The study, which has been accepted for publication in theDuke Environmental Law and Policy Forumjournal, looks at potential environmental hazards and how lawmakers in other states are factoring health and environmental risks into regulatory approaches targeting the natural gas extraction method.
"If North Carolina legalizes shale gas extraction, we need to consider what's worked best in other states and avoid what hasn't," says Rob Jackson, Nicholas professor of global environmental change at the Nicholas School of the Environment. "That's the only way to get it right."
Legislation passed earlier this year has moved North Carolina closer to producing shale gas, and is directing the Department of Environment and Natural Resources to complete a study on the effects of hydraulic fracturing, often called "fracking," by May 2012.
The authors of Duke's own study say if North Carolina legislators allow natural gas production through hydraulic fracturing, they should consider seven measures to help avoid and mitigate any possible negative effects. These include:
-
Securing baseline data on ground water prior to shale gas production and at
each stage of the drilling process
- Funding
for regulatory programs and an agency to carry them out
- Planning
for withdrawals from area water supplies related to the production
- Minimizing
the risks of spills and contamination caused by equipment failure and human
error by implementing safety requirements
- Thinking
through options for the disposal and treatment of wastewater resulting from the
hydraulic fracturing process
- Assessing
the impacts on air quality and assuring attainment of federal ground-level ozone
standards
- Requiring some degree of disclosure regarding the chemicals used in fracturing fluid.
The paper, "Considering Shale Gas Extraction in North Carolina: Lessons Learned in Other States," is written by Sarah Plikunas, Brooks Rainey Pearson and Jonas Monast of Duke's Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions, and Rob Jackson and Avner Vengosh of the Nicholas School of the Environment. To read it, visithttp://nicholasinstitute.duke.edu/nc-hydraulic-fracturing/paper.