
The segment in the transcript below starts at 11:00 minutes into the video.
Transcript
[McGINNIS] Welcome back to "Clean Skies Sunday." The Gulf spill is shining a spotlight on the environmental and health effects of generating all forms of energy. And now a new film is generating some buzz in energy circles, professing to expose the dangers of a type of natural gas drilling called hydraulic fracturing.
[MAN] Whoa! Jesus Christ!
[McGINNIS] "Gasland" filmmaker Josh Fox shows startling shots of folks lighting their faucet water on fire purportedly due to hydraulic fracturing. This is the method used to extract natural gas from shale rock. It involves injecting water, sand, and chemicals underground.
[WOMAN] It bubbles and hisses when it comes out. I won't drink it.
[McGINNIS] The film tries to illustrate that the practice holds environmental and health risks. We invited two experts to debate the issues raised in the film and issues hydrofracking now faces. Richard Haut, from the Houston Advanced Research Center, a nonprofit, nonpartisan center, and Walter Hang, president of Toxics Targeting in Ithaca, New York, which provides data to engineers and municipalities on contaminated properties. Here is some of that debate.
Flammable drinking water -- you can't argue with these graphic images, folks lighting their faucet water on fire, and this is apparently due -- and I'll ask you first, Rich -- to the practice of hydraulic fracturing leaving natural gas seeping into drinking water. Is this what's happening there?
[HAUT] Well, when I watched "Gasland," my first reaction was, my heart really goes out to these people. Everybody has the right to clean water here. And then I started looking into it, and it's a form of biogenic gas. And what that means, it's separated from thermogenic gas. Thermogenic gases are natural gas that we look at down in the gas shales themselves, and it's what we're trying to produce here.
The biogenic gas occurs in very shallow formations. It's created by bacteria, it's caused by landfills and other things. Every single one of those cases in Colorado, they are caused by biogenic gas. And so, when we look at the gas coming out of these faucets, it is not the natural gas that we are looking at when we drill these wells into the gas shales.
[McGINNIS] I've heard also that this methane migration can occur naturally. Walter, what do you say about these shots of folks lighting their faucet water on fire?
[HANG] Well, in New York State, Toxics Targeting reviewed more than 300,000 spills, many of them associated with gas drilling and oil drilling. We have state Department of Environment, the conservation documents that clearly show that gas has blown it right out of the ground, migrated through fractures in the rock, traveled as far as 8,000 feet in a matter of minutes, and literally has come blasting up inside people's homes, polluted their wells, was literally jetting out of the ground. People had to run for their lives because of this flammable gas.
I found a person in Candor, New York. There was seismic investigation going on near his home, and so they think that this may have been the cause of the gas that now is coming out of his faucet, and he, too, can light his water. So this kind of mining is very, very potent and there are lots of problems according to the data in New York fires, explosions, people being evacuated, polluted wells -- the data are absolutely sound.
[McGINNIS] Rich, how do we get to the bottom of this flammable water issue?
[HAUT] If we look at gas around the United States, 20% of that gas is biogenic, created by the bacteria in small formations, very uneconomical for people to go after. You can actually do a test and look at the isotopes and test that gas to see where it is coming from. Is it biogenic or is it thermogenic? Now, if it is biogenic, that means it is not coming from the gas shales. Like I said, the ones that were particularly pinpointed through "Gasland" in the movie there -- the Markham house, the McClure house, and the West Divide Creek -- were all biogenic gas.
[McGINNIS] Let's move on -- I wanted to point out that the producers of this film will not allow "Clean Skies" to air any clips from the film, though plenty are available on YouTube and elsewhere. One of the scenes shows a couple holding up a mason jar filled with water. Very, very dirty water, they said it came right out of the tap -- extremely graphic image. Give me a sense, Rich, how large of a risk is there to contaminated ground water caused by hydraulic fracturing?
[HAUT] You have thousands and thousands of feet of rock between the gas that we're looking at, the gas shale, and the fresh water zones. Then we have to look at the well construction itself. We have to ensure that this well is constructed in a proper manner, so there's certain design procedures, certain drilling procedures and everything that must be followed. It's required by law, and the state laws are very particular about where a casing, a piece of pipe, has to be set through and across the freshwater sands.
