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Gas drilling has expanded in Pennsylvania and other states where shale formations are thought to hold lots of natural gas, a clean-burning energy source. To get it, companies need to fracture the rock. As the technique has proliferated, so too has concern among homeowners, and local, state and federal governments about its potential toll on underground drinking water sources which are unregulated and untested. Two federal agencies have launched their own studies, and the state of Pennsylvania
-- where numerous homeowners are suing drilling companies over water contamination
-- views methane as among the most serious risks of gas drilling. In that state, an investigation into an explosion and fire at a house in December, and another at a home in February, is looking at natural gas drilling as the culprit. And a natural gas drilling company last year agreed to pay $4.1 million to 19 homeowners whose water was contaminated by methane gas, even though the company denies causing the pollution. In Texas, the federal Environmental Protection Agency demanded that Range Resources of Fort Worth place monitors in two homes and provide two families with water after methane and other contaminants were detected in drinking water. But the state regulator recently said the EPA analysis was wrong. Study participants in northeastern Pennsylvania hoped the research would help settle the debate.
Sherry Vargson's drinking water well in Bradford County had the highest levels of methane detected in the study. The bubbles of methane gas, which she describes as looking like Alka-Seltzer coming out of the tap, did not start until 14 months after the well was drilled. The company who leased her property, Chesapeake Energy Corp., has bottled water delivered. "I still think it can be done safely, but there are too many shortcuts being taken," she said. ___ Online: Journal: http://www.pnas.org/
[Associated
Press;
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