The
Daily Caller
Energy
secretary: Fracking can be done safely
by Michael Bastasch
08/01/2013
Energy
Secretary Ernest Moniz said that
hydraulic fracturing can be done safely and there has been no evidence
the
drilling technique causes groundwater contamination.
“I
still have not seen any evidence of fracking
per se contaminating groundwater,” Moniz told reporters at a Christian
Science
Monitor breakfast on Thursday, adding that natural gas could be used as
a
“bridge to a low carbon future” as it releases about one-third to
one-half as
much carbon dioxide as other fossil fuels.
Environmentalists
have been pressuring the
federal government to clamp down on fracking over concerns that it
causes water
contamination. However, a recent Energy Department study found no
evidence of
groundwater contamination from natural gas drilling sites in western
Pennsylvania. In fact, the study found that fracking fluid stayed
nearly a mile
below drinking water supplies.
The
Environmental Protection Agency has also
failed on three separate occasions to link groundwater contamination to
fracking, most recently abandoning a study on the issue in Pavillion,
Wyo. The
agency is currently working on a separate nationwide study on fracking,
which
it said won’t be completed until 2016.
“The
EPA has been on a witch hunt to shut down
hydraulic fracturing, but yet again the evidence has determined it is
safe,”
said Louisiana Republican Sen. David Vitter. “All too often we see the
Agency
using flawed science for political purposes, but this is EPA’s third
strike on
hydraulic fracturing. There has been such positive progress with
hydraulic
fracturing — clearly the brightest spot in our otherwise slumping
economy — and
I’m certainly pleased the EPA is stepping aside and allowing the state
to once
again take the lead.”
Fracking
involves injecting fluids into cracks
in rock formations to widen them and allow more oil and gas to escape,
increasing the amounts that can be recovered. However, Moniz said that
there
have been a few instances where methane got into groundwater due to
faulty well
design, but stressed that such problems were “manageable.”
“Manageable
means it still has to be managed,”
Moniz added, stressing the importance of proper regulations.
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