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Hydraulic Fracturing

 
 

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Hydraulic fracturing is an oilfield technology used in the United States to help produce more than 7 billion barrels of oil and 600 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. Its continued use is critically important to producing at home more of the oil and natural gas the nation will be consuming in the decades ahead.

Hydraulic fracturing makes it possible to produce oil and natural gas in places where conventional technologies are ineffective. It uses water pressure to create fractures in rock that allow the oil and natural gas it contains to escape and flow out of a well. Hydraulic fracturing is well-regulated and safe.

In 2004, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency concluded, “the injection of hydraulic fracturing fluids into coal-bed methane wells pose little or no threat to (underground drinking water).” The agency, in a review of incidents of drinking water well contamination, found “no confirmed cases linked to fracturing fluid injection of CBM (coalbed methane) wells or subsequent underground movement of fracturing fluid.”



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Video Tour of Drilling and Completion Operations
Industry professionals will explain the “before, during and after” phases of drilling and well completion operations (including hydraulic fracturing). They will also describe the steps companies take to make sure that these operations take place safely and in a manner that protects the environment. You will see how natural gas resources that are vital to our country’s energy security and economy can be produced in a way that respects local and community concerns and minimizes long term impacts.


Industry Practices Relating to Hydraulic Fracturing
API has been developing and refining engineering standards and practices for the industry for nearly 85 years. Many of these standards have been adopted as references for industry performance by federal and state agencies. These standards mark the evolution of what has become one of the world’s leading high-technology industries, enabling us to keep up with the ever-increasing demand for reliable oil and natural gas supplies.

Well construction practices that are standard in the industry and that are enforced by virtually all states effectively protect underground sources of drinking water from impacts related to oil and gas exploration and production activities, including hydraulic fracturing.  The great majority of hydraulic fracturing activities take place at depths far below existing groundwater sources that could reasonably be considered underground sources of drinking water. And contemporary well design practices – steel pipe cemented to the rock through which a well is drilled – ensure multiple levels of protection between any sources of drinking water and the production zone of an oil and gas well. 

We are continuing to improve our operations through the development of new industry guidance documents on well construction, surface environmental considerations, and water use and management.  We will be sharing these documents with state regulators to enhance transparency in the regulatory process.

API HF1, Hydraulic Fracturing Operations-Well Construction and Integrity Guidelines, First Edition/October 2009
The purpose of this document is to provide guidance and highlight industry recommended practices for well construction and integrity for those wells that will be hydraulically fractured. The guidance provided here will help to ensure that shallow groundwater aquifers and the environment will be protected, while also enabling economically viable development of oil and natural gas resources.   

This document can be downloaded for free by following this link:  http://www.api.org/Publications/epstandards/index.cfm


Duplicative hydraulic fracturing rules could imperil U.S. economy
The U.S. economy could suffer a severe blow if federal regulators demand duplicative oversight of hydraulic fracturing, a commonly used well-stimulation and completion technology already regulated by the states, part two of a three-part study by IHS Global Insight has found.

See the IHS-Global Insight study documents below:

Adobe PDF Icon Executive summary of the national effects of federal hydraulic fracturing regulation
Size: 177 KB | Date: July 1, 2009 | License: Free

Adobe PDF Icon The national impacts study (on production and on the economy)
Size: 521 KB | Date: July 1, 2009 | License: Free

Adobe PDF Icon State by state economic impacts
Size: 1.17 MB | Date:July 1, 2009 | License: Free


Hydraulic Fracturing Brochure

Hydraulic Fracturing Techniques and Safeguards
Hydraulic fracturing is important. America needs its natural gas, and hydraulic fracturing is essential to produce it. In many regions, clean burning natural gas is critical to American manufacturing jobs, to farmers for fertilizer and energy, and to help address climate change concerns because of its low carbon-content. Read more about the history, process, and the protective measures of hydraulic fracturing.  


Adobe PDF Icon View/Download
Size: 1.1 MB | Date: February 10, 2009 | License: Free


Facts About Shale Gas
Shale gas is one of the most rapidly growing forms of natural gas. It, along with other non-conventional forms of natural gas, such as tight gas and coalbed methane, will make a major contribution to future North American gas production. Unconventional gas production is forecast to increase from 42 percent of total US gas production in 2007 to 64 percent in 2020. API has assembled this fact sheet to provide background information on shale gas, its potential and its importance.


Hydraulic Fracturing Q & A's
Explore the questions and answers regarding hydraulic fracturing and its vital importance to all Americans.


 
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Exploration & Production Winter Standards Meeting - Jan. 25-29, 2010 - New Orleans, Louisiana



 
   
Updated:November 20, 2009