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To: Citizen Zed

http://investigations.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/12/03/15627493-frightening-tale-about-fracking-draws-rebuttal-from-industry-group

Using the fatally flawed Bamberger-Oswald “study” on hydraulic fracturing as the focal point, the author weaves a carefully constructed narrative that does everything from repeating common (and debunked) activist talking points to claiming America’s cows are being poisoned to death by oil and natural gas development.

Of course, the story would have been much different had the author included (instead of deliberately omitting) scientific assessments that weren’t tailor-made for an anti-natural gas crowd.

How do we know they were deliberately omitted? Well, to her credit, Elizabeth Royte (the author of the piece) reached out to Energy In Depth several weeks ago about this article. She acknowledged having read EID’s work on the subject, and then asked me some pointed (but fair) questions about potential impacts on livestock and crops from hydraulic fracturing. I sent her a detailed response, including links to studies (more on that below) that demonstrate little if any negative impact on health as a result of nearby shale development. I also emphasized that concerns about public health should always be taken seriously, and the industry naturally does exactly that. But I also cautioned that simply blaming impacts on the most convenient thing (i.e. hydraulic fracturing) without scientific evidence does not solve problems, nor does it encourage the proper kind of public dialogue to address concerns.

Unfortunately, Ms. Royte did not see fit to print any of that, choosing only to include a brief mention of the lack of scientific pedigree in the Bamberger-Oswald paper – which was promptly bracketed by ascribing fault to the natural gas industry for a supposed lack of disclosure.

So, what else didn’t make it into the report?

First of all, the flaws in the Bamberger-Oswald study have been publicly documented. Dr. Ian Rae, for example, a Co-Chair of the Chemicals Technical Options Committee for the U.N. Environment Programme, called the study “an advocacy piece” written by individuals who “cannot be regarded as experts” in the subject about which they were writing. “It certainly does not qualify as a scientific paper,” Rae added. Rae also critiqued the journal that published the study – New Solutions: A Journal of Environmental and Occupational Health – by saying “the refereeing process evidently was not very stringent.”

I shared all of this information with Ms. Royte, but Dr. Rae’s commentary on the Bamberger-Oswald paper was omitted entirely from the story.

Secondly, although the article purports to be part of an “investigative reporting” effort, there was clearly a lack of interest in discussing anything that deviated from the Bamberger-Oswald paper’s conclusions. Here are just a few items relating to health impacts from development that I shared with the author, who nonetheless did not see fit to print:

Denton County, Texas: An analysis by two public health experts found that, “even as natural gas development expanded significantly in the area over the past several years, key indicators of health improved across every major category during those times.” Denton County is situated atop the massive Barnett Shale, one of the largest natural gas fields in the United States.

Fort Worth, Texas: An air quality study conducted for the City of Fort Worth – the largest and most comprehensive of its kind to date – determined there were “no significant health risks” from shale development in the area. Fort Worth, located in Tarrant County, also sits atop the Barnett Shale.

Pennsylvania: The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, in two separate reports of air monitoring in Pennsylvania – one each for the northeastern and southwestern portions of the state – “did not identify concentrations of any compound that would likely trigger air-related health issues associated with Marcellus Shale drilling activities.”

There are, of course, many more examples, including hard data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics that undermine the suggestion that hydraulic fracturing is a grave threat to occupational or community health. Most of us also know about the AP investigation earlier this year, which found that activists’ claims about hydraulic fracturing causing cancer and other health problems had little or no basis in fact, much less scientific evidence.

So again, why were these examples omitted from the report? It’s really anyone’s guess. The one common denominator, however, is that none of them conforms to the notion that hydraulic fracturing is somehow a “tornado on the horizon” – as Sandra Steingraber, the lead-in voice to the Bamberger-Oswald paper, once put it. In fact, a sober review of these materials – and a proper weighting of the credibility of those who released the information – might even lead people to realize that claims about impending doom are hyperbolic and, in many cases, flat out untrue.


3 posted on 02/25/2015 10:46:54 AM PST by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer)
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To: thackney

What? The “environmentalists” and “ecologists” would fight against further expansion of the techniques of fracking, by using hyperbole and demonstrated untruths?

Can they not present a rational argument, founded in demonstrated effectiveness, as to the worth of fracking as a means of extracting wealth from the environment? Or is it enough for them that wealth should NOT, ever, be extracted from the dear Earth Mother?

As far as cows being poisoned by the effects of coming in contact with spilled or escaped petroleum or natural gas, this argument is virtually unchanged from horror stories that were circulated since the early days of oil exploration and extraction in Texas and Oklahoma. All that “damage” was rapidly debunked even back then, and still, like a dog to its own vomit, they keep on going back the the same unfounded and disproved rants.


15 posted on 02/25/2015 10:57:22 AM PST by alloysteel (It isn't science, it's law. Rational thought does not apply.)
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To: thackney
Dude. Here's the deal. Keep fighting the good fight but know the deck is stacked against you. The Communists are breaking every law these days, lying with impunity, and winning. We will, as a society, go backwards a few decades, to 1970's Soviet Union. In a generation or two, we'll shake that off, like the USSR did, but we will go to a weak form of socialism, or like Russia did, become a kleptocracy.

And this time they will have these little miniature drones which will crawl or fly into your house and kill you.

35 posted on 02/25/2015 12:03:40 PM PST by Lazamataz (With friends like Boehner, we don't need Wemocrats. -- Laz A. Mataz, 2015)
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To: thackney

Bookmark.


45 posted on 02/25/2015 2:21:24 PM PST by SunTzuWu
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