel cost for natural gas in a good combined cycle plants. So, delivered wind is cheaper that using natural gas in that region. Apparently, manufacturing can continue to rebuild regardless of gas price in that region.

    14. Re:Transition fuel by afidel · · Score: 1

      Trains will probably never run on synth fuel, with a train storage is a complete non-issue, fuel takes up a tiny fraction of the available cargo room and towing capacity so trains will just use lightly compressed natural gas directly, it's WAY more energy efficient that way and the conversion from traditional diesel is trivial (Berkshire owned CSX is already starting to convert their fleet)..

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    15. Re:Transition fuel by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      My point, or at least description of the gas fracking market situation, lies in my first post. You have since tried to divert into a discussion of your vision if why wind deserves credit. Make that case if you want, but it is unrelated to my first post. The premise of the article was the fracking boom and its economic impact. The underlying drivers of the fracking boom is what I was addressing. Sorry the topic wasn't local wind impact on local economies, but don't blame it on me, I didn't submit the article.

    16. Re:Transition fuel by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      You do know what Rust Belt means?

    17. Re:Transition fuel by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      More questions. Here is one for you..

      Do you have a point or have something to add to the topic? If so , make it, and stop asking me pointless questions in an attempt to divert.

    18. Re:Transition fuel by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Good point.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    19. Re:Transition fuel by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      I guess I'd just repeat that your price spike scenario seems a little irrelevant to the present topic. The Rust Belt is a region in the Midwest.

    20. Re:Transition fuel by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      The topic is the economic benefits/impacts of fracking in the midwest region. I described the cyclic nature of fracking and the underlying drivers, which are not local or regional. Discussion after that was based on your particular questions to me and not the article at hand. You don't seem to have a point. You are confused, likely by your obesssion to make wind the topic, but lacking any real way to do it. So instead you proceed to ask leading questions in hopes I slip up so you can do some sort of happy dance.

      So, once again, if you have a point please make it. If not, you probably should run off and find some anti-nuke submissions, which appears to be your other obsession.

    21. Re:Transition fuel by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      I didn't ask you a question. I just pointed out that were wrong again.

    22. Re:Transition fuel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I totally agree that everyone should move to southern California so we don't waste all this energy just keeping people from freezing to death in these region

      What? So we can all die of dehydration instead? No thank you.

    23. Re:Transition fuel by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Another failed attempt, btw, simple link slinging without a point related, as I clearly stated. I'll give you that it was one post removed before you asked the questions...if that makes you feel better.

    24. Re:Transition fuel by un1nsp1red · · Score: 1

      The rent in southern california is already too damn high. Please do not come to southern california.

  5. Excellent Question by Bob9113 · · Score: 5, Informative

    do the associated environmental risks of new "tight oil" extraction techniques outweigh the benefits to these depressed economic regions?

    That is an excellent question. What we need is an excellent answer. Unfortunately, right now, we only have some rather crude guesses, mostly made by people with entrenched preconceptions (on both sides of the issue). We don't know what the probable environmental cost of an additional $100m of fracking production is.

    There are two reasons to continue fracking, while going easy on the rate of production; 1) the oil will still be there, it will probably continue to climb in value, and we are learning -- by doing -- more cost effective and safer approaches to extraction, and 2) because we need more data to improve the risk assessment model.

    Not doing fracking won't get us the data we need, and would prevent us from developing the technology to get this stuff out cheaper and safer. Doing fracking as fast as we can will waste money and create additional damage by using current early-stage extraction processes, and it exposes us to poorly quantified risk.

    The biggest problem right now is that the oil companies, in fear of regulation-to-come, are extracting as fast as they can to try to get the money out of the ground before the axe falls. That is pretty much the worst possible answer: It minimizes the profit margin on a finite resource while maximizing the risk. It is a textbook example of short-term orientation market failure.

    1. Re:Excellent Question by NotDrWho · · Score: 0

      How DARE you make a reasonable and intelligent comment?!? This is Slashdot, sir!

      --
      SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
    2. Re:Excellent Question by Alarash · · Score: 1, Troll

      Not doing fracking won't get us the data we need

      But what if doing the fracking causes irreversible damage? Maybe we need to make the mistake to realize it's one, but then it might be too late. Some countries apply the "Principle of precaution", that is, "if you're not sure of the effects of what you're doing, don't fucking do it."

    3. Re:Excellent Question by pastafazou · · Score: 1, Interesting

      It's been happening for 60 years now, and there have been zero deaths, and zero environmental disasters. Safer than nuclear, safer than coal, safer than wind turbines. Just because you used an expletive for emphasis in your closing sentence, doesn't mean you're right.

    4. Re:Excellent Question by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

      Wait....regulating the oil industry? When has that ever happened....*cough* Deepwater Horizon *cough*

    5. Re:Excellent Question by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 2

      No environmental disasters...really? So earthquakes and poor water quality do not count as environmental disasters...nice...

    6. Re:Excellent Question by xdor · · Score: 1

      You'll notice that your "market failure" argument is completely based on a non-market "government chill-factor" driver?

    7. Re:Excellent Question by Vitriol+Angst · · Score: 1

      While I get what you are saying as far as "research" it's kind of like saying; "We can't know how to treat Agent Orange damage if we don't keep spraying Agent Orange -- there won't be enough data."

      Fracking is a transition tech -- it's getting the last bits of natural gas and that's fine. But if we spent more money pushing the alternative energy -- which WILL EVENTUALLY be cheaper, we speed the day and time when it's more viable.

      The environment and mankind will be better off on alternative energy so why are we dragging our feet on that while making excuses for the BAD STUFF somehow getting better? It makes no sense and that's not being "entrenched" on a point of view. Solar and Wind are the future -- there is no good excuse to wait.

      And I'm not 100% against fracking -- I just recognize it as a stop gap measure.

      --
      >>"ad space available -- low rates!!!"
    8. Re:Excellent Question by Bob9113 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But what if doing the fracking causes irreversible damage? Maybe we need to make the mistake to realize it's one, but then it might be too late. Some countries apply the "Principle of precaution", that is, "if you're not sure of the effects of what you're doing, don't fucking do it."

      Well played. :)

      Here, let me do the iconic example of the other side:

      'We can't have government jumping in and killing off entire industries just because the sky might be falling. There have been no major catastrophes as a direct result of fracking, and even the few relatively minor events that have been recorded turned out not to be caused by fracking, but by improper deep-well injection of effluent.'

    9. Re:Excellent Question by Bob9113 · · Score: 2

      You'll notice that your "market failure" argument is completely based on a non-market "government chill-factor" driver?

      No, I will not. The same short-term-orientation market failure would occur in a pure laissez-faire system. In that case, the failure to account for long-term risk combined with limited liability, bankruptcy, and shell corporations would result in the same public risk / private profit that is the primary economic failure with fracking now.

      I will grant that it is exacerbated by the current government stance of "no regulation now, unknown-and-probably-stricter regulation in the future." Solving that hastening of the public risk, however, only requires that regulation remain approximately the same or become less strict over time. Combined with the fact that some level of regulation to offset public risk exposure (negative externality) is the GDP maximizing solution, starting with zero regulation is necessarily incorrect.

    10. Re:Excellent Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are not due to fracking.

    11. Re:Excellent Question by Bob9113 · · Score: 1

      While I get what you are saying as far as "research" it's kind of like saying; "We can't know how to treat Agent Orange damage if we don't keep spraying Agent Orange -- there won't be enough data."

      While I get what you are saying, I think you are using a charged metaphor. We know how bad Agent Orange is. We genuinely do not know how dangerous fracking is. Try replacing Agent Orange with, for example, "the search for the Higgs Boson", or "artificial intelligence", or some other thing that has unknown potential to be disastrous.

