Difference between revisions of "Team:CU Boulder/Background"
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<p><b>CU Boulder iGEM consulted INVST, a local organization that strives to educate the public on a number of environmental causes, one of which is fracking. They advocate that each person educate themselves on the local risks and benefits of fracking, and directed us to look toward two organizations: the Coloradans for Responsible Energy Development (CRED) Organization which advocates the use of hydraulic fracturing, and with the University of Colorado Fracking Divestment, a group against the use of oil and natural gas. There are many different viewpoints, each seemingly able to support facts to support their arguments. CU Boulder iGEM strives to produce a product that can bring resolution to both sides by creating a sensor that can help defend the claims of oil companies while allowing environmentalist groups to conduct their own contamination tests to prove how they’ve been affected by fracking.</b></p> | <p><b>CU Boulder iGEM consulted INVST, a local organization that strives to educate the public on a number of environmental causes, one of which is fracking. They advocate that each person educate themselves on the local risks and benefits of fracking, and directed us to look toward two organizations: the Coloradans for Responsible Energy Development (CRED) Organization which advocates the use of hydraulic fracturing, and with the University of Colorado Fracking Divestment, a group against the use of oil and natural gas. There are many different viewpoints, each seemingly able to support facts to support their arguments. CU Boulder iGEM strives to produce a product that can bring resolution to both sides by creating a sensor that can help defend the claims of oil companies while allowing environmentalist groups to conduct their own contamination tests to prove how they’ve been affected by fracking.</b></p> | ||
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<h2><em>...but first, what is Fracking?</em></h2> | <h2><em>...but first, what is Fracking?</em></h2> | ||
<p>Fracking is the shortened name for “hydraulic fracturing,” a technique used by natural gas companies where a hole is drilled down to the shale layer, and then sand, water, and chemical solvents are injected at high pressures to create fractures in the earth which allow pathways for natural gas to channel up to the drill site. The technique is far more profitable than any alternative natural gas extraction method that nearly all natural gas in the United States is produced as a result of fracking. However, many organizations such as the CU Boulder divestment campaign are against fracking, citing increased dependency on fossil fuels, causing small scale earthquakes, and contamination of air and groundwater as factors. Natural gas companies cannot always control the exact size and direction that the fractures spread, and that is the root of the problems according to environmentalist groups. Nonetheless, the fracking industry is still growing annually, and the problems are persisting, yet US State and Federal governments are not urgent in taking action. It may be important to begin the conversation about what steps are necessary, if any.</p> | <p>Fracking is the shortened name for “hydraulic fracturing,” a technique used by natural gas companies where a hole is drilled down to the shale layer, and then sand, water, and chemical solvents are injected at high pressures to create fractures in the earth which allow pathways for natural gas to channel up to the drill site. The technique is far more profitable than any alternative natural gas extraction method that nearly all natural gas in the United States is produced as a result of fracking. However, many organizations such as the CU Boulder divestment campaign are against fracking, citing increased dependency on fossil fuels, causing small scale earthquakes, and contamination of air and groundwater as factors. Natural gas companies cannot always control the exact size and direction that the fractures spread, and that is the root of the problems according to environmentalist groups. Nonetheless, the fracking industry is still growing annually, and the problems are persisting, yet US State and Federal governments are not urgent in taking action. It may be important to begin the conversation about what steps are necessary, if any.</p> | ||
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<p>We decided to ask other iGEM teams around the world to see what their opinion was, | <p>We decided to ask other iGEM teams around the world to see what their opinion was, | ||
and to gauge fracking’s perspective on a global level.</p> | and to gauge fracking’s perspective on a global level.</p> | ||
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Latest revision as of 17:19, 18 September 2015
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