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The Almighty Buck Politics

Romanian Officials Say Russia Finances European Fracking Protests 155

HughPickens.com writes Andrew Higgins reports in the NYT that Romanian officials including the prime minister point to a mysteriously well-financed and well-organized campaign of protests over fracking in Europe and are pointing their fingers at Russia's Gazprom, a state-controlled energy giant, that has a clear interest in preventing countries dependent on Russian natural gas from developing their own alternative supplies of energy and preserving a lucrative market for itself — and a potent foreign policy tool for the Kremlin. "Russia, as part of their sophisticated information and disinformation operations, engaged actively with so-called nongovernmental organizations — environmental organizations working against shale gas — to maintain dependence on imported Russian gas," says NATO's former secretary general, Anders Fogh Rasmussen. A wave of protest against fracking began three years ago in Bulgaria, a country highly dependent on Russian energy. Faced with a sudden surge of street protests by activists, many of whom had previously shown little interest in environmental issues, the Bulgarian government in 2012 banned fracking and canceled a shale gas license issued earlier to Chevron.
Russia itself has generally shown scant concern for environmental protection and has a long record of harassing and even jailing environmentalists who stage protests. On fracking, however, Russian authorities have turned enthusiastically green, with Putin declaring last year that fracking "poses a huge environmental problem." Places that have allowed it, he said, "no longer have water coming out of their taps but a blackish slime." For their part Green groups have been swift to attack Rasmussen's views, saying that they were not involved in any alleged Russian attempts to discredit the technology, and were instead opposed to it on the grounds of environmental sustainability. "The idea we're puppets of Putin is so preposterous that you have to wonder what they're smoking over at Nato HQ," says Greenpeace, which has a history of antagonism with the Russian government, which arrested several of its activists on a protest in the Arctic last year.
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Romanian Officials Say Russia Finances European Fracking Protests

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  • by JoshuaZ ( 1134087 ) on Saturday December 06, 2014 @09:27AM (#48537621) Homepage
    Keep in mind that just because Russia/Putin doesn't want fracking, it isn't a reason by itself to think tha fracking is a good thing.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Well, anything other than a return to a Noble Savage [wikipedia.org] state will not please the radicals.
    • The problem is that fracking is not a bad thing either.
      • It kind of is when the companies are known not to plug the holes properly once they're done with an area. It's a problem in my province, which has caused some uproar, justifiably.
        • by khallow ( 566160 ) on Saturday December 06, 2014 @10:50AM (#48537881)
          So why is the proposed fix, a banning of fracking rather than enforcement of existing regulation?
        • It kind of is when the companies are known not to plug the holes properly

          That has nothing to do with "fracking". Improperly sealed wellheads can be a problem with any gas well, fracked or conventional.

        • by GNious ( 953874 )

          just to be that guy ...

          It kind of is when the companies are known not to plug the holes properly once they're done with an area. It's a problem in my province, which has caused some uproar, justifiably.

          So fracking is not bad, if the companies doing it aren't bad, but because the companies in whichever 3rd world country you live in are not subject to regulations and/or control, fracking is bad ...

          • Yes, the third world country of Canada.

            Got off on the wrong foot today?

            • by GNious ( 953874 )

              Hey, if Canada values oil, gas etc so much that it is willing to poop all over the environment, then, yeah, 3rd world country - sorry if that upsets your view of your homecountry.

              • As Canada is aligned with NATO, we are by definition part of the first world. Do they teach these things in your third world country?
        • And the other problem is if they do not properly seal the well prior to injection, which HAS happened.
          BUT, that is an issue with regulations on fracking, not an issue with fracking itself.

          And if oil companies are not sealing their wells, I would be objecting as well if I were you.
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by drinkypoo ( 153816 )

        The problem is that fracking is not a bad thing either.

        Uh, what? Increased seismic activity (link shown in two cases) and water contamination (link shown in multiple cases) aren't bad things? Seriously, what? Also, they're injecting refinery wastes into the holes. Seriously, fucking what?

        • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 06, 2014 @01:08PM (#48538417)

          Actually, the seismic activity might be a good thing.

          The link is basically that the fracking is weakening some structures that then drop below the strength needed to keep a quake from happening at current pressure. This causes a small quake. The alternative is to let the pressure build until it exceeds what the current structures down there can handle, this would cause a single large quake.

          I'm not pro-fracking (I think the ground water contamination is bad), plus the cheap gas slows movement away from fossil fuels, but the increase is small quakes shouldn't be thought of as bad IMO.

          • Actually, the seismic activity might be a good thing.

            It isn't, and I already provided this link to a logged-in user earlier, you don't really deserve it: http://www.consrv.ca.gov/index/earthquakes/Pages/qh_earthquakes_myths.aspx [ca.gov] And you seriously could have found it with google, in a hot second.

          • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

            'Idiot' doesn't work like that at all. What happens is you just shift stresses in fault line to other locations 'BUILDING UP' to major quakes in those locations. The completely and utterly stupid idea that you can spend eternity chasing your own tail alleviating stresses in fault lines is just plain nuts. You do not remove the stresses, they are constant, you shift the focal point of stresses by failures at particular locations, at particular times, shifting those stresses to a new location, where major st

        • The problem is that fracking is not a bad thing either.

          Uh, what? Increased seismic activity (link shown in two cases) and water contamination (link shown in multiple cases) aren't bad things? Seriously, what? Also, they're injecting refinery wastes into the holes. Seriously, fucking what?

          Scientists agree that fracking activity is far too deep for it to leech out to ground water. The cases of contamination are mostly due to problems with the well casing. We didn't stop building houses because poorly constructed ones could collapse on people, we tightened codes and toughened inspections, the same is needed to fix the wells issue. As for the seismic activity it causes more rattled nerves then actual damage.

        • by dbIII ( 701233 )
          Your roads are made out of "refinery wastes". It really depends on exactly what chemical it is, what it does and where it gets to doesn't it?
      • I'll believe that the moment an oil multi's board moves into the area where they're doing some fracking.

        • [quote]I'll believe that the moment an oil multi's board moves into the area where they're doing some fracking.[/quote]

          That's just silly. Not only is it an absurd thing to ask of them, it would prove absolutely nothing. You know full well that if such a thing DID happen you'd call it a publicity stunt and remain opposed to fracking anway ... so why make such a dishonest claim? Hyperbole?

          • I'll probably not be very convinced that it's any safer, but it would at the very least show that oil companies themselves are at least convinced that it's safe. I'm kinda certain that even they KNOW it's unsafe but ... well, there's money to be made.

            • I'm kinda certain that even they KNOW it's unsafe but ... well, there's money to be made.

              Certain based on what? The zero scientific evidence which shows any risk of harm greater than existing drilling methods?

              How can you be certain that someone whom you've never met or spoken to actually knows something which cannot even be shown to be true? This would be like me saying "I'm certain that Obama knows that an alien spaceship was recovered in Roswell, but he's covering it up because there's money to be made". Hilarious, maybe, but completely nonsensical.

        • In texas, the oil executive sued to prevent fracking. His stated reason was that the water towers would lower his property values and ruin the view.

          What about everyone else's property values and views?

          • by dbIII ( 701233 )

            What about everyone else's property values and views?

            That's Commie talk! The Libertarian view is that they can pay for their own lawyers.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Fracking is used to get hold of more hydrocarbons to burn into CO2. For some reason this is a very popular idea among European politicians who keep talking about Climate Change.

        They do so from a hypothesis that natural gas from fracking will replace oil. It won't. Demand and supply will ensure that fracking lowers the price of hydro carbons, giving (especially poor) countries an incentive to keep burning hydro carbons for longer. Currently, the only thing that will cause a serious move to wind/solar/fusion

      • The problem is that fracking is not a bad thing either.

        It's amazing to me that this single statement can get modded "troll" on a website dedicated to people who supposedly are tech fans / experts.

    • by Trepidity ( 597 )

      Especially because it's highly likely that there is a lot of self-interested money on both sides here. If your heuristic is that the side funded by someone unsavory must be wrong, might want to look into where Romanian politicians are getting their money from.

    • by Karmashock ( 2415832 ) on Saturday December 06, 2014 @11:07AM (#48537931)

      The Saudis are heavily involved in anti fracking propaganda in the US as well.

      Everyone paying attention knows what is going on. This more about money and less about the environment.

    • Logically, no. But then, one has to understand that every position - no matter how altruistic your motivation - has a consequence. If your local group is protesting anything based on funding from Putin (or the Koch Brothers, or George Soros, etc) understand that as well-intentioned as your protests may be, you are being used as a convenient pawn.

      And then understand that because of that consequence (or some associated one), that position means that you may have repugnant allies, who agree with that positio

      • ...But then, one has to understand that every position - no matter how altruistic your motivation - has a consequence. If your local group is protesting anything based on funding from Putin (or the Koch Brothers, or George Soros, etc) understand that as well-intentioned as your protests may be, you are being used as a convenient pawn.

        Put you faith in ideas, not persons. Even a blind pig finds an acorn once in a while.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      First:

      Russia/Putin wants fracking but by themselves - not by the other - in article you have exampe that Gazprom frakcing initiative on the other part of Romania had no protests at all.

      Secondly - still fracking is better than giving Russia money for war in Georgia, Ukraina, Moldova.

