Gas

What the Frack: Why Fracking Chemicals Should be Disclosed

What the Frack: Why Fracking Chemicals Should be Disclosed

Citizens of Pavillion, Wyoming, started to notice a bad taste and smell in their water. Methanol, a toxic chemical, was found in their water from fracking waste. 2L staffer Gracie Sandlin discusses how fracking companies are not required to disclose the chemical injected into the ground due to trade secrets, but is that for the best? Sandlin advocates that these chemicals should not be trade secrets, discusses what another state is doing, and hopes Wyoming will soon follow.

A Self-Inflicted Perfect Storm: Britain’s Energy Policies and Brexit Have Made it More Susceptible to Shortages Than its Neighbors

A Self-Inflicted Perfect Storm: Britain’s Energy Policies and Brexit Have Made it More Susceptible to Shortages Than its Neighbors

2L staffer Tamir Helmy discusses the gas storage that has hit the UK. Although there are many debates about what is causing the shortage from Covid to governmental policies, Helmy believes that although Covid is a valid reason, the governmental policies have become the root of the problem.

Fair Treatment: Regulating Forced Pooling in the Modern Age of Resource Excavation

Fair Treatment: Regulating Forced Pooling in the Modern Age of Resource Excavation

In this blog post, 3L Ian Young writes on the challenges landowners face when it comes to regulated forced pooling. Young details how states, such as Colorado, are facing backlash after passing pooling statutes that could be considered unconstitutional.

Colorado Residents Plead: Stop Fracking with Our Homes

Colorado Residents Plead: Stop Fracking with Our Homes

In a world where it was previously thought that one owned all that was above and all that was below his land, it seems as if Colorado is taking a big step to ensuring that this is no longer true. An obscure Colorado law allows whole neighborhoods to be forced into leasing the minerals beneath their properties as long as one person in the area consents. This concept, known as forced pooling, is instrumental in developing oil and gas resources in Denver’s rapidly growing suburbs