[McGINNIS] Rich, in a word, could hydraulic fracturing cause this dirty water -- yes or no?
[HAUT] There has been no known case where hydraulic fracturing has caused a channel to occur from the producing formation up into the freshwater zone.
[McGINNIS] Walter, you saw this mason jar full of dirty water, and you agree this could happen because of the practice?
[HANG] It has happened in New York. You can see a video of a fella named Dave Eddy in Allegheny County. They were fracking at a well across the street from his home. They told him they were going to frack, and a few minutes later, this incredibly dirty, toxic water came blasting out of his faucet, as his children were taking a bath.
You have the theory where there are regulatory controls, where you have all these engineering controls, everything is done safely. Then you have the reality of Deepwater Horizon in the Gulf, where things go wrong -- there are fires, these are explosions, there's contamination. All the seals fail, the annular cementing fails, and the next thing you know, you have an uncontrolled problem.
[McGINNIS] The debate continues on our Web site -- CleanSkies.com.
A catastrophic oil spill was waiting to happen.
That's what one expert who has studied government data on the huge and growing number of Gulf of Mexico spills is saying.
"There have been thousands of spills from 1990 to 2009," said Walter Hang, head of Toxics Targeting, an Ithaca, N.Y., company that tracks and analyzes federal hazardous spill reports.
While many were small, the sheer number of incidents is mind-boggling, Hang said.
They include scores of oil platforms and rigs that were destroyed by hurricanes, wells that "lost control," deep-sea risers that became detached or severed, boats that collided into oil platforms and sank.
Spills have increased dramatically under the Bush and Obama administrations. The federal Minerals and Management Service has recorded some 330 significant spills - those over 2,100 gallons - since 1964. Nearly half happened in just the past 10 years.
And you can guess which company suffered the most spills since 2000?
That's right, BP.
Federal records show BP reported 23 significant oil spills in that time - including two within weeks of each other in 2003, on the same Deepwater Horizon drilling rig that was destroyed in the April 21 catastrophe.
Here a few samples of those BP reports. As you read them, keep in mind that the oil companies - and they alone - have historically provided the official estimates of their spills. By now, the whole world knows by now how much we can trust BP on that front.
- Jan. 19, 2000: "The weekly function test was performed from the remote blowout preventer (BOP) panel in the off-shore installation manager's office. Instead of testing the blind shear rams, the engineer inadvertently pushed the LMRP [lower marine riser package].
"The control panel buttons for the LMRP did not have enough security to prevent activating the wrong function. It was determined that 2,400 barrels of 60% synthetic-based drilling mud [with approximately 60,000 gallons of oil]" leaked into the Gulf of Mexico.
- May 21, 2003: "The spill occurred at Mississippi Canyon 778 ... The drilling vessel was in the process of pulling up the [well]hole when it experienced wave action heaving and jarring.
"The riser parted in two places ... There was a release of 2,450 barrels of 58% Accolade synthetic-based drilling mud (SBM). It is estimated that [it] contained approximately 1,421 barrels (59,000 gallons) of Accolade synthetic base oil."
- June 30, 2003: "An emergency riser disconnect occurred when drilling vessel failed to maintain station against 44 knot winds ... and 12-to-14-foot sea conditions." Approximately "944 barrels of Nova Plus synthetic base oil" were "released into the sea."
- Aug. 3, 2003, on the Deepwater Horizon rig: "While drilling and using mud boost line to enhance cutting transportation in the riser, the driller noticed he was losing mud ...
"The mud pumps were shut down and it was confirmed that the losses came from a leak in the boost line. At one point, the boost hose had ruptured and there were several other locations along the hose that were badly worn. The total losses were calculated to be 143 barrels ..."
In addition to human errors, frequent hurricanes in the gulf are a big problem the industry prefers not to talk about.
