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Quantum fluctuations in science, space and society, from quarks to Hubble and Mars. Served up by Alan Boyle, NBC News Digital science editor. E-mail Alan, or connect via Facebook, Twitter or Google+.

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  • 16
    Feb
    2012
    3:02pm, EST

    It's not fracking's fault, study says

    Men with Cabot Oil and Gas work on a natural gas valve at a hydraulic fracturing site in South Montrose, Penn. Hydraulic fracturing, also known as fracking, stimulates gas production by injecting wells with high volumes of chemical-laced water in order to free up pockets of natural gas below.

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    Follow @b0yle




    A university study asserts that the problems caused by the gas extraction process known as hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," arise because drilling operations aren't doing it right. The process itself isn't to blame, according to the study, released today by the Energy Institute at the University of Texas at Austin.

    The report is likely to add new fuel to a blazing controversy over fracking. Researchers reviewed the evidence contained in the reports of groundwater contamination from three prominent shale-rock formations where the process is employed: the Barnett Shale in North Texas, the Marcellus Shale in Pennsylvania, New York and other areas of Appalachia; and the Haynesville Shale in western Louisiana and northeast Texas.


    The groundwater contamination is graphically portrayed in the documentary "Gasland," which showed residents near shale-gas operations setting their drinking water on fire as it came out of the tap. Worries about such contamination have sparked political resistance to fracking, leading some states and countries to hold up new drilling operations.

    At the same time, shale gas is seen as an increasingly important domestic energy source. About a quarter of U.S.-produced natural gas currently comes from shale, and that proportion is projected to rise to nearly half by 2035. Last month, President Barack Obama suggested that the natural gas industry could support 600,000 jobs in America by the end of the decade, in large part due to the rise of hydraulic fracturing. In its latest budget request, the White House proposed new studies by the Environmental Protection Agency to ensure that fracking is done safely.

    Mike Groll / AP

    People take part in a rally against hydraulic fracturing at the Legislative Office Building in Albany, N.Y., on Jan. 23. New York state legislators are considering a number of bills to limit fracking.

    "It's a game-changer in terms of the energy balance," study leader Chip Groat, associate director of the Energy Institute, told journalists today. He and other scientists discussed the report in Vancouver, Canada, at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

    Where does fracking go wrong?
    Hydraulic fracturing involves drilling deep into shale beds, then injecting water, sand and chemicals under high pressure to shatter layers of rock — liberating trapped pockets of natural gas. The gas is captured for energy use, but the water and other byproducts have to be cleaned up. The procedure has been used since the 1950s, but it's become far more widely applied in recent years due to advances in horizontal-drilling technologies.

    The researchers concluded that many of the reports of contamination can be traced to above-ground spills or other mishandling of the wastewater, Groat said. Other causes of the contamination include underground casing failures or poor cement jobs. "These problems are not unique to hydraulic fracturing," Groat said in a news release.

    In the reports reviewed by the researchers, "we found no direct evidence that hydraulic fracturing itself ... was a cause for concern," he told journalists at the AAAS meeting. He acknowledged, however, that shale gas development "can be bungled" due to problems with drilling and extraction techniques used closer to the surface.

    Such problems are most likely behind the water-on-fire phenomena documented in "Gasland." But it's difficult to identify precisely what the problem was or what the long-term effect will be without before-and-after data, Groat said.

    "We really feel hobbled in a lot of these [cases] by the lack of baseline information," he observed.

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    Ray Kemble delivers fresh water on Jan. 18 to family members whose water was contaminated due to a shale-gas drilling operation hydraulic fracturing in Dimock, Pa.

    Today's release of the final report follows up on a preliminary version that was issued last fall. In addition to discussing the causes of contamination, the report evaluated the ability of states to enforce existing regulations, and analyzed the public perceptions surrounding fracking.

    Among the other findings:

    • Natural gas found in water wells within some shale gas areas, such as the Marcellus Shale, can be traced to natural sources. The report said the gas was probably present before the onset of shale gas operations.
    • Some states have actively addressed the regulatory issues surrounding shale gas, but most regulations were written before the process became widespread. In those cases, regulations may need to updated to reflect new situations. However, "there isn't the need for new regulatory frameworks," Groat said.
    • News coverage of the controversy has been "decidedly negative," and few media reports mention the scientific research related to the process.
    • Surface spills of the fluids used in the fracking process were judged to pose a greater risk to groundwater sources than the fracking itself.

