Cross-Posted from DeSmogBlog

Representative Diana DeGette says fracking bills make a mockery of disclosure.
Last year, a hydraulic fracturing (“fracking”) chemical fluid disclosure “model bill” was passed by both the Council of State Governments (CSG) and the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC). It proceeded to pass in multiple states across the country soon thereafter, but as Bloomberg recently reported, the bill has been an abject failure with regards to “disclosure.”
That was by design, thanks to the bill’s chief author, ExxonMobil.
Originating as a Texas bill with disclosure standards drawn up under the auspices of the Obama Administration’s Department of Energy Fracking Subcommittee rife with oil and gas industry insiders, the model is now codified as law in Colorado, Pennsylvania, and Illinois.
Bloomberg reported that the public is being kept “clueless” as to what chemicals are injected into the ground during the fracking process by the oil and gas industry.
“Truck-Sized” Loopholes: Fracking Chemical Fluid Non-Disclosure by Design
“Drilling companies in Texas, the biggest oil-and-natural gas producing state, claimed similar exemptions about 19,000 times this year through August,” explained Bloomberg. “Trade-secret exemptions block information on more than five ingredients for every well in Texas, undermining the statute’s purpose of informing people about chemicals that are hauled through their communities and injected thousands of feet beneath their homes and farms.”
For close observers of this issue, it’s no surprise that the model bills contain “truck-sized” loopholes.
“A close reading of the bill…reveals loopholes that would allow energy companies to withhold the names of certain fluid contents, for reasons including that they have been deemed trade secrets,” The New York Times explained back in April.
Disclosure Goes Through FracFocus, PR Front For Oil and Gas Industry
The model bill that’s passed in four states so far mandates that fracking chemical fluid disclosure be conducted by FracFocus, which recently celebrated its one-year anniversary, claiming it has produced chemical data on over 15,000 fracked wells in a promotional video.
The reality is far more messy, as reported in an August investigation by Bloomberg.
“Energy companies failed to list more than two out of every five fracked wells in eight U.S. states from April 11, 2011, when FracFocus began operating, through the end of last year,” wrote Bloomberg. “The gaps reveal shortcomings in the voluntary approach to transparency on the site, which has received funding from oil and gas trade groups and $1.5 million from the U.S. Department of Energy.”
This moved U.S. Representative Diana DeGette (D-CO) to say that FracFocus and the model bills it would soon be a part of make a mockery of the term “disclosure.”
“FracFocus is just a fig leaf for the industry to be able to say they’re doing something in terms of disclosure,” she said.
“Fig leaf” is one way of putting it.
Another way of putting it is “public relations ploy.” As Dory Hippauf of ShaleShock Media recently revealed in an article titled “FracUNfocusED,” FracFocus is actually a PR front for the oil and gas industry.
Hippauf revealed that FracFocus‘ domain is registered by Brothers & Company, a public relations firm whose clients include America’s Natural Gas Alliance, Chesapeake Energy, and American Clean Skies Foundation – a front group for Chesapeake Energy.
Given the situation, it’s not surprising then that “companies claimed trade secrets or otherwise failed to identify the chemicals they used about 22 percent of the time,” according to Bloomberg‘s analysis of FracFocus data for 18 states.
Put another way, the ExxonMobil’s bill has done exactly what it set out to do: business as usual for the oil and gas industry.
Public domain photo of Rep. Degette by United States Congress.



6 Comments

I’m too old and remote to do much now, but we really need some industrial spying out in the fracking fields.
As a young man, I did 5+ years of of low-level and one-tier up work in ag and similar very blue collar work, and had plenty of buddies along that road in extractive industry work.
I’m sure the ingredients and ‘recipes’ are often lying around at these fracking sites, in the cab of somebody’s pickup truck, or in the foreman’s trailer, etc.
A couple months ago, I spent a long evening talking to a cousin’s rather bright, 25 yr old son-in-law, who is a crew manager at a big chemical company in Houston. They make things like Windex, Turtle Wax, WD-40, etc., sometimes generics, sometimes brand name. He has most of the recipes in his head, but he and crew always go through each recipe’s checklist and prescribed steps, because the chemical inputs are often very dangerous to work with. Even without a recipe in front of him, he knows all the chemicals he deals with on a daily and weekly basis.
Boris and Natasha, get thee to ND, Marcellus-PA, NY, etc…
Excellent work.
Thank you!
They breathe the same air and drink the same water as the rest of us, wtf is the matter with these people.
I think that they believe that their money and position in society protects them. Anyway, they probably feel that they will be dead before anything could touch them. Their kids will then be protected by the money and societal position.
Thanks Steve.
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