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Mr Khan said:
mrstickball said:
Mr Khan said:
 

Because it causes groundwater to catch fire, and the companies are allowed to keep whatever poisons they're pumping into the ground perfectly secret.

 

Poison is not a worthy tradeoff for profits. There needs to be a moratorium on fracking before it can be brought under proper environmental scrutiny with careful guidelines set in place for all companies to follow.

 

and lol at "Right to Work." The only "right" you have is to be fired if you get too uppity. That's what your "rights" afford you.

 

Care to cite an actual scientific study on fracking causing groundwater to be contaminated - enough to catch the water on fire? The last video I saw of it, the people went to jail for slander and falsification of the incedent.

The documentary Gasland is more or less what i've needed on this. Of course, it's a moving target, as those companies have faced enough scrutiny to tighten up the screws on environmental considerations, but Federal legislation is still needed. At least to make them non-exempt under the Clean Water and Clean Air acts like they are now.


A greater part of that movie is fraudulent. You shouldn't put so much faith in a documentary without doing some additional research to verify the claims.

http://www.kioga.org/communications/reports/GasLandDebunked.pdf/view

http://www.nytimes.com/gwire/2011/02/24/24greenwire-groundtruthing-academy-award-nominee-gasland-33228.html?pagewanted=all

http://www.mediaite.com/online/josh-fox-and-gasland-does-the-media-prefer-smoke/

Feel free to review any of the links. As per the EPA, fracking is regulated by the Clean Water Act: http://water.epa.gov/type/groundwater/uic/class2/hydraulicfracturing/wells_hydroreg.cfm

Thier quote:

While the SDWA specifically excludes hydraulic fracturing from UIC regulation under SDWA § 1421 (d)(1), the use of diesel fuel during hydraulic fracturing is still regulated by the UIC program. Any service company that performs hydraulic fracturing using diesel fuel must receive prior authorization through the applicable UIC program. For more information on how the UIC regulations apply to hydraulic fracturing using diesel fuels please see EPA's Guidance issued for public comment. The UIC regulations can be found in Title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations Parts 144-148.


State oil and gas agencies may have additional regulations for hydraulic fracturing. In addition, states or EPA have authority under the Clean Water Act to regulate discharge of produced waters from hydraulic fracturing operations.



Back from the dead, I'm afraid.