Just another Reality-based bubble in the foam of the multiverse.

Tuesday, November 03, 2009

The Squeaky Wheel Gets the Oil and the Water, Too

The Editorial page of The New York Pravda sees green when its' water is at risk:

Among the many dubious provisions in the 2005 energy bill was one dubbed the Halliburton loophole, which was inserted at the behest of — you guessed it — then-Vice President Dick Cheney, a former chief executive of Halliburton.

It stripped the Environmental Protection Agency of its authority to regulate a drilling process called hydraulic fracturing. Invented by Halliburton in the 1940s, it involves injecting a mixture of water, sand and chemicals, some of them toxic, into underground rock formations to blast them open and release natural gas.

Hydraulic fracturing has been implicated in a growing number of water pollution cases across the country. It has become especially controversial in New York, where regulators are eager to clear the way for drilling in the New York City watershed, potentially imperiling the city’s water supply. Thankfully, the main company involved has now decided not to go ahead.

The safety of the nation’s water supply should not have to rely on luck or the public relations talents of the oil and gas industry. Thanks in part to two New Yorkers — Representative Maurice Hinchey and Senator Charles Schumer — Congress last week approved a bill that asks the E.P.A. to conduct a new study on the risks of hydraulic fracturing. An agency study in 2004 whitewashed the industry and was dismissed by experts as superficial and politically motivated. This time Congress is demanding “a transparent, peer-reviewed process.”

An even more important bill is waiting in the wings. Cumbersomely named the Fracturing Responsibility and Awareness of Chemicals Act, it would close the loophole and restore the E.P.A.’s rightful authority to regulate hydraulic fracturing. It would also require the oil and gas industry to disclose the chemicals they use.

The industry argues that the chemicals are proprietary secrets and that disclosing them would hurt their competitiveness. It also argues that the process is basically safe and that regulating it would deter domestic production. But if hydraulic fracturing is as safe as the industry says it is, why should it fear regulation?


Why indeed when the Fair and Balanced Pravda is all to ready to uncritically quote the oil barons assertions that there is no energy crisis, particularly in natural gas fossil fuels.

Of course, this kind of procedure, essentially strip mining every oil shale deposit in the world and ruining fresh watershed in the process is the projected reason why there would be no energy crisis.

Of course, if regulations were to be imposed, the stock value of said oil futures would tank, possibly taking the economy with it again.

There'll be no regulation except of the usual non-regulatory kind.

1 comment:

Wiglaf said...

I live near one of those shale deposits, which is up in the Uintah Mountains, one of the nicer places left in the west. But I have little hope for its survival. It's on track to become yet another piece of Mordor, as soon as that $100/barrel oil comes back.