      Fracking is a transition tech -- it's getting the last bits of natural gas and that's fine. But if we spent more money pushing the alternative energy -- which WILL EVENTUALLY be cheaper, we speed the day and time when it's more viable.

      I agree, completely, though I think that's not a problem with fracking. I think the right place for that is a tax on fossil fuels to generate some friction on fossil fuel use. If you want, the collected revenue could be targeted to stimulate alternatives, but I tend to want to keep governments hands off the stimulus side (since they're so good at handing the money to their friends instead of the most promising technology) -- though I'd be more OK with the money going to government funded research, particularly if the results were put in the public domain -- like maybe cellulosic fiber biofuel research... but I digress. :)

      The environment and mankind will be better off on alternative energy so why are we dragging our feet on that while making excuses for the BAD STUFF somehow getting better? It makes no sense and that's not being "entrenched" on a point of view. Solar and Wind are the future -- there is no good excuse to wait.

      I agree with where your sentiment is coming from, and I think it's a good place. But I'm not sure I completely agree that we, as a society, are entrenched and waiting. We have fossil fuel taxes in place, and we are doing stimulus of solar and wind. And it's going really well -- have you seen the prices of PV panels lately? They've dropped a lot -- when I first started looking in 2008, a 250 watt panel was about $1,000. Now you can get them for under $300.

      And I'm not 100% against fracking -- I just recognize it as a stop gap measure.

      Very agreed.

    12. Re:Excellent Question by pastafazou · · Score: 1

      Can you cite an earthquake caused by fracking that actually caused any damage? Poor water quality existed long before fracking. There are plenty of inexpensive solutions to ensure water quality isn't an issue.

    13. Re:Excellent Question by afidel · · Score: 1

      Bullshit. There was a case here locally where a farm that had had fine drinking water for almost 200 years suddenly had flammable water with Benzene levels 5-10x the allowable limit. They have water reports from as little as 2 years before the fracking began because they were contemplating selling the farm (they ended up donating most of the land to the county for a park and taking a 100 year tax abatement on the homestead instead, which is how the land ended up being fracked to begin with, talk about no good deed going unpunished). You can check out the story yourself if you think I'm some fringe lunatic.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    14. Re:Excellent Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The biggest problem right now is that the oil companies, in fear of regulation-to-come, are extracting as fast as they can to try to get the money out of the ground before the axe falls.

      Are you sure about that? Last I heard there were a lot of wells out there that have been capped, to keep the price of gas from going too low again as well as keep from running out of underground natural gas storage during the injection season.

    15. Re:Excellent Question by k6mfw · · Score: 1

      Another consideration is potential damage to underground water resources, if that gets polluted, all of us are toast. You can live without gas, but cannot live without water.

      --
      mfwright@batnet.com
  6. Yeah, once Canada invades by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    and takes Detroit, then we stop 'em! But not until after.

    1. Re:Yeah, once Canada invades by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'm pretty sure we would have to invade Canada to force them to take Detroit.

    2. Re: Yeah, once Canada invades by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are assuming, of course, that Canada would want Detroit and that we would fight to get it back. AFAIK there are no energy resources under it and we basically abandoned it already.

      Now days we only fight for oil. National pride and patriotism are out style. Money is the only power.

      I fear (and somewhat hope for) some group to do some serious ballistic adjustments and scare our political persons back to some sense of reality. We can vote all day long for people we think will do a better job but within a year of getting their snout in the trough they don't work for us anymore.

  7. Fracking takes water out of action by whereiswaldo · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This article tries to compare fracking water use to other uses (eg. golf courses) but fails to account for fracking water being taken out of the system - it's not recycled, it's disposed of. With lakes drying up or disappearing in California and other countries fighting over fresh water, how can the fracking industry be so wasteful?

    1. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by NotDrWho · · Score: 4, Insightful

      While fracking water can't be reused as drinking water, there is some evidence that it can be recycled for other purposes, and may not be nearly as contaminated as previously thought.

      --
      SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
    2. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by gstoddart · · Score: 1

      The problem is that they won't tell us what they're using in the fracking water, which means we have little way of knowing what's in it, and how contaminated it actually is.

      To date (at least as far as I've seen), the companies have been keeping the mixture as a trade secret, and refusing to let any independent science take place.

      It's all just "don't worry, it's safe", even when people are ending up with contaminated wells.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    3. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How the heck would we know if it's not too contaminated since they won't let us know what they actually put in it?

    4. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by pastafazou · · Score: 0

      newsflash: fresh water is an infinitely renewable resource. The problem isn't a lack of fresh water, the problem is surplus population in regions prone to natural drought cycles. With proper water reserve infrastructure, development, and management, these regions could easily eliminate water shortages.

    5. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

      LMOL umm no it can't be recycled for other use. Until the oil companies tell us what it's in the fracking chemicals - which that won't do - it's hard to know the level of contamination. But thanks for playing it's "really not that bad" game....pin head.

    6. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

      WTF? Water is a finite resource. Period. Reducing the amount of usable water by contaminating it further reduces the resource. F'ing troll....

    7. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by xdor · · Score: 3, Interesting

      In terms of the universe, you are probably correct.

      However, I notice that pure combustion of methane gas yields carbon dioxide and water vapor (incomplete combustion yielding some nasty things like carbon monoxide). So all of this pulling of methane from underground and subsequent combustion: yields water vapor and a gas plants use to grow and thereby convert to CO2 to oxygen, which bound to hydrogen yields water.

      So eventually, we will get the water back. And I'm not sure if the numbers work out (gallons of water polluted vs. amount of water vapor produced from millions of cubic feet of methane), but it seems there's a possibility, over time, we will actually have *more* water in circulation as a result.

    8. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by MrL0G1C · · Score: 1

      Doesn't sound safe to me:

      DEP finds 243 water sources contaminated by gas exploration

      I can't help but wonder how many more water sources will be have chemicals leach into them even after the fracking is finished. On the positive side, sometimes the contamination diminishes over time to safe levels.

      --
      Waterfox - a Firefox fork with legacy extension support, security updates and better privacy by default.
    9. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by wiredlogic · · Score: 1

      The northeastern US doesn't have a water shortage that's why.

      --
      I am becoming gerund, destroyer of verbs.
    10. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by kick6 · · Score: 1

      Water is a finite resource.

      That's a gross misrepresentation. It's not like it boils off into space after it comes out of a well, it can be reused. There are several cities that have switched over to using filtered sewage for drinking water, and """contiminated""" frac water isn't any more polluted.

    11. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > With lakes drying up or disappearing in California and other countries fighting over fresh water...

      What it has to do with fracking in NY, PA and other states with plenty of fresh water?

    12. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by mnooning · · Score: 1

      .. water being taken out of the system? How many millions of gallons do our major rivers pour into the sea?. Saving water in a wet part of the country area will not help a dry area.

    13. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by will_die · · Score: 4, Informative

      That you cannot get the recipes is a big lie propagated by the gasland film.

      You can do a google search and find the generic recipes. The problem is those recipes are generic and depending on the soil the proportions of different chemicals change. The big problem and why various companies have been fighting the various anti-frackers is that as you use the water it picks up chemicals from the ground, the various anti-fracker groups want companies to do a constant scan for those picked up chemicals and track all of them and report all of them.

    14. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...fracking water [...] may not be nearly as contaminated as previously thought.

      Depends on who's doing the thinking.

