Part I – An Abrupt Awakening
This past February of 2014,
50 miles south of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in the rural area of Dunkard
Township, people were shocked by the dramatic explosion of the Marcellus shale
natural gas fracking well, which led to a huge fireball that raged and continued
to burn for five days. The fire crackled and hissed loudly as neighbors
described it as sounding as if a jet engine was continually running just
outside your window. The heat was so tremendous that it was impossible to
remove equipment and propane tanks near the site that exploded. One worker was
hospitalized, but another was declared missing, and they could only find a few
fragments of charred skeletal remains on the third day after the fire finally
burned itself out. Chevron, the owner of the well, sent out a special team from
Houston called the Wild Well Control Team, and apparently, the only emergency
plan to control such a fire was to let it burn itself out. The service
technician, Ian McKee, who died in the blast, was only 27 years old. Ian’s fiancée
is pregnant and expecting in July. They were hoping to make enough money to get
married soon and buy a home. The press kept her name secret at her request, but
we know that she was hoping that he was only injured. That hoped was tragically
dashed.
Chevron, realizing the
public relations disaster it had on its hand, sent out hundreds of letters to
the community stating:
“Chevron recognizes the
effect this had on the community. We value being a responsible member of this
community and will continue to strive to achieve incident-free operations. We
are committed to taking action to safeguard our neighbors, our employees, our
contractors and the environment.”
Along with the letter was a
gift certificate for pizza with a soft drink of your choice. The gift
certificates expired this past May 1. For some reason, the people of Dunkard
Township did not appreciate Chevron’s communal offering.
The opinion of the public is
very mixed on hydraulic fracturing, which is also called fracking. The news
media has for the most part been positive to some extent, especially pointing
out the explosive economic growth in sleepy North Dakota which is now a major
oil producing state. Then there is a mix of negative stories, which picked up
momentum when the movie Gasland came out in 2010 and introduced images of
people setting their kitchen sink tap water on fire because it was leaking
methane gas. The conservative media was quick to demonize filmmaker Josh Fox as
one of those bad liberal filmmakers trying to make money off by picking on a
successful industry. The news media for the most part has failed the public on
educating people on the nature of fracking. This is understandable, as the real
customers of broadcast media are corporations looking to advertise to a more
affluent audience, and oil and gas companies are among that customer base.
If you look at public
opinion polls, a year ago, 48% of the U.S. population was positive on the
development of fracking, and a slightly higher 49% was very much against it. In
the most recent survey, the percentage of people positive toward fracking
started to dip to 44%. Even without the proper information, stories are
spreading and people are getting a sense of something going wrong.
Unfortunately, the industry
promotes fracking as a technology that has been used for the past 60 years.
This is actually quite false. Some variant of fracking has been tried in
vertical wells over the years, but pressuring oil and natural gas out of shale
rock formations using horizontal drilling has only started within the past 7
years or so. Literature about the environmental implications in peer reviewed
academic and scientific journals only began appearing in late 2011. In other
words, its questionable if the industry even knows what its doing.
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