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Fracking Misunderstood?

Blogs > canucks12
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canucks12
Profile Blog Joined June 2009
Canada812 Posts
February 28 2012 08:05 GMT
#1
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydraulic_fracturing

So, hello everybody. I'm a mining engineering student and I just stumbled upon a video about fracking. Please watch, and prepare to be surprised.

http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1009530098/fracknation
- no youtube link here, but this is important -

Honestly, I was very surprised to hear about this and it altered my judgement on the topic significantly.

In short, fracking is the process of pumping pressurized fluids into the ground to force oil and gas up to the surface. Some people are able to light their water on fire - for a short time - because of the gas content in their wells. Many blame it on hydrofracking. Additionally, a movie called "GasLand" talked heavily and criticized hydrofracking severely.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1558250/

Please spread the word, or reply with your ideas on the topic.

+ Show Spoiler +
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=weXXegZyGUE

Long video, but make note of the prof's opinion if you don't have time to listen to the whole thing:





*
cmen15
Profile Blog Joined December 2010
United States1519 Posts
February 28 2012 08:15 GMT
#2
This is so crazy cause i was in Cortland this past week seeing a friend and in the lobby there was a "dont frack with new york " poster. I had no idea what it meant until now lolol.
Greed leads to just about all losses.
canucks12
Profile Blog Joined June 2009
Canada812 Posts
February 28 2012 08:27 GMT
#3
On February 28 2012 17:15 cmen15 wrote:
This is so crazy cause i was in Cortland this past week seeing a friend and in the lobby there was a "dont frack with new york " poster. I had no idea what it meant until now lolol.


A lot of environmentalists and politicians are trying to make fracking out to be some sort of hellish procedure. I worked in a coal mine, now that sucks.
endy
Profile Blog Joined May 2009
Switzerland8970 Posts
February 28 2012 08:29 GMT
#4
I can't watch the video because I'm at work, but I know it has terrible effects for environment. It was banned in some countries already, I hope it will be banned in more countries, it's disgusting.
ॐ
canucks12
Profile Blog Joined June 2009
Canada812 Posts
February 28 2012 08:35 GMT
#5
On February 28 2012 17:29 endy wrote:
I can't watch the video because I'm at work, but I know it has terrible effects for environment. It was banned in some countries already, I hope it will be banned in more countries, it's disgusting.


My friend just called you a big noob

Seriously though, all opinions welcome. Please watch the videos - or at least the first one - when you have the time.
skindzer
Profile Blog Joined May 2005
Chile5114 Posts
February 28 2012 08:44 GMT
#6
Theres a documentary called Gasland that kind of touches the subject. You might want to check it out.
Its not only the rain that brings the thunder
canucks12
Profile Blog Joined June 2009
Canada812 Posts
Last Edited: 2012-02-28 08:49:06
February 28 2012 08:47 GMT
#7
On February 28 2012 17:44 skindzer wrote:
Theres a documentary called Gasland that kind of touches the subject. You might want to check it out.


It's mentioned in my opening. And yeah, any way to get more light on the topic is pretty much a good thing.
endy
Profile Blog Joined May 2009
Switzerland8970 Posts
February 28 2012 08:58 GMT
#8
On February 28 2012 17:35 canucks12 wrote:
Show nested quote +
On February 28 2012 17:29 endy wrote:
I can't watch the video because I'm at work, but I know it has terrible effects for environment. It was banned in some countries already, I hope it will be banned in more countries, it's disgusting.


My friend just called you a big noob

Seriously though, all opinions welcome. Please watch the videos - or at least the first one - when you have the time.


Ok, I will watch the video tonight.
As far as I know fracture fluids contain dangerous chemicals, and those are not disposed of properly.

Also in the page you linked yourself, I can read :

In the US, interviews with Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) scientists and leaked documents have shown that, since the 1980s, EPA investigations into the oil and gas industry's environmental impact—including the ongoing one into fracking's potential impact on drinking water—and associated reports had been narrowed in scope and/or had negative findings removed due to industry and government pressure.
ॐ
emythrel
Profile Blog Joined August 2010
United Kingdom2599 Posts
Last Edited: 2012-02-28 09:10:50
February 28 2012 09:10 GMT
#9
From what they showed of the fallout from Fracking in Gasland I will be happy when they stop doing it. The fact that the laws around "safe" levels of toxins created by this procedure were written by the industry (at least in the US) and that they are pretty much not accountable is beyond stupid. There was a family in that film who had water coming out the the tap that not only wasn't drinkable but was actually flammable!!!!
When there is nothing left to lose but your dignity, it is already gone.
Shockk
Profile Blog Joined July 2010
Germany2269 Posts
February 28 2012 09:59 GMT
#10
It's good to see the other side of the discussion with this documentary (no doubt they'll reach their goal and make the film). Personally, I know little about fracking besides some tidbits I picked up on lectures about oil and gas extraction, so I can't comment too much on it. But I'd bet a lot of people would be very surprised if they knew how the oil their cars run on has been extracted in the first place, or how the gas they're heating their homes with has.

Enviromental damage is a serious topic, and fracking - just like any other method of mining/extraction - should be monitored. But one-sided views help noone.
lolmlg
Profile Joined November 2011
619 Posts
February 28 2012 12:25 GMT
#11
Sometimes views seem to be one-sided because the evidence is overwhelming in a particular direction. I sympathize with (insert some completely unrelated situation given a paragraph on that page) but it doesn't change the facts at all.
orangesunglasses
Profile Blog Joined January 2012
United States110 Posts
February 28 2012 12:32 GMT
#12
yeh i have known about this for a while and it sickens me

it really adds to my daily depression causing world issues that people without vision seem to love to be involved with


the entire areas that this goes on in become unlivable. the water itself is flamable and you can create plastic substances by putting a flame to some of the water. then when they are done pumping the water into the earth it causes things like toxic clouds and acid rain, just overall insane stuff.

gasland is something everyone should watch
How you win is the only thing that matters
EternaLLegacy
Profile Blog Joined December 2011
United States410 Posts
February 28 2012 12:50 GMT
#13
On February 28 2012 18:10 emythrel wrote:
From what they showed of the fallout from Fracking in Gasland I will be happy when they stop doing it. The fact that the laws around "safe" levels of toxins created by this procedure were written by the industry (at least in the US) and that they are pretty much not accountable is beyond stupid. There was a family in that film who had water coming out the the tap that not only wasn't drinkable but was actually flammable!!!!


