The book offers strategies and solutions for rural communities dependent on fossil fuel economies to enable them to transition to sustainable development.
“EHP is extremely grateful for the opportunity to share with a broader audience the knowledge and expertise we’ve amassed over the past 12 years of our existence,” said Executive Director Alison L. Steele, one of the chapter’s authors. “Communities and policy makers can make better health-protective decisions when they understand the complex relationship between shale gas pollution and public health.”
In the chapter Shale Gas Extraction in Pennsylvania, EHP details the health impacts of the shale gas boom and takes a hard look at historic policy failings while illuminating a way forward for policy improvements that can better defend the health of residents anywhere polluting industries operate.
In Pennsylvania, the advent of shale gas development (also called unconventional gas development, hydraulic fracturing, or fracking) has created prosperity for some and adverse health consequences for many in primarily rural areas of the state.
EHP’s chapter challenges the assumption that the financial benefits of shale gas extraction outweigh the costs to public health and community wellbeing.
A boom in shale gas drilling and extraction, which began in 2004 and ramped up sharply in the ensuing decade, occurred with no consideration of public health.
In fact, policymakers at all levels of government enabled industry to circumvent existing emissions rules, while the state provided large public subsidies, required minimal operating fees, established inadequate setback distances, and provided lax agency oversight in exchange for virtually unlimited industry access to gas deposits underlying the state.
Meanwhile, residents living near shale gas development have suffered a host of health impacts, from asthmas and heart events to birth defects and cancers.
The clock cannot be turned back on the failures of policymakers to protect populations within the state. However, a number of policy improvements can be made to better defend the health of residents in Pennsylvania and anywhere polluting industries operate.
Improvements in the areas of equity, transparency, authority, and accountability are vitally important to protecting public health from shale gas pollution.
Portions of this chapter originally appeared in a white paper titled Pennsylvania’s Shale Gas Boom: How Policy Decisions Failed to Protect Public Health and What We Can Do to Correct It.
The Environmental Health Project is a nonprofit public health organization that defends public health in the face of shale gas development.
EHP provides frontline communities with timely monitoring, interpretation, and guidance while engaging diverse stakeholders: health professionals, researchers, community organizers, policy makers, and others.
Resource Links:
-- University Of Pittsburgh School Of Public Health Studies Find Shale Gas Wells Can Make Asthma Worse; Children Have An Increased Chance Of Developing Lymphoma Cancer; Slightly Lower Birth Weights [PaEN]
-- Environmental Health Project Finds Results ‘Very Concerning’ From University Of Pittsburgh Studies Showing Links Between Natural Gas Development And Lymphoma Cancer, Worsening Asthma Conditions, Lower Birth Weights [PaEN]
-- 9th Compendium Of Studies On Health & Environmental Harms From Natural Gas Development Released - ‘The Rapidly Expanding Body Of Evidence Compiled Here Is Massive, Troubling And Cries Out For Decisive Action’ [PaEN]
-- Environmental Health Project: Gov. Shapiro’s Record On Shale Gas And Health - A Look At The Grand Jury Recommendations One Year In
-- Physicians For Social Responsibility - PA: Gov. Shapiro And The Fossil Fuel Industry - Abandoning Climate Science For Industry Support
-- We’ve Heard This Before: ‘We’re Providing Jobs - Stopping Pollution Threatens Jobs’ - A Brief Review Of Pennsylvania’s Conservation History [PaEN]
PA Oil & Gas Industry Public Notice Dashboards:
