Try your hand at managing the earth’s energy reserves| McClatchy

| McClatchy.

Try your hand at managing the earth’s energy reserves

Hydrogen sulfide gas found in sinkhole-area vent well | News | The Advocate — Baton Rouge, LA

Hydrogen sulfide gas found in sinkhole-area vent well | News | The Advocate — Baton Rouge, LA.

Marcellus Shale County Aims for Long-Term Gain – NYTimes.com

Marcellus Shale County Aims for Long-Term Gain – NYTimes.com.

PennsylvaniaStatewideWorkforceAssessmentv1_Final.pdf (application/pdf Object)

PennsylvaniaStatewideWorkforceAssessmentv1_Final.pdf (application/pdf Object).

Ohioans Protest Fracking Wastewater Injection Well 0A+A- Share 11-19-2012 Appalachia Resist A group of Athens County residents wearing hazmat style suits and respirators gathered in front of the Hazel Ginsburg fracking wastewater injection well site on Ladd Ridge Road in Alexander Twp. demanding that the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) shut down the well do to safety concerns. The protesters held banners that read “Shut it Down, No New Permits,” “ODNR: You Have the Facts So Close this Toxic Well,” “Our Safety is Not for Sale,” and “Clean Drinking Water is a Human Right.” Many of the signs were emblazoned with the symbol for radioactivity. The protest was in solidarity with those who are blockading the Keystone XL pipeline in Texas

http://ecowatch.org/2012/protest-fracking-wastewater/

11-19-2012

Appalachia Resist

A group of Athens County residents wearing hazmat style suits and respirators gathered in front of the Hazel Ginsburg fracking wastewater injection well site on Ladd Ridge Road in Alexander Twp. demanding that the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) shut down the well do to safety concerns.

The protesters held banners that read “Shut it Down, No New Permits,” “ODNR: You Have the Facts So Close this Toxic Well,” “Our Safety is Not for Sale,” and “Clean Drinking Water is a Human Right.” Many of the signs were emblazoned with the symbol for radioactivity. The protest was in solidarity with those who are blockading the Keystone XL pipeline in Texas.

Pipeline Safety Tracker – ProPublica

Pipeline Safety Tracker – ProPublica.

Pipelines Explained: How Safe are America’s 2.5 Million Miles of Pipelines? – ProPublica

Pipelines Explained: How Safe are America’s 2.5 Million Miles of Pipelines? – ProPublica.

SkyTruth Releases Fracking Chemical Database –

See http://frack.skytruth.org/fracking-chemical-database

SkyTruth has released a database created from more than 27,000
industry reports on the chemicals used in hydraulic fracturing, or
“fracking.” This data, obtained through a great expenditure of time
and effort by SkyTruth personnel, is being made freely available to
the public for research and analysis. This dataset is scrubbed from
FracFocus, and made more available through the hard work of Sky Truth.

Texas, North Dakota, Pennsylvania and five other states require
disclosure through FracFocus to respond to public calls for
transparency, but with the tools provided by FracFocus, data
aggregation and analysis is impossible. Despite these critical
shortcomings, the White House has identified this website as a tool
for providing transparency.

Unfortunately, more states are considering using FracFocus to address
calls for disclosure and the Bureau of Land Management is currently
finalizing new rules for fracking that will apply to millions of acres
of public land. In order for the public to be informed about the type
and amount of chemicals being used in fracking, sometimes even in
their backyards, SkyTruth believes this data must be made much more
accessible.

The data were extracted from chemical disclosure reports submitted by
industry toFracFocus.org, for gas and oil wells fracked between
January 2011- August 2012. The SkyTruth Fracking Chemical Open
Database is the first free resource enabling research and analysis of
the chemicals used in fracking operations nationwide.

“The intelligible disclosure of industry information and data through
this SkyTruth action will make the task of research on the effects of
fracking much easier,” said Dr. Tony Ingraffea, professor of Civil and
Environmental Engineering at Cornell University. “This large and
ever-expanding dataset is invaluable for cross-referencing with other
datasets such as health and environmental quality.”

See http://frack.skytruth.org/fracking-chemical-database

Statement re: DOH Refusal to Share Details on Fracking Health Study

Statement re: DOH Refusal to Share Details on Fracking Health Study.

FOIA Request

DOH Reply

Health Risk Assessment of Air Emissions From Unconventional Natural Gas – HMcKenzie2012.pdf (application/pdf Object)

Health Risk Assessment of Air Emissions From Unconventional Natural Gas – HMcKenzie2012.pdf (application/pdf Object).