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Golongagainon Dec 10, 2011 6:54pm
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Shale-gas drilling to add 870,000 U.S. jobs by 2015: IHS
Yadullah HussainDec 6, 2011 – 9:09 AM ET
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By Jim Efstathiou Jr.
Producing natural gas from shale will support 870,000 U.S. jobs and add US$118-billion to economic growth in the next four years, according to a report from IHS Global Insight.
Gas from shale, which accounts for 34% of U.S. output, also will contribute US$57-billion in federal, state and local taxes by 2035, or US$933-billion in the next 25 years, according to today’s IHS report, commissioned by America’s Natural Gas Alliance, a Washington-based industry group.
Shale gas is extracted using hydraulic fracturing, a process in which millions of gallons of chemically treated water and sand is forced underground, breaking up the rock to free trapped gas. Industry expansion is adding jobs in an otherwise disappointing economy, said John Larson, a vice president at Lexington, Massachusetts-based IHS, a management consulting company for the energy industry.
“Shale gas combines a capital-intensive industry with a broad domestic supply chain,” Larson said in an interview. “We think that these jobs through 2015 are net new jobs because of high unemployment.
Environmental groups have said the process, also called fracking, has tainted drinking water in states such as Pennsylvania, where almost 4,000 wells have been drilled. About 1,900 people, most opposed to fracking, attended a New York City hearing on Nov. 30 to consider state rules for drilling.
Financial forecasts by IHS include direct jobs in the drilling industry plus an “employment multiplier.” For every direct job added, more than three indirect and induced jobs are created, according to the report
‘Conservative Estimate
The forecast excluded potential drilling in New York, which has placed a moratorium on fracking while it develops drilling regulations, or the impact of U.S. service companies supplying drilling in Canada, Larson said.
“Given those sort of factors, we feel that what we’ve presented here is a very conservative estimate,” Larson said.
The shale-gas contribution to U.S. gross domestic product will triple to $231-billion in 2036 from $76-billion last year, the report found. Lower natural gas prices as shale boosts supply will cut U.S. electricity costs by an average of 10%, the report found. Lower prices will raise industrial production 2.9% by 2017 and 4.7% by 2035.
Environmental groups such as Washington-based Food and Water Watch say fracking has led to groundwater contamination and should be banned. The group found in a November report that projections for the number of shale-industry jobs in states such as Pennsylvania and New York led to a “gross exaggeration” of the gains, said Emily Wurth, the group’s water policy director.
A 2011 report by the Public Policy Institute of New York State, an Albany-based research group, found that by 2018, developing 500 shale gas wells a year in five counties would create 62,620 jobs. After correcting the “flawed” job multiplier, the number was closer to 6,656 jobs, Wurth said.
“Very few people have analyzed these reports,” Wurth said in an interview. “That’s unfortunate because a lot of elected officials take these studies as factually based.”