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Gas Drilling Report

Decent Essays

This paper is about fracking and the reason for the disparity between what sciences is telling the public and what the corporations and politicians are doing about gas drilling. In addition, the economic and environmental advantages and disadvantages of allowing the gas companies to have absolute autonomy on oil drilling will be enumerated. Furthermore, the effectiveness of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and The Bureau of Land Management's (BLM) will be discussed.
Furthermore, I will include my opinion on the safety of Illinois waters or waterways; and will describe the organic compound known as toluene, its uses and its potential toxic effects on humans. Finally, the recommended limit of toluene by EPA and FDA will be noted; and …show more content…

Unfortunately, the energy bill further exempted the gas companies from disclosing the chemicals used during hydraulic fracturing and basically undermined the power of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA); an agency which was created in 1970 for the sole purpose of ensuring that the environment of the United States in its entirety is contamination free (“EPA history,” 2015). With the leaders of the country creating a barrier to a clean and healthy environment, it's not surprising that there is a disconnect in what the politicians and corporations are telling the general public about gas drilling, the elected officials that were supposed to represent the interest of the people of the United States failed in the duties to the American public due to their greed and selfish agenda. Despite protests from environmental groups, the Bush/Cheney administration created a loophole, which is commonly referred to as the Halliburton Loophole, to keep the American public uninformed about the gas companies’ destruction of human lives and the …show more content…

economy robust. According to the American petroleum institute (2013), the total employment impact of the US oil and natural gas industry’s on the national economy in 2011 was in the amounted to 9.8 million full-time and part-time jobs and accounted for 5.6 percent of total US employment. The above numbers include both operational and capital investment impacts (“Economic impacts,”2013). When the direct, indirect, and induced impacts were summed up, the industry’s total impact on labor income (including proprietors’ income) was $598 billion or 6.3 percent of national labor income in 2011. According to Analysts, the contribution of the industry to the US GDP was $1.2 trillion, accounting for 8.0 percent of the national total in 2011(“Economic

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