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Photos at the 2015 Stop the Frack Attack National Summit in Denver, Holiday Inn - Stapleton
Photo credit: Roger Smith
Stacks of tree trunks, cut to make way for a natural gas pipeline lay on the cleared right of way near Becky Crabtree's home outside Lindside, W.Va. Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News.
Press Conference on Fracking by Joe Andrucyk at Governor’s Reception Room, 100 State Circle, Annapolis MD 21401
Shadow Minister for Environment and Janelle Saffin met with community members. Gasfield Free Northern Rivers presented them with the LTG Water4 Life federal election platform.
Photos taken at the 2015 Stop the Frack Attack National Summit in Denver at the Holiday Inn - Stapleton
Credit: Thomas Jefferson
Photos taken at the 2015 Stop the Frack Attack National Summit in Denver at the Holiday Inn - Stapleton
Credit: Thomas Jefferson
HANDS ACROSS THE SAND 2014: CLEAN WATER, NOT DIRTY DRILLING. PART OF NATIONAL DAY OF ACTION
MAY 17, 2014 NAPLES PIER.
IMAGES BY Linda S. Jacobson
Fotos von Jakob Huber/Campact
Frei zur Nicht-Kommerziellen Nutzung (siehe creative commons-Lizenz).
Für kommerzielle Verwendung wenden Sie sich bitte an jakob_huber@web.de
The Rev. Brad Bennett opens the gate for the small cemetery on his family's farm near Jane Lew, W.Va. Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News.
Regardless of their stance on fracking, residents of the Marcellus Shale in Pennsylvania and southern New York all agreed that the fracking should be monitored. An interstate agency, the Susquehanna River Basin Commission, manages water resources within the watershed with an expansive monitoring network. Their 58 stations continuously monitor temperature, pH, specific conductance, dissolved oxygen and turbidity.
Read more about this giant monitoring effort: www.fondriest.com/news/susquehanna-river-monitoring-netwo...
Photos courtesy of the SRBC. The site map was created by Fondriest Environmental.
Fracking is actually a pretty nasty (environmentally speaking) way of extracting natural gas from the ground. Still a funny word.
From the J Henry Fair photo exhibit at the 2011 Earth Day Fair at Grand Central. A lot of frack sites cannot be seen from regular roads because the drilling usually takes place in private lands where the owners are offered huge sums of money to allow the drilling to take place. What they usually don't realize is that the environmental after effects are not as safe as they were told. Most of the drilling also takes place in areas where there is very little economic opportunity so people jump at the chance to make money and not think of the consequences. Educate yourself and write your local congressman or senator because new laws are being re-visited everyday and in New York, it is being reviewed whether to allow it to be introduced into the state. Only someone in local government can stop this but the information on it was and is scarce. Also check out the brief videos on the documentary Gasland online and see the very real threat to your drinking water and if you think you can't be affected think again. It has been such a lucrative business that other companies are thinking of starting to drill in other countries as well.
via @jmestepa
Good times on the platform. Train isn't moving, at least two trains directly behind it. #wmata @unsuckdcmetro twitpic.com/5p86jc
Photos at the 2015 Stop the Frack Attack National Summit in Denver, Holiday Inn - Stapleton
Photo credit: Roger Smith