"Given the egregious record of off-shore oil problems, the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe was obviously forseeable and should have been prevented," Hang notes.
As the number of spills mounted, no one paid attention. Now the big one is here, and nothing can hide that gushing hole at the bottom of the sea.

A tour of Dimock, Pennsylvania, with Victoria Switzer is a bumpy ride over torn-up roads, around parking lots filled with heavy machinery and storage tanks, and past well pads that not long ago were forests. The winter here was quiet, but with the thawing ground came the return of the rigs, the trucks, the constant noise and lights of a twenty-four-hour-a-day gas drilling operation. "It's a modern-day Deadwood out here," Switzer says, likening the activity to the gold rush. "No rules, no regs, just rigs."
The "occupation," as she calls it, hasn't just transformed Dimock into an industrial hub; it has also damaged the local water supply and put residents' health at risk. After a stray drill bit banged four wells in 2008, Switzer says, weird things started happening to people's water: some flushed black, some orange, some turned bubbly. One well exploded, the result of methane migration, and residents say elevated metal and toluene levels have ruined twelve others. Then, in September 2009, about 8,000 gallons of hazardous drilling fluids spilled into nearby fields and creeks. The contamination and related health problems have prompted fifteen families to file suit against Cabot Oil and Gas, the primary leaseholder in the area, alleging fraud and contract violation and seeking to stop the damage from spreading.
If she could do it all over again, Switzer says, she never would have signed the 2006 drilling lease that helped open Pandora's Box here. But at the time, she'd never heard of hydrofracking—the Cabot representative didn't mention the word to her when he gained the rights to drill on her land. The story of gas drilling in Dimock begins more than a mile below the earth's surface in the Marcellus Shale, a huge rock formation that extends from New York to Tennessee. Some geologists estimate that the Marcellus contains enough shale gas to power the United States for two decades. But the gas is caught in millions of tiny pores and can be extracted only through hydraulic fracturing, or hydrofracking, a controversial process that requires blasting millions of gallons of water, sand and toxic chemicals deep underground to create fissures that open the pores and free gas to rise to the surface.
Hydrofracking is a hugely lucrative and rapidly expanding industry—the consulting firm PFC Energy recently reported that shale gas production accounts for about 10 percent of US natural gas production, up from 1 percent in 2000. It is bolstered not only by a powerful lobby but also by growing awareness of the threats posed by climate change and America's dependence on foreign oil. In recent years, a broad coalition of energy analysts and government officials have embraced domestic natural gas as a promising "bridge fuel" that could help smooth the transition from more carbon-intensive fossil fuels like oil and coal to renewable energy sources like solar and wind. The catch, though, is that the natural gas industry shares the same history as other energy industries operating in the United States. A string of recent disasters—including the TVA coal ash spill, the Massey coal mine explosion and the Deepwater Horizon oil spill—have demonstrated all too vividly that failure to regulate and oversee resource extraction can lead to catastrophe. Some fear that Dimock is the first natural gas casualty, an early warning of what could happen on a much larger scale if fracking spreads unchecked to other residential areas in the Marcellus region and across the country.
For a long time, shale gas was thought to be unattainable. But in the 1990s, first in Texas and later in other Western states, new drilling techniques, sophisticated technology and industry exemptions from environmental laws paved the way for economically viable fracking. Many of those exemptions—from provisions in the Clean Air Act, the Clean Water Act, the Superfund Act and the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act—are longstanding. The most notable among them was introduced by Vice President Dick Cheney as an amendment to the 2005 energy bill. The so-called Halliburton Loophole, named after Cheney's former employer and the company that pioneered the fracking process in the 1940s, stripped the EPA's authority to regulate hydrofracking through the Safe Water Drinking Act. Companies were essentially given free rein to drill however and wherever they see fit, and to use and dispose of proprietary fracking fluids without any disclosure or safety requirements. The only remaining shred of federal oversight was a voluntary agreement with the three largest companies not to use diesel fuel—which they proceeded to ignore.