A completely bullshit parlor trick. People have been doing that with their water for hundreds of years. Some parts of American naturally have high methane content in the water. It's just the way it is. What they need is a better well filtration system.

I'm sorry, but it's ignorant fools like you who fall for spectacle instead of science that are driving my country into oblivion.

Gasland is an attack piece that is not unbias and not scientific.
Statists gonna State.
BottleAbuser
Profile Blog Joined December 2007
Korea (South)1888 Posts
February 28 2012 12:57 GMT
#14
This might be relevant.
Compilers are like boyfriends, you miss a period and they go crazy on you.
Adila
Profile Joined April 2010
United States874 Posts
February 28 2012 13:52 GMT
#15
What I want to know is what is in the fracking liquid that is being used?
canucks12
Profile Blog Joined June 2009
Canada812 Posts
February 28 2012 14:40 GMT
#16
On February 28 2012 21:50 EternaLLegacy wrote:
Show nested quote +
On February 28 2012 18:10 emythrel wrote:
From what they showed of the fallout from Fracking in Gasland I will be happy when they stop doing it. The fact that the laws around "safe" levels of toxins created by this procedure were written by the industry (at least in the US) and that they are pretty much not accountable is beyond stupid. There was a family in that film who had water coming out the the tap that not only wasn't drinkable but was actually flammable!!!!


A completely bullshit parlor trick. People have been doing that with their water for hundreds of years. Some parts of American naturally have high methane content in the water. It's just the way it is. What they need is a better well filtration system.

I'm sorry, but it's ignorant fools like you who fall for spectacle instead of science that are driving my country into oblivion.

Gasland is an attack piece that is not unbias and not scientific.


This is what I'm trying to get at. I believe that fracking has been an unfair victim of gasland's approach.
It seems that people are too eager to believe a documentary these days. (how ironic that I link to another documentary eh?)
gameguard
Profile Blog Joined March 2006
Korea (South)2131 Posts
February 28 2012 14:42 GMT
#17
i thought this was about battlestar galactica :0
mrafaeldie12
Profile Joined July 2011
Brazil537 Posts
February 28 2012 14:49 GMT
#18
I think fracking was banned here in Brazil for a good reason.
"..it all comes thumbling down thumbling down thumblin down"
TheToast
Profile Blog Joined August 2010
United States4808 Posts
February 28 2012 15:04 GMT
#19
I support fracking. There's not one shred of academic evidence that fracking is inherently unsafe or overtly bad for the environment. There in fact has been at least one study that's shown most of the ground water contamination associated with fracking is in fact mostly to due with poor storage and spillage of chemicals near the surface. An issue that can affect any oil or gas drilling operations.

As for the methane in the personal wells as show in gasland, I don't see why that's an issue. Methane, while flammable, isn't toxic. It's a lot of emotional to-do over nothing.

Considering all the catastrophic enviromental damage the oil industry has done in places like Nigeria I find it peculiar that people are so worried about fracking. It's an emotional knee-jerk reaction to something based on no evicence. Even if this did cause damage to a few people's wells, the fact is the United States needs more energy. We need the natural gas and I don't see why we should abandon the whole process because a few people in the middle of no where are inconvinienced.

If they can prove there is methane contamination of their personal well; they deserve compensation from the energy companies and the laws should reflect that. But it is by no means a reason to abandon the whole thing. Right now the energy has to come from somewhere.
I like the way the walls go out. Gives you an open feeling. Firefly's a good design. People don't appreciate the substance of things. Objects in space. People miss out on what's solid.
N3rV[Green]
Profile Blog Joined August 2009
United States1935 Posts
February 28 2012 15:12 GMT
#20
All I know about fracking is a few hellish stories from my mother (an ER doctor). The worst of which being about a young man that fell into one of the collection pools. (where a bunch of the nasty fracking solution is kept after it comes back up)


He died from massive organ failure, the nurse than took his clothes off and the doctor that took care of him both nearly died from the same thing. The fracking solution is seriously fucking no good.
Never fear the darkness, Bran. The strongest trees are rooted in the dark places of the earth. Darkness will be your cloak, your shield, your mother's milk. Darkness will make you strong.
TheToast
Profile Blog Joined August 2010
United States4808 Posts
February 28 2012 15:28 GMT
#21
On February 29 2012 00:12 N3rV[Green] wrote:
All I know about fracking is a few hellish stories from my mother (an ER doctor). The worst of which being about a young man that fell into one of the collection pools. (where a bunch of the nasty fracking solution is kept after it comes back up)


He died from massive organ failure, the nurse than took his clothes off and the doctor that took care of him both nearly died from the same thing. The fracking solution is seriously fucking no good.


Actually the vast majority of the solution is water. According to wikipedia, only about 2% of the stuff then inject into the ground is chemical additives. And of that, much of it is harmless. My suspicion (assuming this story is true) is that this guy probably fell into a pool of the pure chemical additives, before it was combined with the water. I imagine if you fell into a pool of pure anti-freeze, benzene, methanol, boric acie, lead, and heavy metals it would kill you pretty quickly.

