To frack or not to frack?
This question is asked by more and more people as decisions are being made about whether hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, by Noble Energy Inc. will be allowed in northeastern Nevada.
While the public is divided on this issue, Dawn Harris, founder of the Frack Free Nevada website and Facebook page and a University of Nevada, Reno student, believes fracking is dangerous and should be stoppedโat least until further research can be done.
โItโs our water and our air,โ Harris said. โWe cannot survive without it. We need to protect these things.โ
The main issue Harris has with fracking is that there has not been enough research done on the topic for various reasons. She wants the practice to halt.
โI think that we need to have a moratorium until thereโs science that can say what the effects are,โ Harris said. โA pharmaceutical company cannot issue a drug unless itโs tested. Why is this industry allowed to perform all of these actions without any testing to prove that it is safe?โ
Through her own research, Harris has spoken to people in areas where fracking has been done to see how it has affected them. She has found various health issues. She stated that the industry claims these are not scientific, only anecdotal, but Harris doesnโt feel this is reason to dismiss these findings.
โItโs a very wealthy, very powerful industry, and they want to protect their interests,โ Harris said. โThe people experiencing the problems are just everyday citizens. They donโt have anything to gain by standing up and saying, โHey, Iโm having nosebleeds, and my horsesโ hair is falling out. The horses are having nosebleeds. Livestock is dying. And my children have asthma now.โโ
Harris is currently looking into the implications of fracking on public health through her personal and university studies.
Although Harris does not agree with the practice of fracking, her goal is to raise awareness and general knowledge of fracking so people can make educated decisions about it. Harris reached out to the Sustainable Energy Network on campus to get Gasland and Rooted Landsโdocumentaries on frackingโshown on campus April 2 and 7 as part of this.
Harris wants the public to realize the issue of fracking is not a matter of choosing sides but choosing whatโs good for the countryโs health and future. She believes the industry has created a division in the public to deal with this issue, pitting people against each other who arenโt necessarily at odds.
โThey put people who are trying to have money to raise their families against people who are trying to protect our air, water, soil and our way of life,โ Harris said. โIf we didnโt have that division, if we could see we are all on the same side trying to protect our basic rights to raise our families and eat good quality food and drink clean water and breathe clean air, the industry wouldnโt be able to stand.โ
When reached by email to comment on the issue, Noble Energy said it would provide responses to our questions, but at press time, has not.
