Gas explosions from fracking
From Global Energy Monitor
This article is part of the FrackSwarm coverage of fracking. |
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A 2014 U.S. Chemical Safety Board investigation found 26 explosions and fires since 1983 at conventional oil and gas sites. The explosions killed 44 members of the public and injured 25 others.[1]
Hutchinson, Kansas
On January 17, 2001, an appliance store and two other buildings ignited and an explosion shattered windows for blocks. Three miles away, there was a 30-foot-tall "geyser of gas." Elsewhere, the ground sprayed brown briny water. The following morning, a new plume of gas and water went through the floor of mobile home, killing two people. Geologists determined that the eruptions were produced from an underground gas storage field located seven miles away.[2]
References
- ↑ "The drilling industry's explosion problem," Mike Soraghan, EnergyWire, October 20, 2014.
- ↑ "An Unseen Leak, Then Boom," ProPublica, June 21, 2012.
Resources
Related GEM.wiki pages
Click on the map below for state-by-state information on fracking:
External links
- FracTracker
- FRAC: Fracking Regulatory Action Center, Sierra Club
- Hydraulic Fracturing Case Chart and Litigation Tracker, Arnold and Porter, 2012.
- Fraccidents Map
- Timeline: How We Learned to Love—and Hate—Natural Gas, Mother Jones, 2012.