| NRDC agrees with the oil and gas industry on something |
| Written by NRDC | Amy Mall's Blog |
| Friday, 22 April 2011 19:24 |
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Earlier this week there was a dangerous natural gas well accident in Bradford County, Pennsylvania, when a well blew out during a fracking operation. According to news reports, thousands of gallons of frack fluid blew out near homes and onto farms and continued to spill for two days. The fluids contaminated Towanda Creek--which flows into the Susquehanna River.
Read the original post at its source -- including links/images where applicable. Earlier this week there was a dangerous natural gas well accident in Bradford County, Pennsylvania, when a well blew out during a fracking operation. According to news reports, thousands of gallons of frack fluid blew out near homes and onto farms and continued to spill for two days. The fluids contaminated Towanda Creek--which flows into the Susquehanna River. The response of 'Energy in Depth,' an organization that represents the oil and gas industry? "When accidents occur, however rare they may be, the right approach is to figure out what happened, correct it, and make sure it doesn't happen again." We don't agree that accidents are rare, but here's a shocker: we agree with Energy in Depth on "the right approach." Sadly, however, industry has not followed its own protocol. No one has made sure that accidents do not happen again. In fact, they happen on a regular basis. That is why the public is outraged. A few examples of blow-out accidents and problems: January, 2011: A natural gas well blew out during a hydraulic fracturing operation in a Pennsylvania state forest. It was reported that 21,000 gallons of frack fluid blew into the air Pennsylvania has become a national sacrifice zone for natural gas development. It has seen more than its share of drinking water contamination, houses exploding, and destroyed landscapes and communities. We agree with Energy in Depth that accidents can be used as lessons for future improvements. As we've seen with innovations in hospital administration, when hospitals use what they learn from accidents and errors to improve their processes and their systems, they have seen improvements in the bottom line, quality of care, and patient as well as staff satisfaction. Unfortunately, we have to give the oil and gas industry an "F" when it comes to learning its lessons. |