But as a 2% solution of water, you would probably have to drink a gallon of the stuff to kill you that quickly. Again assuming the story is true, I think the bigger issue here would be the gross violation of worker safety rather than environmental damage. Can't have an open pool of highly toxic chemicals, Osha would not approve I think...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydraulic_fracturing#Chemicals
I like the way the walls go out. Gives you an open feeling. Firefly's a good design. People don't appreciate the substance of things. Objects in space. People miss out on what's solid.
gds
Profile Blog Joined February 2007
Iceland1391 Posts
February 28 2012 15:36 GMT
#22
On February 29 2012 00:28 TheToast wrote:


Actually the vast majority of the solution is water. According to wikipedia, only about 2% of the stuff then inject into the ground is chemical additives. And of that, much of it is harmless. My suspicion (assuming this story is true) is that this guy probably fell into a pool of the pure chemical additives, before it was combined with the water. I imagine if you fell into a pool of pure anti-freeze, benzene, methanol, boric acie, lead, and heavy metals it would kill you pretty quickly.

But as a 2% solution of water, you would probably have to drink a gallon of the stuff to kill you that quickly. Again assuming the story is true, I think the bigger issue here would be the gross violation of worker safety rather than environmental damage. Can't have an open pool of highly toxic chemicals, Osha would not approve I think...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydraulic_fracturing#Chemicals


I'm sorry TheToast, but what you just wrote is extremely stupid, i doubt anyone can take your words seriously after reading this.
N3rV[Green]
Profile Blog Joined August 2009
United States1935 Posts
February 28 2012 15:40 GMT
#23
We don't actually know WHAT the solution is, because what goes into it isn't a constant (changes from location to location, have even heard from Halliburton workers that they really just throw together whatever they have around and just go with it.)

So you can't just say that it's 2% chemical 98% water. I've had 3 or 4 buddies that have worked for Halliburton out in the Colorado Plateau doing fracking. It's honestly all too scary to even think about.

Just try to imagine a man who wakes up, and buys 4 8 hour energies for his day, then over 12 hours later when his shift is done, he BUYS 4 MORE 8 HOUR ENERGIES.

That is a Halliburton worker, and it's seriously not uncommon.
Never fear the darkness, Bran. The strongest trees are rooted in the dark places of the earth. Darkness will be your cloak, your shield, your mother's milk. Darkness will make you strong.
TheToast
Profile Blog Joined August 2010
United States4808 Posts
February 28 2012 15:46 GMT
#24
On February 29 2012 00:40 N3rV[Green] wrote:
We don't actually know WHAT the solution is, because what goes into it isn't a constant (changes from location to location, have even heard from Halliburton workers that they really just throw together whatever they have around and just go with it.)


Somehow I think the process is drastically more complicated than this. If they could just "throw together whatever" then why are they using the chemicals at all? My guess is they have some skilled chemical engineers that carefully develop a mixture based on the size of the well, composition of the rock, etc.

On February 29 2012 00:36 gds wrote:
Show nested quote +
On February 29 2012 00:28 TheToast wrote:


Actually the vast majority of the solution is water. According to wikipedia, only about 2% of the stuff then inject into the ground is chemical additives. And of that, much of it is harmless. My suspicion (assuming this story is true) is that this guy probably fell into a pool of the pure chemical additives, before it was combined with the water. I imagine if you fell into a pool of pure anti-freeze, benzene, methanol, boric acie, lead, and heavy metals it would kill you pretty quickly.

But as a 2% solution of water, you would probably have to drink a gallon of the stuff to kill you that quickly. Again assuming the story is true, I think the bigger issue here would be the gross violation of worker safety rather than environmental damage. Can't have an open pool of highly toxic chemicals, Osha would not approve I think...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydraulic_fracturing#Chemicals


I'm sorry TheToast, but what you just wrote is extremely stupid, i doubt anyone can take your words seriously after reading this.


Would you actually care to explain why? Or are you just content to sling vague insults at me?

I like the way the walls go out. Gives you an open feeling. Firefly's a good design. People don't appreciate the substance of things. Objects in space. People miss out on what's solid.
N3rV[Green]
Profile Blog Joined August 2009
United States1935 Posts
February 28 2012 15:53 GMT
#25
And I've been told by people who have done the work that all they need is stuff corrosive enough to break apart the rock. They seriously don't give a shit what they throw into the ground. They don't even get 100% of the solution back up to the surface, and even if they do it just sits in a pool (generally uncovered, I fucking live out there where most of this is going on man, I've seen plenty with mine own two eyes) and they just leave it once they're done.

This practice is horrific and is being used purely for stupid financial gain.
Never fear the darkness, Bran. The strongest trees are rooted in the dark places of the earth. Darkness will be your cloak, your shield, your mother's milk. Darkness will make you strong.
TheToast
Profile Blog Joined August 2010
United States4808 Posts
February 28 2012 16:02 GMT
#26
On February 29 2012 00:53 N3rV[Green] wrote:
And I've been told by people who have done the work that all they need is stuff corrosive enough to break apart the rock. They seriously don't give a shit what they throw into the ground. They don't even get 100% of the solution back up to the surface, and even if they do it just sits in a pool (generally uncovered, I fucking live out there where most of this is going on man, I've seen plenty with mine own two eyes) and they just leave it once they're done.

This practice is horrific and is being used purely for stupid financial gain.


In my experience the people actually doing the work tend to have little or no understanding of the engineering behind it; they usually just do whatever the engineers tell them to do.

I'm not going to defend the actions of the oil companies; clearly they have shown that when left unregulated as they ahve been in many developing countries like Nigeria, they have no issues about leaving behind large, toxic messes.

What I am defending is the practice of fracking. There's really been no conclusive evidence that there is anything that makes fracking more enviromentally unfriendly than any other form of oil or gas extraction. Yes, if you are leaving pools of chemicals on the surface that's going to contribute to ground water and enviromental contamination. But banning fracking isn't going to solve the problem, the oil companies do the same stuff when extracting these items in more traditional ways.

