offshore drilling

Offshore Oil Rig Fracking

New EPA Rule Requires Chemical Disclosure for Offshore Fracking

The environmental impact of “fracking” has been the subject of some debate in recent years. It is the process of pumping water and some other agents into oil wells under pressure in an effort to open cracks in the rock and allow the oil and gas to get out. This process is largely responsible for the massive expansion in U.S. natural gas production allowing us to approach energy independence. So oil companies are very protective of the technology. Environmentalists on the other hand have ascribed everything from water pollution, drought and earthquakes to the process. In today’s article, we will look at a new wrinkle to the fracking debate relating to off-shore fracking.

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A Run for the Canadian Border

The Gulf of Mexico disaster has changed U.S. priorities, costs, and energy supply sources for years to come. But the fact that the U.S. needs energy isn’t changing anytime soon, and as mass sources of green energy are still a while away, the most likely alternative might be the most surprising one.
With US$15 billion invested annually in offshore drilling in the United States, the disaster in the Gulf of Mexico means that this money is getting ready to migrate elsewhere. And it is the Athabasca oil sands of Alberta, Canada, that are number one on the list.

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