      Fracking advocates say "of course untreated fracking water is toxic, and we never said it wasn't, and it's much less harmful than shooting up with Drano® so what's the problem you environmentalist freaks? We're not purposely dumping it in the streams!"

      Fracking foes say "an independent study by a lab that has worked for both sides of the controversy (making neither side happy with their results, I might add) says that groundwater is horribly poisoned by fracking wastewater, even in small amounts such as the unintentional leakage that is actually occuring".

      Normal people say "hmmm, so it's toxic, surprising exactly nobody, but under the law it's never supposed to touch the groundwater, ever, so exactly where is it supposed to end up going? How can we know what's going on when the ingredients are secret and there's little or no oversight of daily operations by any regulatory agency?"

    15. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      Large volumes of inexpensive, clean water that do not require large amounts of energy to process is a finite resource.

      There, I fixed it for you.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    16. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by afidel · · Score: 1

      and """contiminated""" frac water isn't any more polluted.

      Really, you say that with such conviction. Would you drink untreated, or lightly treated fracking water every day for a year? Because AFAIK nobody but the fracking companies knows exactly what they're putting into their mixtures (and often not even then, many wildcaters buy from Halliburton and friends). The companies have fought extremely hard against any attempt to have them disclose what they are using, or at having and independent scientific analysis of the safety of the fracking effluent. One of the few scholarly articles I've found shows significant risks:

      The analysis of effluent samples collected prior to the PADEP’s request supports our first hypothesis that concentrations of analytes in effluent were above water quality criteria (Table 1). Ba, Sr, and bromides are of particular public health concern. For the metals strontium and barium, both surpassed the federal MCL for drinking water
      link

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    17. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fracking foes say "an independent study by a lab that has worked for both sides of the controversy (making neither side happy with their results, I might add) says that groundwater is horribly poisoned by fracking wastewater,

      Why on earth would hippie environmentalists be unhappy with a study that confirms everything they say about fracking?

      Oh, and is that "independent" study referring to the one done by the Stroud Water Research Center-- a research center founded by a bunch of hippies in 1967 to "promote stewardship of fresh water ecosystems"? Oh yeah, I'm sure the oil and energy companies are really going to get a fair hearing from them.

    18. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry, but I've had it with idiots like you. They submitted exactly what they use in a god damn congressional hearing!!!! Just because they're holding a list of what they use in front of you and you've got your eyes closed and ears plugged screaming "LALALALA" doesn't mean they refused to disclose it. It means you refused to listen to it.

      This is starting to seem like the biggest misinformation campaign on earth. And for the record, if you'd used the entire quote from the GP, no, I wouldn't drink lightly contaminated frac water, but since the GP was compairing it to sewage, I wouldn't drink water lightly contaminated with sewage either.

    19. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by pastafazou · · Score: 1

      ocean water evaporates, clouds form, rain falls down. As long as this cycle continues, fresh water will continue to renew. F'ing know nothing moron....

    20. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by pastafazou · · Score: 1

      Really? Every time it rains in Washington, DC 4 Billion liters of inexpensive, clean water that doesn't require large amounts of energy to process falls.

    21. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by afidel · · Score: 1

      They submitted exactly what they use in a god damn congressional hearing
      [citation needed]

      Preferably a link to the Congressional Record where the additives are listed.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    22. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nuclear desalination of sea water provides unlimited water even in the worst of droughts. Its cheap, easy, safe and its only byproduct is massive amounts of electricity. Of course this would eliminate goofy government action and they don't like it when they are not empowered to make the problem worse.

    23. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Again, nuclear desalination of seawater would enable a small and continuous river of fresh water to run from the ocean to any place it was needed. Its also free to do. And the ocean is there no matter how bad any drought gets.

    24. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Meanwhile, water vapor goes into upper atmosphere, gets disassociated into hydrogen and oxygen by the sunlight, and hydrogen escapes into outer space. Eventually no more hydrogen or water.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    25. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by xdor · · Score: 1

      OMG are you sure this isn't like data from Mars?

      Hey everybody the oceans are evaporating! Quick, somebody start a national drive for cloud seeding: keep our water terrestrial!

    26. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Venus is a better example of an Earth sized planet that has lost all its hydrogen, no water and most of the oxygen tied up with carbon. Only about a billion years until the same happens to the Earth as once the oceans boil, the photo-disassociation will accelerate and the Earth doesn't have enough gravity to hold hydrogen or even helium.
      BTW, that methane that you mention turning into water usually started as water before some life form converted it to methane.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    27. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by xdor · · Score: 1

      I was referring to the difference between Mars and Earth where Mars lacks the gravitational pull to retain oxygen, Earth still does.

      Despite the escape of atmospheric hydrogen, its constantly being produced by algae, and fresh-water algae tend to grow more when things are warmer. I don't think hydrogen loss is the king-pin for the billion-year epoch dooms-day you're describing.

    28. Re:Fracking takes water out of action by dryeo · · Score: 1

      I don't believe that algae are capable of doing the nuclear reactions required to produce hydrogen, we have what we have and probably had much more in the distant past. Besides once the oceans boil, it's hard to imagine much algae surviving.
      The Sun is steadily getting hotter due to getting denser due to increasing percentage of helium. The standard model predicts roughly a billion years (some say half that) until it's hot enough to boil the oceans. After that one theory is that we get a runaway green house effect, basically Venus. Much different then Mars which as you point out, has too little gravity to hold a decent atmosphere as well having a protective magnetic field to stop the solar wind from stripping it.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
  8. More jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Rebuilding the structures taken out by subsidence will massively stimulate the economy in 20 years!

  9. Does natural gas fracking work the same way as oil by rolfwind · · Score: 2

    ?

    I know the extraction bellcurves of conventional oil wells/fields are generally decades long things, while fracking lasts only a few years, so a fracking area tends to get dotted with many, many wells before they have to move on due to depletion.

    Does the same short-livedness hold true for natural gas?

  10. What about green fracking? by EmperorOfCanada · · Score: 1

    Can there be a such thing as green fracking for natural gas? Is there a way to avoid the witch's brew of nasty that they inject? From what I gather the primary technology behind fracking is that you hammer something down into the shale along with sand, the shale cracks, and the sand slips into the cracks and holds them open. Then the gas leaks out.

    One of the huge complaints is that all that crap can contaminate water supplies; this would include the fracking fluid itself coming back up to the surface.

    So my humble question is: Is there a different way to get the sand into the cracks without making such as mess?

    Now my personal experience is that I grew up in a shale rich area and know two other things about shale, one is that it is very chemically interesting, in that friends and I would regularly break it open to marvel at the interesting colours between the layers. Those colours would then fade very quickly returning the shale to the dull dark grey that it usually was. I don't know if this was a thin layer of hydrocarbons evaporating or some sort of mineral that quickly oxidized. But whatever it was the rock was the only rock in my area that "did" anything. Secondly my experience was that you didn't want the shale near plants that you liked. If you lined your garden with it or put a shale walkway near trees they either died or largely stopped growing.

    So shale appears to be an active rock that you generally want to leave alone. But again can shale be treated after the gas has been removed? Sprinkle a little something down the drill hole to return the rock to its previous inert(ish) state.

    Mining is almost always messy, but many mines if properly managed can be not only fairly innocuous but can be sort of cool, as is the case that some rock quarries make for interestingly shaped lakes while others turn into stagnant cesspools.

    The real way that this can be dealt with is to look at any mess the fracking people make as a subsidy that they are asking for. The simple question then is to place a value on that subsidy and make sure that they return to the local economy something extra that matches the subsidy. Not the usual baloney that they are providing jobs to the area(as they would do that anyway) but a concession that directly matches the value of what they are getting. So if the water in the area might be polluted and it will cost $200 million to run a clean water supply into the area then they should run a $200 million dollar water supply in to the area and maintain it for as long as the water remains altered. This would then either make the project unprofitable, or it would cause them to seek alternatives such as greening up the process.

