WV Gas Industry has No Place for Science

by Duane Nichols on April 9, 2017

March for Science: April 22nd

No Science, Please, for Fracking Industry ….. ?

Essay by S. Tom Bond, Resident Farmer, Lewis County, WV, April 4, 2017

The human brain is not a reality machine.  It is a device for survival in a world where problems must be solved, but exact reality is not needed.  Think about all the fantasies in literature, everything from “One Thousand and One Nights” which includes the flying carpet and the roc, a bird so large it can pick up a man and carry him away, to Frankenstein, the man crafted by early 19th century methods in the mind of Mary Shelly, and its predecessor, Prometheus, to Jules Vern’s fantasies, and so on.  These Universes exist in the mind only. As the prisoner in Mahler’s  symphony sings “die Gedanken sind frei”  - thoughts are free

Look too, at the variety of the world’s religions.  People believe and act on them.  An individual religion is not wired into human minds, but is learned from the culture surrounding the person.

However, the mind we have has made us a uniquely successful species.  About half of the primary biological productivity of the earth – that is all new growth on earth – is devoted to feeding, clothing, housing and keeping us alive.  No single species has been able to approach this in the past.

This presents a dilemma – a very powerful, useful organ for knowing is not directly attached to reality, but capable of unlimited flights of fantasy.  In the past this might have been more useful than it is for today’s humanity.  It provided diversity, and smaller, diverse systems are tolerant, because if one fails, others go ahead.  This is the nature of evolution.  It is not good when only one path is taken by all, because forethought and planning must be based on what is correct.  Failure is disaster for all.

We understand narratives, stories of explanation.  Cold facts must be linked into a story, an explanation, if they are to be remembered, transmitted, and useful. Fitting facts into a narrative that is parallel to the real world requires a very high skill.  It is injured by indifference, willful ignorance, and the big one, self interest.

Science is a system for getting a narrative, an explanation of phenomena, closer to reality. It works by using measurements, samples of the real world, and a procedure for debating proposed explanations.  It is a huge debating society, now so diverse there are many branches.  People spend their lives learning what is known, and adding to it.  It is written down and new ideas are debated world wide.  One makes points by suggesting new explanations for data, or by finding errors in new suggestions.  Competition is fierce.  It is a very social enterprise.

Rarely, people falsify data, and present new ideas based on false data.  But one of the key principles is that experiments must be repeatable by others, so fakers will eventually be found out.  Basic ideas change, too. At one time it was thought the planets go around the sun in circles.  More careful measurements showed they move in ellipses.  Most additions are not very large, but sometimes there is a tremendous change, such as when it was realized that the surface of the earth consists of plates that move, Plate Tectonic Theory, a cornerstone of Geology today.  Or the Quantum Theory, which is now a cornerstone of both chemistry and physics.

So sampling, careful measurements, and active, open debate bring science as close to the real world as anything today.  Unlike money, it has only indirect connection to power, however.  It must be financed, it doesn’t pay directly for itself, like so many things that affect us collectively, rather than individually.

The public narrative about fracking, however, is not science.  It is the device of individuals, not even checked with connections to reality, quite like literature.  It is a good, heartwarming story, claims of abundance, jobs, affluence. Here is a good example. It is widely promoted by those who hope to have some of its benefits, and by those who are afraid not to be a valued follower.

There is, however, a lot left out of this narrative.  The article referred to uses percent increase in O&G jobs, not actual figures.  The actual numbers are small compared to total employment.  The drilling industries are high investment, but actually low labor, in contrast to solar and wind.  Nor is externalized costs mentioned, nor the carbon dioxide burden it would cause.

Another misunderstanding: the US gas industry has smaller reserves, much smaller, than places overseas, which already have production equipment in place, ready to pump. You can check this out yourself.  The four nations ahead of us have 12.7 times as much gas as the United States, and Russia in particular hasn’t even prospected it’s area completely.  Other nations also have half-again as much as the four ahead of the US.  So the West Virginia gas industry is pumping gas from a smaller reserve with a bigger straw, which must be paid for with new money.   Natural gas exports also require building gas liquefaction plants and special ships to move it across the ocean.

Then there is the mater of denial of the ill effects on our environment and people. There is much research, now over 900 articles, on the health effects of fracking.  The volume of such research doubles each year, in spite of failure of cooperation from the industry, which is not interested in verifiable facts, but in promoting it’s own narrative.

It is amazing how poor the education of many people making important decisions really is. My guess is there are few climate change deniers whose knowledge of the physics involved is at the level of a first year college student.  They don’t know enthalpy of vaporization, enthalpy of fusion, heat capacity, coefficient of expansion.  Nor do they know the Earth science of the global ocean heat conveyor, or the Hadley, Farrell and Polar cells.  You shouldn’t worry if you don’t know these terms and how they relate to global warming, unless you are writing contradictions to global warming.  You need to know how to choose science, rather than PR, however.   The science is all available to those who want to take the time to learn, but most don’t have the time required.

Very few fracking executives or midstaff understand elementary toxicology. Nor does the industry as a whole have such expertise.  And it’s well understood that any employee who is not loyal to the objectives of the firm gets the boot.  It is hard on one’s professional standing, if trained in petroleum engineering and you loose a job by being a whistle blower. CIA employees aren’t the only ones who have to “go along to get along.”

And the same applies to politicians.  As I’ve said before, they don’t have time for research or going out in the field and talking to constituents.  They have to spend their time raising money and getting re-elected.  It’s all power brokering. This results in monstrosities such as the WV Senator who is on the Senate Clean Air Committee AND “fighting to preserve coal.” In Pennsylvania they have a bill that removes liability for drillers who use acid mine drainage for fracking.

For corporations, there is little long-term view, hardly more than the next quarter or two, certainly none as long as it will take to pay off their debts.  And no depth beyond “common sense.”  It’s all about paying a dividend and keeping the stock price up.

If “ignorance is bliss,” this must be the finest hour for the hydrocarbon burning industries. They have up a “full head of steam,” but can’t see beyond the next wave.

See also: www.FrackCheckWV.net

{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }

Mary Wildfire April 10, 2017 at 7:56 am

The industry has a PR campaign going; we need to keep up to counter it! We have the facts to do so; we just have to have the stamina, the people to do it.

I had an op-ed in the Charleston Gazette March 30th, April Keating had two there in the past week; rebuttal letters are going to the Huntington Herald-Dispatch paper for an op-ed by a PR person for the industry, and I’m working on a rebuttal to the editorial in the Fairmont paper.

The industry is doing this, presumably, to counter the increased resistance to their destructive program and perhaps also because they’re desperate to get gas flowing as fast as they can to wherever they expect top dollar, to pay off debts and avoid stranded assets.

One thing they’re likely lying about is the quantity of reserves. David Hughes has written several reports on this. Here is the most recent:

http://www.postcarbon.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/Hughes_2016-Shale-Gas-Reality-Check-2016.pdf

Let’s keep our focus.

Mary Wildfire, Roane County, WV

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