Difference between revisions of "Team:CU Boulder/project/motivation"

 
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<!---------------- Content starts here --------------->
 
  <article>
 
  <article>
 
<h1>Motivation</h1>
 
<h1>Motivation</h1>
<h1>A BIG FRACKING DEAL</h1>
+
<h1>DRILLING FOR A BETTER SOLUTION</h1>
<p><b>Fracking definition, overview of opinions, quote from INVST, possible threats, quote
+
from Apache Natural gas showing conflicting opinions. Fracking definition, overview
+
of opinions, quote from INVST, possible threats, quote from Apache Natural gas showing
+
conflicting opinions. Fracking definition, overview of opinions, quote from INVST,
+
possible threats, quote from Apache Natural gas showing conflicting opinions Fracking
+
definition, overview of opinions, quote from INVST, possible threats, quote from
+
Apache Natural gas showing conflicting opinions.</b></p>
+
<br><br>
+
<h2><em>Fracking Over The Years</em></h2>
+
<p>More detailed history of fracking including development of techniques, and quotes
+
from advocacy groups regarding their formation and development. More detailed history of
+
fracking including development of techniques, and quotes from advocacy groups regarding
+
their formation and development.More detailed history of fracking including development
+
of techniques, and quotes from advocacy groups regarding their formation and development.
+
More detailed history of fracking including development of techniques, and quotes
+
from advocacy groups regarding their formation and development. More detailed history of
+
fracking including development of techniques, and quotes from advocacy groups regarding
+
their formation and development.More detailed history of fracking including development
+
of techniques, and quotes from advocacy groups regarding their formation and development.
+
More detailed history of fracking including development of techniques, and quotes
+
from advocacy groups regarding their formation and development. More detailed history of
+
fracking including development of techniques, and quotes from advocacy groups regarding
+
their formation and development.More detailed history of fracking including development
+
of techniques, and quotes from advocacy groups regarding their formation and development.</p>
+
 
<br>
 
<br>
<p>We even asked other iGEM teams around the world to see what their opinion was,
+
<p><b>The CU Boulder iGEM team was inspired by combining ideas from previous work and legislation related to fracking with recently-produced genetics including the use of logic gates and cell-to-cell signaling. This combination ultimately results in the most cutting-edge naphthalene biosensor for practical industrial use in controlling groundwater contamination due to fracking.</b></p>
and to gauge fracking’s perspective on a global level.</p>
+
<br><br>
  
 
<!---------VIDEO-------------->
 
<!---------VIDEO-------------->
<div id="video"></div>
 
  
<p>Mission of team is founded in engineering principles to help everybody involved.
+
<div>
We can create a product that is successful in aiding both sides, decide for youself
+
<iframe  align="middle"  scrolling="no"    allowTransparency="true"    frameborder="0"    width="1000" height="450"    src="https://goanimate.com/player/embed/0aodWVaGRO6s?utm_source=social&utm_medium=tumblr&utm_campaign=usercontent"></iframe>
whether fracking is beneficial.</p>
+
  
<!----------------InfoGraphics----------------->
+
<br><br>
<div id="columns_container">
+
        <!----------------LEFT --------------->
+
<div id="left_column">
+
    <h2><em>FRACKING FACTS</em></h2>
+
    <div class="fact">
+
        <h1>86%</h1>
+
        <p>of interviewees were against fracking</p>
+
    </div>
+
    <div class="fact">
+
        <h1>$11,600</h1>
+
        <p>cost of an average contamination test</p>
+
    </div>
+
    <div class="fact">
+
        <h1>290,000</h1>
+
    </div>
+
    <div class="fact">
+
        <h1>$1.6 Billion</h1>
+
        <p></p>
+
    </div>
+
        <br><br>
+
        <br><br>
+
 
</div>
 
</div>
        <!----------------RIGHT --------------->
+
<br><br>
<div id="right_column">
+
  
<div class="section" id="sec1"> <!--------section 1 ---------->
+
<div id="rig_container">
    <div class="left_content">
+
        <h2><em>FILMS ABOUT FRACKING</em></h2>
+
        <h3>Fracknation (2013)</h3>
+
        <p>“Journalist Phelim McAleer faces threats, cops, and bogus lawsuits questioning green extremists for the truth about fracking. McAleer uncovers fracking facts suppressed by environmental activists, and he talks with rural Americans whose livelihoods are at risk if fracking is banned”</p>
+
    </div>
+
  
