Month: April 2017

EPA head on rogue employees, the environment, and frivolous lawsuits

EPA head on rogue employees, the environment, and frivolous lawsuits

via Climate Change Dispatch
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EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt discussed a variety of issues on Fox & Friends this morning, from employees using encrypted text messaging, his agency’s pro-growth agenda, and frivolous lawsuits. According to the conservative-leaning watchdog group Judicial Watch, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) staffers have been using the Signal app to communicate using encrypted text messages. Judicial Watch […]

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April 13, 2017 at 05:13AM

Every green initiative has been a disaster says Christopher Booker

Every green initiative has been a disaster says Christopher Booker

via Climate Change Dispatch
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What a parable for our times the great diesel scandal has been, as councils vie to see which can devise the heaviest taxes on nearly half the cars in Britain because they are powered by nasty, polluting diesel. This week, it was announced many diesel drivers will soon have to pay fully £24 a day […]

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April 13, 2017 at 04:12AM

Fracking Comes To Alaska, Triggering New Oil Boom

Fracking Comes To Alaska, Triggering New Oil Boom

via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF)
http://www.thegwpf.com

Hydraulic fracturing is coming to Alaska, and one professor thinks it could change global politics in favor of U.S. interests.

Companies have discovered in the last year at least 5 billion barrels of recoverable oil on Alaska’s North Slope — a 14 percent increase in U.S. proven reserves. These finds could significantly increase U.S. oil production, changing the global energy game in the U.S.’s favor.

“If these new discoveries become producing fields, the Alaskan Arctic will write a new chapter in the U.S. oil industry’s dramatic ascent,” Dr. Scott L. Montgomery, a professor of international relations at the University of Washington, wrote in an op-ed for The Conversation. “It will increase our leverage over [Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries] OPEC and may help to counter Russia’s geopolitical influence.”

“This prospect raises a new question: How will we will use our clout as the world’s most important new oil power?” Montgomery wrote.

Montgomery argued fracking for Alaskan oil will make the U.S. a major oil exporter. Montgomery says Alaskan oil will be sold to Asia and undercut OPEC’s share of that market.

“Oil remains our one unreplaceable energy source,” Montgomery wrote. “Global mobility and a modern military are, as yet, inconceivable without it. Growth in global demand, centered in developing Asia, will continue for some time, as it did even from 2010 through 2014 when prices were above $90 per barrel.”

The U.S. is the world’s largest and fastest-growing producer of oil and natural gas, surpassing both Russia and Saudi Arabia. U.S. oil production grew 80 percent higher than it was in 2008.

Companies recently found massive untapped oil deposits in Alaska that could be access through fracking. Major oil companies like Conoco are purchasing Alaskan land and developing cost effective methods of fracking in remote regions.

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USGS: Alaskan North Slope May Hold Up to 80 Trillion Cubic Feet of Shale Gas

USGS Alaska North Slope May Hold Up to 80 Tcf of Shale Gas

For the first time, the U.S. Geological Survey has estimated the potential of undiscovered, technically recoverable onshore shale oil and gas resources in Alaska’s North Slope.

The estimates range from 0 up to 2 billion barrels of oil and from 0 up to 80 trillion cubic feet of gas – representing technically recoverable oil and gas resources, which are those quantities of oil and gas producible using currently available technology and industry practices, regardless of economic or accessibility considerations.

Primarily due to economic and infrastructure considerations, production has never been attempted from these Alaska North Slope shales, which span most of the North Slope but are largely absent from the environmentally sensitive Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

Better knowledge of the untapped resource potential found in all areas of the country will help us better make science-based decisions about how we continue to grow domestic energy production for America,” said Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar. “Alaska’s energy resources hold great promise and economic opportunity for the American people, and we will continue to expand our scientific understanding of existing resources as part of our commitment to an all-of-the-above energy approach that includes safe and responsible production of American oil and gas resources.”

Providing scientifically sound, publicly available assessments of the quantity of new, untapped oil and gas resources in frontier areas is but the first step in weighing their potential contributions to energy supplies as well as the impacts of recovering them,” said USGS Director Marcia McNutt. “This information can help leaders from both government and industry make good decisions for the long term, anticipate environmental issues in advance of development, and guide wise investments.”

