Home
News
Products
Corporate
Contact
 
Thursday, November 28, 2024

News
Industry News
Publications
CST News
Help/Support
Software
Tester FAQs
Industry News

New fracking technique can be much less intrusive


Tuesday, June 30, 2015

Researchers at Northwestern University believe that improving the operational efficiency of natural gas fracking could produce a "win-win" for both the U.S. energy sector and the environment.

Engineering professor Fengqi You and doctoral student Jiyao Gao developed models to analyze the shale gas supply chain. Their findings, published in the journal ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering, indicated that several changes could help curb the environmental impacts of fracking.

The model showed that companies should plan for long-term drilling at fracking sites rather than building dozens of horizontal wells to extract shale gas.

The altered schedule would reduce the industry's consumption of water — which is pumped underground with sand and chemicals to crack underground shale rock — and avoid the use of long-term storage facilities and other capital expenses.

In addition, the study recommended that fracking companies treat their wastewater rather than inject it underground. The Northwestern model showed that recycling water back into fracking operations would be more sustainable over the long term and curb the need for additional transportation costs.

The analysis also recommended that energy companies develop pipelines — rather than use trucks — to both transport water to the fracking site and ship natural gas elsewhere.

"Shale gas is promising. No matter if you like it or not, it’s already out there," You said. "The question we want to answer is: How can we help this industry to make it more sustainable?"

By: DocMemory
Copyright © 2023 CST, Inc. All Rights Reserved

CST Inc. Memory Tester DDR Tester
Copyright © 1994 - 2023 CST, Inc. All Rights Reserved