US Consumers "Fracked"!!!

signalmankenneth

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US Consumers "Fracked" as Fossil Fuel Industry Benefits From Natural Gas Wholesale Price Drops?!!

An article posted in The National Journal asserts that fracking -- dangerous to the environment, the earth and humans -- has resulted in huge price breaks in natural gas for businesses, but comparatively little for consumers.
The article reveals that the industrial sector has seen the wholesale price of natural gas decrease by 66% -- attributed to fracking increases in the supply of natural gas -- but only 23% for residential consumers. This, of course, raises the issues yet again of who is benefitting from the large risk of fracking, which uses toxic chemicals, pollutes the environment, and ravages the earth's outer layer.

On a web page revealingly filled with large adds for Chevron -- "Which Industry is Creating American Jobs and Strengthening the Economy? The Answer Is Energy," one huge Chevron banner ad proclaims -- the article makes clear who is economically get a windfall from fracking:

Fracking has sent the price of natural gas plummeting, just not for the people who need it most.

The straight-out-of-the-ground price of natural gas is way down since the start of the boom in hydraulic fracturing. Back in 2008, users buying gas directly from drillers were paying an average of $7.97 per thousand cubic feet, according to the Energy Information Administration.

By 2012, that cost—known as the “wellhead” price—had dropped to $2.66 in nominal dollars (not adjusted for inflation) resulting in a two-thirds discount in just five years.

However, those are the prices paid by pipeline operators, utilities, large industrial users, and other entities that can buy gas directly from the companies that drill for it.

By the time gas was piped into homes, individual consumers were still paying an average of $10.68 per thousand cubic feet. That’s down from $13.98 in 2008, but the $3.30 price drop is much smaller—both in absolute and relative terms—than the one that big buyers are getting further up the chain.

Yes, and of course, it gets worse:

And consumers are about to give some of those gains back. The EIA projects that heating costs for residential customers using natural gas will rise by an average of 13 percent this winter, adding an additional $80 to the typical household’s energy bill over the course of the season.

The upcoming price hike is a sticking point for the natural-gas industry as it tries to use the promise of economic benefits to sell the public on fracking. And for customers, it’s a setback at a time when real wages are largely stagnant, household budgets are tight, and large-scale price cuts would mean much-needed relief.

Or to put it less politely, US consumers are getting royally "fracked"!

The National Journal article -- not that the enormous Chevron ads might influence any writing, right? -- qualifies that investment in infrastructure and government regulations might account for the disparity in natural gas price decreases.

But given the enormous gap between the cost of natural gas to consumers since 2008 and the cost to fossil fuel wholesale buyers, the so-called explanation appears a bit lacking in credibility.

What is entirely missing in The National Journal article is any reference to the high-risk of fracking. Were it to have been brought up in the piece, it would inevitably lead to a consideration of the risks versus the benefits to most Americans in terms of their gas bills.

That's a discussion the fossil fuel industry doesn't want to have, as it profits from radical drilling activity that can have a perilous impact on Americans.

Meanwhile, the average US citizen is barely feeling any relief from high natural gas bills, if at all.

Furthermore, the analysis in The National Journal doesn't provide figures that the natural gas wholesale price drop is due to fracking or to what degree it is due to fracking. It just rest its case on that assumption without providing proof.

That raises a whole lot more questions, as it should.

After all, The National Journal article is indirectly sponsored, through ads, by Chevron (three prominent ones at the time of the writing of this commentary).

By
MARK KARLIN

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what are the chemicals they FORCE into the fissures to get the gas?

where do they go after the gas comes out?


how do you control WHERE the gas comes out?


do any of you backers know the answers to those questions?
 
what are the chemicals they FORCE into the fissures to get the gas?

where do they go after the gas comes out?


how do you control WHERE the gas comes out?


do any of you backers know the answers to those questions?

Yes we do but I know from bitter experience that it is nigh impossible to convince some people, you being a prime example. Suffice to say this, Halliburton have made a fracking fluid that can be drunk and the Vice-President of Haliburton Canada, drank some during a PR stunt to prove it is safe

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...ecutive-drinks-fluid-PR-stunt-prove-safe.html
 
and how do we prove what he drank is what they actually use?


dude they have lied to the people many time in the past for money.

money is their ONLY priority remember
 
Oh good idea lets monitor each and EVERY site they are fracking at and police them on what they use.


because I know you think corporations have NEVER lied to the people but not all of us are as stupid and uninformed as you
 
http://www.celsias.com/article/natural-gas-companies-poisoning-your-ground-water/


Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa Jackson said in a congressional hearing on Tuesday that the agency would consider revisiting its official position that this drilling technique does not harm groundwater. A 2004 study conducted by the EPA under the Bush administration concluded that hydraulic fracturing causes "no threat" to underground drinking water. The study was used to support the provision in the 2005 energy bill that exempted hydraulic fracturing from federal regulation.

We do not know, because there is no federal oversight, the exact formula of the chemicals added to the water. We do not know, because the industry has been greenlighted through state regulatory agencies, what the millions of gallons of poison underground will do to our drinking water. We are told to trust the natural gas industry, as we were told to trust Wall Street. And if our drinking water becomes contaminated, then expect corporations to profit from the desperation
 
see how brain washed you are Aox.


you have to groan at the obvious truth and cant give a real answer
 
see how brain washed you are Aox.


you have to groan at the obvious truth and cant give a real answer

So the fact that CO2 levels are back to 1990 levels, gas prices are down to one third and the US is well on its way to becoming energy self sufficient means nothing to you. You prefer to take the word of some climate alarmist blog with an axe to grind. Not that I care really, in the UK we are potentially sitting on the world's greatest reserves of gas so excuse me if we don't give a shit about your ill informed views.
 
yes those are good thing an temporary right?

destroying physical water supplies and cracking up the ground are permanent huh?
 
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