Fracking primarily benefits large companies, while local communities face environmental and health costs.
Key Findings
Fracking results in severe environmental issues and adverse health impacts, as seen in Pennsylvania.
New York’s 2014 fracking ban spurred economic growth, creating 171,000 clean energy jobs by 2022.
Fracking bans and public health setbacks reduce environmental damage and public health risks.
Overview
Polarized views on the long-term costs of fracking versus its short-term benefits have fueled intense debate about energy production in the United States. While experts critical of fracking cite risks such as water contamination, increased seismic activity, air pollution from the release of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and fossil fuel-induced climate change, proponents of fracking argue that it is essential for energy independence and economic growth, pointing to job creation and lowered energy costs. However, the arguments in favor of fracking often involve dangerous misconceptions.
So, what are the facts and what is fiction? And how have disparate approaches to energy production and economic development impacted different states? This article discusses the contrasting approach to fracking in Pennsylvania and New York and looks at a few of the environmental, public health, and economic outcomes of each state’s energy strategy.
Short-Term Jobs, Long-Term Risks
One of the most common misconceptions about fracking is that it creates jobs and boosts local economies. But data shows many of these jobs are short lived. Though the initial phase of drilling and setting up a fracking site can employ a significant number of workers, the need for labor decreases dramatically once the wells are operational. This boom-and-bust pattern results in a high turnover rate and economic instability for local communities that cannot rely on sustained employment from drilling operations, leaving communities vulnerable to economic downturns once drilling operations cease.
The jobs created by the fracking industry also come with significant health risks. Workers in the oil and gas sector, including those involved in fracking, experience higher incidences of workplace injuries and fatalities compared to other industries. From 2003 to 2008, the fatality rate in the oil and gas extraction industry was about eight times greater than the rate for all U.S. workers. This high rate of fatalities is due to hazards such as chemical exposures, vehicle crashes, explosions, fires, falls and confined spaces.
U.S. Energy Economic Trends
Another misleading argument for fracking is that it lowers domestic energy costs by increasing the supply of oil and gas. While it is true that fracking has contributed to a surge in energy production, the economic benefits of fracking and increased oil and gas production — particularly for household consumers — are highly misrepresented by industry supporters.
In recent years, the United States has leveraged its oil and gas resources to become a leading exporter in the global energy market. In 2022, the U.S. produced about 20.08 million barrels per day (b/d) of petroleum and consumed approximately 20.01 million b/d. According to Nasdaq industry analysis, this surplus has allowed the U.S. to be a net exporter of petroleum products and liquefied natural gas (LNG).
However, the main beneficiaries of the increased supply and export capacity of U.S. oil and gas are multinational energy companies and international markets, with local economies often bearing the brunt of economic, environmental, and health costs. According to the Center for American Progress, turning domestic energy sources like oil and gas into internationally traded commodities actually exposes U.S. households to and businesses to higher gas prices set on a volatile global market, amounting to an estimated 10 percent increase for the cost of household natural gas and utility bills.
Pennsylvania Oil and Gas Data
This map shows oil and gas wells in Pennsylvania through July 2, 2024, and is based off of publicly available data from Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP).
View the map “Details” tab on the right side of the legend box to learn more and see the data sources or click on the map to explore the dynamic version of this data.
View Full Size Map | Updated 7/2/2024 | Map Tutorial
Fracking’s Impact in Pennsylvania
Over the last decade, Pennsylvania has become the second-largest fracked gas producer in the United States, following Texas, producing 7.5 trillion cubic feet of natural gas in 2022 according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA). As of 2023, more natural gas was produced in the Appalachian region than in any other U.S. region, accounting for 29 percent of gross natural gas production. As a result, the state has also become emblematic of the controversies surrounding fracking.
The Case of Dimock, Pennsylvania
Dimock, Pennsylvania, has become one of the most infamous examples of the impacts of fracking. The small town in northeastern Pennsylvania gained national attention after residents experienced severe water contamination linked to fracking activities by Cabot Oil and Gas, now Coterra Energy. This incident was featured in the 2010 documentary “Gasland,” where residents showed their tap water igniting due to high methane levels.
The contamination issues began in 2008 when residents started reporting problems with their water supplies, which they attributed to nearby fracking operations. Investigations revealed that fracking activities had indeed caused methane to seep into the groundwater, contaminating the water source for numerous households. This led to a prolonged legal battle, culminating in a historic settlement in 2022 where Coterra Energy was required to pay $16.3 million to build new water infrastructure and provide clean water to affected residents for the next 75 years.
Dimock Township is a small town located in Susquehanna County, a county in northeastern Pennsylvania with extensive fracking development. Photo by Erica Jackson, FracTracker Alliance, March 2022.
Despite the historic settlement, the situation in Dimock remains contentious. The planned public water system is still in the early stages of development and faces numerous logistical challenges. The target completion date is set for 2027, but residents like Victoria Switzer are skeptical, calling the planned water line “imaginary” and doubting the project’s feasibility given the dense concentration of gas wells and infrastructure in the region.
