I’m not sure how many of you have seen the shit film by Josh Fox (This link leads to the Wikipedia entry about him. I wouldn’t give him the oxygen of publicity by linking to his film. If you want to go there, that’s up to you) purporting to show, how drilling for shale gas is allowing gas to rise into the drinking water aquifers.
The video below shows the real story of how Fracking for gas is not the demon it was portrayed by the ecomentalist loons.
Her story:
Flammable faucets. Top-secret chemicals. Sick livestock. Ominous voice-overs. Grainy video. And that banjo … that incessant banjo.
Shelly had seen and heard enough.
Is hydraulic fracturing — one of many key processes used to produce America’s enormous reserves of natural gas — as unsafe and environmentally ruinous as some have said? The way Gasland director Josh Fox tried so hard to portray it on HBO?
Shelly certainly had a stake in the answer. A teacher by trade from rural northeast Pennsylvania, Shelly lives with her husband, four children and granddaughter on a farm that’s been part of her husband’s family since 1890. Of course, that farm also happens to sit atop the Marcellus Shale, one of the largest natural gas fields in the world. If accessing those resources wasn’t safe, she thought, then neither was her family. She owed it to them — and to herself — to find out the truth. After all, wells were being considered for her property.
Dispatches from the Real Gasland
If only our government would step back and see how dire our energy requirements are going to become in the next few years and realise that Fracking for gas and oil may just help bring about the saving of our economy.
I’ve posted this before. We just need to get a move on.
I don't think David Cameron's father would ever forgive him if he turned against windfarms, as he makes a packet from one on his estate.
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ReplyDelete"If only our government would step back and see how dire our energy requirements are"..........
Take a peak at this video:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=umFnrvcS6AQ
He puts things into perspective, I think.