In 1930, my greatgrandparents purchased a beautiful farm in Bradford County, PA, in a little hamlet called French Azilum. In the summer, we spent time there, resting, breathing in the fresh air, enjoying the wild flowers, the bright stars and planets on a clear moonlit night, and swimming in the Susquehanna River. If gas drilling is allowed to continue, Bradford County and all of Pennsylvania will be forever changed, ruined beyond repair.
Don writes, "Folks, there should be solid rock in the streambed under my feet. It's anything
but solid." He describes the creek bed: "I found sediment several feet deep that shakes like pudding."
“The ‘control of nature’ is a phrase conceived in arrogance, born of the
Neanderthal age of biology and the convenience of man.”
Rachel Carson was
born in Springdale, Pennsylvania, and spent her childhood on a farm. She studied
English and Zoology at Pennsylvania College for Women (now Chatham College)
and received her M.S. degree in Marine Biology from Johns Hopkins University.
She taught Zoology at the University of Maryland before going to work for the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service where, in 1949, she became chief editor of
publications. In 1952 she purchased land on the Sheepscot River in West
Southport, Maine.
If the courage of a single human voice can be measured
by the ferocity of the attempts to silence it, the writer of The Silent Spring
(1962) stands as a truthteller of exceptional courage and insight. Her carefully
researched exposure of the environmental damage caused by widespread use of
pesticides was vigorously attacked by chemical corporations. In 1992 a panel of
distinguished Americans voted The Silent Spring the most influential book of the
past fifty years. Today Rachel Carson is revered as the founder of the
environmental movement in America. Her earlier books include Under the
Sea Wind, The Sea Around Us and The Edge of the Sea. In 1954 she wrote: “The
more clearly we can focus our attention on the wonders and realities of the
universe about us, the less taste we shall have for destruction.”
After
the publication of The Silent Spring Rachel Carson wrote to a friend: “The
beauty of the living world I was trying to save has always been uppermost in my
mind—that, and anger at the senseless, brutish things that were being done. I
have felt bound by a solemn obligation to do what I could---if I didn’t at least
try I could never be happy again in nature.”
Just so we're all clear: THIS IS NOT A SURFACE SPILL! This crap erupted from beneath the surface. The spray pattern on vegetation surrounding ground zero for this eruption spreads out at LEAST 25 feet or more in all directions. More to follow.
Thank you, Don Williams, for this video report. This is a nightmare.
Related news: LINK DEP issues statement...
Published on May 21, 2012 by GADCLuzerneCounty
http://www.gdacoalition.org
Residents of the Riverdale Mobile Home Park in Piatt Township, Pa. are facing evictions on June 1 to make way for an enormous water withdrawal facility. If Aqua gets its way, the company will be allowed to remove 3 million gallons per day from the Susquehanna and kick out longtime residents who have nowhere else to go. The water will then be transported via pipeline to fracking sites all over Lycoming County, Pa., where it will be mixed with poisonous chemicals and injected into the earth.
Taken from the road, Bailey Rd., Franklin Twp., Susquehanna County, Pa., on 5-16-12.
Mitchell home is just below the site. WPX Energy is the gas company involved.
Video taken by Vera Scroggins. Vera writes:
"See what it's like to live next to flaring of two wells; fortunately, it's the owners of this site that live next to it and have to experience this and see how they like it and whether they want all their neighbors to experience it, like they do. Their neighbors up to 3 miles away or more are hearing this throughout the whole day for days. [24/7]
Thanks, for disturbing our peace and country life and turning it into a gas field."
From Earthworksaction.org Flaring
Flaring is the practice of
burning gas that is deemed uneconomical to collect and sell. Flaring is also
used to burn gases that would otherwise present a safety problem. It is common
to flare natural gas that contains hydrogen sulfide (i.e., sour gas), in order
to convert the highly toxic hydrogen sulfide gas into less toxic compounds.
