Greg Palast On 'Fracking' Plans For Ireland
          national |
         crime and justice |
         feature         
 Tuesday July 03, 2012 12:45
 by One of NFI
 
      
 Greg tells it like it is to a captivated audience
 
"Is there a safe way to frack? Probably: but not profitably; and
certainly not within the geology of a little emerald isle. " 
- Greg Palast, investigative Journalist
Related Links: 
Poland and Fracking - Lessons to be Learned - Ban Fracking In EU | 
Counties and Townlands in the Fracking Zones - Are You Living in a Facking Zone? Find Out Here. | 
Response to the article 'Frank Convery, Yvonne Scannell, Fracking and Local Credibility in Ireland' | 
Fracking Ireland - Business Group Accept €20,000 From Tamboran | 
Local Fracking Talk Brings Revelations | 
Open letter to the members of the 31st Dáil Éireann. Hydraulic Shale Gas Fracturing - Tamborans claims - Chemicals involved in the fracking procedure
 On the 20th of April 2010, the Deepwater Horizon oilrig blew out in 
the Gulf of Mexico, killing eleven men instantly, then destroying 600 
miles of coastline.On 9 September 2010, a natural gas pipeline 
exploded in San Bruno, California, burning eight to death, one of 
several recent pipeline explosions in the USA. In 1992, in Chicago, a 
gas pipe leaked and 18 houses exploded, incinerating three people. 
What do these deaths have to do with plans for “fracking” for natural 
gas in Ireland? Everything. It was my job to investigate these three 
explosions, the Deepwater Horizon and California explosions as a 
reporter for the UK news show Dispatches, the earliest as a US 
government investigator. In all three cases, the deaths were preceded 
by the same reassurances about the safety of drilling and piping that 
I read now in the debate about fracking in Ireland. First, the 
Deepwater Horizon. Eleven men died when the 'mud' – drilling cement 
meant to cap the wellhead – failed and methane gas blew out the top of 
the pipes and exploded. The Shannon Basin is not the Gulf of Mexico, 
but your safety will be just as dependent on Halliburton’s mud. 
 Can we trust Halliburton’s reassurances? The owners of the Deepwater 
Horizon have told a US court that they’ve discovered that Halliburton 
hid critical information that the well cement could fail. Halliburton 
denies the cover-up. But cover-up or not, the cement failed as it has 
several times recently in the US in wells drilled for fracking. In all 
cases, including the contamination of water supplies in Pennsylvania 
(where some residents could set their tap water alight with a match), 
drilling was proceeded by mollifying studies indicating that all was 
safe. But they failed to see all the looming dangers. 
In Ireland, you haven’t even done the studies. The University of 
Aberdeen study for the Irish Environmental Protection Agency has been 
played as some kind of endorsement for charging ahead with fracking in 
Ireland – but this is not the case if you actually read the study. The 
University study is, in fact, a long series of warnings that proposed 
drilling methods, the local geology and the potential impacts on water 
quality all require studies not even begun. It also points to the 
necessity of creating a regulatory system not now in place which can 
cope with watching thousands of explosive, toxic well-sites. 
The Shannon river basin is a truly eyebrow-raising place to blindly 
drill thousands of wells. It’s located in proximity to one of 
Irelands few major aquifers (your drinking water supply) and the 
drilling will be relatively shallow. Where I live in the State of New 
York, the government, though a major booster of fracking, has banned 
the fracking of shallow shale deposits and banned the process from all 
locations near our aquifers. The US experience is not comforting. 
Horizontal fracking (as proposed for Irish deposits) requires 
explosive charges to be fired along miles of pipe underground (and 
under houses and water supplies) followed by the pumping of fluids at 
high pressure through these pipes. The result has been man-made 
earthquakes. Buildings don’t fall down, but cracks bring hydrocarbon 
poisons into the aquifers. In the vast uninhabited wastes of the 
American Dakotas, we simply abandon water systems. Where in Ireland 
can you do that? 
And then there are the pipelines. The fracked gas doesn’t get to 
market by carrier pigeon. Ireland has had virtually no discussion of 
the difficulties, danger and cost of running hundreds, and ultimately, 
thousands of miles of gathering pipes. I’ve been investigating the 
horror of pipeline explosions for three decades now and the problem is 
exponentially worsened by the new web of lines created by fracking. 
Highly explosive transport systems require an elaborate system of 
on-site government regulation which Ireland does not have and cannot 
now afford. And it’s simply too easy for the PIGs to cheat. 
A PIG is a Pipeline Inspection Gauge, a robot that looks like a 
mechanical porker with wire whiskers that crawls through pipes hunting 
for corrosion, cracks, leaks and trouble. When the PIG 'squeals', the 
pipes must be dug up and replaced. And that’s frightfully expensive. 
It especially frightens the executives who have to pay for pipe 
replacement. So, what I’ve found and reported is that the providers of 
software and its users are aware that the PIGs’ diagnostic computer 
code, which converts the squeals of the PIG into warnings, has flaws 
which understate dangers. And the results have been horribly 
predictable: Despite the reassuring noises from the PIGs, pipes have 
leaked, polluted, exploded and killed. 
Is there a safe way to frack? Probably: but not profitably; and 
certainly not within the geology of a little emerald isle. I am weary 
of appearing at scenes of death and destruction when cement fails, 
pipes crack and tremors spew poisons only to hear a gas or oil company 
executive’s PR flack issue an apology. I doubt those apologies will 
sound better in Gaelic.
By Greg Palast