Oil Executive: Military-Style ‘Psy Ops’ Experience Applied – US Business News – CNBC

Oil Executive: Military-Style ‘Psy Ops’ Experience Applied – US Business News – CNBC.

Counterinsurgency tactics used by gas industry:  http://www.amazon.com/Marine-Corps-Counterinsurgency-Field-Manual/dp/0226841510

I just read the full story, there is audio. This is shocking even to me —who thought I could no longer be shocked by anything,
TXSharon (Sharon Wilson) got this info straight from the conference! She did not even hide her identity. She paid to get in, used her name and her organization, OGAP and recorded this. http://www.texassharon.com/
Read and Listen here.

http://www.cnbc.com/id/45208498

Wood Mackenzie: Playing a smart shale gas hand – Oil & Gas Financial Journal

Wood Mackenzie: Playing a smart shale gas hand – Oil & Gas Financial Journal.

Insiders Sound an Alarm Amid a Natural Gas Rush – NYTimes.com

Insiders Sound an Alarm Amid a Natural Gas Rush – NYTimes.com.

U.S.   | June 26, 2011

Drilling Down:  Insiders Sound an Alarm Amid a Natural Gas Rush

By IAN URBINA

As investment floods into shale wells, concerns about their productivity are spurring talk of a bubble.

Copyright 2011  The New York Times Company | Privacy Policy

Ark. considers ban on injection wells (Wednesday, June 22, 2011)

An E&E Publishing Service

OIL AND GAS: Ark. considers ban on injection wells  (Wednesday, June 22, 2011)

State regulators recommended yesterday that the Arkansas Oil and Gas Commission implement a permanent ban on deep wells that are used to dispose of natural gas drilling fluids in an area north of Little Rock that has seen a swarm of recent earthquakes.
Two wells were shut down in February under an agreement between the well owners and the commission. Two others will have to stop operating if the commission approves the regulation at a July 26 hearing.
The ban would not stop natural gas drilling in central Arkansas’ Fayetteville Shale. Hydraulic fracturing can continue, but the millions of gallons of fracking fluid used in the 1,150-square-mile region would have to be trucked to injection wells elsewhere in Arkansas, or in Oklahoma or Texas, Commission Deputy Director Shane Khoury said.
Khoury said the commission worked with the Arkansas Geological Survey and the Center for Earthquake Research and Information at the University of Arkansas, Little Rock, before making the recommendation.
“This is similar to pending litigation — I can’t go into a lot of details. But based on our analysis … this is the correct and warranted regulatory response,” Khoury said.
Before the two wells stopped operating this spring, there were 85 earthquakes with a magnitude 2.5 or higher. Since then, there have been fewer quakes — 20 in the 18 days following the shutdown, according to the state Geological Survey.
Mickey Thompson, a partner in Clarita Operating LLC of Little Rock, said yesterday that earthquake swarms are a natural occurrence and that there is no reason to support the ban.
“We feel like the decision has been made and that we’ve been denied our due process,” said Thompson, whose oil and gas service company operates a well in the zone under the proposed ban. “We were believing there was actually going to be a scientific study and a scientific presentation, not a hunt for a political scapegoat.”
The commission will also recommend rules that would require setbacks from fault zones in other areas of the state, spacing between disposal wells, and the installation of seismic instruments near new or existing injection wells in the Fayetteville Shale region (Chuck Bartels, AP/FuelFix <http://fuelfix.com/blog/2011/06/22/arkansas-regulators-seek-ban-on-injection-wells-in-fayetteville-shale/> , June 22). — AS

The Marcellus Effect: If you don’t lease we will cut you out of production…. forever

The Marcellus Effect: If you don’t lease we will cut you out of production…. forever.

State pension fund invests over $1 billion in gas companies | Star-Gazette | stargazette.com

State pension fund invests over $1 billion in gas companies | Star-Gazette | stargazette.com.

Written by
Jon Campbell
jcampbell1@gannett.com

Living Wage

Living Wage figures for Tompkins County as calculated by Alternatives Federal Credit Union.

Expenses 2009 2011

Living Wage $11.11 $11.67

Rent $763 $811

Food $203.25 $203.60

Transportation $167.52 $179.03

Communication $61.49 $59.99

Health Care $143.53 $173.08

Recreation $100 $101.62

Savings $59.81 $60.78

Miscellaneous $111.13 $110.46

ALBANY — The State Comptroller’s Office has invested hundreds of millions of dollars from the state pension fund in natural gas and hydraulic fracturing companies in recent years, a review of the fund’s most recent listings shows.