Flares emit a host of air pollutants, depending on the chemical
composition of the gas being burned and the efficiency and temperature of the
flare. Flaring results in hydrogen sulfide emissions if hydrogen sulfide is
present in large enough amounts in the natural gas. There may also be additional
by-products formed if some of the chemicals used during the drilling or
hydraulic fracturing process are converted to a gaseous form and are burned
along with the natural gas.
The Ventura County Air Pollution Control
District, in California has estimated that the following air pollutants may be
released from natural gas flares: benzene, formaldehyde, polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbons (PAHs, including naphthalene), acetaldehyde, acrolein, propylene,
toluene, xylenes, ethyl benzene and hexane. Researchers in Canada have measured
more than 60 air pollutants downwind of natural gas flares.
An interesting piece on how politics is being brought to bear on the Keystone XL pipeline project. Will it be attached to unrelated bills in Congress by Senate Republicans, or will some of these obstinate lawmakers hold off in order to gain an edge during the campaign? Is the destruction of our environment and aquifers something we should use as a campaign strategy?
Went to Snake Creek today, 5-18-12, and taped these bubbles streaming up and put a barbecue lighter to them which ignited the bubbles---watch -- this is in Franklin Forks near the swimming hole rope hanging from a large tree-- about 35 feet from the tree along the bank. Next to Snake Creek Marina , off route 29 , Franklin Forks, Susquehanna County, Pa. I've written and called the DEP and other regulatory agencies to investigate this. This is also near the 4 homes that recently since March were publicly equipped with methane venting stacks for high methane in their water wells. This is down the road from a gas drilling pad with four gas wells.
Published on May 16, 2012 by veraduerga
Taped 5-15-12. Great Speakers and Music. Fourteen PA. people came and Mark Ruffalo there. Speakers are Onondaga Nation Turtle Clan Mother, Sandra Steingraber- Biologist, Sen. Avella and his SB 4220 for a ban, Julia Walsh, Food and Water Watch, Wes Gillingham of Catskill Mountainkeeper, Ben and Elaine Perkus, Mark Ruffalo, Victoria Switzer of Dimock, Pa., Craig and Julie Sautner of Dimock, Pa., The Mohawk Ahkwesasne Women Singers.
"After working 17 hours straight at a natural gas well in Ohio, Timothy Roth and three other crew members climbed into their company truck around 10 o’clock one night last July and began their four-hour drive back to their drilling service company’s shop in West Virginia.
When they were just 10 minutes from home, the driver fell asleep at the wheel. The truck veered off the highway and slammed into a sign that sheared off part of the vehicle’s side, killing Mr. Roth.
About two months before the fatal crash, Mr. Roth nearly died in a similar accident when another co-worker with the same company fell asleep at the wheel after a long shift and ran the company’s truck into a pole. In 2009, Mr. Roth’s employer was penalized in New York, Pennsylvania and Utah for violations like “requiring or permitting” its oil field truckers to drive after working for 14 hours, the legal limit.
Over the past decade, more than 300 oil and gas workers like Mr. Roth were killed in highway crashes, the largest cause of fatalities in the industry. Many of these deaths were due in part to oil field exemptions from highway safety rules that allow truckers to work longer hours than drivers in most other industries, according to safety and health experts.
Many oil field truckers say that while these exemptions help them earn more money, they are routinely used to pressure workers into driving after shifts that are 20 hours or longer."
This drilling mud blowout is .2 miles behind Kunkle Motors of Route 309 in Dallas Township Pennsylvania.
Drilling blowout in Back Mountain
Published: May 8,
2012 The state Department of Environmental Protection is investigating a
blowout at a natural gas pipeline installation near Leonards Creek in
the Kunkle section of Dallas Township.
Chief Gathering LLC, which
was recently bought out by PVR Partners, is laying a natural gas pipeline
from wells in Susquehanna County to connect to the Transco interstate
pipeline in Dallas.