Drilling is now regulated entirely at the state level, where there is not nearly enough manpower to handle the volume of wells. In 2008 thirty-five inspectors were responsible for more than 74,000 wells in Pennsylvania (with promises to hire sixty-eight more as Marcellus drilling grows); nineteen inspectors covered more than 13,000 wells in New York; and twenty-four oversaw more than 64,000 wells in Ohio.
With staff stretched so thin, it's nearly impossible to get the job done well, says Dusty Horwitt, a senior counsel for the Environmental Working Group. In January Horwitt released a study warning that regulators in several drill states—including Pennsylvania and New York—don't check to see if companies are using diesel or other harmful distillates. He also found that many state EPA officials are unclear on the stipulations surrounding fracking regulation. In many cases, the report estimates, the concentration of petroleum distillates used in a single well could be enough to contaminate 650 million gallons of water—the same amount consumed daily by New York City residents. In a worst-case scenario, the amount of distillates in a well could be enough to pollute more than 10 billion gallons of water.
Keeping track of the materials used in fracking is crucial, says Theo Colborn, a Colorado-based endocrinologist who monitors the impact of industrial chemicals on human health. "It's the same kind of very high-tech stuff that we use in airplanes," she explains. "If we didn't use some very dangerous stuff in airplanes, as hydraulic fluids to reduce friction, we wouldn't be flying." Colborn has been researching hydrofracking operations since 2004. Of the 246 products on a partial list of drilling and fracking chemicals used in Colorado, obtained with help from the Oil and Gas Accountability Project, she found that 228 have at least one adverse health effect. Most are known to have multiple negative health impacts, and many are endocrine disruptors, which cause developmental, reproductive and neurological harm. She also found diesel and benzene, which is a carcinogen and is toxic at very low levels.
When a well is fracked—each well is generally fracked up to ten times—between 15 and 40 percent of the mix flows back to the surface. Companies operating in the Marcellus, which is naturally radioactive, must find a way to dispose of thousands of gallons of water, toxic chemicals, brine and radium. There are several ways things can go wrong, Horwitt says. Fluids can be spilled during transport, they can travel underground through natural or man-made fractures, or they can contaminate nearby areas if they're not stored properly.
There are many ways to dispose of the stuff: injection wells, evaporation pits, wastewater treatment plants and dumping, which are allowed by industry exemptions from environmental laws. Companies choose which method to use based on the amount of waste they have and the resources available, says Lee Fuller, a top lobbyist for the Independent Petroleum Association of America (IPAA).
Injection wells, which were recently linked as a possible cause of minor earthquakes in fracking towns along the Texas Barnett Shale, aren't being used in Dimock, according to Switzer. But she says that companies dump waste into creeks and ponds, or into pits lined with thin plastic. Pits that are not lined will eventually leach into groundwater, and pits that are lined can easily tear, leak and have the same effect, says Colborn. Even those that are properly sealed can still release dangerous gases into the air. In recent years, she explains, hydrofracking in Wyoming has raised ozone levels, which can lead to serious respiratory problems. A resident-funded health survey and air quality study in the tiny drilling town of Dish, Texas, revealed dangerously high levels of benzene, toluene and xylene in the air.
Walter Hang, a toxicologist who runs a web-based toxics mapping company in Ithaca, New York, worries that the current infrastructure can't handle the scale of these operations. "Anytime you have industrial activity, you're going to have problems—there's no way around it," he says. "You have tremendous volumes of wastewater, you have thousands of truck trips, and it's really heavy-duty." Hydrofracking requires millions of gallons of chemically treated water to be on site at all times. And wastewater plants can't handle fracking fluids properly, says Hang, because there is such a high concentration of chemicals and radioactivity.
In an effort to prevent their communities from becoming the next Dimock or Dish, New York state officials have held off on opening the Marcellus to drilling, pending a review. Late last year, the state's Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) released a draft environmental impact statement, which aimed to supplement drilling regulations that have been in place since 1992. The two-month public comment period drew about 14,000 comments, including some from the EPA, the Natural Resources Defense Council and elected officials. Comments are still under review, and a final version of the draft will likely be released in the fall.
