Deep Drilling, Deep Pockets in NYS”: Pro-fracking interests spent $64.3 million from 2007 to 2013

Deep Drilling, Deep Pockets in NYS”: Pro-fracking interests spent $64.3 million from 2007 to 2013.

Climate of Doubt | FRONTLINE | PBS

Climate of Doubt | FRONTLINE | PBS.

Capital Business Blog » Hundreds turn out for pro-fracking rally at the State Capitol

Capital Business Blog » Hundreds turn out for pro-fracking rally at the State Capitol.

ExxonMobil’s Dirty Secrets, from Indonesia to Nigeria to Washington: Steve Coll on “Private Empire”

ExxonMobil’s Dirty Secrets, from Indonesia to Nigeria to Washington: Steve Coll on “Private Empire”.

Connecting the Dots: The Marcellus Natural Gas Play Players – Part 1

Connecting the Dots: The Marcellus Natural Gas Play Players – Part 1.

FACT CHECK: More US drilling didn’t drop gas prices

FACT CHECK: More US drilling didn’t drop gas prices.

Lobbying: American Gas Association seeking to spread its influence well beyond the Beltway — 12/09/2011 — www.eenews.net

Lobbying: American Gas Association seeking to spread its influence well beyond the Beltway — 12/09/2011 — www.eenews.net.

Deep Drilling Deep Pockets – Fracking Report – Common Cause

Deep Drilling Deep Pockets – Fracking Report – Common Cause.

 

Money in Politics

Deep Drilling, Deep Pockets

A faction of the natural gas industry has invested more than $747 million as part of a 10-year lobbying and political spending campaign to persuade federal authorities to ignore the dangers of hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” a rapidly expanding but poorly regulated method of tapping gas reserves.

 

Fracking involves injecting a mix of sand, chemicals, and water into a well at high pressure in order to break up underground rock formations and free up natural gas. Pollution may occur underground, with fracking chemicals or methane directly contaminating aquifers and drinking wells, or above ground, as streams or tributaries are polluted by spills or improper wastewater disposal.

 

Despite the pollution risks, the industry has argued that regulatory exemptions for fracking are needed to give America the opportunity to tap vast reserves of natural gas that have been previously unobtainable.

 

The Environmental Protection Agency is scheduled to publish new, preliminary findings about the potential dangers of fracking in 2012. That gives the natural gas industry a powerful incentive to increase its political spending now in an attempt to shape public opinion and the debate over fracking in Congress, as well as affect the outcome of the 2012 Congressional elections. Doing so will be much easier after last year’s U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Citizens United. This ruling threw out a century-old ban on corporate spending around elections and empowered corporations to exert even more influence over the political process. Now money spent on campaign contributions, lobbying, and through other avenues of influence such as the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) can be backed by millions spent on electioneering. Read the press release.

 

 

Download the Report

 

 

 

 

 

Ohio

Ohio Fracking Report (PDF)

Fracking money spreadsheet (Excel)

Michigan

Michigan Fracking Report (PDF)

Press Release
Fracking money spreadsheet (Excel)

Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania Fracking Report (PDF)
Press Release