In all, the $140 billion fund had more than $1 billion invested in more than a dozen energy companies as of March 31, 2010, a review by Gannett’s Albany Bureau shows. That includes $72 million in natural-gas giant ChesapeakeEnergy Corporation and $145 million in Schlumberger Ltd, a company specializing in hydrofracking and oilfield services.

The issue of gas drilling and hydrofracking has divided the state, with some touting the economic and energy benefits associated with the fuel. Others say the extraction process — which involves the injection of millions of gallons of water and chemicals to fracture shale formations — is environmentally destructive and could lead to water contamination.

“The main objective is to make money, so that’s always a primary concern. But (Thomas DiNapoli) has always been very clear in his interest in safety and risk mitigation,” said Ola Fadahunsi, a spokesman for the Comptroller’s Office. “That’s the delicate balance that you always have to (achieve).”

Records show the fund’s investments in several gas companies have risen significantly since 2008, when many of those companies began expanding aggressively after technological advancements made the massive Marcellus formation more accessible. An additional $15 million went to Chesapeake and Houston-based Cabot Oil & Gas Corporation in that time frame, as well as $30 million to Southwestern Energy Company.

Some of the investments have led to big returns, including Schlumberger. The fund’s 4.2 million shares were worth $296 million as of 2010, after the fund bought $145 million worth of shares over the years.

Roger Downs, a conservation associate for the Sierra Club Atlantic Chapter, said the investments in fracking and gas companies deserve a second look, saying it could pose a conflict if the state moves ahead with drilling.

High-volume hydrofracking is prohibited in New York as the state reviews its permitting regulations. A second draft of the regulations will be released this summer.

“It’s something that I think we’d like the Comptroller’s Office to look at,” Downs said. “I think if the state is profiting from natural-gas development at the same time that they are looking at potentially new regulations for the industry, there is a bit of conflict of interest.”

A handful of the fund’s largest investments are in energy companies such as Royal Dutch Shell and ExxonMobil, which have built their fortune largely in oil but have in recent years acquired companies specializing in shale gas extraction. The fund has invested more than $374 million in Exxon, for example.

Some of the companies receiving pension-fund investments have come under fire for environmental mishaps. Cabot paid more than $400,000 in fines to the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection and reached a $4.1 million settlement after faulty well construction led to methane seeping into a dozen water wells in Dimock Township, Pa.

Chesapeake made news last month when a blowout in Bradford County, Pa., led to a spill of thousands of gallons of chemical-laced water used in the hydrofracking process.

Both earlier this year and in 2010, DiNapoli was part of a group of investors to file a resolution with several companies involved with shale gas, including Chesapeake, Cabot and Hess. The group asked the companies to detail the environmental impact of their operations, as well as put forth potential policies to reduce emissions and environmental harm.

Most of the companies agreed with the request, while Carrizo Oil & Gas will put the resolution to a shareholder vote next month.

“The development of the Marcellus and other shale gas plays must be done the right way,” DiNapoli said at the time the resolution was filed. “As shareholders, we want these companies to assure us that they have a full and complete appreciation of the liability risk, and that they’re taking steps to mitigate those risks.”

Susan Lerner, executive director of government watchdog group Common Cause New York, agreed with DiNapoli’s action, saying it’s important for pension fund managers to stay on top of the corporations they invest in.

“One of the risks for a company that is involved in mineral extraction is that something goes wrong and the company is held liable, and then the shareholder value decreases,” Lerner said. “If the pension funds are shareholders, then they should behave like capitalists and demand that their investment be protected in whatever way is appropriate.”

Assemblywoman Barbara Lifton, D-Ithaca, has been one of the fiercest critics of hydrofracking in the Legislature, but said she trusts the work of the Comptroller’s Office.

“I assume they look at these decisions strictly as investments and keep the politics out of it,” Lifton said.

While the companies’ practices continue to come under intense scrutiny from environmental groups, telling the comptroller not to invest in an industry would be setting a dangerous precedent, said Sen. Thomas Libous, R-Binghamton.

“This issue has come up on a number of occasions, and not just as it pertains to fracking, but as it pertains to a whole host of things over the years,” Libous said. “If the comptroller started separating things out into what people agreed or disagreed with, there would be nothing to invest in.”

Fracking the Future – How Unconventional Gas Threatens our Water, Health and Climate

Fracking the Future – How Unconventional Gas Threatens our Water, Health and Climate.