Meanwhile, in a highly controversial move, the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) quietly lifted a 12-year ban on fracking in the area in 2023, giving Coterra Energy Inc. permission from the state environmental regulators to drill new gas wells underneath the township. While some see the return of fracking as a boon for economic development and so-called energy independence, others fear a repeat of the environmental disaster that initially led to the fracking ban in Dimock. Their concerns are also compounded by new threats from fracking: wastewater discharge.
Fracking Ban in New York
Only 120 miles from Dimock, Pennsylvania, New York state has taken a very different approach to the issue. Rather than expanding fracking, New York implemented a statewide ban on fracking in 2014 following public outcry over concerns about water contamination, air pollution, and public health risks. The ban was solidified in 2020, making New York one of the states with the strongest anti-fracking policies in the country.
Opponents of the ban argue that New York has missed out on economic benefits from natural gas extraction, contending that responsible fracking could have provided sustainable economic growth. However, data indicates that the state has taken a more strategic approach to its energy economy. Since the ban, New York has made significant investments in renewable energy, aiming to generate 70% of its electricity from renewable sources by 2030. The state has also committed to installing 6,000 MW of solar capacity and 9,000 MW of offshore wind by 2035.
Driven by the state’s Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act, New York has committed more than $170 million to training initiatives that prioritize underserved communities and preparing workers for the evolving energy market. Consequently, the renewable energy sector is projected to create thousands of jobs. According to the 2023 New York Clean Energy Industry Report, there were a record-breaking total of 171,000 clean energy jobs across New York in 2022.
FracTracker Alliance’s Karen Edelstein has contributed to the movement to ban fracking in New York since December 2011. This timelapse shows the growth in solar capacity in the state before and after fracking was banned in 2014. Graphic by Karen Edelstein, FracTracker Alliance, 2022.
Boon or Boondoggle?
A side-by-side comparison of Pennsylvania and New York shows the actual long-term impacts of the fracking boondoggle on communities and the environment. While Pennsylvania residents grapple with environmental contamination and other adverse effects directly attributable to fracking, New York’s approach has focused on preventing these risks by banning fracking entirely.
In contrast to Pennsylvania, New York state’s investment in renewable energy has been a boon for the state; the state’s strategy has not only mitigated potential fracking-related damage but also positioned New York as a leader in the clean energy transition. New York’s ambitious approach to transitioning their energy sector has provided a stable foundation for economic development, offering long-term benefits without the drawbacks associated with fracking.
Conclusion
The severe environmental and public health impacts of fracking demand immediate action. Ultimately, banning fracking is the most comprehensive solution to its pervasive impacts. As of 2024, only five states have banned fracking, including Vermont (2012), New York (2020), Maryland (2017), Washington (2019), and California (2024).
For states with a high level of oil and gas production, such as Texas and Pennsylvania, there are many other stopgap measures that could help prevent environmental damage and protect communities from the adverse impacts of fracking. In the absence of other long-term solutions, one strategy for mitigating risk is to adopt public health setbacks, which mandate minimum distances between fracking operations and homes, schools, and water sources. For states with extensive oil and gas development, implementing public health setbacks would help safeguard vulnerable populations and ensure a basic level of protection while more permanent solutions are developed.
Regulators and elected officials are key players in holding the industry accountable for its impacts, though policy makers often lack the political will to regulate industry, even at the expense of their constituents. For example, this has been demonstrated by Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro’s inconsistent record on fracking. As Attorney General, he investigated and indicted a major natural gas company in 2021 for environmental violations. However, as Governor, Shapiro has been criticized for not implementing stricter regulations to protect communities like Dimock, which continue to suffer from fracking-related contamination and health issues for the sake of the state’s “all-of-the-above” energy strategy.
Transitioning towards a safer and more sustainable energy future requires a wide range of strategies and stakeholders. However, states like New York provide a blueprint for balancing immediate needs with long-term sustainability, demonstrating how proactive policies can protect public health and the environment while supporting economic growth.
Learn More
- See FracTracker’s latest analysis on oil and gas trends in Pennsylvania as of July 2024. Read more
- Read a July 24, 2024, press release from FracTracker Alliance and Center for Coalfield Justice on how policies in Pennsylvania have impacted residents of heavily fracked areas of the state. Read more
- Analysis from Ohio River Valley Institute shows Appalachia’s fracking counties continue their economic spiral as the region’s gas output begins to plateau. Read more
Urge Pennsylvania Governor Shapiro to adopt public health setbacks
Join the Conversation
Stay Informed
FracTracker Newsletter
Support Our Work
FracTracker Alliance helps communicate the risks of oil and gas and petrochemical development to advance just energy alternatives that protect public health, natural resources, and the climate.
By contributing to FracTracker, you are helping to make tangible changes, such as decreasing the number of oil and gas wells in the US, protecting the public from toxic and radioactive chemicals, and stopping petrochemical expansion into vulnerable communities.
Your donations help fund the sourcing and analysis of new data so that we can keep you informed and continually update our resources.
Please donate to FracTracker today as a way to advocate for clean water, clean air, and healthy communities.
What You Should Read Next

