Fracking and Ethics
Introduction
While “fracking”—the term applied to the practice of hydraulic fracturing of rock to gain access to the oil or gas underground—has been hailed as a revolutionary way for the oil industry to draw oil from previously hard to reach places, there are a variety of ethical issues surrounding the practice (Evensen & Stedman, 2018). Stakeholders in the issue of fracking go beyond those in the oil/gas industry, however. They include people in communities, whose water supply has been contaminated as a result of fracking. They include people whose lives have been changed by fracking due to the opportunity to invest in companies engaged in this practice. They include the workers and employees who are given jobs because of the new opportunities that fracking provides. Thus any position for or against fracking will impact all these stakeholders in different ways. Some believe fracking is the way of the future. Others view it as a threat to the stability of communities and to environmental health. This paper will show why fracking may actually be both of these things—a hopeful path towards future prosperity and a threat to the well-being of the very society it seeks to satisfy. The main issue is that fracking in its current state still poses a number of dangers to various stakeholders and thus can be viewed as ethically irresponsible. If fracking could be perfected and practiced without risk to others (from investors to communities) it could be viewed in a far more favorable light. Until that moment comes, however, fracking must be viewed as a threat. This paper will discuss the history of fracking, where the argument comes from, what the counter-argument is, and why in the final analysis the ethics of fracking must be questioned.
History/Background
The argument surrounding the practice of fracking has gotten underway from a variety of approaches, mainly because there are so many different stakeholders involved. The first approach that will be discussed here is the approach from the economic standpoint. The second approach that will be discussed is from the environmental standpoint.
In the beginning, fracking was seen as a way for oil/gas producers to access previously hard to reach oil using the newly conceived method of hydraulic fracturing. The problem that the industry had faced in the past regarding this method was that it was very expensive. It was much cheaper to pump oil out of the ground using the traditional oil derrick method. Fracking required a great deal of investment and companies needed cheap or low interest rates in order to secure that investment just to get the process going and to keep it maintained.
That moment came in the wake of the 2008 crisis: interest rates were drastically cut by the central banks and investors started putting money into the fracking industry, which promised positive returns. So long as rates stayed low, the companies could produce oil and not be hampered by margin call. However, were rates to rise, the companies’ debts would come due in a big way and leave them without recourse to further investment to maintain the process. Even were the price of oil to rise, for instance, the fracking industry would not benefit because other costs would rise as well (Sovacool, 2014; Strauss, 2019).
The other issue with fracking is that it can cause damage to the environment and thus harm communities that depend on fresh water supplies, which have become contaminated in the past because of fracking (McDermott-Levy, Kaktins & Sattler, 2013; Mooney, 2011). Indeed, Busby and Mangano (2017) showed that infant mortality rates significantly increased in regions where fracking took place, while in the rest of the nation infant mortality rates declined. The authors concluded that “fracking appears to be associated with early infant mortality in populations living in counties where the process is carried out. There is some evidence that the effect is associated with private water well density and/or environmental law violations” (Busby & Mangano, 2017, p. 381). In short, fracking has been found to be harmful for the environment—and for human beings who rely on that environment to support their way of life.
From these two approaches—the economic side and the environmental side—the arguments against fracking have occurred. The ethical issues are essentially these: 1) fracking as an industry is unsustainable because it is too costly and is only now booming because of low interest rates and the need of investors to find the kind of high-yield...
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