Unconventional gas drilling is emerging as one of the most controversial energy & environmental issues in the United States and around the world today.

Advancements in extraction technologies, particularly horizontal drilling and high volume hydraulic fracturing (fracking), have enabled drillers to reach previously inaccessible gas in geological formations underlying several areas of the U.S.

Increasing public awareness of the threats posed by America’s dependence on foreign oil and dirty coal to public health and the global climate have led many – including some environmental organizations and progressive politicians – to embrace gas as a “bridge fuel” to help America kick its dirty energy addiction.

54 page report at: http://www.desmogblog.com/fracking-the-future/desmog-fracking-the-future.pdf

But recent revelations about the dangers that unconventional gas drilling poses to drinking water supplies, public health and the global climate are raising important questions about how “clean” this gas really is.

Scientists studying the impacts of unconventional gas drilling warn that gas is likely to have a greater influence on water, air and climate than previously understood. Major scientific bodies have cautioned against a national commitment to gas as a bridge fuel, citing the need for further research into the potential consequences of continued reliance on this fossil fuel.

A growing number of land owners, former gas industry executives and elected officials are also challenging the notion that gas is as clean as its proponents argue, and questioning whether unconventional gas drilling can be done without threatening drinking water supplies, air quality and the global climate.

Yet the gas industry continues to benefit from lax oversight and several exemptions from existing public health protections, such as the Safe Drinking Water Act and parts of the Clean Water Act that apply to other fossil fuel extraction industries. Recent attempts by federal agencies and lawmakers to improve oversight of gas operations have been met with strong resistance from the gas industry and its alliance of front groups and defenders in the media.

The gas industry’s influence in Washington has grown tremendously thanks, in large part, to the rapid consolidation of the gas industry into the hands of the largest oil companies in the past few years. Not long ago, the industry was made up primarily of what its proponents call “mom and pop” companies—small operators that drilled chiefly for conventional gas.

But with recoverable deposits of that relatively ‘easy’ conventional gas dwindling in the Lower 48, larger drillers have turned their focus to the more difficult and expensive unconventional gas plays.

Oil giants such as BP, ExxonMobil, Shell and Chevron now dominate the gas industry. The industry’s chief front group, Energy In Depth (EID), goes to great lengths to maintain the “mom and pop” image of the industry, claiming it represents small and independent gas producers.

However, its own documents prove that its early funding – and ongoing financial support – comes from many of the largest oil and gas interests.

EID and other gas lobby groups argue that federal oversight and increased scrutiny and accountability measures would harm the industry’s development and risk jobs. But big oil companies have made that same “economy-killing” argument for decades – a strategy they learned from tobacco companies and the chemical industry – while amassing record profits and enjoying spectacular growth.

Through intensive lobbying, campaign contributions and other forms of influence, these oil and gas companies have successfully thwarted efforts to hold the gas industry accountable for its impacts on health and the environment.

Now the same companies that brought us the Exxon Valdez spill, the BP blowout in the Gulf of Mexico, Chevron’s destruction of the Amazonian rainforest in Ecuador and countless other pollution examples, want the public to blindly trust them – with zero federal oversight – as they pursue drilling for much riskier unconventional gas throughout the country.

The question is, given the oil industry’s track record of environmental and health disasters, can the public trust them to get it right with the more challenging unconventional gas?

This report is designed to shed light on the rapidly changing composition of the gas industry and to raise important questions about whether the rush to exploit unconventional gas may be coming at too high a cost to the environment.

While coal and oil certainly pose their own significant challenges to health and climate, it is important to recognize that unconventional gas is also a dirty fossil fuel and does not belong in any credible definition of “clean energy.”

Given the extensive uncertainties surrounding the impacts potentially connected to the unconventional gas industry’s current drilling practices, it is only prudent at this point to insist on a pause for further evaluation. In fact, as a direct result of the recent Chesapeake gas well blowout in Pennsylvania that spilled drilling chemicals onto nearby properties and waterways, a former gas company executive called for a moratorium on all fracking operations near waterways in Arkansas’s Fayetteville shale region, stating that:

“There is no reason on Earth, if they are going to close it down there, they shouldn’t close it down here.”

It is becoming increasingly clear that the unconventional gas boom is happening too fast, too recklessly and with insufficient concern for the potential cumulative impacts on our most critical resources – clean air, safe drinking water and a stable climate.

