Gasland - new documentary exposes US gas drilling environmental disasters

1984

The Living Force
FOTCM Member
I watched the premiere of this docu last night on HBO and was more than horrified. What these oil/gas conglomerates have been allowed (by Cheney et al) to do to the environment - and even worse - innocent folks that live near the drilling is very hard to watch. And, the over 400 chemical poisons coming from these wells are being eaten by cattle that end up on your plate. Looks like they've covered all their bases quite well.

Here is the link to the trailer and a synopsis on the docu:

http://www.hbo.com/documentaries/index.html#/documentaries/gasland/index.html

http://www.hbo.com/documentaries/index.html#/documentaries/gasland/synopsis.html/
 
Considering the fact that methane comes out of the ground naturally in a number of places and mostly just goes to waste, is this fracturing with highly polluting chemicals really necessary?

If I were to guess, I would think that their intention all along is just to pollute the ground water and they're just doing it under the guise of drilling for gas.
 
I just watched this the other night and was nearly in tears at the destruction of the land and animals. I was really blindsided by this information. I had happily gulped down the propaganda that drilling for natural gas was a safe alternative (silly me). What is most distressing is the sheer number of wells that have been placed in such a short amount of time and the amount of damage that can occur nearly overnight.
 
Apparently, US actor Mark Ruffalo is on the Dept. of Homeland Security advisory list:

Actor Mark Ruffalo has been put on a US terror advisory list after organizing screenings of a documentary criticizing natural gas drilling.

The Shutter Island hunk attracted the attention of Pennsylvania’s Office of Homeland Security when he set up screenings for Gasland, which won the special jury prize at this year’s Sundance film festival, and said he was concerned about the impact of drilling on water supplies. The actor has addressed the subject in the latest edition of American GQ.

Gasland — directed by Josh Fox — follows the film-maker as he visits communities in Pennsylvania where natural gas has been drilled. Fox decided to document his trip after a natural gas company wrote to him in 2008 offering to lease his family’s land in Milanville, Pennsylvania for $100,000.
 
_http://www.cnbc.com/id/41784453/Industry_tried_to_get_doc_disqualified_from_Oscars

ALLENTOWN, Pennsylvania - The natural gas industry has spent months attacking the documentary "Gasland" as a deeply flawed piece of propaganda. After it was nominated for an Oscar, an industry-sponsored public relationsgroup asked the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to reconsider the film's eligibility.

The reply: Let Oscar voters have their say.

"We do not have the resources to vet each claim or implication in the many (documentary) films that compete for our awards each year, and even if we did there would be no shortage of people disputing our conclusions," Bruce Davis, the academy's executive director, wrote in a reply obtained by The Associated Press.

"Gasland" is up for best documentary at Sunday's Academy Awards ceremony. Director Josh Fox's dark portrayal of greedy energy companies, sickened homeowners and oblivious regulators has stirred heated debate among the various stakeholders in a natural gas boom that is sweeping parts of the U.S. The film has galvanized anti-drilling activists while drawing complaints about its accuracy and objectivity.

In a letter to the academy, Lee Fuller, the executive director of an industry-sponsored group named Energy In Depth, called "Gasland" an "expression of stylized fiction" with "errors, inconsistencies and outright falsehoods."

He asked the academy to consider "remedial actions" against the film.

Davis, the executive director, wrote to Fuller that if the academy were to act on every complaint made about a nominated film, "it would not be possible even to have a documentary category." He said the academy must "trust the intelligence of our members" to sort out fact from fiction.

"If facts have been suppressed or distorted, if truth has been twisted, we depend on them to sniff that out and vote accordingly," he wrote.

The letter was given to the AP by Energy in Depth, whose spokesman, Chris Tucker, said the group had no expectation that "Gasland" would actually be disqualified from Oscar consideration. The point, he said, was to educate academy voters.

"I think it's a fairly good bet that a large majority of the folks who are going to be voting on this film don't have a background in petroleum engineering," quipped Tucker, who put together a 4,000-word rebuttal of "Gasland" last summer.

Fox said the industry's campaign against "Gasland" has backfired.

