Imagesource:http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2013/07/06/arts/06GASLAND/06GASLAND-superJumbo.jpg
No the above image is NOT a photo-shopped image you see, but a still from the documentary Gasland 2 screened on a movie night hosted by the Student Sustainability Collective at Riverside Community College. This homeowner's water supply could be set on fire just like most homeowners' water supply affected by fracking. I really had no idea what fracking was (which is what the documentary is about) and didn't really think it affected me. Now I've come to learn that there is big support and plans to have fracking in California. "In most states, fracking operations are designed to extract natural gas reserves. In California, it’s all about oil. California has the largest shale oil play in the nation- the Monterey Shale. It spans much of the Central Valley and Southern California. It lies below many of the sources of drinking water for Central Valley residents and contains an estimated 13.7 billion barrels of recoverable oil that have historically been too difficult to extract." Yes, alternative energy sources are important so that the U.S. does not have to be so dependent on foreign energy sources, but at what cost? After viewing Gasland 2 I can say that the repercussions of fracking are unsafe and harmful and I strongly oppose any plans for fracking anywhere! The one thing that really scared me about the movie was the way that government was portrayed. The government is actually under the govern of corporations and companies as evidenced by the film, and if we can't turn to the government for help where can we go? I highly recommend this movie!
Here are notes I took while watching the film, so you can get an idea of what the film's about:
- Gas industry denies water contamination and air pollution result of fracking, "We don't believe... haven't seen proof..."
- Families told not to fish or swim in ponds because of unsafe water, altering their lifestyle
- Victoria Switzer-property values decrease, "hey have to bring your own water"
- Cabbot Oil and Gas had contaminated Dimmick, Pennsylvania water with methane (causing it to be able to set on fire)
- EPA told pavilion residents not to drink their water
- natural filtration in ground wont filter fracking chemicals
- this isn't news, resource extraction at expense of indigenous people done for years in the history of the U.S.
- Some residents forced to leave their homes because house can blow up, or they were getting really sick. forced to take the financial loss
- Counterinsurgency, psy-ops techniques used by companies against public. military terms
- Cement failure within the fracking systems at high rates, allowing chemicals to escape into resorvoirs
- fracking cause of earthquakes
- natural gas good for weaning of fossil fuels
- sufficient clean renewable energy available (wind)- do not need to dig for fuels
- corporations have high influence in government more than ever
- court cases with angry homeowners settled with nondisclosure agreements
- EPA rep said they could not tell the truth (lied and said water was safe). They have to listen to the higher ups in D.C.
- oil control business has so much money and power over what's going on with fracking
- own government afraid of a business
Sources:If you would like to learn more about fracking in California visit:http://www.cleanwateraction.org/fracking-california
Great post! I knew very little about Fracking until this class, and now I want to know more. The video is definitely one to watch now.
ReplyDeleteRecently I read an article about a family in Texas that sued and won over a Fracking Law suit. The company had released harmful chemicals into the air that was harming their family, and forced an evacuation. So I can definitely believe the photo!