The blowout occurred last week as contractors were
boring beneath wetlands and some of the mud they were using blew out into
the creek, according to state Department of Environmental Protection
Spokeswoman Colleen Connolly. She did not know how much mud got into the
creek.
Hot off the press from Susquehanna County, PA, and environs! Don't miss the Spring 2012 issue just out!
Click here for great journalism.
Three Questions About Fracking
Five Stories and a Trailer Park: Gerri Kane, Carol French, Carolyn Knapp, Bill Pabst, and Matthew and Tammy Manning have experienced problems related to gas drilling. Read more...
Amazing Fact: Under current SEC rules, gas companies can sweeten their balance sheets by claiming reserves that have never been independently proven to exist!
Up in the north where the Susquehanna grows And the pipelines follow south where it flows And the deer herd dwindles -- especially the does Is the land of the angered angler. Deep in the endless mountains, they say If you look close enough, still to this day You can still see the footprints, the forked laurel branch Left by the angler, who could not, would not stay. Where was the angler -- where could he be? And why was he angry? Why did he flee? From up in the north where the Susquehanna flows? The old fracker still lives here. Ask him. He knows. You won't see the fracker. He's not very big. He hides in the crown block on top of his rig. He lurks in that crown block, as high as a crow And warms his brown socks while dodging the snow Using the gas that he pilfered from way down below. Go ask him, I tell you, go ask him today. He'll tell you, he will,if you're willing to pay. Why the angler was angered and went far away. It all started way back, such a long, long time back … Way back in the day when the river was clean And the bass had no lesions, their eyesight still keen And the trees were all dense, the critters content That's the day he arrived and set up his tent. In that pristine wilderness, he started to dig Using equipment bigger than big And plowed through the trees, Knocked them all flat He could have cared less for such habitat. Suddenly, with the sound of a cast And a zinging brown fly that flew right on past, The angler was there with barbed hooks galore He walked to the rig, he knocked on the door. And he demanded the fracker drill there no more. "I," said the angler, "speak for the fish Which you seem to pollute as much as you wish The bass are all splotchy, the snakes have no home You ran them all over with trucks caked with chrome And the deer have less room to graze and to roam." "You fool," said the fracker, "stop griping -- stop grumping." And on he continued with digging and dumping. The river glazed over, the creeks slowly died The bass couldn't breed, their organs all fried. The squirrels and the chipmunks, the deer and the snails The eagles, the salamanders and a few cottontails They all fled the land, looking for food. While the fracker drilled there, all greedy and rude. As the angler got angry, the fracker cashed in Until all the gas, and his wallet, got thin. And then, only then, did he see his mistake As he walked past a poisoned and decaying snake And faced the angler, who was red in the face. "Look what I've done to this wonderful place! I've turned it into a home of great waste!" The angler, he left -- he just disappeared Leaving the fracker alone, stroking his beard When he realized something both ironic and weird: Everyone, he thought, loved the fracked gas They used it for heating, for cooking their bass They shelled out their money, they made him mad rich And he drilled them more gas, all without hitch And they all were blind to the one glaring glitch. Everyone, that is, but that guy with the hooks The one who gave him such not-so-nice looks The angler was the one who tried taking a stand Who stood for the fish, who stood for the land. If only there were more who together would band … The sportsmen, the anglers, the hunters, the trappers The campers, the farmers, the trail-bound horsebackers All of them united, all with one voice. Do you, faithful reader, plan to make the right choice? Then join in the cause, save the Valley's outdoorsBefore our natural treasures are heard from no more!
The Allegheny National Forest is plagued with abandoned,wells that have been left behind, unplugged by oil and gas operators. Not only are many of these wells spewing methane into the atmosphere, but fluids are being released from these wells and are being consumed by game and wildlife.
A deer drinks contaminated water from unplugged well
LONDON (Reuters) - The shale energy
boom is fuelling a rise in the burning of waste gas after years of decline, a
World Bank source told Reuters ahead of the release of new data, giving
environmentalists more ammunition against the industry.
