I understand why locals might not want fracking in their area, but at a national level we do need this. Not to mention it will create jobs, taxes and hopefully cheaper energy prices.
It might be better to do this offshore, but currently the process is quite expensive. It might be worth the government investing in that, so we can do it in the North Sea rather than say Cumbria.
has anyone seen the movie gasland?
I'm concerned about what fracking will do to the water table.
You enjoy fiction do you. See a couple of posts above yours.
has anyone seen the movie gasland?
I'm concerned about what fracking will do to the water table.
Let's be honest though, it's a short term solution to a long term problem. More should be done to research new technologies, refine existing renewable technologies. Fracking isn't the answer to our energy problems.
I understand why locals might not want fracking in their area, but at a national level we do need this. Not to mention it will create jobs, taxes and hopefully cheaper energy prices.
Let's be honest though, it's a short term solution to a long term problem. More should be done to research new technologies, refine existing renewable technologies. Fracking isn't the answer to our energy problems.
Not sure if serious.
The thing is, you can't argue with a protestor. No matter what your background is, they know everything there is to know and more and you're just one of the sheeple bleating along. I just shrug nowadays and feel happy that they have no actual power![]()
You're not pumping it into the water table... You're pumping it thousands of feet beneath the water table, mixing it with water full of rubbish anyway... The only real way you would mix groundwater with fracking fluids is if you spilled it on the ground at surface (you have to have impermiable membranes down to stop mud/fluids from the well getting into the grroundwater anyway) or via compromised casing. UK regulation/best practice means there will be three cemented metal tubes covering any drinkable aquifer in shale gas wells to stop this happening (for perspective most/all US wells will have only one as standard). There is still no conclusive evidence that in the US fracking fluid (as opposed to drilling mud) has got to/pollluted ground water in any case.Not sure if mentally capable of comprehending that pumping chemicals into the water table will be bad for the environment.
Seems a few posters on here need to feel cool by riding the skeptic band wagon
10% of the gas that has been discovered in the north of England so far will be enough to provide the entire UK with gas for 50 years. So yeah, its 'nothing much'
You're not pumping it into the water table... You're pumping it thousands of feet beneath the water table, mixing it with water full of rubbish anyway... The only real way you would mix groundwater with fracking fluids is if you spilled it on the ground at surface (you have to have impermiable membranes down to stop mud/fluids from the well getting into the grroundwater anyway) or via compromised casing. UK regulation/best practice means there will be three cemented metal tubes covering any drinkable aquifer in shale gas wells to stop this happening (for perspective most/all US wells will have only one as standard). There is still no conclusive evidence that in the US fracking fluid (as opposed to drilling mud) has got to/pollluted ground water in any case.
Yeah, but is it safe?