Fracking Research Papers

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Fracking is a method of obtaining oil and natural gas from deep areas of the earth by mining very deep into the ground and injecting fluid into the ground at a high pressure in order to fracture the rock. When the rock is fractured, natural gas is released and harvested by large hydraulic fracturing rigs (Brooks, 2013). Though the process is an effective way of obtaining energy sources, it is a highly controversial topic so it is not massively used worldwide. Fracking works great and provides effective results but there is a diverse amount of downsides to the mining technique that have caused many people to take anti-fracking stances. The main argument against fracking is that it comes with environmental downsides, using immense amounts of water, infecting the earth with hazardous chemicals, and leaking methane into the atmosphere. Though many of the environmental downsides of fracking have been proven, the benefits of the energy source outweigh the downsides. Fracking has been being done in America for a long time before the controversy over it began. The first time that anything similar fracking was done in America was in the 1860s, when high pressure liquids were injected into rock wells in rigs in Pennsylvania, New York, Kentucky and West Virginia (Brooks, 2013). That method was occasionally used in various wells for the next couple decades, with little development of the technique. The first major evolution in the method came in 1930 when nonexplosive fluids were injected into rock in the ground. The fluid disintegrated some of the rock which created pockets through which natural gas could travel up to the surface (Elias, 2013). After this, the next major development came in 1947 when Stanolind Oil, an oil company, injecte... ... middle of paper ... ...n fracking rigs to maintain an air quality above a certain level of purity at all times. Most laws are in the same vein of environmental conciousness. A bill was recently passed that would get fracking started quicker in the state. Because so much time has passed with no institution of any rigs, the Illinois oil companies and its associates have gotten tired of waiting. Mark Denzler, vice president of Illinois Manufcaterer's Association states that “ there’s been extreme disappointment that we’ve waited a year to get rules in place and then nothing” (Wernau, 2014). So since Illinois has yet to build any fracking rigs, the best (and only) thing they can do right now is make sure to learn from the mistakes of other states. Illinois must do its best to implement a smart and efficient set of guidelines to keep fracking rigs in check and safe for the environment.

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