The issue is of particular concern to residents in New York City and Syracuse, two of a small number of US cities with a special permit to provide unfiltered surface water for drinking. Drilling in upstate watersheds could place the cities' water supplies at risk and create the need to build billion-dollar water treatment plants. In April the DEC announced that any Marcellus drill permits within the New York City and Skaneateles Lake (Syracuse) watersheds will undergo a separate, far more rigorous environmental review.
It's a step in the right direction, says State Senator Tom Duane, but it's a potentially divisive move for New York. As Duane sees it, residents of New York City and Syracuse are protected from the stress and destruction of hydrofracking, but those in rural upstate areas remain vulnerable.
Duane and State Assembly member James Brennan introduced twin bills earlier in the year that seek to put a two-year hold on issuing permits and ban drilling within certain distances to drinking water supplies. It's his mission, Duane says, to deter—if not ban—drilling in the state, as any revenues from drilling would quickly be eaten up by road repair and other costs. "I don't believe that there's a way to safely do hydraulic fracturing," he says. "I'm skeptical that you could ever find a way, but I don't want to say that it's impossible."
Similar concerns have been bubbling up at the federal level. Last summer Colorado Democratic Representatives Diana DeGette and Jared Polis, along with New York Democrat Maurice Hinchey, introduced the Fracturing Responsibility and Awareness of Chemicals (FRAC) Act, which aims to close the Halliburton Loophole and revive the EPA's power to regulate or prohibit fracking fluids. Pennsylvania Democrat Bob Casey signed on as the Senate sponsor. After the twin bills were introduced, they were sent to California Democrat Henry Waxman, chair of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, who opened an investigation in February. On Hinchey's request, the EPA launched its own investigation. (New York State Assembly member Steven Englebright introduced a bill in April to ban hydrofracking in the state until the EPA finishes its study.)
The federal push to regulate hydrofracking may have gotten an unexpected boost in the wake of the Deepwater Horizon explosion. "The situation in the Gulf of Mexico is a grave reminder of the dangers posed by energy extraction," Casey says. "Natural gas drilling in Marcellus Shale in Pennsylvania has the potential to be a great economic boon for the Commonwealth. But we must take the proper steps to make sure it is done in a way that benefits Pennsylvanians and protects drinking water. Pennsylvania can reap the benefits and not be left with the burden on our infrastructure, health and safety." Hinchey agrees that the offshore oil spill should prompt legislators to pay more attention to drilling on land. "Drilling is important, the production of energy materials is important," he says. "But it's also critically important that it be done carefully and effectively in ways that are not going to be harmful."
Can fracking be done safely and justly? Hinchey says yes—as long as it's properly regulated. In keeping with that stance, the Kerry-Lieberman American Power Act does not call for an outright ban on hydrofracking. But the much-anticipated climate change bill, introduced on May 12 against the grim backdrop of the BP disaster, does include tough language calling on drilling companies to divulge fracking chemicals.
Fuller, of the IPAA, says disclosing chemicals would not keep people or the environment any safer. He says groundwater is protected through the construction of cement casings around wells, which close it off from the methane and the fracking fluids flowing through the well. "The assertion that you cannot protect the environment and fracture natural gas wells is totally inconsistent with the reality," he says. "The well construction process is what really protects groundwater, and it is a very effective process."
But in Dimock, proper well casings didn't stop 8,000 gallons of fracking fluid from spilling onto a local farm. And that Dimock well explosion? The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) determined that improper well casing was to blame. It's not an isolated incident: improper well casing was also at fault in a 2007 explosion in Bainbridge, Ohio, that blew a house off its foundation and left yet another neighborhood without drinking water.
For months after the Dimock drilling error rendered wells unusable, Cabot Oil and Gas denied any connection to the contamination, and in March the DEP determined that hydrofracking was not at fault. It's a technicality that drilling companies and lobbyist groups commonly use to dodge accountability, and they have a point. In many instances, it's not the physical act of fracturing that contaminates the well—all the more reason, advocates argue, to put the entire process under closer scrutiny.