    1. Re: What about green fracking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It's so easy to get sand into the cracks. And so hard to get it out. And a real bitch if you don't. So use lots and lots of beach towels.

    2. Re:What about green fracking? by xdor · · Score: 1

      The "greenest" fracking I'm aware of is propane-fracking. Uses propane instead of water as the fracking medium.

      No water is used, some of the propane can be recovered, the remaining is suitable as a crude oil. As an added plus, unlike water, no radioactive radon is conducted back to the surface with this process.

      Some Canadian company has applied for a patent to the process in the United States. IMO, this should be declined since Chevron invented the process back in the 70s for under-sea fracking. Not to mention if there ever was a case for making an invention public domain in the interest of the public!

      The downsides are obvious: huge upfront costs (somewhere between $20 and $50 million per well maybe). And just a little more dangerous than working with water. Just a little.

    3. Re:What about green fracking? by Cardoor · · Score: 1

      One big thing you're missing is the environmental impact of escaped methane. See, when you blast all this rock, you can't hope to capture all the methane as it escapes. a significant amount is released directly into the atmosphere.

      Methane is something like 20x as potent a greenhouse gas as CO2 over a century, and ~50-70x more potent over periods of less than 50 years (give or take). When you take the methane release into account, even away from all the water/soil pollution, fracking is more damaging vis-a-vis climate change than oil or even coal.

    4. Re:What about green fracking? by EmperorOfCanada · · Score: 1

      I was thinking of the more NIMBY problems involved in fracking. In my province they basically just banned fracking but that was pretty much all about groundwater, waste issues, and other very local problems. Seeing that restarting the coal mines would locally be considered a huge political win I don't think that the local ban took global warming into much consideration.

      So when I was talking about green fracking, it was greening those issues directly around the fracking area.

    5. Re:What about green fracking? by Cardoor · · Score: 1

      so you're just looking for ways to clean it up just enough to skirt your ban? to hell with real actual consequences? sheesh.

  11. See... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 0

    There's an upside to all the earthquakes and poisoned water supplies!

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  12. Someone should look-up the term "Rebound" by ComputerGeek01 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    From what the article says, this is a bump in manufacturing from short term contracts, this is hardly a sustainable client base. My guess is that at the very most this will be a benefit for one generation, maybe two at the very most. A few thousand jobs is nothing to shrug off but I hope that these towns are prepared for what is going to happen within the next 20 to 40 years. The cheap housing and sharp increase in demand will attract real-estate prospectors; and just like these sociopathic leeches always do, they will start building up their little housing price bubbles and once again the idea that maybe "infinite growth" can be a real thing is going to settle in the backs of peoples minds. I'm not saying that we should stop this kind of thing mind you. The money generated in this way is very real, even if the actual wealth is not. But we should be better prepared for the fallout this time.

    1. Re:Someone should look-up the term "Rebound" by frinkster · · Score: 3, Insightful

      From what the article says, this is a bump in manufacturing from short term contracts, this is hardly a sustainable client base. My guess is that at the very most this will be a benefit for one generation, maybe two at the very most. A few thousand jobs is nothing to shrug off but I hope that these towns are prepared for what is going to happen within the next 20 to 40 years. The cheap housing and sharp increase in demand will attract real-estate prospectors; and just like these sociopathic leeches always do, they will start building up their little housing price bubbles and once again the idea that maybe "infinite growth" can be a real thing is going to settle in the backs of peoples minds. I'm not saying that we should stop this kind of thing mind you. The money generated in this way is very real, even if the actual wealth is not. But we should be better prepared for the fallout this time.

      Many of these rust-belt cities have struggled for so long that suburban sprawl has been quite limited. Many of them have intact urban downtowns that are run-down and many of these towns and cities have been focusing on smart urban renewal of these downtown areas. They won't be making the same mistakes again. And they don't need a whole generation of investment to make them great little places to live.

    2. Re:Someone should look-up the term "Rebound" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well said.

    3. Re:Someone should look-up the term "Rebound" by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      Many of these rust-belt cities have struggled for so long that suburban sprawl has been quite limited. Many of them have intact urban downtowns that are run-down and many of these towns and cities have been focusing on smart urban renewal of these downtown areas. They won't be making the same mistakes again. And they don't need a whole generation of investment to make them great little places to live.

      They still need ongoing jobs. And this is the elephant in the room as far as fracking goes. It's boom-bust all over again.

      The money isn't really in the product, the money is really in creating enough buzz to get some other sucker to put his money into a well so that you can cash out. Once that stream of suckers^Hinvestors drops out, the economy drops out. Quickly.

      So in ten years you will seen storefronts boarded up again. They won't be storefronts from the 50's and '60s (the last boom and bust cycle), they will have LED lights and fake granite counter tops and old Wifi routers. But they will be boarded up.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    4. Re:Someone should look-up the term "Rebound" by afidel · · Score: 1

      Huh? Cleveland and Detroit are both the definition of rustbelt and urban sprawl, heck Youngstown was ranked 175/221 for worst urban sprawl in the smart growth 2014 report.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    5. Re:Someone should look-up the term "Rebound" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      here's a great book which outlines why Youngstown faltered as an economy, and what needs to happen 'behind the scenes' to make the boom sustainable instead of flash-in-the-pan.

      Why the Garden Club Couldn't Save Youngstown: The Transformation of the Rust Belt
      by Sean Safford
      http://www.amazon.com/Garden-Club-Couldnt-Save-Youngstown/dp/0674031768

  13. drilling & mining is NOT manufacturing by Cardoor · · Score: 4, Insightful

    it's properly (and technically) called 'exploitation of natural resources'. It isn't sustainable - in terms of environmental impact, massive front-ended depletion rates rates, or the ultimate demand-destruction the high cost of extraction begets. Political and environmental chicanery have obfuscated the first two, with massive monetary stimulus banking on the dollar's reserve status having propped up the latter (among other things of course).

    If the ultimate cost of extraction were markedly lower (as it has in decades past) the net energy gains might still be enough to justify. But those days are long gone.

    1. Re:drilling & mining is NOT manufacturing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Manufacturing isn't sustainable either, unless you believe that the raw materials and energy that goes into a manufacturing plant just appear out of thin air.

    2. Re:drilling & mining is NOT manufacturing by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Recycling pretty much negates your point on raw materials. And, wind power seems to provide energy out of thin air.

    3. Re: drilling & mining is NOT manufacturing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just plant lots of trees. Make charcoal instead of coal. Use cobblestone instead of iron or diamond when possible. It's not that hard to focus on using mostly renewables.

  14. No need to swear by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

    US Rust Belt Manufacturing Rebounds Via Fracking Boom

    Watch your fracking language.

    --
    systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
    1. Re:No need to swear by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 1

      Watch your fracking language.

      We don't need that felgercarb herre.

