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June 21, 2011
On June 21, 2011, the Environmental and Energy Study Institute (EESI) and Heinrich Boell Foundation held a briefing on the development of shale gas using hydraulic fracturing technology. Also known as "fracking", the increased deployment of this technology has come under greater scrutiny in the United States and Germany for numerous reasons: increased water use, impact of the chemicals used, challenges of how to treat wastewater, and induced seismicity. Recent research by Cornell University found that shale gas has a greenhouse gas footprint comparable to coal. At this briefing, U.S. and German experts from the state, federal, and NGO communities shared their perspectives as both countries debate whether and how fracking should be regulated to preserve the economic benefits gained from lower natural gas prices and to protect the health of communities near well sites.
Related Media Coverage
Regulating hope out of gas? Nonsense. by John Quigley, PennFuture blog Regulating the Hope Out of Natural Gas by Andrea Seffens, Freedom Works Pa. regulators 'playing catch-up' on fracking, former official says by Mike Soraghan, E&E News (subscription required)
Background
While Poland has announced major investments in shale gas development as a way to break free from Russian natural gas, countries like France and Germany are proceeding cautiously over environmental concerns. Yet, Germany plans to phase out its 17 nuclear reactors and needs to find replacement power that meets its climate goals. Meanwhile, Pennsylvania, New York, and other states are struggling with the goal to produce energy domestically and the need to protect the well being of communities over which shale gas is located. The U.S. EPA has undertaken a multi-year effort to study the effects of fracking on water resources while a growing body of recent scientific reports point to the negative effects current fracking practices have on the environment and communities.