The simple fact is right now the US and the world needs energy and renewable means can't provide what we need yet. The fuel has to come from somewhere.
I like the way the walls go out. Gives you an open feeling. Firefly's a good design. People don't appreciate the substance of things. Objects in space. People miss out on what's solid.
Logo
Profile Blog Joined April 2010
United States7542 Posts
Last Edited: 2012-02-28 17:03:13
February 28 2012 16:18 GMT
#27
Fracking is one of those things where who is funding the study seems to have a high correlation with what the study finds if I'm not mistaken. Things that are funded (directly or indirectly) through fracking companies have a very different result than those that are truly independent. Here's one such look into the 'independent' funding: http://news-beacon-ireland.info/?p=2862

Now that doesn't mean that fracking is good or bad, who knows. All it means is I have less faith in the current studies, and any reasonable person should. And personally, if we aren't sure it's safe and reasonable to the environment, then I don't think we should be doing it, but other view points on that matter seem reasonable to me none the less.

Anyways more importantly, that Kickstarter seems pretty bullshit. Middle/lower class is getting screwed by poor policy and a bad (for everyone but the super rich / megacorporations) economy and increasingly uneven wealth distribution. So their complaints are valid, but that's not a reason to support fracking or the gas companies. Basically these people have been screwed over, and some other company will 'save them' while also screwing them or the environment. So forget that, fix the original problem, don't make a bigger mess. Not to mention while you may want to support fracking for helping those people out, they $ amount they're seeing compared to how much the company makes is going to be almost nothing so it's not like the company is doing something altruistic and at best it's only a delay of the economic troubles of those areas (what happens when the company stops fracking there).

Edit: That first woman's argument is bullshit. She assumes either you want to hug trees or your support fracking. People can want something in between ffs. At some point it's reasonable to draw a line and say no more, lets try to find a better way rather than use the fact that we can't be completely environmentally friendly as an excuse to rape the land. Anyone who tries to divide issues like that doesn't deserve to be a part of the discussion; all of her points are unrelated to fracking.

Also the trap not to fall into is assuming that because a side has some inaccuracies, that the side is completely wrong. If we took that stance then SOPA/ACTA would have passed because many anti-SOPA/ACTA people kept mentioning things that had been taken out of the bills. Yet in reality that doesn't diminish the legitimate concerns.
Logo
Chill
Profile Blog Joined January 2005
Calgary25975 Posts
February 28 2012 16:26 GMT
#28
On February 28 2012 22:52 Adila wrote:
What I want to know is what is in the fracking liquid that is being used?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydraulic_fracturing#Chemicals
Typically water.
Moderator
Jehct
Profile Blog Joined July 2010
New Zealand9115 Posts
Last Edited: 2012-02-28 17:06:13
February 28 2012 16:43 GMT
#29
Uh, that documentary looks like total shit. A bunch of testimonials from poor, easily coerced and uninformed elderly with 0 real information as the selling point? Why would anyone support this?

Edit: Holy shit, just looked at the teaser for one of the other films made by these people (Not Evil Just Wrong). One of the highlighted reviews says (without context) that the film “..makes a mockery of the scientific methods practiced by the climate fear-mongers”, and the teaser has Southerners talking about how Al Gore and co. would destroy 7 million jobs. The immediate quote following is "that would bring civilization crashing down to its knees and hundreds of billions of people would die"so they counter 'fearmongering' with other, totally ridiculous fearmongering? And then they fucking emphasize it?

Anyone that gives a dollar to these people hasn't thought it through.
"You seem to think about this game a lot"
Chef
Profile Blog Joined August 2005
10810 Posts
Last Edited: 2012-02-28 16:51:50
February 28 2012 16:46 GMT
#30
What I don't understand is why the videos got taken down/why they're spreading fear. Is this supposed to be some big conspiracy to get people to use other methods of obtaining oil (even if they're less safe?) That sounds comical. Is it environmental activists taking a drug campaign route where they exaggerate some statistics out of some moral end goal?

What is actually going on? Does BBC often rely on donations to make documentaries? Honestly it just feels like some kind of appeal to hipsters... "I knew fracking was awesome before it was cool!" I would have liked to hear the rebuttal instead of just having him cut off before he made his point. I bet it was something like "yes, people have been lighting their water on fire, but that water is not safe to drink, or yes, they've been doing that, but it's actually more toxic than it used to be and is effecting the environment in a global way besides human's drinking water."

There's just too little information There's only enough to get mad, either at environmental damage, or at dumb people gettin scurred of a little oil in dur waturr.
LEGEND!! LEGEND!!
Nouar
Profile Joined May 2009
France3270 Posts
Last Edited: 2012-02-28 17:26:37
February 28 2012 17:26 GMT
#31
On February 29 2012 01:26 Chill wrote:
Show nested quote +
On February 28 2012 22:52 Adila wrote:
What I want to know is what is in the fracking liquid that is being used?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydraulic_fracturing#Chemicals
Typically water.


"about 50% or so of these MSDS sheets lack a specific chemical name, and some MSDS sheets simply claim 'proprietary' status and list none of the chemicals in that container."

Although some of the chemicals pose no known health hazards, some are known carcinogens, some are toxic, some are neurotoxins. For example: benzene (causes cancer, bone marrow failure), lead (damages the nervous system and causes brain disorders), ethylene glycol (antifreeze, causes death), methanol (highly toxic), boric acid (kidney damage, death), 2-butoxyethanol (causes hemolysis). Gamma-emitting isotopes (can cause cancer) are also included in the fluid. Some of the isotopes used are Gold-198, Xenon-133, Iodine-131, Rubidium-86, Chromium-51, Iron-59, Antimony-124, Strontium-85, Cobalt-58, Iridium-192, Scandium-46, Zinc-65, Silver-110, Cobalt-57, Cobalt-60, and Krypton-85.[25]

The 2011 US House of Representatives investigative report on the chemicals used in hydraulic fracturing shows that of the 750 compounds in hydraulic fracturing products “[m]ore than 650 of these products contained chemicals that are known or possible human carcinogens, regulated under the Safe Drinking Water Act, or listed as hazardous air pollutants” (12). The report also shows that between 2005 and 2009 279 products (93.6 million gallons-not including water) had at least one component listed as “proprietary” or “trade secret” on their Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) required Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS).

