The EPA Fracking Miracle
Andrew Cuomo’s ban on drilling is
exposed as a fraud.
From the Wall Street Journal
So even the Environmental Protection
Agency [EPA] now concedes that fracking is safe, which won’t surprise anyone
familiar with the reality of unconventional oil and natural gas drilling in the
U.S. But if no less than the EPA is saying this, then the political opposition
doesn’t have much of a case left.
“We did not find evidence that these
mechanisms have led to widespread, systemic impacts on drinking water resources
in the United States,” the EPA observes in a 1,399-page report and multiple
appendices. By mechanisms, the researchers mean the practice of injecting water
and chemicals into shale at high pressure to extract oil or natural gas.
The environmental movement has
stoked speculative fears about chemical mixes leaching into aquifers, poisoned
potable water and toxic spills. States including New York, Maryland, California
and Vermont have used this pretext for fracking moratoriums or bans. Yet the
EPA study is the most exhaustive review ever conducted of the scientific
literature and fracking in practice. Dozens of researchers spent five years and
likely tens of millions of dollars.
EPA’s conclusion really is
remarkable. The agency has yearned for an excuse to take over fracking
regulation from the states, which do the job well. So if there was so much as a
sliver of evidence that fracking was dangerous, the EPA would have found it.
Think of this as the Obama Administration’s equivalent of the Bush
Administration failing to find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.
The truth is that state oversight,
industry best practices and especially innovation in technology and engineering
are more than adequate to protect water and the wider ecology, as well as the
prosperity that fracking underwrites. The EPA paper even accepts that the
domestic energy boom has “increased domestic energy supplies and brought
economic benefits to many areas of the United States.”
Some areas—but not all. One
exception is New York, where Governor Andrew Cuomo banned
fracking by executive order after winning re-election last year. The Democrat
hinted during his campaign that he was open to drilling, especially upstate
atop the oil-and-gas-rich Marcellus Shale that straddles Pennsylvania and the
Empire State.
But suddenly his health department
rolled out a report full of dubious science concluding that it could not say
with “absolute scientific certainty”—as if such a thing exists—that fracking
does not endanger the public. The department cited “potential water
contamination” and “the potential to affect drinking water quality.”
In other words, Mr. Cuomo’s sleuths
couldn’t find conclusive evidence that fracking harms drinking water, so he
banned it until they can. Even as formerly depressed and deindustrialized
Pennsylvania regions benefit from drilling, over the border the unlucky saps
must bow to the green superstitions of New York City elites.
The Rochester and Buffalo metro
areas are the third and fourth poorest cities in America after Detroit and
Cleveland, according to the Census, but they could become the northeastern
capitals of the U.S. energy renaissance. When even the EPA blesses fracking,
the self-serving political hackery behind Mr. Cuomo’s ban is exposed for all
the world to see.
Poster’s only comment: “We the people” can change our rulers
if we want to.
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