    The Energy Institute said its report was conducted using general university funds, but received assistance from the Environmental Defense Fund in developing the scope of work and the methodology for the study. The EDF said it reviewed drafts of the report during the course of the project but did not contribute to its conclusions.

    Not the final word
    Scott Anderson, senior policy adviser for the Environmental Defense Fund's energy program, discussed the report in a blog posting published after the report's release. "If the problem isn't hydraulic fracturing, then what is?" the headline asks. Here's some of what Anderson said:

    "As has been the case in other inquiries, the University of Texas study did not find any confirmed cases of drinking water contamination due to pathways created by hydraulic fracturing. But this does not mean such contamination is impossible or that hydraulic fracturing chemicals can’t get loose in the environment in other ways (such as through spills of produced water). In fact, the study shines a light on the fact that there are a number of aspects of natural gas development that can pose significant environmental risk. And it highlights the fact that there are a number of ways in which current regulatory oversight is inadequate."

    Follow @CosmicLog

    Anderson said the report deserved widespread attention, but was "by no means the final word on these topics."

    Groat said the report was based on a review of previously published data rather than fresh field observations. "We did not go out and measure things," he acknowledged.

    He said further studies will be conducted into the atmospheric and seismic impact of hydraulic fracturing — two much-debated environmental issues that were not addressed in detail in the newly issued report. The Energy Institute also plans to conduct a detailed case study on groundwater contamination in Texas' Barnett Shale, as well as a field investigation into the effects of shale gas drilling on the water above and below fracturing sites in the Barnett Shale.

    "Certainly more work needs to be done," Groat said.

    Update for 11:15 p.m. ET Feb. 16: One of my correspondents on Twitter, Pamela Oldham, notes that ConocoPhillips committed itself in 2010 to contribute $1.5 million to the University of Texas at Austin for energy research. The petroleum company said at the time that the Energy Institute would administer the grants, with the money going to UT-Austin's Cockrell School of Engineering and the McCombs School of Business. I'll check on how that squares with the institute's claim that the study was funded from general university accounts.

    Oldham also notes that ConocoPhillips was recently named in a civil lawsuit alleging fracking-related water contamination in Texas' Panola County.

    Update for 10:20 a.m. ET Feb. 17: Chip Groat, associate director of the Energy Institute and the leader of the study released this week, responded to my inquiry about the ConocoPhillips grant last night with this email:

    "Three or four of the large energy companies give money to UT  for student support (a recruitment investment) and for research that is spread among various departments. ConocoPhillips has done this, and part of the funding they provided was to the Energy Institute to support the Barnett Shale Case Study which will be a follow-on to the study we reported on today. None of the ConocoPhillips money went into this study [the one released this week]. For the [follow-up] case study, we will use Energy Institute money plus funds from energy companies and governments in the Barnett Shale development area. This is a matter of financial necessity, but we want to spread the funding among organizations with different interests in Barnett Shale development."


    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter or adding Cosmic Log's Google+ page to your circle. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for other worlds.

    399 comments

    So the process isn't wrong, it's the corporations messing it up? If they can't/won't do it properly, why are they allowed to in the first place?

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  • 29
    Dec
    2011
    2:42pm, EST

    100 years of natural gas? Hype gets reality check

    Pavillion Area Concerned Citizens released this photo saying it shows a hydraulic fracturing drill site in the Pavillion/Muddy Ridge gas field. The group said it was taken from the porch of its chairman, John Fenton.

    By John Roach, Contributing Writer, NBC News

    The hype around seemingly limitless reserves of natural gas made available through the technological innovation known as hydrologic fracturing, or fracking, may be just that — hype — according a new analysis of the data behind the claims.

    An April press release from the Potential Gas Committee lies in the crosshairs of Chris Nedler's analytical reporting for Slate.com. 

    The committee, an organization of petroleum engineers and geoscientists, estimated a future gas supply of 2,170 trillion cubic feet (tcf), which at the current rate of consumption of 24 tcf per year, translates to a "95-year supply of gas, which apparently has been rounded up to 100 years," Nedler writes.

    He then explains that only 273 tcf of that total are "proved reserves." That fits with data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration. The remaining amount is broken down into categories ranging from probable to speculative. Of this reasoning, Nedler writes:

    C.J. Marshall / AP

    This file photo shows the outside of a natural gas drill site owned by Chesapeake Energy in Leroy Township, Pa.

