May 6th, 2013
The Associated Press reports that oil and natural gas companies are using more solar power to provide electricity to power remote monitoring stations after the hydraulic fracturing crews have left.

The Associated Press reports that oil and natural gas companies are using more solar power to provide electricity to power remote monitoring stations after the hydraulic fracturing crews have left.
Tags: · natural gas, oil, Solar Power
The EPA apparently caved to gas industry pressure by dropping a case involving a gas-tainted water well in Weatherford, Texas, according to an AP investigation published today.
The report stems from an EPA finding in 2010 that gas driller Range Resources
Tags: · EPA, natural gas, Range Resources, Weatherford
From Green Right Now Reports New Yorkers Against Fracking will be holding vigils in several communities this week, stretching from Brooklyn to Syracuse and several other cities. The coalition is urging Gov. Cuomo to maintain a moratorium against natural gas fracking, which it sees as endangering private and public water supplies and the Hudson River [...]
Tags: · fracking, natural gas, New York, water contamination
To get back to some non-election topics…A couple weeks ago, New York Times columnist David Brooks wrote an op-ed entitled “A Sad Green Story” about the (supposed) travails of the green movement over the last 10 years. The idea that the clean technology sector is failing, or that it’s a bad investment, is common enough in the business world and pundit class. But it’s patently false. So what is Brooks talking about and what’s really true here?
Tags: · Andrew Winston, clean energy incentives, clean tech, Fossil Fuels, Green Energy, Jigar Shah, natural gas, OtherVoicesBlog, Solar Power
Beyond that brief mention at the Republican Convention when Mitt Romney won a laugh for quipping that Obama had promised to keep the oceans from rising, it’s impossible to name one other time when climate change dominated even 15 minutes of the daily election news cycle this past year.
Tags: · BarbaraKesslerBlog, carbon price, carbon tax, coal, Congressional Research Service, cutting carbon pollution, cutting the federal deficit, Fossil Fuels, natural gas, oil
Last February, when Raymond Orbach, director of the Energy Institute at the University of Texas at Austin, announced the release of a major study by UT researchers on the effects of hydraulic fracturing, he noted that public policy should be based on “the very best science.”
Tags: · academic research, BarbaraKesslerBlog, Charles Groat, natural gas, Raymond Orbach, UT Energy Institute, water contamination
ITHACA, N.Y. – No matter how you drill it, using natural gas as an energy source is a smart move in the battle against global climate change and a good transition step on the road toward low-carbon energy from wind, solar and nuclear power.
Tags: · Climate Change, Cornell University, fracking, global warming, Greenhouse Gas Emissions, methane emissions, natural gas
New research has concluded that salty, mineral-rich fluids deep beneath Pennsylvania’s natural gas fields are likely seeping upward thousands of feet into drinking water supplies.
Though the fluids were natural and not the byproduct of drilling or hydraulic fracturing, the finding further stokes the red-hot controversy over fracking in the Marcellus Shale, suggesting that drilling waste and chemicals could migrate in ways previously thought to be impossible.
Tags: · fracking, fracking debate, ground water, Marcellus Shale, mineral migration, natural gas, Pennsylvania, shale formations
Natural gas is portrayed as the “bridge fuel” that will save the US from uneven electricity supply and prices as we transition off coal and oil on our way toward using renewable biofuels, solar and wind power.

A drilling rig in Fort Worth, Texas. (Photo: Green Right Now)
Tags: · BarbaraKesslerBlog, Barnett Shale, bridge fuel, clean energy, cleaner fuels, Colorado, fracking opposition, Marcellus Shale, natural gas, New York, Pennsylvania, renewables, Sierra Club, Texas, top ten natural gas drilling states, WaterDefense.org, Wyoming
Dozens of groups appealed to President Obama today to temper his enthusiasm for natural gas drilling until EPA studies on the risks posed by gas drilling are completed.
The appeal, contained in a March 5 letter penned by Ken Cook, president of the Environmental Working Group (EWG), and signed by dozens of environmental and community groups from around the country, also asked the president to realize that industry claims that the US harbors a 100-year supply of natural gas deposits may be overstated.
Tags: · Dimock Pennsylvania, EWG, fracking, natural gas, natural gas claims, natural gas contamination, natural gas emissions, New York watershed
Groups protesting natural gas drilling have focused on the threat to water supplies. They point to the modern drilling or “fracking” methods, which shatter rock deep beneath the earth, opening fissures that threaten water stores; and they cite cases of wells being contaminated near fracking operations in Pennsylvania and Wyoming.
Now new research by three Cornell University scientists suggests that fracking could cause even more havoc with the atmosphere
Tags: · Cornell University, fracking, Greenhouse Gas Emissions, methane emissions, natural gas, natural gas as bridge fuel
Dimock, Pa., residents whose wells have been contaminated with methane gas got word Thursday that the EPA will send water to four of the 11 affected families.
Tags: · Cabot Oil and Gas, contaminated water, Dimock, EPA, fracking, natural gas, Pa., WaterDefense