[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 110 (Monday, July 26, 2010)]
[House]
[Pages H6027-H6028]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MARCELLUS SHALE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentleman from Pennsylvania (Mr. Thompson) is recognized for 5 minutes.
Mr. THOMPSON of Pennsylvania. Madam Speaker, I am here today to speak
about an incredible opportunity which is in the northeastern part of
the United States, and that is the Marcellus shale natural gas. The
Marcellus shale describes a natural gas play in Pennsylvania that has
created jobs and economic growth, even in the most difficult of
economic times. It is one of the largest deposits of natural gas in the
world, and much of it is located in my district. However, the play is
deep down and requires a process called fracking, in which water, sand,
and approved chemicals are pressured into the play to fracture the
shale to release the gas. Now it is this process that has come under
criticism and has been the subject of a great deal of inaccurate
information both in the media and a so-called documentary called
``Gasland.''
[[Page H6028]]
Fracking has been used for 100 years, hydro-fracking for 60 years.
The safety is documented with zero confirmed cases of groundwater
contamination in 1 million applications over that 60 years. The
director of the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection's
Bureau of Oil and Gas Management said that he has never seen an impact
to fresh groundwater directly from fracking.
Another piece of incorrect information is that no one knows what goes
into fracking fluid. Well, first of all, more than 99.5 percent of the
fluid is sand and water. For the remainder, Pennsylvania law requires
companies to disclose all chemicals used in the fracking process, just
not the specific formula. A complete list of those chemicals is
available on the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection
Web site. They include materials that help deliver the water down the
well bore and position the sand in the tiny fractures created in the
formation.
{time} 1940
One of the more prominent substances is guar gum, most commonly used
as an emulsifier in ice cream.
You know, there are contentions that fracking is not well regulated.
To the contrary, eight Federal and 11 Pennsylvania acts or laws
regulate the impacts of drilling. The film ``Gasland'' goes so far as
to assert that ``the 2005 energy bill pushed through Congress by Dick
Cheney exempts the oil and natural gas industries from the Clean Water
Act, the Clean Air Act, the Safe Drinking Water Act, the Super Fund
law, and about a dozen other environmental and Democratic
regulations.''
Well, that is patently false. It must comply with all of these laws
with the caveat that the hydraulic fracturing process was never
regulated under the Safe Drinking Water Act in its 60-year history, and
that particular energy bill was supported by 74 ``yes'' votes in the
Senate, including those at the time of Senators Obama and Salazar.
Most alarmingly, ``Gasland'' has a stunning scene of a man who is
turning on a tap, sticking a lighter under it and watching it ignite.
``Gasland'' blames natural gas development for the flaming faucet, but
the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission wrote: ``Dissolved
methane in well water appears to be biogenic.'' Madam Speaker, that
means naturally occurring in origin. ``There are no indications of oil-
and gas-related impacts to well water.''
Though perhaps the most telling repudiation of this film comes from
John Hanger, Secretary John Hanger of the Pennsylvania Department of
Environmental Protection, who for 10 years was president and CEO of the
environmental organization called Citizens for Pennsylvania's Future.
He appears briefly in the film. John Hanger said the film was
``fundamentally dishonest'' and ``a deliberately false presentation for
dramatic effect.'' He called the producer a ``propagandist.''
Now, I am 100 percent behind producing natural gas in a safe and
environmentally sound way. If there are violations of the rules or
laws, either State or Federal, we rely on the good offices of the
Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection to do whatever is
necessary to bring enforcement to the situation. They have proven to be
capable and aggressive.
Gas drilling creates jobs and economic growth and contributes to our
energy security in this country. It needs to be done right with
environmental protection. It doesn't deserve a propaganda film which
doesn't educate but which serves to simply demonize an industry for
personal gain and political reasons.
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