  15. Re:Does natural gas fracking work the same way as by Cardoor · · Score: 1
  16. Re:Now comes the Time of the Envirowackos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I'd be fine with it if they used safer chemicals. Yes it's a very small percent around 0.45 - 0.50 but when you add up just how much water they use it ends up being in the millions of gallons of nasty shit pumped in the ground like...
    Hydrochloric Acid
    Glutaraldehyde
    Quaternary Ammonium Chloride
    Quaternary Ammonium Chloride
    Tetrakis Hydroxymethyl-Phosphonium Sulfate
    Ammonium Persulfate
    Sodium Chloride
    Magnesium Peroxide
    Magnesium Oxide
    Calcium Chloride
    Choline Chloride
    Tetramethyl ammonium chloride
    Sodium Chloride
    Isopropanol
    Methanol
    Formic Acid
    Acetaldehyde
    Petroleum Distillate
    Hydrotreated Light Petroleum Distillate
    Potassium Metaborate
    Triethanolamine Zirconate
    Sodium Tetraborate
    Boric Acid
    Zirconium Complex
    Borate Salts
    Ethylene Glycol
    Methanol
    Polyacrylamide
    Petroleum Distillate
    Hydrotreated Light Petroleum Distillate
    Methanol
    Ethylene Glycol
    Guar Gum
    Petroleum Distillate
    Hydrotreated Light Petroleum Distillate
    Methanol
    Polysaccharide Blend
    Ethylene Glycol
    Citric Acid
    Acetic Acid
    Thioglycolic Acid
    Sodium Erythorbate
    Lauryl Sulfate
    Isopropanol
    Ethylene Glycol
    Sodium Hydroxide
    Potassium Hydroxide
    Acetic Acid
    Sodium Carbonate
    Potassium Carbonate
    Copolymer of Acrylamide and Sodium Acrylate
    Sodium Polycarboxylate
    Phosphonic Acid Salt
    Lauryl Sulfate
    Ethanol
    Naphthalene
    Methanol
    Isopropyl Alcohol
    2-Butoxyethanol

  17. Bad title..Manufacturing is by Grey+Geezer · · Score: 1

    NOT rebounding because of the fracking boom. Only a small fraction of the hundreds of thousands of manufacturing jobs lost to globalization are being replaced by the fracking industry.

    --
    The USA is only 4X older than me...perspective
  18. Re:Now comes the Time of the Envirowackos by CaptainDork · · Score: 1

    Preemptive asshole strike?

    Scared much?

    --
    It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
  19. Re:Now comes the Time of the Envirowackos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You left out:

    Dihydrogen Oxide
    Dihydrogen Oxide
    Dihydrogen Oxide
    Etc.

  20. "Fracking" by ChefJeff789 · · Score: 1

    I instantly decided to read this entire article with the word "fracking" interpreted in the same way it was used on Battlestar Galactica. I was not dissapointed =)

  21. Strategy by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    I think we can retain our domestic supply while curbing Russia by building but not using export terminals. We could save quite a lot on military expenses if we held that card in our hand: play nice or we'll take away your revenue in less than a month. So, the cost of building the (idle) terminals would be well justified.

    1. Re:Strategy by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      You would save nothing.
      Unless the Russia rapidly decreases the size of it's military you still need to have the military power to back it up.
      After all a natural gas tanker could always just explode in the middle of the Atlantic or in a harbor in Europe.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    2. Re:Strategy by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      We'll if it comes to blockades, I doubt Russia will be selling much gas. On savings, do we need to build a cruise missile defense, or can Russia be brought back to its treaty obligations? Idle natural gas terminals say honor your treaty obligations.

    3. Re:Strategy by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Does not take a blockade, just an "accident". You will always want to have enough military force to win any war if possible. The goal is to never have to fight a war. The simple rule is no nation ever starts a war because the opponent is too strong. Nations start wars that they think they can win.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    4. Re:Strategy by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure I get you point then. Under normal conditions the tankers would not be used. So, they are not going to be blowing up. If they are used, it would be to stiffen the European backbone on sanctions by keeping their gas supply up without Russian imports. We avoid an arms race by keeping Russia in line. That saves on military costs. I don't know what it costs to stop a nuclear cruise missile. India is working on it but Russian missiles are stealthy. Might be tough.

    5. Re:Strategy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thats good, but do you really expect government to solve anything? They only regulate it out of existence. If they actually solved problems like energy it would eliminate the need for them. Offing themselves is something kings are not in the habit of doing.

    6. Re:Strategy by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      It's not that rare. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C...

    7. Re:Strategy by AGMW · · Score: 1

      ... or in a harbor in Europe.

      Or a harbour in New Zealand if anyone pisses off the French!

      --
      Eclectic beats from Leeds, UK
      handmadehands.co.uk
    8. Re:Strategy by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Okay.
      1. Russia threatens Estonia or even Poland.
      2. Nato moves troops into threatened nation.
      3. Russia cuts off natural gas to Europe in winter unless the troops are moved because Russia thinks NATO is too weak to stop them.
      4. The US takes the expensive tankers out of mothballs, trains the crews, and trains the people to run LNG depos that where built but never used or manned in a week.
      5. A week later the first tanker arrives in the EU.
      6. The next tanker has an accident on the way to the EU. It just blows up.
      7. Another tanker makes it to the EU.
      8. That tanker blows up in a harbor and takes half the town with it.
      9. Nato starts escorting the tankers.
      10. Russia thinks Nato is too weak to stop them so they just take the nation like they did with Crimea.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    9. Re:Strategy by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Interesting that you think training would not be up-to-date. Our other strategic capabilities have ongoing training. Odd also that you think that a harbor would be used for delivery.

    10. Re:Strategy by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      So you want to hire and train people to run unused natural gas terminals? And how else does a tanker of natural gas get delivered but to a port?
      https://www.google.com/search?...

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    11. Re:Strategy by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Just as I would be much happier if ICBMs remain unused. LNG terminals are built away from populated areas these days. Perhaps the word "strategy" is one that is hard for you to understand.

  22. Cities should be designed for easier "recycling". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cities exist due to serving economic needs at their particular location.

    Man has made the mistake of overbuilding such that they are too expensive to demolish and change or replace. Detroit industrial construction is an example. It's easy to scrape off old wooden buildings, but other materials are problematic.

    Sustainability requires the ability to RECYCLE structures more easily and to take down cities no longer needed. The idea that we should fight to maintain a city for its own sake as opposed to adaptive use/relocation/reversion to greenfield sites is archaic but AFAIK no one is effectively advocating it.

    If my car dies there is a system more than a century old to part and scrap and recycle it QUICKLY for re-use. Buildings should also be designed with recycling aforethought.

  23. frac = big tobacco by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    frac = big tobacco

    just wait, eventually the fake science will be debunked and everyone will know they were duped by a billion dollar industry. the only difference is that more people will be hurt from the contamination and exposure and it will cost taxpayers billions to cleanup

    local landfills near me have Geiger counters and turn back many loads of "sludge" pumped out from frac well retaining ponds. apparently the deep shale has a high level of radioactivity and when the frac fluid comes back out, tiny bits of radioactive shale return with it. so not only is there a strange chemical cocktail in these large retaining ponds, there are also radioactive particles. did I mention that there the news reports all the time when these ponds leak and they take truck loads (100k tons at a time) of dirt away (but to where?) what other industry can store hazardous chemicals in multi acre retaining ponds? what other industry can create a new industrial facility (24/7) 1000 feet from your house (if you are lucky enough!).

  24. fracking is NOT new by kick6 · · Score: 2

    Just because the idiots in the media just discovered the existence of the procedure a few years ago doesn't mean anything. The first well was frack'ed in 1947. If fracking is new, so are jet engines, nuclear bombs, and a whole host of now-outdated shit. Journalistic integrity is a lost art.

    1. Re:fracking is NOT new by Type44Q · · Score: 1

      Fracking itself may not be new... but it wasn't used on a scale anywhere even close to what we're seeing now... until the advent of directional drilling, which definitely is new. And it can be argued that drilling long narrow tunnels laterally through layers of shale is far less disruptive and risky than the recent trend of pumping millions of gallons of fresh water, diesel, propane, proprietary mixes of mysterious synthetic substances into the ground beneath our pastures and farmland.

