View allAll Photos Tagged fracking
Organizers with Climate Justice Montreal will set up a shale gas extraction site outside of the Queen Elizabeth Hotel, where oil and gas executives are holding a breakfast meeting about shale gas, to send a message that this extraction sacrifices air, water and land, three great reasons to stop extraction.
Des organisateurs avec le groupe Justice Climatique Montréal mettrons en place un site d'extraction de gaz de schiste juste à l'extérieur de l'Hôtel Reine Elizabeth, là où des cadres d’industries pétrolières et gazières se rencontrent autour d’un déjeuner pour parler du gaz de schiste, pour envoyer un message que cette extraction sacrifie l'eau, l’air et la vie sur terre : trois excellentes raisons pour arrêter l'extraction.
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
Emergency response and no trespassing signs line the road near a hydraulically fractured natural gas well outside West Finley, Pa. Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News.
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
St. Tammany public hearing near on Helis Oil and Gas Co. permit request to explore for oil near Mandeville using the hydraulic fracturing (fracking) method.
Fracking is an oil industry method of extracting gas from shale formations using various toxic chemicals the nature of which are protected from disclosure because they are supposedly trade secrets.
. It releases potent greenhouse gas methane into the atmosphere and poisons our precious water upon which we all depend for life itself. It also destroys our land and leaves behind radioactive substances that occur naturally and are brought up out of the ground by the drilling process. All of this in the name of a few corporations and wealthy individuals whose greed is never satisfied.
We can learn from the Oneida and bless our water.
Oppose fracking - and the tar sands! And don't waste your time courting the politicians: they're bought and paid for by the industry. It's all grassroots....the people in the streets, the churches, the social organizations.....the real democracy.
Photos taken at the 2015 Stop the Frack Attack National Summit in Denver at the Holiday Inn - Stapleton
Credit: Thomas Jefferson
In the world of high heels, there is much focus on stilettos. They have been around for a lot of years now, and are not the most comfortable of heels, especially when combined with a pointed toe. For me though, a chunkier heels is far more attractive, high enough for a girl to know she's in heels, but not so high that she can't walk elegantly in them.
I'd much rather see a girl comfortable in 3" heels all day than a girl hobble around in pain in her Louboutins for a few hours.
A girl who can manage her stilettos elegantly all day every day is another matter though! :)
Venezuelan government's latest 'awareness campaign' - Don't frack, it's bad for the environment!
...and Venezuela's biggest export :)
Charlotte Bodak/Staff Photographer
Midland freshman Alexis Loebig, Waterford senior Alysha McClain, and West Bloomfield sophomore Caitlin Richards chant "Once you frack you can't go back" in front of the Comfort Inn Thursday afternoon.
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.