Woody2Shoes
Impressive Member
We will probably never know what caused the flaring water. Because of the coal measures, and gas-bearing shale, under most of Pennsylvania, it's been leaking gas for thousands of years - although I'm sure human activity helps here and there. I think that the use of domestic boreholes for potable water (even in quite suburban areas) is something that would be much more unusual in the UK.That's what I'm getting at - there were definitely videos of flaming water, but nobody asked the critical questions - what's causing it and was it the fracking?
If it was fracking (probably not), how likely is it that the rest of us would have the same issue? Not likely. Nobody asked the question after the video "so, we saw that once. If it's really an issue, they should've been able to put together a montage of flaming faucets near wells all over the place".
I suspect that the flaming water was used as a prop. If there were serious issues here other than outright violations of surface water, we'd know more.
Early on, we had all kinds of stories about dead cows and all sorts of horror movie rubbish. It's all gone. I guess people lost interest. If it was really happening on a regular basis, it would be awfully difficult to lose interest.
I think that if gas genuinely substitutes for coal (as it seems to have done in your area) then there are some benefits, but gas is still far from ideal - not least because all fossil fuel extraction involves the creation of 'fugitive emissions' of methane and other gases to the atmosphere - methane being a much more effective greenhouse gas than CO2 all things being equal - but also because it's a hydrocarbon.