James Panero
Fracking brings breathtaking economic and environmental benefitsat least to places that welcome it.
A drill near Dimock, Pennsylvania, taps what may be the world's second-largest reserve of natural gas.
A drill near Dimock, Pennsylvania, taps what may be the worlds second-largest reserve of natural gas.
Few people understand the ground better than Larry Fulmer, a soft-spoken man with flowing white hair pulled back into a ponytail. Fulmer, the hydrofracturing superintendent for Cabot Oil & Gas in Pennsylvania, knows just how much pressurized water and sand will liberate the natural gas trapped in the shale rock a mile beneath our feet.
In other words, in spite of the screams and shrieks of the Greenies and Obama adorers, it's not only good for people who want jobs but it helps the environment. Read the full piece @ The View from Marcellus by James Panero, City Journal Summer 2013
Fracking brings breathtaking economic and environmental benefitsat least to places that welcome it.
A drill near Dimock, Pennsylvania, taps what may be the world's second-largest reserve of natural gas.

A drill near Dimock, Pennsylvania, taps what may be the worlds second-largest reserve of natural gas.
Few people understand the ground better than Larry Fulmer, a soft-spoken man with flowing white hair pulled back into a ponytail. Fulmer, the hydrofracturing superintendent for Cabot Oil & Gas in Pennsylvania, knows just how much pressurized water and sand will liberate the natural gas trapped in the shale rock a mile beneath our feet.
In other words, in spite of the screams and shrieks of the Greenies and Obama adorers, it's not only good for people who want jobs but it helps the environment. Read the full piece @ The View from Marcellus by James Panero, City Journal Summer 2013