CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014 OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“NEW
NUMBERS SHOULD EASE INTENSITY OF FRACKING DRIVE, DEBATE”
There’s a huge political implication
in the big difference between 13.7 billion barrels of oil and 600 million.
Similarly, there's meaning in the
gigantic difference between 15 trillion cubic feet of natural gas and 6.4
billion (the average California household uses about two to three cubic feet of
natural gas per day).
Taken together, it’s the difference
between fueling the entire United States for several years and fueling it for
only about one month.
Those are the differences between the
amount of oil and gas the federal Energy Department in 2011 estimated lies
trapped in the rocks of California’s Monterey Shale geological formation and
what it now says can actually be recovered using current technology at
today’s prices.
The gigantic Arabian- or
Oklahoma-style resources first said to be available from the Monterey Shale,
which stretches south from San Benito County along the western side of the San
Joaquin Valley all the way into Southern California, gave rise to a strong
drive for massive hydraulic fracturing. Better known as fracking, this
technique sees many thousands of gallons of water and acid injected under high
pressure deep into the ground, where it blasts apart shale rocks holding oil
and gas deposits.
The 2011 Energy Department estimates,
repeated in 2012 and 2013, gave rise to a boom mentality and changed the
political balance of environmentalism and job creation in this state.
Gov. Jerry Brown, who consistently
champions measures fighting climate change, refused to back an outright
ban or moratorium on fracking in California despite concerns over both
production of greenhouse gases and possible pollution of ever-more-vital ground
water aquifers.
Onefactor:A USC study contended that
full-blown fracking of the Monterey Shale would spur 2.8 million new California
jobs in what seemed like it could become the biggest boom here since the Gold
Rush era.
The author of that study has told
reporters the reduction of about 95 percent in official estimates of what can
be readily extracted from the Monterey Shale would similarly cut his
job-creation forecast.
Through its information agency, the
Energy Department explains the massive cut in its expectations for the Monterey
Shale by saying rocks there are warped more than in other heavily-fracked areas
like Ohio, North Dakota and Pennsylvania. Earthquakes did this. The
convolutions they produced in subterranean rocks would make it far harder to
extract oil by any current method than previously thought, the EIA said.
Of course, any estimate that can
change by 95 percent in one direction seemingly overnight and for reasons that
were long known prior to the initial estimate is not likely to remain stable
long. Nor can it be considered highly reliable.
So the oil industry says it wsill keep
driving for fracking, trusting that oil company scientists will devise ways to
tap resources the firms have lately rushed to control.
The politics of all this are still
murky. With the latest estimate of Monterey Shale resources now pretty similar
to what’s known to exist in untapped offshore California oilfields, logic says
a fracking moratorium would cost no more jobs than the current moratorium on
new offshore oil drilling.
In short, environmentalists may argue
that a moratorium – embodied in a bill now active in the Legislature – makes as
much sense in one place as the other. And Brown, a decades-long supporter of
the coastal oil moratorium, might just go along since for the moment, the
bottom has fallen out of fracking job-creation forecasts.
So far, Brown has said nothing, and
since he’s surely aware any fluctuating estimate can change right back to where
it was before, he’s not likely to anytime soon. Former U.S. Treasury official
Neel Kashkari, fighting to be Brown’s Republican opponent this fall, has for
months made all-out fracking a centerpiece of his economic platform and has yet
to change his stance.
Even so, the drive for fracking has
definitely been changed. For the ratio of fracking risks to benefits has now
shifted radically – at least for the next year or so – nor are the
stakes as high as they were before the late May day when the Energy
Department radically changed its tune.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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