Companies are still not required to provide the names of chemicals in "proprietary" formulas, so the chemical lists are incomplete.


"Typically water", yes. It's as if you say cigarettes are "typically tobacco".

The process itself has some merits, the way they are doing it right NOW is awful, as usual with big companies.
NoiR
TheToast
Profile Blog Joined August 2010
United States4808 Posts
Last Edited: 2012-02-28 17:39:28
February 28 2012 17:38 GMT
#32
Nouar I love how you strategically neglected to mention this quote from that same article:

Chemical additives used in fracturing fluids typically make up less than 2% by weight of the total fluid.


While there is some very nasty stuff in the fracking fluid, including radioactive heavy metals, anti-freeze, boric acid, and methanol; they are extremely diluted. Likely the water on a high traffic road after a short rain fall is going to be more toxic, seeing that the solution would contain much higher concentrations of anti-freeze, motor oil, and fuel.

I also would question how much radioactive contamination, if any, results from fracking. It sounds like they use the isotopes as tracers, and my guess they use them in very small quantities. Some of them, like Iodine131, also have a very short half life. Considering that most natural sources of water already include several PPB of radioactive isotopes; one can't jump to any conclusions about the effects on the environment or people without some solid research.

I like the way the walls go out. Gives you an open feeling. Firefly's a good design. People don't appreciate the substance of things. Objects in space. People miss out on what's solid.
Nouar
Profile Joined May 2009
France3270 Posts
Last Edited: 2012-02-28 17:50:09
February 28 2012 17:48 GMT
#33
On February 29 2012 02:38 TheToast wrote:
Nouar I love how you strategically neglected to mention this quote from that same article:

Show nested quote +
Chemical additives used in fracturing fluids typically make up less than 2% by weight of the total fluid.


While there is some very nasty stuff in the fracking fluid, including radioactive heavy metals, anti-freeze, boric acid, and methanol; they are extremely diluted. Likely the water on a high traffic road after a short rain fall is going to be more toxic, seeing that the solution would contain much higher concentrations of anti-freeze, motor oil, and fuel.

I also would question how much radioactive contamination, if any, results from fracking. It sounds like they use the isotopes as tracers, and my guess they use them in very small quantities. Some of them, like Iodine131, also have a very short half life. Considering that most natural sources of water already include several PPB of radioactive isotopes; one can't jump to any conclusions about the effects on the environment or people without some solid research.



I know, that's why the cigarette analogy is good, because in fact they ARE mostly tobacco/water, but the rest deserve to be mentioned, too, especially when there are unknown (lol) products. Obviously they won't put plutonium in it, but still.

I was just pointing out the shadowed parts, the 98% water has already been mentioned dozen times in the first two pages. (the other 2% as well, but still :D it was to put a perspective to chill's simplistic post)
NoiR
TheFrankOne
Profile Joined December 2010
United States667 Posts
February 28 2012 17:56 GMT
#34
On February 29 2012 02:38 TheToast wrote:
Nouar I love how you strategically neglected to mention this quote from that same article:

Show nested quote +
Chemical additives used in fracturing fluids typically make up less than 2% by weight of the total fluid.


While there is some very nasty stuff in the fracking fluid, including radioactive heavy metals, anti-freeze, boric acid, and methanol; they are extremely diluted. Likely the water on a high traffic road after a short rain fall is going to be more toxic, seeing that the solution would contain much higher concentrations of anti-freeze, motor oil, and fuel.

I also would question how much radioactive contamination, if any, results from fracking. It sounds like they use the isotopes as tracers, and my guess they use them in very small quantities. Some of them, like Iodine131, also have a very short half life. Considering that most natural sources of water already include several PPB of radioactive isotopes; one can't jump to any conclusions about the effects on the environment or people without some solid research.




What goes in the well is mostly water, what comes back up is water, plus chemicals, plus oil/gas full of emulsifiers and surfactants, the real danger is what happens when wells are not cased properly or if they are abandoned improperly, what goes into the well is not the real problem, this whole argument is a waste of time.

If pumping chemicals into the well was a problem we wouldnt use deep wells for hazardous waste injection. (I don't know if you knew we did that but we do.)

Nasty shit comes back out of the well as part of their production methods, and that is what is in holding ponds and its what people should be concerned with.
EerieNewb
Profile Blog Joined August 2010
Poland73 Posts
February 28 2012 18:02 GMT
#35
Interesting, but too many of you ignore the fact that in the video from 00:00 to 00:12 there is a guy behind them walking on water(just right to the woman's arm). Also cool that LA filmmakers shot their promo on a Polish beach :D, I would donate if I didn't have to pay my energy bills...
Trainrunnef
Profile Blog Joined July 2010
United States599 Posts
February 28 2012 18:49 GMT
#36
My biggest issue is that for many of the companies involved we have no idea what they're pumping in to the ground because it is "proprietary techology". Companies claim that they cant reveal their chemical cocktails for fear of competitors using their formula, but who knows who theyre really hiding that info from.
I am, therefore I pee
nanoscorp
Profile Blog Joined September 2010
United States1237 Posts
Last Edited: 2012-02-28 19:02:29
February 28 2012 18:59 GMT
#37
On February 29 2012 02:38 TheToast wrote:
Nouar I love how you strategically neglected to mention this quote from that same article:

Show nested quote +
Chemical additives used in fracturing fluids typically make up less than 2% by weight of the total fluid.


