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The New York Times ran this op-
GET IT RIGHT ON GAS
THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
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We are in the midst of a natural gas revolution in America that is a potential game changer for the economy, environment, and our national security—
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“This is helping to lower our carbon emissions faster than expected and make us more energy secure.”
The enormous stores of natural gas that have been locked away in shale deposits across America that we’ve now been able to tap into, thanks to breakthroughs in seismic imaging, horizontal drilling, and hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” are enabling us to replace much dirtier coal with cleaner gas as the largest source of electricity generation in America. And natural gas may soon be powering cars, trucks, and ships as well. This is helping to lower our carbon emissions faster than expected and make us more energy secure. And, if prices stay low, it may enable America to bring back manufacturing that migrated overseas. But, as the energy and climate expert Hal Harvey puts it, there is just one big, hugely important question to be asked about this natural gas bounty: “Will it be a transition to a clean energy future, or does it defer a clean energy future?”
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That is the question—
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That would be reckless. This year’s global extremes of droughts and floods are totally consistent with models of disruptive, nonlinear climate change. After record warm temperatures in the first half of this year, it was no surprise to find last week that the Department of Agriculture has now designated more than half of all U.S. counties—
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That is why on May 29 the British newspaper The Guardian quoted Fatih Birol, the chief economist for the International Energy Agency, as saying that “a golden age for gas is not necessarily a golden age for the climate”—if natural gas ends up sinking renewables. Maria van der Hoeven, executive director of the I.E.A., urged governments to keep in place subsidies and regulations to encourage investments in wind, solar, and other renewables “for years to come” so they remain competitive.
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Moreover, while natural gas is cleaner than coal, extracting it can be very dirty. We have to do this right. For instance, the carbon advantage can be undermined by leakage of uncombusted natural gas from wellheads and pipelines because methane—
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On July 19, Forbes interviewed George Phydias Mitchell, who, in the 1990s, pioneered the use of fracking to break natural gas free from impermeable shale. According to Forbes, Mitchell argued that fracking needs to be regulated by the Department of Energy, not just states: “Because if they don’t do it right, there could be trouble,” he says. There’s no excuse not to get it right. “There are good techniques to make it safe that should be followed properly,” he says. But, the smaller, independent drillers, “are wild.” “It’s tough to control these independents. If they do something wrong and dangerous, they should punish them.”
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Adds Fred Krupp, the president of the Environmental Defense Fund who has been working with the government and companies on drilling standards: “The economic and national security advantages of natural gas are obvious, but if you tour some of these areas of intensive development the environmental impacts are equally obvious.” We need nationally accepted standards for controlling methane leakage, for controlling water used in fracking—
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Energy companies who want to keep regulations lax need to understand that a series of mishaps around natural gas will—
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But we also need to get the economics right. We’ll need more tax revenue to reach a budget deal in January. Why not a carbon tax that raises enough money to help pay down the deficit and lower both personal income taxes and corporate taxes—
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AT ISSUE: SOURCES FOR DEVELOPING AN EVALUATION ARGUMENT
Friedman uses the terms revolution and game changer in his opening paragraph. Is this language appropriate here, or do you think Friedman is exaggerating or overstating his case?
Friedman does not consider fracking to be evil, nor does he see it as a solution to all of America’s energy problems; his position falls somewhere in between these two extremes. State Friedman’s position in one sentence. Assuming that this sentence could serve as the essay’s thesis statement, where would you locate it? Why?
What experts does Friedman quote? Do they agree with one another, or do they have different views of fracking? Do they all agree with Friedman? Explain.
What criteria does Friedman use to evaluate fracking? Are these the same criteria used by other writers whose essays appear in this section?
According to Friedman, how should the United States “get it right on gas”? What “right” steps does he propose? Do you agree?