        <div class="video_image" id="frack"></div>
+
    <div id="rig"></div>
 +
<h2>To determine what type of product could make the biggest impact, CU Boulder iGEM analyzed the environmental risks of fracking and the shortcomings of current solution methods. The result was a design that uses E. coli to test trace fracking fluid contaminants that anybody can use easily and effectively. CU Boulder iGEM interviewed petroleum engineer David Meyer for insight into the history of fracking.</h2>
 +
<p>Despite fracking being a relatively recent topic among environmental discussions, the technology to drill vertical hydraulic fracturing wells has been around and used since 1940s. It wasn’t until the 1980s when George P. Mitchell, a petroleum engineer from Texas, invented the horizontal drilling process. Soon, no natural gas companies could survive unless the adapted the technique themselves. By the 1990s, more than 80% of natural gas in the United States was extracted with fracking, and environmentalists began to fear some of the unintended consequences of the practice. Chemistry and law quickly stepped in to evaluate remediation options, all of which has led to the creation of CU Boulder iGEM team’s device.</p>
 
</div>
 
</div>
 +
<div id="timeline_container">
  
<div class="section" id="sec2"> <!--------section 2 ---------->
+
 
        <div class="video_image" id="frack"></div>  
+
<br><br>
    <div class="right_content">
+
<div class="date date2" >2004</div><div class="fact_title fact_2004">Early Engineering of Whole Cell Biosensors</div>
        <h3>Gasland (2010)</h3>
+
<div class="fact_box fact_2004">
        <p>“It is happening all across America-rural landowners wake up one day to find a lucrative offer from an energy company wanting to lease their property. Reason? The company hopes to tap into a reservoir dubbed the "Saudi Arabia of natural gas." Halliburton developed a way to get the gas out of the ground-a hydraulic drilling process called "fracking"-and suddenly America finds itself on the precipice of becoming an energy superpower</p>
+
    <p>The first description of a whole-cell biosensor with environmental applications was described by researchers at the Swiss Federal Institute for Environmental Science and Technology. They engineered Pseudomonas putida bacteria to luminesce proportionately to aqueous naphthalene concentrations. However, these bacteria had complex biochemical pathways that were not well enough understood to be easily adjusted and refined. Furthermore, the cells were not sensitive enough to report the dilute naphthalene concentrations that fracking companies may be interested in reporting.</p>
    </div>
+
 
</div>
 
</div>
 +
<br><br>
  
<div class="section" id="sec3"> <!--------section 3 ---------->
+
 
    <div class="left_content">
+
<div class="date">2005</div><div class="fact_title fact_2005">Bush Signs Energy Policy Act</div>
        <h3>Triple Divide (2013)</h3>
+
<div class="fact_box fact_2005">
        <p>“Triple Divide is built on evidence from cradle-to-grave investigations that attempt to answer the question, “How are state regulations and industry handling impacts from fracking?” Throughout the film’s 10 chapters, which cover waste, class II injection wells, drinking water contamination, split-estates, the “pre-drill test scandal”, and the “pressure bulb” are on the ground accounts of hair-raising journalism.</p>
+
    <p>The Energy Policy Act of 2005 was passed to change US energy regulations, and restructuring tax incentives within the energy industries. Part of this bill included a provision that would exempt natural gas companies that use fracking from disclosing the chemicals involved that would normally be required of energy companies. While many drilling companies would benefit, it caused the started to grow skeptical about their intentions and the environmental impact of hydraulic fracturing.</p>
    </div>
+
        <div class="video_image" id="frack"></div>
+
 
</div>
 
</div>
 +
<br><br>
 +
 +
<div class="date">2011</div><div class="fact_title fact_2011">Founding of FracFocus Chemical Disclosure Agency</div>
 +
<div class="fact_box fact_2011">
 +
<p>According to their website, FracFocus Chemical Disclosure is a government run agency that was the first to provide public access to information on fracking and the chemicals used near homes. Naphthalene was reported as the most common, as it was found in more than 30% of all contamination sites. Recent legislation has required companies to register the chemicals they use on FracFocus, and it coordinates with reporting companies to keep updated records of contaminant history across the United States. The foundation of the site and coordinating legislation provided transparency, but few companies have been held accountable for data published through FracFocus.</p>
 
