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by sageikosa
5078 days ago
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I would imagine if they are scientists, they assert fracking is harmless due to knowledge and research. If something is injected at a depth below the water table, and is at least as dense or denser than water, it does not move upward against the pull of gravity unless acted upon by an outside force. Their nationality has nothing to do with that. My father the (retired) hydro-geologist (and former professor) is not alarmed by fracking; and to the best of my knowledge he hasn't taken big oil and gas money (or he's been holding out on me). He never did big research projects, although he did also consult for a civil engineering firm analyzing and remediating super-fund sites and drilling contamination-free water wells for various communities across the north-eastern US. Oil and gas companies give/grant/donate money to universities for a variety of reasons, not least of which is to improve the talent pool for recruitment. And if you want to commission a study, you go to where the experts are. |
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Addressing the concern of the actual article:
The fact is that you can't escape from having researchers having some kind of tie to their subject matter, on one side of an issue or another.
The reason that people have chosen a given area of research is that they've got some kind of interest in it -- for or against. There's really no way around this, and so we rely on openness of results, and the peer review process to police research.
The same problem looms in governmental regulation, where regulatory capture [1] is an unavoidable problem. If you want someone to write regulations who actually knows what the heck they're doing, you're going to have to go with someone who got experience from somewhere, which is more than likely from working in the industry. The problem here, of course, is that there is no openness nor peer review in regulation.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regulatory_capture