While there is some very nasty stuff in the fracking fluid, including radioactive heavy metals, anti-freeze, boric acid, and methanol; they are extremely diluted. Likely the water on a high traffic road after a short rain fall is going to be more toxic, seeing that the solution would contain much higher concentrations of anti-freeze, motor oil, and fuel.

I also would question how much radioactive contamination, if any, results from fracking. It sounds like they use the isotopes as tracers, and my guess they use them in very small quantities. Some of them, like Iodine131, also have a very short half life. Considering that most natural sources of water already include several PPB of radioactive isotopes; one can't jump to any conclusions about the effects on the environment or people without some solid research.



There's a huge difference between pure, drinkable water, and a 98% water / 2% hazardous chemical solution. It sounds to me like you're overestimating the impact of dilution. Take Lead for example. Safe blood concentrations are on the order of tens of micrograms per deciliter in the blood. To bring one gram of lead in solution down to levels acceptable to the body would require around 10,000 L of water. By mass, that's a 99.99% water solution. I still wouldn't want to drink it. Safe levels in Australia are set below 0.01mg / L, a factor of 10 beyond these rough estimates.

Bottom line: 2% is NOWHERE NEAR safe when you're talking about hazardous chemicals.

edit: math
TheToast
Profile Blog Joined August 2010
United States4808 Posts
February 28 2012 19:09 GMT
#38
On February 29 2012 03:59 nanoscorp wrote:
Show nested quote +
On February 29 2012 02:38 TheToast wrote:
Nouar I love how you strategically neglected to mention this quote from that same article:

Chemical additives used in fracturing fluids typically make up less than 2% by weight of the total fluid.


While there is some very nasty stuff in the fracking fluid, including radioactive heavy metals, anti-freeze, boric acid, and methanol; they are extremely diluted. Likely the water on a high traffic road after a short rain fall is going to be more toxic, seeing that the solution would contain much higher concentrations of anti-freeze, motor oil, and fuel.

I also would question how much radioactive contamination, if any, results from fracking. It sounds like they use the isotopes as tracers, and my guess they use them in very small quantities. Some of them, like Iodine131, also have a very short half life. Considering that most natural sources of water already include several PPB of radioactive isotopes; one can't jump to any conclusions about the effects on the environment or people without some solid research.



There's a huge difference between pure, drinkable water, and a 98% water / 2% hazardous chemical solution. It sounds to me like you're overestimating the impact of dilution. Take Lead for example. Safe blood concentrations are on the order of tens of micrograms per deciliter in the blood. To bring one gram of lead in solution down to levels acceptable to the body would require around 10,000 L of water. By mass, that's a 99.99% water solution. I still wouldn't want to drink it. Safe levels in Australia are set below 0.01mg / L, a factor of 10 beyond these rough estimates.

Bottom line: 2% is NOWHERE NEAR safe when you're talking about hazardous chemicals.

edit: math


I'm not advotating drinking the stuff.

But it's not ultra toxic dangerous wase either. If in some instance heavy rains were to flush a bunch of this stuff into a river, it's unlikely that it is going to create an kind of long term ecological disaster. If some of it does leak into the ground water, it's unlikely that it is going to severaly contaminate the aquifer. As I said, the rain water washing off of a heavily used road is likely going to be more toxic. However, if this stuff were to be allowed to regularly leak into the ground water over a large period of time, it certainly could certainly drastically contaminate an area or ground water aquifer. But any industry presents this kind of a risk. It's up to these companies to ensure they are following EPA standards and it is up to the government to punish them if they are not.

The idea that fracking is some kind of ultra enviroment destroying practice is just silly though.
I like the way the walls go out. Gives you an open feeling. Firefly's a good design. People don't appreciate the substance of things. Objects in space. People miss out on what's solid.
canucks12
Profile Blog Joined June 2009
Canada812 Posts
February 28 2012 22:24 GMT
#39
If you've ever been to the oil patch in northern Alberta (not fort mac, but around the Grande Prairie area) you'd soon realize that fracking does not deserve the hate that it's getting. There are many more harmful methods that should be dealt with, but are completely out of the public's eye. On that note, people in Brazil are still using mercury to float gold...

Fracking should be treated carefully and environmental and safety regulations should be strictly followed. If all that is said and done, it should be a very viable process to extract a cleaner energy source than coal or oil. It shouldn't be shot down like this.
Epocalypse
Profile Joined December 2011
Canada319 Posts
Last Edited: 2012-05-16 23:55:45
May 16 2012 22:00 GMT
#40
Now even movie stars are rising against Fracking. The problem is that they don't frame the question in a positive human perspective, and after they denounce it they provide no positive alternative that can replace the energy we would have made available for us.

This guy, Alex Epstein, wants to give a free seminar on fracking to any movie star so that they can start spreading a positive message.

Fracking 101:
http://bit.ly/fracking101

Here's a lecture by the same guy, very charismatic, invigorating, and has a positive message.
bw4life
ThermoNuke
Profile Joined February 2011
United States1 Post
Last Edited: 2012-12-07 03:04:20
December 07 2012 02:47 GMT
#41
I stumbled upon this thread by sheer accident. Coincidentally on one of my favorite sites to visit.

Let me start by being open. I worked on a frac crew for five years. Supervised for three of that.

Im not going to try to hit every single argument in the thread but I have to say that many people are sadly misinformed.

The statement that nearly all frac fluid is 98% is actually a true statement. On a typical water frac the harshest chemical additive we may carry is what is called a "biocide". An absolutely essential additive that prevents bacterial growth in rock formations. Now, this biocide is many times weaker than bleach in its undiluted form. You, those who seem to hate fracing, actually do more to pollute the water than a frac a crew does simply by washing your clothes, using bleach and chemicals to clean, even the drugs that are passed through your system and into your urine.