</div>
 
</div>
 +
<br><br>
 +
 +
<div class="date">2012</div><div class="fact_title fact_2012">OptiEnz Sensors Begin Use</div>
 +
<div class="fact_box fact_2012">
 +
<p>Since the government had loose regulations on fracking contamination and people grew more concerned about the now-reported chemicals being used, the private sector’s demand for chemical sensors increased. OptiEnz is a leading biosensor development company that was founded by a professor at Colorado State University. Their product uses extracted enzymes and fiber optics to sense real-time pollution directly in the water source, preventing the need for pretreatment and skilled labor that has been previously required.</p>
 +
</div>
 +
<br><br>
 +
 +
<div class="date">2013</div><div class="fact_title fact_2013">Peking iGEM Team Improves Aromatic Transcriptional Regulators</div>
 +
<div class="fact_box fact_2013">
 +
<p>Based on information from their wiki, the 2013 iGEM team from Peking developed many parts to detect aromatic compounds. Among those produced were the NahR transcriptional regulator combined with a salicylate promoter and an sfGFP gene that can respond to naphthalene at concentrations within an order of magnitude of the EPA’s maximum of 20 µg/L. This part was thoroughly characterized and available in the distribution kit, so it quickly became the goal of the CU 2015 team to improve its use to make the system more sensitive, easier to use, and ultimately more practical for industrial application.</p>
 +
</div>
 +
<br><br>
 +
 +
<div class="date">2014</div><div class="fact_title fact_2014">First Settlement of a Personal Injury
 +
Lawsuit Against a Fracking Company</div>
 +
<div class="fact_box fact_2014">
 +
<p>According to CNN, Houstonian Lisa Parr sued Aruba Petroleum for health problems that arose upon the construction of 22 natural gas wells within 2 miles of her home. She suspected that her families’ persistent nausea, migraines, and dizziness came as a result of toxic air and water pollution. Although the Aruba insisted that toxicologists and medical professionals supported that their operations posed no harm, the jury voted and awarded Parr a $2.9 million settlement. This case a need for the general public to have access to practical methods to measure of contamination, and that there may be demand for sensors outside of just private companies or regulatory agencies.</p>
 +
</div>
 +
<br><br>
 +
 +
<div class="date">2015</div><div class="fact_title fact_2015">Network Installation of Permanent Fracking
 +
Sensors Proposed at AMS Conference</div>
 +
<div class="fact_box fact_2015 fact_box2">
 +
<p>Michael van den Bossche from the University of Virginia proposed a network of sensors to track methane pollution in the air as a result of increased fracking use in the natural gas industry. This was among the first designs of a full-scale network of sensors that could run continuously as a large-scale operation. Because  it can run continuously and is not dependent on instantaneous measurement from a sample or a single source, it can produce significant information with very low system maintenance following installation.</p>
 +
</div>
 +
<br><br>
 +
 +
<div id="black_box">
 +
<div id="black_box_image2"></div>
 +
<div id="black_box_text">
 +
<p>The Naphthalene Recorder project by CU Boulder iGEM incorporates the whole-cell concept for simplicity of processing and production and extends OptiEnz concept of measuring untreated samples from bodies of water by introducing a stake that can maintain homeostatic conditions wherever it’s placed. The concept of a low-maintenance network with contaminant “memory” extends the concept proposed for methane sensors, and its use can allow the public to run their own tests, avoiding lawsuits and not being strictly dependent upon the law requiring a company to run a test themselves.</p> 
 +
 +
</div>
 +
<div id="black_box_image1"></div>
 +
 +
</div>
 +
 +
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 +
<br><br>
 +
<br><br>
 +
<br><br>
 +
<br><br>
 +
<br><br>
 +
<br><br>
 +
<br><br>
 +
<br><br>
 +
  
 
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{{CU_Boulder_footer}}
 
{{CU_Boulder_footer}}

Latest revision as of 23:35, 18 September 2015


<!DOCTYPE html> Team:CU_Boulder - 2015.igem.org

Motivation

DRILLING FOR A BETTER SOLUTION


The CU Boulder iGEM team was inspired by combining ideas from previous work and legislation related to fracking with recently-produced genetics including the use of logic gates and cell-to-cell signaling. This combination ultimately results in the most cutting-edge naphthalene biosensor for practical industrial use in controlling groundwater contamination due to fracking.







To determine what type of product could make the biggest impact, CU Boulder iGEM analyzed the environmental risks of fracking and the shortcomings of current solution methods. The result was a design that uses E. coli to test trace fracking fluid contaminants that anybody can use easily and effectively. CU Boulder iGEM interviewed petroleum engineer David Meyer for insight into the history of fracking.

