Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
- Publication
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Law
North Carolina's Dueling Property Rights Interests: Water And Hydraulic Fracturing, Rupa Russe
North Carolina's Dueling Property Rights Interests: Water And Hydraulic Fracturing, Rupa Russe
NCCU Environmental Law Review
No abstract provided.
Reflection On Shale Gas Fracking Risk Assessment And Management In The United States, Yosra Abid
Reflection On Shale Gas Fracking Risk Assessment And Management In The United States, Yosra Abid
Washington Journal of Environmental Law & Policy
Hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, is the current technology of choice for developing most shale gas reserves. This technology allows increased production of natural gas from formerly inaccessible shale formations. One of the primary environmental impacts of concern for fracking is its potential to contaminate water.
This paper focuses on the potential risks affecting the drinking-water resources throughout the complete lifecycle of a drilled and fractured well. Given the significant environmental concerns, fracking risk assessment (what we know about the risk), and fracking risk management (what we wish to do about the risk) appear to be indispensable steps for the enactment …
Rebuilding The Texas Railroad Commission, James W. Coleman
Rebuilding The Texas Railroad Commission, James W. Coleman
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
This article explains how the Railroad Commission of Texas became the world’s most prominent oil and gas regulator and how it can become the world’s role model again. It explains how the Railroad Commission built the world’s modern oil and gas industry by stopping oil and gas waste and ensuring stable prices. And it describes the crisis now facing the industry—overproduction of oil and gas is wasting resources that will be worth more in the future. The United States is emerging from the biggest oil and gas boom that the world has ever seen and its production now dwarfs that …