      So, while the media may have missed a few technical details in their coverage, it's definitely a moot point.

  25. Let me sum up the issues by plopez · · Score: 1

    Problem: fossil fuels are required for a fossil fuel based economy. Yes that includes tech which requires plastics, electricity, and fuel to extract the mierals needed to build the products, make the products, and ship them.

    Problem: reliance on foreign fossil fuels can cause wars.

    One solution: extract fuel from places where the fuel was unreachable or very difficult to extract.

    Problem: can cause environmental damage.

    Benefit: energy independence

    Benefit: jobs

    Problem: does nothing to reduce carbon emissions.

    Solution: non-fossil fuel energy sources with lower environmental impact.

    Problem: bridge fuels are needed.

    That's about it.

    --
    putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
  26. oh Belgium! by Thud457 · · Score: 1

    I blame this fraking boom on the sexy Cylons in the Battlestar Galactica reboot.

    In my day, kids didn't use fucking vulgar goddamn language like that, they had respect.

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

  27. Life imitates art ... by Rambo+Tribble · · Score: 1

    ... as the foundational premise of "Firefly" plays itself out.

    1. Re:Life imitates art ... by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      Everything is a Western?

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    2. Re:Life imitates art ... by Rambo+Tribble · · Score: 1

      Not exactly; everything is Reconstruction.

  28. would you prefer geothermal power? by raymorris · · Score: 2

    Simple question - would you prefer geothermal energy rather than energy obtained by fracturing?

    1. Re:would you prefer geothermal power? by Cardoor · · Score: 1

      answering from my relatively light knowledge base on geothermal, im inclined to say : absolutely. i don't know enough about geothermal to know if there are deleterious unintended side effects, but conceptually it seems far far more harmonious.

    2. Re:would you prefer geothermal power? by Oakey · · Score: 2

      It was a trick question, geothermal requires fracking

      --
      "Dre don't get as high as me.... I'm Cheech and Chong" - Snoop Dogg
    3. Re:would you prefer geothermal power? by raymorris · · Score: 1

      Ad Oakey pointed out, geothermal is produced by fracking. You were wise in your response, I think. Most people here on Slashdot know everything about everything, and have all the answers. You're smarter than that.

    4. Re:would you prefer geothermal power? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Somewhat.. For geothermal one only has to frack once to make the channel where the heat will be collected. Oil is quickly depleted leading to new well sites that have to be made.

    5. Re:would you prefer geothermal power? by Cardoor · · Score: 1

      can you elaborate (as i said i dont know much about it)? i suspect order of magnitude will be the key driver.

    6. Re:would you prefer geothermal power? by raymorris · · Score: 1

      I'm no Oakey, but I can give you a very quick summary of geothermal, which I believe is fairly objective:

      --------------
      Geothermal is stable and relatively clean. It releases some greenhouse gasses. It's often inexpensive, but available only in a very limited area, certain parts of the "ring of fire" that circles the Pacific Ocean. Half of the ring is at the bottom of the ocean, so geothermal is available in spots along the west coast of the Americas and northern Asia. Geothermal wells are often very, very deep, and therefore risky - you could spend several million dollars, then hit a section that can't be drilled through, so you're out a few million dollars with nothing to show for it.

      Overall, geothermal is, in my opinion, very attractive for the people in those few places where it's available.
      ----------------

      Here's a bit more detail, with references:
      The United States produces over 1 billion kilowatt hours of geothermal energy each year, more than any other country (EIA 2012). As calculated by Bertani & Thain (2002), greenhouse gas emissions from geothermal energy are 75% lower than natural gas and 87% lower than coal. From the earliest research into modern geothermal, it has been known that energy can be retrieved only from specific areas with appropriate tectonic activity (Elder 1965). John W. Elder found that areas where geothermal energy can be found within one kilometer of the surface are stable sources of energy at a reasonable cost and identified those areas as being primarily along the Pacific Rim and in Iceland. The areas identified as viable represent less than 1% of the earth. In all other areas, geothermal energy is not viable, primarily because forcing fluid against the high pressure at great depths would require more energy than could be retrieved.
      The 2,566 megawatts of installed capacity in California and other parts of the country are certainly of benefit in those areas. The energy cannot be efficiently transported throughout the rest of the country, meaning the potential of geothermal is limited to those specific areas. Geothermal projects involve a considerable degree of risk because the energy source is buried under thousands of feet of rock, where engineers can see neither the potential energy reservoir nor the thousands of feet of rock that must be drilled to reach it. Therefore, it cannot be known ahead of time how long a geothermal well will produce, or if the intervening material is likely to cause the project to fail. Southton (2005) documented many failure modes which can stop a project after millions of dollars have already been invested. Lap leaks, compression failure, and casing cracks can ruin a geothermal well before any energy is produced (Southton 2005). Pruess (1990) considered various models for predicting when a well might stop producing, but those are only predictions. A geothermal well may stop producing at any time.
          The U.S. Geological Survey presented a procedure currently in use to extend the life of existing wells and allow geothermal wells to be drilled in new locations (Pierce 2010). The Pierce presentation of this method, known as hydraulic fracturing, also referenced the possibility that hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking”, might increase the risk of earthquakes. The potential danger of hydraulic fracturing was identified in 1994 by Bruhn, Parry, and Thompson, and the issue has received attention in the press lately. Guidelines for safe use of hydraulic fracturing may be developed by engineers and geologists, however issues of public opinion and politics exist in this area. Some proponents of renewable energy argue against the use of inexpensive natural gas by pointing out the potential risk of using hydraulic fracturing for natural gas production. It is therefore difficult for the same groups to argue for geothermal energy, which is also produced by hydraulic fracturing. Although the geothermal fields in California are the largest source of geothermal in the world, they provide less than 0.001% of energy needs, according to EIA data (2012). If it were possible to increase hydrothermal production by 1000%, this would fulfill 0.1% of U.S. energy needs.

    7. Re:would you prefer geothermal power? by Cardoor · · Score: 1

      thanks for that

  29. There's no stopping this. by Charliemopps · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There's a lot of nonsense posts in this thread about how it doesn't benefit anyone... I live right in the middle of this so let me provide some anecdotal evidence...

    My Uncle is a farmer (cranberries) and has a 160 acre farm. His son worked in factories. Those factories pretty much left the state for China and my cousin, who admittedly is an idiot and therefor can't get a decent job that involves thinking, has been bouncing from fast food job to fast food job for about a decade. The cranberry market crashed a while back as the 'cranberry fad' died. Berries went from $80/barrel to around $12/barrel. My uncles farm was floundering, he was about $200k in debt and pulling in $40k/year after expenses.

    Then came fracking.

    My cousin got a job hauling pipes... he went from working at McDonalds to making $55k/yr over night. That may not seem like a lot to most slashdotters but in the Northern/Midwest area thats a very good salary. He's got land, a house, he's very happy though the commute is terrible. (up to 4hrs to work and back depending on the site hes working on)

    Cranberries grow in sand... Sand is used in fracking. My Uncle just closed a deal to sell his farm to a Sand Mining operation for $2 million. In fact, nearly every Cranberry farmer he knows is selling as well. The sand mining companies are offering 400% the going rate for the land and are buying everything... everywhere... Some people are getting as high as $20k/acre depending on the Sand quality and how close they are to the railroad.