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via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF) http://www.thegwpf.com

April 13, 2017 at 03:34AM

Fractivist Journalism and Its Proficiency with Fake News

Fractivist Journalism and Its Proficiency with Fake News

via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF)
http://www.thegwpf.com

Fractivist journalism is one gigantic exercise in fake news – fake fracking news that is – as a story on a University of Guelph methane study illustrates.

Fake news seems to be enjoying quite a run these days, but there are no better examples than those provided by fractivist journalism. There are only a handful of reporters regularly reporting on fracking issues who bother to even attempt being objective. Most are in the model of StateImpactPA, a fractivist shill effort financed by the Heinz and Haas families to serve as an echo chamber for the work of sister entities such as the Clean Air Council, Delaware Riverkeeper, et al who are financed by the same families. There are numerous others as well and a loyal reader of this blog who happens to be a fractivist sent me an article yesterday that very much falls into the same category.

The article is entitled “Methane Leaks from Energy Wells Affects Groundwater, Travels Great Distances, Study Confirms” and appears in the online Canadian magazine known as The Tyee (named for a salmon, logo to right). It’s about a University of Guelph study published in Nature Geoscience and titled “Mobility and persistence of methane in groundwater in a controlled-release field experiment.” The study itself is much more muted. Here’s the abstract (emphasis added):

Expansion of shale gas extraction has fuelled global concern about the potential impact of fugitive methane on groundwater and climate. Although methane leakage from wells is well documented, the consequences on groundwater remain sparsely studied and are thought by some to be minor. Here we present the results of a 72-day methane gas injection experiment into a shallow, flat-lying sand aquifer. In our experiment, although a significant fraction of methane vented to the atmosphere, an equal portion remained in the groundwater. We find that methane migration in the aquifer was governed by subtle grain-scale bedding that impeded buoyant free-phase gas flow and led to episodic releases of free-phase gas. The result was lateral migration of gas beyond that expected by groundwater advection alone. Methane persisted in the groundwater zone despite active growth of methanotrophic bacteria, although much of the methane that vented into the vadose zone was oxidized. Our findings demonstrate that even small-volume releases of methane gas can cause extensive and persistent free phase and solute plumes emanating from leaks that are detectable only by contaminant hydrogeology monitoring at high resolution.

The study is anything but an indictment of the shale industry. It simply says methane can migrate, a fact we all know, and injected the stuff into a sand aquifer to see how it moved, as if that proved anything about the degree to which shale wells actually leak. The point of the study is identify how methane does migrate and should be monitored. What the Tyee article does is make a huge leap from learning more about how methane moves to suggesting there are massive amounts of it leaking from shale wells and impacting groundwater, which is anything but true.

fractivist journalism

Worse, it extensively quotes Jessica Ernst, who made claims an Alberta judge found to be “verbose, repetitive, inflammatory, improper and not in keeping with the spirit of the Alberta Rules of Court.” The article is also replete with snide and heavily biased comments packaged as “news” that are clearly opinion (and poorly formed opinion at that). Consider these gems:

In recent years the chronic problem of methane leakage has been aggravated by hydraulic fracking, which causes more wear and tear on well plumbing and seals with intense pressures, shaking and well-banging seismic activity.”

Although industry argues that shale gas wells are too deep to affect groundwater, most methane leaks come not from the production source or bottom of the well but from shallower geological formations closer to the surface of the well. Gas flows up then enters groundwater or the atmosphere via corroded, old or faulty seals.”

Despite evidence of serious methane leakage into groundwater from energy wells, many regulators and energy companies have denied the scale of the problem, claimed the methane naturally migrated into the groundwater or was caused by bacteria.”

Nearly a half a dozen studies done by scientists at Duke and Stanford universities have consistently found elevated levels of methane in water wells near shale fracking operations but couldn’t always identify the source or the mechanism for contamination.”

But industry has repeatedly dealt with abuses of groundwater by offering landowners money and demanding that they sign non-disclosure agreements.”

It’s one “when did you stop beating your wife” question after another, with the reporter injecting his own views or using the Park Foundation funded Duke study for data when, in fact, there are numerous much larger studies indicating exactly the opposite. This is fractivist journalism.

Full post

via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF) http://www.thegwpf.com

April 13, 2017 at 03:19AM