Despite fracking being a relatively recent topic among environmental discussions, the technology to drill vertical hydraulic fracturing wells has been around and used since 1940s. It wasn’t until the 1980s when George P. Mitchell, a petroleum engineer from Texas, invented the horizontal drilling process. Soon, no natural gas companies could survive unless the adapted the technique themselves. By the 1990s, more than 80% of natural gas in the United States was extracted with fracking, and environmentalists began to fear some of the unintended consequences of the practice. Chemistry and law quickly stepped in to evaluate remediation options, all of which has led to the creation of CU Boulder iGEM team’s device.



2004
Early Engineering of Whole Cell Biosensors

The first description of a whole-cell biosensor with environmental applications was described by researchers at the Swiss Federal Institute for Environmental Science and Technology. They engineered Pseudomonas putida bacteria to luminesce proportionately to aqueous naphthalene concentrations. However, these bacteria had complex biochemical pathways that were not well enough understood to be easily adjusted and refined. Furthermore, the cells were not sensitive enough to report the dilute naphthalene concentrations that fracking companies may be interested in reporting.



2005
Bush Signs Energy Policy Act

The Energy Policy Act of 2005 was passed to change US energy regulations, and restructuring tax incentives within the energy industries. Part of this bill included a provision that would exempt natural gas companies that use fracking from disclosing the chemicals involved that would normally be required of energy companies. While many drilling companies would benefit, it caused the started to grow skeptical about their intentions and the environmental impact of hydraulic fracturing.



2011
Founding of FracFocus Chemical Disclosure Agency

According to their website, FracFocus Chemical Disclosure is a government run agency that was the first to provide public access to information on fracking and the chemicals used near homes. Naphthalene was reported as the most common, as it was found in more than 30% of all contamination sites. Recent legislation has required companies to register the chemicals they use on FracFocus, and it coordinates with reporting companies to keep updated records of contaminant history across the United States. The foundation of the site and coordinating legislation provided transparency, but few companies have been held accountable for data published through FracFocus.



2012
OptiEnz Sensors Begin Use

Since the government had loose regulations on fracking contamination and people grew more concerned about the now-reported chemicals being used, the private sector’s demand for chemical sensors increased. OptiEnz is a leading biosensor development company that was founded by a professor at Colorado State University. Their product uses extracted enzymes and fiber optics to sense real-time pollution directly in the water source, preventing the need for pretreatment and skilled labor that has been previously required.



2013
Peking iGEM Team Improves Aromatic Transcriptional Regulators

Based on information from their wiki, the 2013 iGEM team from Peking developed many parts to detect aromatic compounds. Among those produced were the NahR transcriptional regulator combined with a salicylate promoter and an sfGFP gene that can respond to naphthalene at concentrations within an order of magnitude of the EPA’s maximum of 20 µg/L. This part was thoroughly characterized and available in the distribution kit, so it quickly became the goal of the CU 2015 team to improve its use to make the system more sensitive, easier to use, and ultimately more practical for industrial application.



2014
First Settlement of a Personal Injury Lawsuit Against a Fracking Company

According to CNN, Houstonian Lisa Parr sued Aruba Petroleum for health problems that arose upon the construction of 22 natural gas wells within 2 miles of her home. She suspected that her families’ persistent nausea, migraines, and dizziness came as a result of toxic air and water pollution. Although the Aruba insisted that toxicologists and medical professionals supported that their operations posed no harm, the jury voted and awarded Parr a $2.9 million settlement. This case a need for the general public to have access to practical methods to measure of contamination, and that there may be demand for sensors outside of just private companies or regulatory agencies.



2015
Network Installation of Permanent Fracking Sensors Proposed at AMS Conference

Michael van den Bossche from the University of Virginia proposed a network of sensors to track methane pollution in the air as a result of increased fracking use in the natural gas industry. This was among the first designs of a full-scale network of sensors that could run continuously as a large-scale operation. Because it can run continuously and is not dependent on instantaneous measurement from a sample or a single source, it can produce significant information with very low system maintenance following installation.



The Naphthalene Recorder project by CU Boulder iGEM incorporates the whole-cell concept for simplicity of processing and production and extends OptiEnz concept of measuring untreated samples from bodies of water by introducing a stake that can maintain homeostatic conditions wherever it’s placed. The concept of a low-maintenance network with contaminant “memory” extends the concept proposed for methane sensors, and its use can allow the public to run their own tests, avoiding lawsuits and not being strictly dependent upon the law requiring a company to run a test themselves.

















Team:CU-Boulder - 2015.igem.org