    Now... as far as environmental impacts... The farm he spent his entire life building is going to literally be turned into an open pit 150ft deep. He hates the idea, but he can either retire a millionaire or leave his children so much debt they'll be forced to sell to the mine as well. The farmers that aren't selling are happy about it to because with fewer farmers around, the price of cranberries will go up. He plans to use his new found wealth to buy some land that has a trout stream running through it up the road and spend the rest of his days fishing.

    So yes, the environmental impacts are huge. But to say it's not a boom for local people and the poor, that's just disingenuous. If you live anywhere near this stuff you're economic situation is going to improve. My uncles retaining ponds will, however, no longer be the best fishing spot in the county.

    1. Re:There's no stopping this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, yes, it produces temporary booms. Fracking wells deplete rather quickly, however. In 15-20 years, these companies will be long gone. The economies will go to shit again, possibly even worse than they were before the frackers came. And you will no longer have arable land. And property values will plummit. Businesses will leave. Things will go back to the way they were, it is the same boom bust cycle we have seen time and time again.

    2. Re: There's no stopping this. by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

      The farm he spent his entire life building is going to literally be turned into an open pit 150ft deep. ... He plans to use his new found wealth to buy some land that has a trout stream running through it up the road and spend the rest of his days fishing.

      Odds are he outlives the fishing.

    3. Re: There's no stopping this. by Charliemopps · · Score: 1

      The farm he spent his entire life building is going to literally be turned into an open pit 150ft deep. ... He plans to use his new found wealth to buy some land that has a trout stream running through it up the road and spend the rest of his days fishing.

      Odds are he outlives the fishing.

      He's 82, I'll take those odds.

  30. Fracking poisons the ground by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://banmichiganfracking.org/

  31. Re:Now comes the Time of the Envirowackos by ColdWetDog · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You've just read the label on your Pop-Tart.

    Put your glasses on, drink some more coffee and try again.

    --
    Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
  32. Manufacturing vs manufacturing jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Manufacturing is coming back, the manufacturing jobs are not.

  33. A little preparation handles that by raymorris · · Score: 1

    Local policy makers should make preparations for what happens in a generation or two, agreed. This is, however, a solved problem. More money/jobs from the energy industry means that other businesses have paying customers- hair salons, restaurants, hotels, grocery stores - every segment of the economy benefits from the inflow of money to the area. Over the next 10-20 years, blighted abandoned areas become vibrant again. At that point, they are attractive places to build any business. That's the time that policy makers should encourage investment in any business that exports it's product or service out of the city. Manufacturing, software, universities- anything that is purchased by people outside the state will do just fine to maintain an inflow of cash to keep the local economy doing well.

    Right now, these areas are so run-down that nobody wants to put any business there. It's a third- world environment, but with unions and Democrat labor laws. An influx of cash could allow Detroit to be rebuilt as a modern city again, which would then need to have intelligent policies just like any other modern city.

    1. Re:A little preparation handles that by ComputerGeek01 · · Score: 1

      It's a third- world environment, but with unions and Democrat labor laws.

      Normally I wouldn't entertain the idea of politicizing what is clearly an economic and social development issue; but what the hell I'll respond.

      I'm not sure how you think that unions work where you are from. But here in the US what they do is monopolize the labor pool for a given trade on a per entity basis; they do not annex an entire cities population all at one a time. But, solely for the sake of your argument, let's say that a labor union somehow actually DID manage to maintain the peoples faith, in a swing state that has been losing jobs and economically depressed for the passed four decades, and which also currently has a Republican Governor, enough so that they still have some semblance of a presence. And just to get it out of the way let's assume that this union also specialized in shale oil extraction, something that Ohio has never exported on any kind of a scale before. That union is only going to concern itself with it's niche in the host entity. Where as the over whelming majority of jobs and wealth being created are going to be from externalities that are not directly associated with this market. Now if you are contending that the unions are the reason that the jobs left this area in the first place then you are making the mistake of assuming that any of the host entities production models stood a snowballs chance in hell of competing with or catering too emerging markets. They didn't, not a single one of them even tried.

      Please remember that this is Slashdot, not Facebook. You will occasionally be asked to back up your claims with something that at least appears to be evidence.

    2. Re:A little preparation handles that by raymorris · · Score: 1

      True or false: Detroit has for many years been a city where unions are popular, and union-style thinking about wages is common.
      True or false: Detroit is in very bad shape economically, possibly the closest thing the IS has to a third- world environment.
      True or false: The union mentality doesn't accept third-world wages or working conditions. In fact union families expect hifh wages.

      If the above are true, Detroit has poor economic opportunities, but many of the people aren't willing to work at low-wage jobs, which are the only jobs available. Do you not see how it might be a problem when people aren't willing to work at any of the available jobs?

  34. Re:Now comes the Time of the Envirowackos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Strike a blow for common sense. Bitchslap a progtard until his ears ring.

  35. Re:Now comes the Time of the Envirowackos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Someone's going to bring up solar and wind.... then someone will start the FUD about solar and wind.

    But first someone's going to claim Fracking is bitchin' and call everyone else assholes.

  36. Re:Now comes the Time of the Envirowackos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fed up with assholes most likely. Thanks for your assholiness contribution.

  37. It's the earthquakes, stupid by MikeSyposs · · Score: 1

    I couldn't care much about the chemical stew of fracking in rust belt states; they have dumped toxic sludge into Lake Erie for a century. I do care about the explosion of moderate sized earthquakes in Oklahoma, notably starting in swarms around the same time that fracking was allowed. If we continue on this path, the earth will have new human-induced faults, possibly in the rust belt areas. Most unfortunate, the ground in these areas allow earthquakes to be destructive over a greater range than on the west coast. The lack of historical seismic activity makes the ground brittle compared to seismically active regions. If the region gets changed seismically from inactive to active in a brief period of time, the quakes will be far more destructive.

  38. Re:Now comes the Time of the Envirowackos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    can you at least proof read your list? Seriously, you've got methanol and Isopropyl Alcohol like 5 times each, I'm glad you're going for a long list, but remove duplicates, and Isopropanol is the same as Isopropyl Alcohol. And the Ethanol, guar gum and citric acid I've consumed within the last 48 hours, and god forbid if they're pumping petroleum distillate and Hydrotreated Light Petroleum Distillate (again, mentioned multiple times, and for the layman, also known as diesel fuel, both low sulfer and high sulfer varieties) into a petroleum well. I'm sure I can read through the rest of that and find out exactly what each of those chemicals is, but those are the ones that jumped out at me and I know what they are off the top of my head.

  39. resurgence? really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This coming from someone living in Canton...

    Most of the oil jobs are taken from people from out of the area. There have been 4 or 5 hotels built in the Canton area lately. So, there will be some low paying jobs available there. Along with that are some additional restaurant jobs. I'm sure not seeing a great leap in good jobs around here. So, if you are looking to get rich finding a job in Canton, you'd better have current oil experience from somewhere else. Even then, I wouldn't call it "rich". More like a "decent living".

    That's not to say that Canton is a bad place to live. Housing is very affordable in comparison with other parts of the country. So, it doesn't take an incredible job to make a living, just a decent one. I am noticing that to the south of us, that house/land prices are on the rise. This in part because of the oil royalties that may be coming (and in some cases, have come) the land owners way.

    The moral of the story is "don't act on one story". If you are interested in the area, that's great. Welcome to Canton. Don't do it thinking that the streets are suddenly paved with gold. They aren't.

    Do you have an oil related business (or any business for that matter) that you can move to Canton and hire local people? Welcome to Canton even more. Because of the cost of living in the area, it's really not a bad place for any business to consider.

