Fracking
and nuclear side by side in Pennsylvania: A match made in hell?
Plans
are afoot to drill a well that will use fracking technology only a
mile from a nuclear power plant in Pennsylvania. The parties involved
say they are unconcerned, despite evidence showing fracking increases
incidence of earthquakes.
RT,
25
October, 2012
"We’re
not aware of any potential impacts and don’t expect any," said
Jennifer Young, spokesperson for plant owner First Energy told
Pennsylvania’s Herald Standard. "We see no reason to be
particularly concerned."
Environmental
authorities approved plans to construct a shale gas well near the
Beaver Valley Nuclear Power Station in Shippingport earlier this
month. State rules require any such well to be more than 500 feet
from the edge of plant territory, though data indicates that there
are no fracking wells that close to nuclear power stations anywhere
in the US.
Fracking
– or hydraulic fracturing, in full – is a recently-adopted
extraction technique, which uses pressurized fluid to crack open
impermeable materials deep underground, allowing gas or oil to
escape.
It
has been linked with a magnitude 4.0 earthquake
in Ohio last year, as well as several seismic incidents in Texas and
Canada just this autumn.
The
US Geological Service has warned that the procedure can cause
earthquakes, whose severity and frequency will only become obvious
once fracking is more established.
A
2010 report by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) listed Unit 1
at the Beaver Valley Power Station as facing the fifth-highest risk
of earthquake out of all reactors in the entire United States.
But
the NRC says the new well is none of their business.
“Our
regulations do not speak to off-site wells,” said NRC spokesperson
Neil Sheehan. “Our focus is on on-site activities.”
First
Energy officials insist that the plant is constructed to withstand a
5.8-magnitude earthquake, which is stronger than has ever been
recorded in Pennsylvania. They also say that the safety of the
station has been re-evaluated in the wake of last year’s Fukushima
nuclear accident, which resulted partly from an earthquake.
Republican-governed
Pennsylvania has drilled 3,000 gas wells in the past two years, and
has given out 2,000 more permits this year alone.
Before
the latest controversy, the state's environmental groups expressed
anxiety about the environmental damage and potential water pollution
caused by fracking.
Some
countries, such as France, have banned fracking entirely – but in
the US, it's booming in the United States. It now makes up more than
a third of total gas supply, turning America into the world’s
biggest gas producer, alongside Russia.
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