CollapseNet
have done an excellent backgrounder on this – to read their article
GO
HERE
Shale
Gas Boom Now Visible From Space
Oil
companies at the heart of the US shale oil boom are burning off
enough gas to power all the homes in Chicago and Washington combined
in a practice causing growing concern about the waste of resources
and damage to the environment.
CNBC,
28
January, 2013
The
volume of unwanted gas being flared off in North Dakota, the state
leading the shale revolution transforming the outlook for US energy,
rose about 50 per cent last year. The surge at the state's Bakken
formation is being replicated in other shale regions with the Texas
state regulator issuing 1,963 permits to flare in 2012, more than six
times the number of 306 in 2010.
The
rapid increase has made the US one of the world's worst countries for
gas flaring. The volume of gas flared in the US has tripled in just
five years, according to World Bank estimates and is now fifth
highest in the world, behind Russia, Nigeria, Iran and Iraq.
The
flaring is a result, in large part, of the low price of natural gas
in North America, which can make it uneconomic to build pipelines and
tanks to handle the gas released by oil production. Flaring is often
the safest way to dispose of it.
The
lights of the flares burning in the Bakken and Texas' Eagle Ford
shale fields can clearly be seen in night-time satellite photography.
Flaring
has been attracting attention from investors and environmental
campaigners because of the waste of gas and its consequences for
greenhouse gas emissions, local air pollution and disturbance to
nearby communities.
Flaring
in North Dakota increases by about 20 per cent the greenhouse gas
emissions resulting from the state's oil production, refining and
transport, compared with the US average, according to Financial Times
analysis of official data.
Investors
managing a total of $500bn last year wrote to oil companies including
ExxonMobil, Chevron, Statoil and US independents urging them to do
more to cut their flaring. They warned that "excessive flaring,
because of its impact on air quality and climate change, poses
significant risks for the companies involved."
Since
then, flaring in the US and concerns over it have only increased.
Mercy
Investment Services, which manages the investments of the Sisters of
Mercy order of nuns, filed a shareholder resolution this month
calling on Continental Resources, the leading oil producer in the
Bakken, to adopt clear goals for cutting or eliminating flaring.
Continental
said it already flared proportionately less gas than the industry
average, was making progress on more reductions and agreed to report
on its progress in 2013.
The
North Dakota legislature is considering a bill to encourage flaring
reduction through tax breaks. The state is also pushing producers to
use gas to power drilling rigs.
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