How many Indian Fakirs have died from walking on a bed of nails? None recorded so that enterprise must be good for the environment and the economy.How many have died as a direct result of fracking?
Wow. You got one right.How many Indian Fakirs have died from walking on a bed of nails? None recorded so that enterprise must be good for the environment and the economy.
Well, the lawsuit between Jessica Ernst and EnCana and two regulatory agents should shed some light on the definitive statements made here by you and others. It will be some time before the dust settles though.
The regulators wouldn't even give her access to the monitoring records, that is until the courts forced them to not only hand over those records, but to reimburse Ernst for the fees she was charged for her information requests.
Ernst v. EnCana Corporation | Landowner Jessica Ernst sues EnCana and Alberta government regulators over water contamination It's from a bias site but it has the claim she filed in pdf.Any links on that- I am looking for information to make informed decisions- Yes some claims are fake but they are not all fake.
Documented negative environmental impact.If it's such a concern their must be some reason people are so against it.
Yes, documented.Is it a health issue?
Why do we have to wait until someone death is conclusively linked to a process that has a documented negative impact on the environment and the health of people living the region?Has anyone died as a direct result of fracking?
I read more...Read more: Is Fracking Safe? The Top 10 Myths About Natural Gas Drilling - Popular Mechanics
No he doesn't, and neither do I.He figures what comes out of the hole is just dumped all willy nilly like and oil comes shooting out of the ground like in an old John Wayne movie.
Sometimes even EAO's sites get it right.Ernst v. EnCana Corporation | Landowner Jessica Ernst sues EnCana and Alberta government regulators over water contamination It's from a bias site but it has the claim she filed in pdf.
My first job after the Army was with a contract mining/raisebore company.One of my first real jobs was on a drill systems exploration drill rated for a little over 1000 feet with a Becker down the hole hammer(Becker was my driller)who was part owner in SDS back then before they became Beck and then Hazco.
We used enviro friendly fish based bit lube and oil,the bears used to lick the derrick clean on weekends,Documented negative environmental impact.
Yes, documented.
Why do we have to wait until someone death is conclusively linked to a process that has a documented negative impact on the environment and the health of people living the region?
I read more...
http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/energy/coal-oil-gas/top-10-myths-about-natural-gas-drilling-6386593#slide-4
Is Fracking Safe? The Top 10 Myths About Natural Gas Drilling - Popular Mechanics
No he doesn't, and neither do I.
Sometimes even EAO's sites get it right.
My first job after the Army was with a contract mining/raisebore company.
Rock lube we used is as toxic as fracking fluid. If we spilled it on the ground the sites hazardous spill team had to be notified. They came they cleaned it up.
When we broke through to whatever drift we were aiming for, tons of this fluid would explode into that drift.
It was transvac'd up and the area decontaminated by rinsing it with water that would get flushed into a sump.
Where the whole sump would be pumped out and the water sent for disposal.
Ya, because that's all that was in my post... :roll:We used enviro friendly fish based bit lube and oil,the bears used to lick the derrick clean on weekends,
I guess you don't know these farmers and ranchers...I all my years I have never met a rancher or farmer who had problems with fracking on their land and I meet every one of them.
Here's a Calgary Herald article on the lawsuit:Any links on that- I am looking for information to make informed decisions- Yes some claims are fake but they are not all fake.
Hey Ton, can you think of a nontoxic, non-naturally occurring marker that can be added to fracking fluid to track/trace it?Here's a Calgary Herald article on the lawsuit:
http://www.calgaryherald.com/technology/Ruling+advances+woman+tainted+water+lawsuit/6475560/story.html
Here's an EPA finding of drinking water contamination by EnCana in Pavillion Wyoming:
http://yosemite.epa.gov/opa/admpress.nsf/20ed1dfa1751192c8525735900400c30/ef35bd26a80d6ce3852579600065c94e!OpenDocument
Unike what the gassy apologists have said here, clearly not all hydraulic fracturing is done at great depths, far from people's drinking water. Here we have cases of very close proximity to drinking water.
Here's a Calgary Herald article on the lawsuit:
http://www.calgaryherald.com/technology/Ruling+advances+woman+tainted+water+lawsuit/6475560/story.html
Hey Ton, can you think of a nontoxic, non-naturally occurring marker that can be added to fracking fluid to track/trace it?
I only asked because I was wondering if it could be regulated, that fracking fluids must contain identifiable, nontoxic, non-naturally occurring markers. That can be traced to either the company using it or individual wells.There are lots of methods of tracing water movement, ranging from dyes, to chelated heavy metals, injecting gases, radioactive isotopes, fluorocarbons...the applicability depends on the nature of the test. You wouldn't want to put some of this stuff in drinking water, but then again you don't want any drilling fluid in your drinking water either.
Nope,mostly Alberta,give me a year and I'll know most of the sk ones too where i'm at.I guess you don't know these farmers and ranchers...
http://www.nfu.ca/press_releases/2012/02-23.pdf
Ummm, Rimbey Alberta, Region 7 of the NFU, isn't in Alberta?Nope,mostly Alberta....
You've shown to be unable to make that distinct thus far. I doubt pretty colours will help.Let them use it as a marker,then we can seperate the truth from the B.S.
At least then we can place blame where it is deserved.I'm all for it,seems the only ones haveing problems are the ones that dont gt their price for the ROW on their land.Ummm, Rimbey Alberta, Region 7 of the NFU, isn't in Alberta?
You've shown to be unable to make that distinct thus far. I doubt pretty colours will help.
Wrong again.At least then we can place blame where it is deserved.I'm all for it,seems the only ones haveing problems are the ones that dont gt their price for the ROW on their land.
They can allways say no to a well.
Rarely used,never in my experience,if they want a well bad enough they will just ask the nieghbor.