    By the same logic, you can claim to be a multibillionaire, including all your "probable, possible, and speculative resources."

    Assuming that the United States continues to use 24 tcf per annum, then, only an 11-year supply of natural gas is certain. The other 89 years' worth has not yet been shown to exist or be recoverable.

    Of course, consumption could rise, especially if we convert coal-fired power plants to natural gas and use it to fuel more of our cars and trucks. 

    At the end of the day, the future natural gas supply could end up being as large as the most optimistic projections, or fall way short. "We simply don't know, and we may not know for years to come," Nedler concludes.

    The full analysis is well worth a read including Nedler's discussion of Houston-based energy consultant's Arthur Berman's skepticism about the claims of our natural gas reserves.

    Other energy analysts really do see a bright future in natural gas, especially shale gas.

    In "The Quest," the author and energy analyst Daniel Yergin, calls shale gas "the biggest energy innovation since the start of the new century, [that] has turned what was an imminent shortage in the United States into what may be a hundred-year supply and may do the same elsewhere in the world."

    The sentiment is echoed in Michael Graetz's "The End of Energy", where he notes that "a consensus among analysts has emerged that domestic reserves, along with those in Canada, are adequate to supply both countries for many decades, if not a century."

    These writers and analysts also point to the controversy surrounding the environmental impact of fracking technology, which involves injecting millions of gallons of water, sand and chemicals into wells to break apart the shale and release the trapped gas.

    This controversy, in turn, could hobble the pace of natural gas drilling and put a damper on the hype machine surrounding the future of natural gas. Or not. Only the future will tell.

    More on natural gas and fracking:

    • 'Fracking' for energy in Northeast: boon or doom?
    • Alternative to controversial fracking touted
    • Fracking chemical found in town's aquifer
    • 2012 looks promising for energy investors

    John Roach is a contributing writer for msnbc.com. To learn more about him, check out his website. For more of our Future of Technology series, watch the featured video below.

     

    Next-gen nuclear plants could provide carbon-free energy, but the painfully slow process of approving better, safer reactors — not to mention real anxiety over meltdowns and waste — threaten to derail projects before they can be built.

    28 comments

    I do have to wonder what we were thinking when we made the world run on dead plant and animals turned to mush that takes millions of years to replenish.

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    Explore related topics: energy, natural-gas, science, f, innovation, featured, fracking
  • 12
    May
    2011
    11:07pm, EDT

    Rockin' out to the gas drilling debate

    Watch on YouTube
    By Nidhi Subbaraman

    People living above the natural gas-rich reserves stretching below New Jersey and Pennsylvania have been complaining about bubbly, polluted water caused by the controversial gas mining technique called "fracking" for years. Natural gas companies have been tuning out their concerns. So NYU's Studio 20 and the deep-digging journalists at ProPublica decided to make a new animated music video, to get companies, legislators and voters to finally listen up. 

    The video raps through the basics of fracking (and just so you know, sci-fi fans, it's got nothing to do with "Battlestar Galactica"). It's a process in which tons of water are pumped underground into gas-soaked shales, releasing the trapped gases. Fracking is an effective way to flush out the fuel, but the used water is laced with toxic, often flammable chemicals like benzene and formaldehyde. If the water isn't cleaned up, those chemicals can spread into the drinking water supply of nearby towns.


    Regulations overseeing safe fracking have been lax since 2005, when the U.S. government under President Bush decided that natural gas companies were exempt from following the Safe Drinking Water Act. But since earlier this year, things seem to be changing. In early May, Duke University scientists published a study that for the first time linked methane pollution in the water in some Pennsylvanian towns to the methane leaking out of natural gas pipes, and potentially from fracked fissures. On May 5, U.S. Department of Energy chief Steven Chu announced the formation of a panel tasked with making recommendations for clean ways to extract natural gas.

    As for the rap, it may be a good way to spread the message virally — it's already appearing on Rachel Maddow's blog, among other sites — but we'll have to hear more before judging whether or not Studio 20 can quit their day jobs.

    More on natural gas drilling from msnbc.com:

    • Report links fracking to tainted U.S. drinking water
    • Md. official testifies on natural gas drilling
    • Tracking fracking water going high-tech
    • Oil spill's energy lesson for Obama

    Nidhi Subbaraman is an editorial intern specializing in technology and science coverage at msnbc.com.

    2 comments

    You must be drinking the stuff to even say something like 'skeptical'.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: energy, natural-gas, nyu, fracking, studio-20

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