Michael Giberson
Tuesday night a Cheasapeake Energy fracking operation in Pennsylvania suffered a breakdown resulting in the spill of thousands of gallons of fracking fluids at the drilling site and into a local stream.
The news reports so far are kind of sketchy on the scope of the potential damages. They report “thousands of gallons” of fluids spilled, but that phrase encompasses a range from 2 thousand to 999 thousand and isn’t very descriptive: Two thousand gallons is enough water to fill a relatively small backyard swimming pool, 999 thousand gallons is a very large municipal water tower.
How dangerous the spill sounds in new stories varies a bit:
- A Forbes blogger said, “thousands of gallons of salt water, likely mixed with minute quantities of chemicals used in the controversial but long-established fracking process have reportedly spilled out of the well and into a stream.”
- Bloomberg reported, “Chesapeake Energy Corp. is trying to regain control of a natural-gas well in rural Pennsylvania that erupted yesterday, spilling chemically treated water into a creek and prompting evacuations of nearby residents.
- An Associated Press story in the New York Times said, “thousands of gallons of chemical-laced water [spilled], contaminating a stream and forcing the evacuation of seven families who live nearby as crews struggled to stop the gusher.”
The small backyard swimming pool could also be described as “chemically treated water” (and that municipal water tower), though I suppose if a backyard swimming pool leaked its “thousands of gallons of chemical-laced water” there would be no need to evacuate neighbors.
A more recent Associated Press story says that the driller, Cheasapeake, says “initial testing has found little impact on waterways from a spill of thousands of gallons of drilling fluids from a well site in rural northern Pennsylvania.” Of course you would expect them to say that. The state of Pennsylvania will be testing streams and groundwater in the area.
The last year has included the Upper Big Branch Coal mine disaster, the Deepwater Horizon explosion and oil spill, and the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear accident as a result of the Tohoku earthquake/tsunami.
When you concentrate energy to the point where it is worthwhile to produce, you create a risk of a disaster.
Environmentalists will find confirmation of their belief that mankind should abandon those activities, and return to a natural life of being hunter gatherers.
Lawyers will wag their tails and salivate at the chance to turn misery into cash in their pockets.
Politicians will seize upon the opportunity to run their protection racket, by claiming that more government employees will prevent future problems.
Intelligent people will conclude that prudent precautions need to be taken.
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