Pipeline Incidents Are a Daily Occurrence

Environmental Justice Analysis of Oil Extraction in Los Angeles Communities

How Increased Protective Buffer Zones Could Help Protect 3.6 million Pennsylvanians

Regulatory Gaps and Resistance: The Battle Over Fracking in Southern Illinois

Can California Energy Policy Move Past its Contradictions?

Data Gaps: A Critical Examination of Oil and Gas Well Incidents in Ohio

Indigenous Communities’ Fight Against CO2 Pipelines in the Great Plains

Pennsylvania Oil and Gas Industry Trends: Drilled Wells, Violations, Production, and Waste

A Closer Look at Risks of the Appalachian Hydrogen Hub

Falcon Pipeline Criminal Charges Explained

The Importance of Surveying Rural Landowners in North Dakota on Fracking

Exploring the Fallout of Precision Scheduled Rail: A Rail Worker’s Perspective on Precision Scheduled Rail

Not-So-Radical Transparency: An Ineffective and Unnecessary Partnership Between Pennsylvania Governor Shapiro and the Gas Company CNX

California Must Improve Management of Idle Wells

Holes in FracFocus

Mapping PFAS Chemicals Used in Fracking Operations in West Virginia

Chevron’s $2.3 Billion Asset Adjustment Raises Questions Amidst Regulatory Changes in California

Stop Toxic Threat: A Heavy Industrial Zoning Battle

East Palestine Warning: The Growing Threat From Hazardous Waste Storage

Index of Oil and Gas Operator Health in California Shows Risks to State Economy and Taxpayers

Calling for Change: Life on the Fracking Frontlines

On the Wrong Track: Risks to Residents of the Upper Ohio River Valley From Railroad Incidents

Digital Atlas: Exploring Nature and Industry in the Raccoon Creek Watershed

Why Do Houses Keep Exploding in One Pennsylvania Suburb?

FracTracker Alliance Releases Statement Opposing Governor Shapiro’s Agreement With CNX

Oil and Gas Activity Within California Public Health Protection Zones

Assessment of Oil and Gas Well Ownership Transfers in California

Evaluation of the Capacity for Water Recycling for Colorado Oil and Gas Extraction Operations

Evidence Shows Oil and Gas Companies Use PFAS in New Mexico Wells

CalGEM Permit Review Q1 2023: Well Rework Permits Increase by 76% in California

2022 Pipeline Incidents Update: Is Pipeline Safety Achievable?

Testimony On EPA’s Proposed Methane Pollution Standards for the Oil and Gas Industry

Assessment of Rework Permits on Oil Production from Operational Wells Within the 3,200-Foot Public Health Protection Zone

CalGEM Permit Review Q4 2022: Oil Permit Approvals Show Steep Rise Within Protective Buffer Zones

A Contentious Landscape of Pipeline Build-outs in the Eastern US

Major Gas Leak Reveals Risks of Aging Gas Storage Wells in Pennsylvania

Coursing Through Gasland: A Digital Atlas Exploring Natural Gas Development in the Towanda Creek Watershed

Falcon Pipeline Online, Begins Operations Following Violations of Clean Streams Law

Synopsis: Risks to the Greater Columbus Water Supply from Oil and Gas Production

Desalination: The Chemical Industry’s Demand for Water in Texas

Take Action in Support of No New Leases

Carbon Capture and Storage: Developments in the Law of Pore Space in North Dakota

Carbon Capture and Storage: Industry Connections and Community Impacts

Carbon Capture and Storage: Fact or Fiction?