DeSmogBlog joins those who are calling for a nationwide moratorium on hydraulic fracturing and other troublesome practices in the unconventional gas industry. Until independent scientists and experts conduct further studies, the public simply cannot trust the fossil fuel industry to continue with this dirty energy boom.

See:  http://www.desmogblog.com/fracking-the-future/desmog-fracking-the-future.pdf  for the full 54 page report

Fraccidents Map – Google Maps

Fraccidents Map – Google Maps.  Earth Justice

Drilling opponent to leave Pitt post – Pittsburgh Tribune-Review Apr. 10, 2011

Drilling opponent to leave Pitt post – Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.



Drilling opponent to leave Pitt post

By Luis Fabregas, PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Sunday, April 10, 2011
Complete coverage

About the writer

Luis Fabregas is a Pittsburgh Tribune-Review staff writer and can be reached at 412-320-7998 or via e-mail.

Ways to get us

.

A University of Pittsburgh researcher who is a vocal critic of Marcellus shale drilling said Saturday he is leaving his post because the university won’t allow him to speak publicly about environmental issues, not because of online criticism of his work.

Conrad “Dan” Volz, director of the Center for Healthy Environments and Communities at Pitt’s Graduate School of Public Health, said he was not fired or under pressure to resign, but finds he has a calling for advocating for public health.

“There is a basic philosophical difference,” said Volz, 57, of West Deer. “What the university is saying is that they don’t want people to talk about things. They want to do scholarly research and publish it in journals and have it go out into the world.”

Dr. Donald S. Burke, dean of the school, could not be reached for comment. Pitt spokeswoman Allison Schlesinger said she was unable to comment without his approval.

Volz claims drinking water is being contaminated by Marcellus shale drilling. He authored a report in March that showed a high concentration of bromide in Marcellus wastewater at the Josephine brine treatment facility, located in Indiana County, in the Allegheny River watershed. Bromide is a natural compound found in seawater that can form chemicals linked to cancer in laboratory animals when mixed with chlorine used to treat drinking water, Volz said.

“It is now starting to affect drinking water in the Pittsburgh area because the bromide levels in the rivers are so high,” Volz said. He and others say a drilling practice known as “fracking,” in which drillers shoot water, sand and chemicals into the shale to fracture it and free the gas, produces chemically tainted wastewater.

Volz’s work came under attack by unnamed critics in the online newspaper Canada Free Press. The critics claimed he misrepresented facts on the report.

Some Volz supporters said he has been honest and objective about drilling’s potential harm to the environment.

“He’s been a wonderful resource for those who want to know what’s happening,” said Mel Packer, a community activist from Point Breeze. “I hope he continues to speak and finds ways to speak out.”

Volz dismissed the online critics. He said there were some errors in his original report about the Josephine plant, but Pitt never challenged any of his research.

“I have made mistakes in all of my research, as we all do,” he said. “Those errors were minor really and didn’t have any influence over our overall recommendations or conclusions.” He did not describe the errors.

Volz is scheduled to testify on Tuesday in Washington before the Senate Committee on Environment & Public Works, which is holding a hearing titled “Natural Gas Drilling: Public Health and Environmental Impacts.” Robert Perciasepe, deputy administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, also is scheduled to speak.

“If this were an infectious disease, this would be stopped immediately,” he said about Marcellus shale drilling. “If this was Chi-Chis, and we had an outbreak of something, then all the spinach would be sequestered.”

Read more: Drilling opponent to leave Pitt post – Pittsburgh Tribune-Review http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/s_731592.html#ixzz1J89ASR2m

Gregory FCA and GoMarcellusShale.com’s Online Analysis of Public Opinion Pertaining to Marcellus Shale Development March 30th, 2011

https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&ik=04f0445243&view=att&th=12f07bda734ed5da&attid=0.3&disp=attd&zw

Gregory FCA and GoMarcellusShale.com’s Online Analysis of Public
Opinion Pertaining to Marcellus Shale Development
March 30th, 2011
Includes all available Nielsen BuzzMetrics data culled from over 45,000 traditional
media sources and over 150 million social media sources, including blogs, blog
comments, message boards, forums, Facebook, and Twitter.
Sentiment Scores are based on a 10‐point scale, ranging from +5 to ‐5. Plus five is
the most positive score and ‐5 is the most negative score. Zero represents neutral
sentiment.
This analysis was conducted by Gregory FCA and GoMarcellusShale.com, using
data from Nielsen Online’s BuzzMetrics.