  40. +4 Insightful??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The ingredients listed for the frosted strawberry Pop-Tarts are as follows:

    Enriched Flour (wheat Flour, Niacin, Reduced Iron, Thiamin Mononitrate [vitamin B1], Riboflavin [vitamin B2], Folic Acid), Corn Syrup, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Dextrose, Soybean And Palm Oil (with Tbhq For Freshness), Sugar, Contains Two Percent Or Less Of Cracker Meal, Wheat Starch, Salt, Dried Strawberries, Dried Pears, Dried Apples, Cornstarch, Leavening (baking Soda, Sodium Acid Pyrophosphate, Monocalcium Phosphate), Citric Acid, Corn Cereal, Gelatin, Partially Hydrogenated Soybean , Caramel Color, Modified Corn Starch, Soy Lecithin, Xanthan Gum, Modified Wheat Starch, Tricalcium Phosphate, Color Added, Turmeric Color, Vitamin A Palmitate, Red #40, Niacinamide, Reduced Iron, Pyridoxine Hydrochloride (vitamin B6), Yellow #6, Riboflavin (vitamin B2), Thiamin Hydrochloride (vitamin B1), Folic Acid, Blue #1, Less Than 0.5g Trans Fat Per Serving.

    http://www.kelloggs.com/en_US/pop-tarts-frosted-strawberry-toaster-pastries.html

    +5 informative.

    1. Re:+4 Insightful??? by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1

      But have you ever tried using pop-tarts for fracking?

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
  41. Re:Now comes the Time of the Envirowackos by kwbauer · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Nice bit of scare tactics there. Repeat items in the list to get a 37% longer list; Probably another third of the list are common FDA approved ingredients for food and soaps.

    Seriously, you want to complain that up to half of one-percent of what they pump in could be table salt or pure grain alcohol? Or that they are using very soft water?

    You are the reason why the only people who take environmentalists seriously anymore are the environmentalists who are to stupid to realize that the other environmentalists are just making shit up.

  42. artesian well water by jraff2 · · Score: 1

    All municipalities supplied with artesian well water need to insist that any and all oil and gas fracking does not contaminate the water supply, now and WELL into the future. The Oil and Gas Fracking can take place today, the supply goes dry and the company packs up, sells off and disapears, meanwhile the water becomes contaminated with the oil, gas and fracking chemicals and becomes totally useless for town water supply. I would recommend ALL artesian well water be checked now and into the future for fracking contaminants. Also find out where the water comes from, it could be many miles away from the actual well. Make sure any and all fracking is well insured against water contamination again now and well into the future.

  43. Re:Now comes the Time of the Envirowackos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sodium Chloride? Ethanol? Citric Acid? I think you just described a Screwdriver.

  44. evolution is too slow by jsepeta · · Score: 1

    if we humans could just evolve quicker so that polluted water could be consumed, then all this nonsense about "saving the earth" by banning fracking would just go away.

    --
    Remember kids, if you're not paying for the service, YOU ARE THE PRODUCT THAT IS BEING SOLD.
  45. Centurions by Ol+Biscuitbarrel · · Score: 1

    Read the headline and wondered if they weren't bouncing back via the lucrative "toaster" market. So say we all!

  46. I work in fracking industry by munclesonkey · · Score: 2

    95% of what is said her regarding fracking is incorrect. Go work for a fracking company for a few months and see how it is done, you will see exactly what is in the "contaminated" water. Many companies R &D departments are working on ways to re-use "contaminated" water to frac with multiple times so only a very small percentage of "new" water would be needed per frac. The water table where I frac isn't very deep, the place where the fracking is being done is about 2 miles past the water table and near the top of the wellbore there are 7-8 layers of casing (depends on company), cement and steel between the wellpipe and the ground around it, for the "contaminated" water to impact the water table it would have to bypass all those layers and that isn't going to happen. The oil and gas companies also subsidize the county and city to provide for more water testing just to ensure the public trust, not to mention we do our own testing. We live here and drink the water here, do you really think all the lab and engineering employees would use the local water supply if it were contaminated? Learn about fracking on your own and stop letting Matt Damon think for you.

    1. Re:I work in fracking industry by Cardoor · · Score: 1

      "It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends upon his not understanding it" - Upton Sinclair (incidentally, author of Oil! - the book upon which there will be blood was based)

    2. Re:I work in fracking industry by munclesonkey · · Score: 1

      Are you saying I don't understand what I am doing because I make money doing it (and if I understood it I would surely stop)? If that is the case that is idiotic. I have to understand all that it entails including the current information on its impact to the environment. Come on out and see for yourself rather than throwing barbs from afar. I am not the only person in my company with an advanced degree, it is absurd to think that we don't understand what we are doing or that we are blinded by money and are shills for the oil and gas companies. The company I work for is very small so we are not some huge oil conglomerate.
      If you really dislike fracking so much you should all stop driving, or using plastic or the hundreds of other products oil is used to make (even "green" public transportation uses oil, like the plastic subway seats). Even wind turbines use oil based lubricants and parts. People should stop complaining about an industry that they benefit from everyday and are unwilling to recognize those benefits or give up using products created by what the industry produces.

    3. Re:I work in fracking industry by Cardoor · · Score: 1

      i apologize for dropping the quote the way i did. i can see how that can be viewed as an attack.

      i'm saying that human beings, no matter how intelligent, have powerful cognitive biases. when possible, it's worthwhile to at least take a minute and ask if it's possible that our view is distorted in some way - whether it be in synch with sinclair's comment or otherwise.

      i assure you, there is a plethora of data out there regarding the industry and practices that point to significant damage being done.

    4. Re:I work in fracking industry by munclesonkey · · Score: 1

      Well I did go off a bit and a good deal of what I said was directed at others so I apologize for that.

      I would actually be interested in seeing links to the data you mention, honestly, not trolling.

    5. Re:I work in fracking industry by Cardoor · · Score: 1

      MO.. you can google search for plenty of scientific claims that run counter to the claims made by the pro-fracking community. there's clearly a lot of he-said-she-said, and obfuscation of the facts by many parties. what is worth exploring too though are the actions by the fracking companies vis-a-vis what they have done to keep information out of the public domain.. gag-orders linked to paying-off/relocating affected families. bribing town councils, paying for and pressuring research groups to come up with favorable and/or squelch unfavortable studies etc. etc. these are not the kinds of things people generally do when there is nothing to hide, at least not in such a systemic fashion. while public domain information may not get you to a level of metaphysical certitude re: the seriousness of the damage being done, at the very least there is a very serious fact pattern that points in one direction.

  47. Poor stupid bastards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Having lived in the "rust belt" for nearly a decade and worked in the oil industry I can say these poor bastards are going to find that in 5-10 years the gas will give out and they will be back at square 1, with even more groudwater pollution than they had before.

  48. Re: Now comes the Time of the Envirowackos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All common household chemicals.

  49. The fracking industry had enough money to by ToddInSF · · Score: 1

    buy off Bush, who exempted it from all EPA regulations and monitoring.

    So, good luck with all that fracking money as that million fracking wells drilled all over the country gradually increasingly leak and pollute the environment, including the local water table.

  50. Re:Now comes the Time of the Envirowackos by drainbramage · · Score: 1

    Drinking more causes this kind of reasoning.
    And it makes you call your ex girlfriend early in the morning.
    Or so I hear.
    Time for coffee.

    --
    No brain, no pain.
  51. Re:Now comes the Time of the Envirowackos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    how about the radioactive shale particles that flow back to the surface.

    http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/oct/02/dangerous-radioactivity-fracking-waste-pennsylvania

  52. Re:Now comes the Time of the Envirowackos by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

    And the Ethanol, guar gum and citric acid

    You've been eating Rum-and-Raisin ice cream?

    --
    Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"