When we mix in this biocide it is typically mixed at a .5 gal PER THOUSAND gallons. That means for every 10,000 gallons of water pumped there is only 5 gallons of this mild chemical in the water. Do you realize that it is near impossible to even quantify that in a sample? And yes we run acid in our mixtures on most jobs.

How ever, on an average design we will run 2000 gallons of acid and then pump 700,000 gallons of water behind it. Do you realize that Dr. Pepper and Mt. Dew have more acid in it and is hundreds times for harmful than the acid content in frac fluid? Pull out a PH probe and give it a whirl sometime, you would be surprised.

It is absolute truth that the majority of what is pumped into the ground is just sand and water.

People say it contaminates the water supply. How ever these wells typically reach 15,000 to 20,000 feet deep into the ground. Your water table rarely goes deeper than maybe 1000-2000 ft. Were talking miles apart here.
Now I wont say there isnt pollution involved. The fact is you people want cheap energy. You curse us for providing what you want and then turn around and complain about high fuel costs. If you only had any idea how much cheaper natural gas is just because of fracing. Five years ago it was 14$ per thousand cubic feet. Now its 2-3$. And you hate us for that....?

The fact is having been involved in the operations and dealing with the environmental regulations and our own policies we leave many places cleaner than when we showed up. These same people flush chemicals down the drain, poison themselves with cigarettes, and pollute their own sources. But we be damned if we provide you with what you want: cheap energy bills.

And before you rant against me accusing me of some kind of corporate mouthpeice... I'm a gamer like most of you, have been since I was 13. Ive been involved with this industry for eight years now. It really really saddens me to see people rail against what provides for my family and YOURS with information they gleamed off the news or agenda driven youtube videos.

Please please do your own research and draw your own informed opinions. So many these days hop on bandwagons and never discover what true knowledge is. The ignorance that surrounds this issue saddens me deeply.

Knowledge is power guys. We have gotten so far away from that fact.
Watching an agenda driven movie is not knowledge. People have a way of taking rare occurrences and making them into daily events.
WTF!?!? SUPPLY BLOCKED!!
bonifaceviii
Profile Joined May 2010
Canada2890 Posts
December 07 2012 14:58 GMT
#42
A newly registered account stumbles upon a 7-month-old fracking thread "by accident"? J'accuse, sir!

PS: Gasland sucks
Stay a while and listen || http://www.teamliquid.net/forum/viewmessage.php?topic_id=354018
OmniEulogy
Profile Blog Joined July 2010
Canada6591 Posts
December 07 2012 18:11 GMT
#43
On December 07 2012 23:58 bonifaceviii wrote:
A newly registered account stumbles upon a 7-month-old fracking thread "by accident"? J'accuse, sir!

PS: Gasland sucks


He isn't wrong but I agree that it seems strange that he accidentally found this thread.
LiquidDota Staff
TheTenthDoc
Profile Blog Joined February 2011
United States9561 Posts
December 07 2012 18:20 GMT
#44
On December 07 2012 23:58 bonifaceviii wrote:
A newly registered account stumbles upon a 7-month-old fracking thread "by accident"? J'accuse, sir!

PS: Gasland sucks


The fact that his name is Thermonuke makes me think it's a joke.
screamingpalm
Profile Joined October 2011
United States1527 Posts
July 05 2013 06:47 GMT
#45
Since so many seem to dismiss "Gasland", thought this was highly relevant- Josh Fox was on the Daily Show promoting "Gasland II".

http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/wed-june-26-2013/josh-fox
MMT University is coming! http://www.mmtuniversity.org/
N.geNuity
Profile Blog Joined July 2009
United States5112 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-07-05 15:35:42
July 05 2013 15:34 GMT
#46
well since this got bumped might as well ask some relevant questions or points throughout the thread

my main question is where is a good source for actually good science on this stuff, because everyone spews off bullshit one way or the other and I know tl has some actual engineers and I'm pretty curious
1) 2% gives no fucking information and is misleading to almost be lying

I can look into it later but spouting "2%" or "nearly impossible to quantify" doesn't really give any meaningful information and extremely misleading. For example radon limits to prevent a 1/100 increase in cancer or so in US is 4 pCi/L which is ~70000 atoms of radon (4 *10^-12 pCI/L /(1.54*10^5 Ci/g radon-222 SA of radon) * 1/222 g/mol * 6.022*10^23 atom/mol). You're talking like 10^-17 g/L of radon. Almost fucking everything carcinogenic is measured in ppm or less (Eg love canal, one of US's bad examples of toxic substances, was causing problems with dioxin in parts per billion range).

very obviously carcinogenic elements/chemicals/whatever have a very large impact with a very tiny amount of material (in micro-nano gram range or less)

all that matters is if any of that 2% goes anywhere near water supply.

On Flammable water it is if the fracking contributes any higher methane (and national academy of science report says fracking can increase methane concentrations from ~1.1 mg/L to 19.2-64 mg/L near hydraulic fracking sites http://www.propublica.org/documents/item/methane-contamination-of-drinking-water-accompanying-gas-well-drilling

2) pH doesn't mean shit on health effects. soaps and lemon juices can be strong bases/acids.

3) shale gas is a short term bubble, in 2011 7.85 trillion ft^3 extracted for 34% of gas production in US (first number I could google; current rates 25 billion ft^3 a day which is ~9 trillion a year), there's an estimated 318-665 trillion ft^3 of recoverable shale gas. That's pretty much a 40-70 year plan at best, and probably the economic pricing will even back out in 20-30 years. The bubble is caused because fracking did make it so cheap
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cost_of_electricity_by_source#US_Department_of_Energy_estimates

iu, seungah, yura, taeyeon, hyosung, lizzy, suji, sojin, jia, ji eun, eunji, soya, younha, jiyeon, fiestar, sinb, jung myung hoon godtier. BW FOREVERR
Djzapz
Profile Blog Joined August 2009
Canada10681 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-07-05 15:51:26
July 05 2013 15:50 GMT
#47
I like that the video on KS is talking about how bad moratoriums and temporary bans are. Drill and ask questions later!