If fracking is here to stay, as some argue, then more effort should be made to minimize the harm it can cause. There are ways to frack using nontoxic chemicals and even air, for example, which would pose less risk to drinking water. That's a start, but it wouldn't solve the problems of fossil fuel output, pollution or the presence of wells and compressor stations up to 100 feet from homes. Nor would it address compulsory integration and mandatory pooling, which in New York and Ohio allow companies to drill beneath an unsigned person's land if his or her neighbors have all signed leases. The Halliburton Loophole is not the only one that needs to be closed.
For Switzer, the fight to protect her community has become a full-time job. She's given that bumpy tour around Dimock to Dish Mayor Calvin Tillman, grassroots organizers and DEP officials, and she has testified in Pennsylvania Senate hearings. She's not alone in her quest. Citizen action groups have popped up all over the Marcellus region, including the Shaleshock Action Alliance and the Pennsylvania-based Damascus Citizens for Sustainability, and around the country. On May 26 As You Sow, a shareholder advocacy organization representing the Park Foundation of Ithaca, won support from a surprising 26 percent of shares at ExxonMobil's annual meeting for a proposal that would have required the company to disclose its efforts to reduce risks from natural gas drilling. "The Gulf oil spill is a powerful example of how oil and gas drilling can devastate the environment," Park Foundation executive director Jon Jensen wrote in a statement. "This is a good first step in responsibly seeking energy in a way that protects the environment, human health, and the welfare of the company."
Switzer says that at the very least, there should be a national moratorium on drilling while the federal investigations are being conducted. But even if regulations are ultimately implemented, she says, Dimock is already a casualty. It was the first, she says, but it may not be the last.
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One of the natural gas industry's selling points on why New Yorkers should welcome drilling of the vast Marcellus Shale is that the method of choice, hydraulic fracturing, has never contaminated a drinking well or water supply, or caused any environmental mishap in this state.
Never. That's a pretty definitive word, allowing no exceptions. But in this case, it may require an asterisk. Or a bunch of them.
The state Department of Environmental Conservation has so far supported the industry's assertion. But now comes Walter Hang of Ithaca, a researcher who runs a company that tracks and maps environmental problems. He's also an anti-drilling activist.
Mr. Hang says that the DEC's records are missing some 20 years worth of county health department reports on water and gas problems in three counties in western New York -- Allegany, Cattaraugus and Chautauqua. Those included 135 oil and natural gas incidents in Chautauqua County alone, Mr. Hang says. In some instances, he says, water was contaminated with brine. In others, drinking water could be ignited.
Whether these incidents were tied to hydraulic fracturing -- a process by which a mix of water and chemicals is injected into deep rock, causing it to crack and release trapped gas -- is not yet known. The DEC says only that it is looking into Mr. Hang's correspondence.
That's certainly better than not looking into these issues, which may have been the case all these years. It turns out that Mr. Hang is not the first person to sound the alarm; this may merely be the first time DEC heard it.
The records Mr. Hang produced, for example, show that six years ago, a Chautauqua County Health Department water resource specialist wrote that his agency had "investigated numerous complaints of potential contamination problems resulting from oil- and gas-drilling activities."
The specialist, Bill Boria, said there were "suspected ground water contamination problems resulting from oil and gas drilling activities and hydrofracturing."
And, he added, the reported complaints "are probably just a fraction of actual problems that occurred."
That would be a far cry from never.
There are really two issues here.
First, DEC needs to determine whether gas drilling -- particularly the hydraulic fracturing method that the industry wants to use to tap the gas-rich Marcellus Shale -- has contaminated wells or water supplies in New York, or caused any environmental problem here. If "never" is actually "sometimes," it clearly has more work to do persuading the public that drilling on such a large scale would be safe.
And second, the agency that's supposed to be monitoring New York's environment, and the natural gas industry, needs to explain why reports of environmental problems in three counties over two decades come as a surprise.
The issue:
Reports of gas drilling problems surface after assurances that the industry's record is clean.
The Stakes:
Where drinking water supplies are involved, there isn't much margin for error.
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