This is a story about water, the land surrounding it, and the lives it sustains.
Clean water should be a right: there is no life without it. New York is
what you might call a “water state.” Its rivers and their tributaries
only start with the St. Lawrence, the Hudson, the Delaware, and the
Susquehanna. The best known of its lakes are Great Lakes Erie and
Ontario, Lake George, and the Finger Lakes. Its brooks, creeks, and
trout streams are fishermen’s lore.
Far below this rippling wealth there’s a vast, rocky netherworld called
the Marcellus Shale. Stretching through southern New York, Pennsylvania,
Ohio, and West Virginia, the shale contains bubbles of methane, the
remains of life that died 400 million years ago. Gas corporations have
lusted for the methane in the Marcellus since at least 1967 when one of
them plotted with the Atomic Energy Agency to explode a nuclear bomb to
unleash it. That idea died, but it’s been reborn in the form of a
technology invented by Halliburton Corporation: high-volume horizontal
hydraulic fracturing -- “fracking” for short.
Fracking uses prodigious amounts of water laced with sand and a startling menu of poisonous chemicals to
blast the methane out of the shale. At hyperbaric bomb-like pressures,
this technology propels five to seven million gallons of
sand-and-chemical-laced water a mile or so down a well bore into the
shale.
Up comes the methane --
along with about a million gallons of wastewater containing the original
fracking chemicals and other substances that were also in the shale,
among them radioactive elements and carcinogens.
There are 400,000 such wells in the United States. Surrounded by
rumbling machinery, serviced by tens of thousands of diesel trucks, this
nightmare technology for energy release has turned rural areas in 34
U.S. states into toxic industrial zones.
Shale gas isn’t the conventional kind that lit your grandmother’s stove. It’s one of those “extreme energy” forms
so difficult to produce that merely accessing them poses unprecedented
dangers to the planet. In every fracking state but New York, where a
moratorium against the process has been in effect since 2010, the gas
industry has contaminated ground water, sickened people, poisoned livestock, and killed wildlife.
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