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Saturday December 06, 2014 @09:48AM (#48537667)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re:Bullshit (Score:5, Informative)

      by SargentDU ( 1161355 ) on Saturday December 06, 2014 @09:55AM (#48537693)
      He only has to convince the people you would follow in protests, not the minions like you or me.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Xest ( 935314 )

      Agreed, I don't think Putin is funding all or maybe even any anti-franking protests because like you I'm anti-fracking but also most definitely anti-Russian imperialism. However he IS funding the far-right in Europe. See here for example:

      http://www.theweek.co.uk/europ... [theweek.co.uk]

      al Jazeera has a decent article on the reasoning behind it here also:

      http://www.aljazeera.com/indep... [aljazeera.com]

      There are other far right parties in the UK that Russia likely has a hand in funding but are much harder to prove. One example is UKIP in t

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • So, it must not exist. Great chain of denialism you have going there. It's all about what people would prefer not to believe, eh?
  • Thee not me (Score:5, Insightful)

    by John Jorsett ( 171560 ) on Saturday December 06, 2014 @09:54AM (#48537687)
    Already seeing some quasi-defenses of this here. Guess the "get the money out of politics" folks actually mean "get YOUR money out of politics, ours is fine."
  • it has a name... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Connie_Lingus ( 317691 ) on Saturday December 06, 2014 @10:02AM (#48537707) Homepage

    ...in the US we call it "lobbying and advertising" and corporations of course spend billions trying to influence people to engage in behaviors that increase the profitability and public image of their business.

    so it's in Russia's interest to prevent fracking...ok well they spend money to sway public opinion...sounds like SOP to me.

    • by Jiro ( 131519 )

      Governments collect money from people forcibly as taxes and use it for things like this. Corporations cannot do this (unless you want to count cases where corporations are in bed with government).

  • People in southern California need help to stop fracking in earthquake prone areas, which is pretty much the entire southern end of the state. The oil companies have a lot of money to spend on local politicians to get fracking approved, so maybe it's time to get some help from a guy who really cares about the well-being of people around the world, Vlad (The Impaler) Putin.

    Clearly oil companies don't give a rat's ass about the effects of oil extraction (can you say DeepWater Horizon?), so it just makes sens

    • by ChrisMaple ( 607946 ) on Saturday December 06, 2014 @10:21AM (#48537771)
      Faults build up stress until they break. The longer the stress builds, the bigger the earthquake. If fracking promotes earthquakes, that means they'll be more frequent, less damaging, and less deadly. I'd rather experience a Richter 4 daily than a Richter 7 every 20 years.
  • Natural gas should be considered a strategic resource in the US. We should have enough export capacity to eliminate Russia's market share but leave it unused so we can benefit from our own low gas prices. This would provide us a great deal of leverage and industrial advantage simultaneously.
    • Wrong. We need our Nat gas to move us off oil. Ideally, we will subsidize new large vehicle to have serial hybrid using Nat gas. At the same time, we need to convert coal into Nat. Gas.
      • by burni2 ( 1643061 )

        If you say he is wrong, please deliver arguments that support your reasoning.

        But i will argument against your points - btw. I might not be windbourne but I do work with wind for profit & because I want to see renewables to succeed ;) - just in case you want to refrain from argueing and want to short cut by just saying that I'm just a disbeliever - I like to work on arguments and logical reasoning.

        1.) nat gas -> oil
        This is basically on it's wide extreme step not a favourable choice, because you are re

        • Sigh.
          Why do you fools think that you can substitute electricity for oil? The fact is, that you can not. Oil is fungible, but NOT with electricity. The only place that it is true, is in a hybrid vehicles, but right now, that is only in small cars, and is worthless.

          You are DEAD wrong that gas and diesel are cleaner than nat gas. Totally impossible to be the case. Clean nat gas has 2 emissions: CO2 and H2O. Even gasoline and 'clean diesel' do not come that clean. EVER.
          In addition, nat gas or oil turnin
      • I said keep our natural gas. You said keep our natural gas. WTF?
        • No, you said "strategic resource", which means that you want it all left in the ground.
          Big mistake. Instead, we need to use it to get us off oil, while cleaning up our emissions and moving us to full electrics.
          Right now, nearly all of our commercial vehicles, along with large passenger vehicles (such as suburbans), are incapable of moving to full electric economically.
          BUT, by moving these vehicles to nat gas, and then to serial hybrids with nat gas, it makes it easy for makers to move to full electrics
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 06, 2014 @10:13AM (#48537749)

    I'm Romanian, and there is some information missing from this "news". First of all, the Russian company Gazprom has been given a lot of exploration/exploitaition licences in Romania, including the rights for prospecting for shale gas. They operate through a Serbian subsidiary called Nis, and they have already started prospections in the Western area of the country. Therefore, I really doubt Russia finances the civic campaigns against fracking. Then, the Romanian officials quoted include a very controversial mayor of the village where Chevron first started to look for shale gas. That mayor happened to buy the field where the prospections were to be started just before Chevron came. He made a nice profit in the meanwhile, and the non-governmental organizations have acused him from the start of being - possibly - "persuaded" financially by Chevron itself. So these officials are far from being unbiased on the matter.