-- PA Oil & Gas Industrial Facilities: Permit Notices, Opportunities To Comment - August 10 [PaEN]
-- DEP Posted 62 Pages Of Permit-Related Notices In August 10 PA Bulletin [PaEN]
Related Articles This Week:
-- Erie Times: How PA's Oil & Gas Industry Continues To Illegally Dump Wastewater On Roads Across The State [PaEN]
-- Residents, Environmental Groups, Advocates To Hold A Stand With Dimock Day On Aug. 16 In Montrose, Susquehanna County [PaEN]
-- Center For Coalfield Justice Hosts Aug. 20 In-Person Program On Investigations Into Rare Childhood Cancers In Washington County [PaEN]
-- Environmental Health Project Contributes To New Book On Sustainable Development & Rural Public Health - From Fossil Fuels To Greener Futures [PaEN]
-- Guest Essay: Pennsylvania May Not Be Able To Keep All The Lights On In Four Years - By Terry Fitzpatrick, Energy [Utilities] Association Of PA [PaEN]
NewsClips:
-- TribLive Guest Essay: Fracking And Harris - How Close Is Too Close? - By Terrie Baumgardner, Clean Air Council’s Beaver County Outreach Coordinator
-- Erie Times - How PA’s Oil & Gas Industry Illegally Dumps Waste On Roads Across The State
-- Courier Times: How PA’s Oil & Gas Industry Illegally Dump Wastewater On Roads Across The State
-- NPJ Climate Action: Community Rights And Energy Politics In Lycoming County
-- Post-Gazette Guest Essay: DEP Won’t Use Conventional Oil & Gas Well Owners To Plug Abandoned Wells - By Commonwealth Foundation [Factually Wrong On Plugging Contracts + Conventional Well Owners Own Tens Of Thousands Of Abandoned Wells + They Got 687 Violations For Abandoning Wells So Far In 2024, One Well Owner Abandoned 120 Last Week Alone]
-- Marcellus Drilling News: Diversified Energy Grows Via Culling, Harvesting Mature Conventional Gas Wells [PDF of article]
-- City & State PA Guest Essay: New Gas, Hazardous Liquid Pipeline Safety Rules Must Be Enacted For The Health Of Current And Future Generations - By State Sen. Nikil Saval (D-Philadelphia) and Pete Gosar, Wyoming, Western Leaders & Appalachian Leaders Voices
-- FracTracker Alliance: PA Oil & Gas Industry Trends - Drilled Wells, Violations, Production, Waste
-- FracTracker Alliance: How Fracking Bans Protect Communities And The Environment
-- Marcellus Drilling News: Shale Drilling Becomes Leaner & Meaner, Lowering Costs [PDF of article]
-- TribLive Podcast: Looking Back At The Plum Boro Natural Gas Home Explosion In Allegheny County
-- WFMZ: Natural Gas Leak Prompts Evacuations, Road Closure In Palmer Twp., Northampton County
-- AG Henry Announces Settlement With Titan Gas, LLC Over Alleged Unlawful Telemarketing Practices
-- Post-Gazette - Anya Litvak: Emma Lewis, Shell Senior VP Of Chemicals Wants To Build Trust And A Legacy At Shell’s Petrochemical Plant In Beaver County
-- Beaver County Times: Native Tree Nursery & Forest Education Center Groundbreaking In Brady’s Run Park [Supported By Shell Petrochemical Plant Penalty Mitigation Fund]
-- Reuters: Petrochemical Makers Battle Global Glut
-- Capital & Main - Audrey Carleton: Despite The Risks, Pennsylvania Races Into The Geologic Carbon Capture Era
-- Utility Dive: Dominion Energy Says Its Ratepayers Will Be Insulated From PJM Capacity Auction Record High Prices
-- Utility Dive: Constellation Energy Raises 2024 Profit Guidance Amid PJM Load Growth, Tighter Power Supplies
-- Utility Dive: Federal Court Vacates FERC’s Reapproval Of 2 LNG Gas Export Terminals, Gas Pipeline
-- Washington Examiner: US DOE Files Appeal To Continue Pause On New LNG Gas Export Facility Permits
-- E&E News: Oil And Gas Jobs Decline Amid Record-Breaking Production
-- Reuters: US Natural Gas Producers Eye More Output Cuts As Prices Sink
-- Reuters: US EIA Sees Tighter US Oil Market For 2024, Lowers Price Outlook
-- Reuters: Natural Gas Price Shocks Play Greater Role In Euro Zone Inflation, ECB Paper Says
-- Inside Climate News: In PA’s Competitive US Senate Race, Fracking Takes Center Stage
[Posted: August 9, 2024] PA Environment Digest
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