It's a natural resource, it won't go away. Wait for the fucking data to come in
"My incompetence with power tools had been increasing exponentially over the course of 20 years spent inhaling experimental oven cleaners"
FallDownMarigold
Profile Blog Joined December 2010
United States3710 Posts
July 06 2013 17:24 GMT
#48
On December 07 2012 11:47 ThermoNuke wrote:
I stumbled upon this thread by sheer accident. Coincidentally on one of my favorite sites to visit.

Let me start by being open. I worked on a frac crew for five years. Supervised for three of that.

Im not going to try to hit every single argument in the thread but I have to say that many people are sadly misinformed.

The statement that nearly all frac fluid is 98% is actually a true statement. On a typical water frac the harshest chemical additive we may carry is what is called a "biocide". An absolutely essential additive that prevents bacterial growth in rock formations. Now, this biocide is many times weaker than bleach in its undiluted form. You, those who seem to hate fracing, actually do more to pollute the water than a frac a crew does simply by washing your clothes, using bleach and chemicals to clean, even the drugs that are passed through your system and into your urine.

When we mix in this biocide it is typically mixed at a .5 gal PER THOUSAND gallons. That means for every 10,000 gallons of water pumped there is only 5 gallons of this mild chemical in the water. Do you realize that it is near impossible to even quantify that in a sample? And yes we run acid in our mixtures on most jobs.

How ever, on an average design we will run 2000 gallons of acid and then pump 700,000 gallons of water behind it. Do you realize that Dr. Pepper and Mt. Dew have more acid in it and is hundreds times for harmful than the acid content in frac fluid? Pull out a PH probe and give it a whirl sometime, you would be surprised.

It is absolute truth that the majority of what is pumped into the ground is just sand and water.

People say it contaminates the water supply. How ever these wells typically reach 15,000 to 20,000 feet deep into the ground. Your water table rarely goes deeper than maybe 1000-2000 ft. Were talking miles apart here.
Now I wont say there isnt pollution involved. The fact is you people want cheap energy. You curse us for providing what you want and then turn around and complain about high fuel costs. If you only had any idea how much cheaper natural gas is just because of fracing. Five years ago it was 14$ per thousand cubic feet. Now its 2-3$. And you hate us for that....?

The fact is having been involved in the operations and dealing with the environmental regulations and our own policies we leave many places cleaner than when we showed up. These same people flush chemicals down the drain, poison themselves with cigarettes, and pollute their own sources. But we be damned if we provide you with what you want: cheap energy bills.

And before you rant against me accusing me of some kind of corporate mouthpeice... I'm a gamer like most of you, have been since I was 13. Ive been involved with this industry for eight years now. It really really saddens me to see people rail against what provides for my family and YOURS with information they gleamed off the news or agenda driven youtube videos.

Please please do your own research and draw your own informed opinions. So many these days hop on bandwagons and never discover what true knowledge is. The ignorance that surrounds this issue saddens me deeply.

Knowledge is power guys. We have gotten so far away from that fact.
Watching an agenda driven movie is not knowledge. People have a way of taking rare occurrences and making them into daily events.


Just stumbled upon this reply accidentally, so I figured I'd throw in a comment... This post is filled with "bro-science". Saying things like "yo listen, we only put like 5/10,000 parts of X chemical in our water, so it's really weak, like pretty much weaker than when you wash your clothes, don't worry about it!" isn't very legit. The whole post sort of reads that way. Bro-science claim upon bro-science claim.

Now about fracking... I don't have it now, but I recall something recently published in Nature by a group of environmental scientists who studied fracking and found cautionary results. They argued that while fracking isn't doing anything immediately destructive, it may likely cause very unwanted effects down the line, especially with regard to greenhouse gas emission, etc.

So if you parade around like it's totally good and nothing is concerning about it, then you're being just as dishonest or perhaps genuinely ignorant as the ones saying it's pure evil
wherebugsgo
Profile Blog Joined February 2010
Japan10647 Posts
July 06 2013 18:59 GMT
#49
People in this thread don't seem to understand basic chemistry.

98% water 2% other stuff doesn't tell us anything. Different chemical compounds have different toxicity levels - something can have a 0.05% concentration and be lethal while something else won't be. Also, the concentration doesn't really matter when you're dealing with such huge volumes of liquid. There are going to be hundreds of tons of these chemicals (some of which are not even fully understood) in the average fracking operation.

If fracking were well-regulated and the industry had proven itself to be capable of safe operation, this wouldn't really be a problem. Groundwater contamination, air pollution, depletion of freshwater supplies, and radioactivity concerns are all really big issues with regards to fracking. The wikipedia article on it has some good sources for a lot of these things:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydraulic_fracturing#Environmental_impact

What's really scary is the impact of high radioactivity levels due to fracking. This article states that in 2012 there were 1325 radiation alerts in dumps in PA (up almost 3 times the number in 2008) and that at least 1000 of those alerts were set off by waste from oil and gas fracking operations. It's pretty clear that the industry doesn't care about the environmental or public impacts of their operations.

http://triblive.com/business/headlines/3945499-74/gas-radiation-radioactivity#axzz2T6owaYX
kornetka
Profile Blog Joined January 2010
Poland129 Posts
July 16 2013 10:09 GMT
#50
On December 07 2012 23:58 bonifaceviii wrote:
A newly registered account stumbles upon a 7-month-old fracking thread "by accident"? J'accuse, sir!

PS: Gasland sucks


Actually, ThermoNuke's profile was created on Tuesday, 8th of February 2011. Date of the post is December 07 2012. It's not really "newly registered account".
broodwar for ever
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