    The other thing the story fails to tell about is that the movement against dangerous mining operations (not only fracking) is very strong in Romania for several years now, we had massive demostrations, with tens of thousands of protesters gathering in major cities each time such a danger was percieved. And they are the same protesters that actively despise Russia and its influence in the region. Because, unlike Hungary, Serbia and other neighbours, Romania has managed to keep the political Russian influence away -- we've had enough of their bright ideas when they imposed communism on us, and we do not forget that easily.

    All in all, this looks like a manipulative story, possibly put forward by those who would have something to gain from fracking in a country where the population density/distribution makes this method dangerous if not criminal -- and this includes Russians. They won't succeed, of course, they keep underestimating our resolve/intelligence.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      [quote]unlike Hungary, Serbia and other neighbours, Romania has managed to keep the political Russian influence away[/quote]
      That's not quite correct. Bulgaria's majority is also against Russian influence (I know for I am one).

    • by dbIII ( 701233 )
      Good point, it reminds me of this amusing allegation about the CIA being involved in Australian environmental protest.

      http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-03-20/palmer-says-green-groups-funded-by-cia/3901920
  • C'mon, that ain't ok. We've worked long and hard to pinpoint Russia as the new evil with Putin as the new Hitler, and now you push that all down by telling us that there's something GOOD coming from that side of the propaganda war?

    Stop confusing your subjects!

  • by ajlowe ( 2653007 ) on Saturday December 06, 2014 @12:36PM (#48538295)
    You do realize that fracking has been done commercially since 1949 ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H... [wikipedia.org] ), right? What environmentalist are really concerned with is called horizontal completions, but that just doesn't have the insidious ring to it that "fracking" does. If we called it by it's real name, it would be much harder to scare those of us driven by emotion instead of reason.

    Let's not forget there are some benefits to horizontal completions. Thanks to horizontal completions petroleum products (gasoline, jet fuel, diesel, plastics and on and on and on) prices are plummeting. Thanks to horizontal completions, natural gas is now cheaper the coal in the US and coal power plants are being converted to natural gas which is all around cleaner, safer, and produces half the CO2 of coal. Thanks to horizontal completions, OPEC's 40 year cartel appears to be at an end, and horizontal completions dropping the price of oil has been the most effective "sanction" by far on Russia, putting more pressure on Putin and the ruble then all the heads of state combined.
    • Crap, no mod points.
    • Shhhh, you're discouraging the knee-jerk activists!
    • Thanks to horizontal completions petroleum products (gasoline, jet fuel, diesel, plastics and on and on and on) prices are plummeting.

      and with bullets on sale it's even cheaper to shoot ourselves in the foot!

      Thanks to horizontal completions, natural gas is now cheaper the coal in the US and coal power plants are being converted to natural gas which is all around cleaner, safer, and produces half the CO2 of coal.

      that's as great as getting half as much cancer than normal.

      Thanks to horizontal completions, OPEC's 40 year cartel appears to be at an end, and horizontal completions dropping the price of oil has been the most effective "sanction" by far on Russia, putting more pressure on Putin and the ruble then all the heads of state combined.

      i'm no fan of bad governments but wouldn't it be better to just do away with OPEC by moving to clean energy like solar?

  • How much oil company/Middle East money there is behind the antinuclear movement.

    • by dbIII ( 701233 )
      There doesn't need to be. The US nuclear industry ate it's own children by lobbying against the Thorium R&D, which had a knockon with other R&D being dropped, and has doomed itself to irrelevance. Unless something comes in from the military side (eg. a small reactor idea based on military technology from a Californian startup) or technology is imported from somewhere else it has no future.
  • by qpqp ( 1969898 )
    Apparently all problems come from NGOs. Let's ban them. Everywhere.
  • The similarity of goals make for strange bed-fellows. Russia and Saudi Arabia may have little else in common, but they are both major exporters of fossil fuels. Not having the same sort of spy-network as Russia, Saudis finance propaganda movies [cnn.com]. Russia would do that too, of course — and take care of translating such movies for audiences in Russia and its Russian-speaking neighbors.

    And when propaganda-campaigns fail to stop other countries from developing their own energy-sources, Russia will invade [charter97.org]...

  • Some guy at the NATO says that. Without any proof or even evidence. Is this an attempt to discredit anti-fracking movements? Or Russia?

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