Global gas flaring crept up by 4.5
percent in 2011, the first rise since 2008 and equivalent to the annual gas use
of Denmark, preliminary data from the World Bank shows.
The increase is mostly due to the
rise in shale oil exploration in North Dakota, propelling the United States into
the top 10 gas flaring countries along with Russia, Nigeria and
Iraq.
The preliminary data - which will be
released in detail later in May - shows that global gas flaring crept up to
around 140 billion cubic meters (bcm) in 2011, up from 134 bcm the previous
year.
Flaring is used to eliminate gas at
mineral exploration sites, and is released via pressure relief valves to ease
the strain on equipment.
"The challenge in North Dakota is
that there is a lot of initial exploration and production going on, and often
some flaring is necessary at that stage," the source at the World Bank's Global
Gas Flaring Reduction Partnership (GGFR) said.
"We are hopeful that when the full
data is released, both policymakers and companies in North Dakota will pay more
attention to this issue and take the necessary steps to minimize
flaring."
The data will draw further criticism
to the industry, which some activists already condemn on environmental
grounds.
"Environmental regulations to stop
flaring are taking a real kick in the teeth because the financial crisis has put
the emphasis on increasing competitiveness, while anything that is seen as
diminishing competitiveness is not getting any political traction," Charlie
Kronick, senior climate campaigner at Greenpeace, said.
Britain's annual gas consumption is
just under 100 bcm, and Norway's yearly production just above that - which makes
the 140 bcm flared globally over a third more than Europe's top consumer and
producer, respectively.
In current market terms, 140 bcm of
gas would be worth over $100 billion in barrels of oil equivalent.
ECONOMIC WASTE
Gas flaring has fallen more than 20
bcm since 2006 - despite a slight increase between 2008/2009 - but the rise in
2011 indicates that companies and countries must continue to scale up their
efforts to reduce global flaring, the GGFR said.
Despite massive oil and gas reserves,
many top flaring countries suffer from chronic power shortages and stagnating
gas export volumes which experts say could be addressed if they used the gas
instead of burning it.
"It is key to show producers and
governments that there is a win-win solution - in many cases you're saving the
gas and putting it to a positive use and sometimes you're building energy
infrastructure that can be a catalyst for future economic benefit," Michael
Farina of U.S. energy engineering group GE Energy said.
In Iraq, the World Bank says that the
gas flared is enough to fuel all of the country's electric power needs, most of
which is unmet or generated by heavy fuel and crude oils, while Nigeria also
faces substantial losses from flaring.
"Nigeria loses billions of naira to
wasted gas while the nation's power projects are crippled as a result of lack of
gas supply," Nigerian pressure group Social Action said.
The wasted gas also causes immense
environmental damage, both locally and on a global scale.
The World Bank estimates that the
flaring of gas adds some 360 million metric tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) in
annual emissions, almost the same as France puts into the atmosphere
each year or the equivalent to the yearly emissions from around 70 million
cars.
If this waste were to take place
within the European Union's carbon emissions trading scheme, the flaring would
cost some 2.5 billion euros ($3.30 billion) at current market value of 7 euros
per metric ton of CO2.
Estimating that flaring amounts to
around 4.5 percent of global industrial emissions, environmental group
Greenpeace says current legislation fails to tackle the issue.
"The problem is that international
oil companies are not penalized for flaring gas," Greenpeace's Kronick
said.
The damage flaring does to local
communities is also immense.
Social groups in Nigeria say that
flaring in the Niger Delta, where some 30 million people live, has gone on for
40 years and led to acid rains, causing many illnesses.
"Flaring of gas endangers human
health and reduces agricultural productivity," Nigeria's Social Action group
said. ($1 = 0.7571 euros)
(Additional reporting by Oleg
Vukmanovic, editing by William Hardy)