"What they're doing is calling more attention to the film, so I think it works against them," the director said from Los Angeles. "But I think it shows how aggressive they are, how bullying they are, and how willing they are to lie to promote the falsehood that it's OK to live in a gas drilling area."

The documentary category is no stranger to controversy. Director Michael Moore's films like "Bowling for Columbine," which looked at lax gun control regulations in the U.S., and "Sicko," an expose of the U.S. health care system, as well as Al Gore's 2006 global-warming tale, "An Inconvenient Truth," have likewise been attacked as biased and inaccurate.

Like Moore, Fox defends his film as accurate. But he rejects comparisons to the bombastic, ideological director.

"What they're trying to do is make ('Gasland') look like a liberal, elite, Michael Moore thing, which of course it isn't. It's bipartisan," he said.

Fox, a 38-year-old New York City theater director, took an interest in drilling after a gas company approached him in 2008 about leasing his family's wooded 20-acre (eight-hectare) spread in Milanville, near the Delaware River in northeastern Pennsylvania, where he has lived off-and-on since childhood.

Camera in hand, he went on a cross-country tour of places where large-scale drilling is already under way, interviewing residents who say they were sickened by nearby drilling operations and aiming his lens at diseased livestock and flammable tap water that he also blames on gas industry malfeasance.

Though it had a tiny theatrical run, Fox has taken "Gasland" on the road for screenings in more than 100 towns and cities throughout the U.S., England and Australia. It has also aired on HBO on cable television.

"The point was to get the film to the people who needed it most, who were in the middle of making these decisions" on whether to lease their land for drilling, Fox said.

Fox isn't the only Oscar nominee critical of natural gas drilling. Mark Ruffalo, who was nominated for the supporting actor award for "The Kids Are All Right," lives in upstate New York, where there's a fierce debate over gas extraction, and has emerged as a high-profile anti-drilling activist.

Energy In Depth's Tucker said he plans to watch Sunday's Academy Awards telecast, but doesn't think the award ceremony will be the end of the discussion.

"If it wins the Oscar, the conversation continues on," Tucker said. "If it doesn't win the Oscar, the conversation continues on."

The documentary "Inside Job" won the category for Best Documentary this year.

"I think it's a fairly good bet that a large majority of the folks who are going to be voting on this film don't have a background in petroleum engineering," quipped Tucker, who put together a 4,000-word rebuttal of "Gasland" last summer.

I dont think it requires a background in petroleum engineering to know when your tapwater is on fire.
 
1984 said:
I watched the premiere of this docu last night on HBO and was more than horrified. What these oil/gas conglomerates have been allowed (by Cheney et al) to do to the environment - and even worse - innocent folks that live near the drilling is very hard to watch. And, the over 400 chemical poisons coming from these wells are being eaten by cattle that end up on your plate. Looks like they've covered all their bases quite well.

Thought i would add a you tube in this discussion of exploratory gas drilling by hydraulic fracturing. The profit motiveted operaters, while holding the truth to what the possible repercussions that would result of drilling on the land. The operaters leasing the land from unsuspecting property owners, promising tremendous profits, (red flag) as the bait.

Another shell game in the Shale game.

Map Shale Gas Plays, Lower 48 States USA
https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-0upbVlzpgos/TYOgbn-EOSI/AAAAAAAAB80/_HotLIWT71c/shale+gas+plays.PNG

SHALE GAS STOP GAS SHALE (SUBTITLES FR)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IOIxesWknk0&feature=player_embedded#at=244

PERMITS FOR GAS SHALE IN FRANCE "STOP DESTROYING THE NATURE". In French
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i8mp72SFpA4&NR=1
 

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Had a chance to watch that movie yesterday - superb. And horrifying. It made me so angry and sad to watch these great people being systematically poisoned, their environment destroyed, and they can do absolutely NOTHING about it, while the psychopaths laugh at their face. It's horrible.

On the bright side, I've never been to America, but watching those great people I felt a deep appreciation for the US and the positive aspects of the American culture. Great film, highly recommended!

Here's a link: _https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6mp4ELXKv-w
 
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