Pipeline Right-of-Ways: Making the Connection between Forest Fragmentation and the Spread of Lyme Disease in Southwestern Pennsylvania

FracTracker Finds Widespread Hydrocarbon Emissions from Active & Idle Oil and Gas Wells and Infrastructure in California

California Regulators Approve More Oil Well Permits Amid a Crisis of Leaking Oil Wells that Should be Plugged

An Insider Take on the Appalachian Hydrogen & CCUS Conference

Does Hydrogen Have a Role in our Energy Future?

Oil and Gas Brine in Ohio

PA Environment Digest Blog: Conventional Oil & Gas Drillers Dispose Of Drill Cuttings By ‘Dusting’

Real Talk on Pipelines

2021 Production from Pennsylvania’s Oil and Gas Wells

Mapping Energy Systems Impacted by the Russia-Ukraine War

Dimock residents working to protect water from a new threat: fracking waste

Implications of a 3,200-foot Setback in California

New Trends in Drilling Permit Approvals Take Shape in CA

Oil and Gas Drilling in California Legislative Districts

New Report: Fracking with “Forever Chemicals” in Colorado

Introducing: FracTracker’s comprehensive new Pennsylvania map!

New Letter from Federal Regulators Regarding how the Falcon has Been Investigated

US Army Corps Muskingum Watershed Plan ignores local concerns of oil and gas effects

Oil and gas companies use a lot of water to extract oil in drought-stricken California

Southeastern Texas Petrochemical Industry Needs 318 Billion Gallons of Water, but the US EPA Says Not So Fast

Chickahominy Pipeline project tries to exploit an apparent regulatory loophole

Map Update on Criminal Charges Facing Mariner East 2 Pipeline

It’s Time to Stop Urban Oil Drilling in Los Angeles

Infrastructure Networks in Texas

California Prisons are Within 2,500’ of Oil and Gas Extraction

New power plant proposal called senseless and wasteful by climate groups

Ongoing Safety Concerns over Shell’s Falcon Pipeline

New Neighborhood Drilling Permits Issued While California Fails to Act on Public Health Rules

The world is watching as bitcoin battle brews in the US


California Oil & Gas Drilling Permits Drop in Response to Decreased Permit Applications to CalGEM

California Denies Well Stimulation Permits

Mapping PFAS “Forever Chemicals” in Oil & Gas Operations

Updated National Energy and Petrochemical Map

Ohio, West Virginia, Pennsylvania Fracking Story Map

Ohio & Fracking Waste: The Case for Better Waste Management

Pennsylvania Conventional Well Map Update

Impacts of 2020 Colonial Pipeline Rupture Continue to Grow

Gas Storage Plan vs. Indigenous Rights in Nova Scotia

Mapping Gathering Lines in Bradford County, Pennsylvania

Trends in fracking waste coming to New York State from Pennsylvania

2021 Pipeline Incidents Update: Safety Record Not Improving

New York State Oil & Gas Well Drilling: Patterns Over Time

Risky Byhalia Connection Pipeline Threatens Tennessee & Mississippi Health, Water Supply

Shell’s Falcon Pipeline Under Investigation for Serious Public Safety Threats

Kern County’s Drafted EIR Will Increase the Burden for Frontline Communities

Pennsylvania’s Waste Disposal Wells – A Tale of Two Datasets

California Oil & Gas Setbacks Recommendations Memo

Oil and Gas Wells on California State Lands

Industrial Impacts in Michigan: A Photo Essay & Story Map

People and Production: Reducing Risk in California Extraction

Documenting emissions from new oil and gas wells in California


FracTracker in the Field: Building a Live Virtual Map


Mapping Gathering Lines in Ohio and West Virginia

The North Dakota Shale Viewer Reimagined: Mapping the Water and Waste Impact

Falcon Pipeline Construction Releases over 250,000 Gallons of Drilling Fluid in Pennsylvania and Ohio

Systematic Racism in Kern County Oil and Gas Permitting Ordinance

Fracking Water Use in Pennsylvania Increases Dramatically

New Yorkers mount resistance against North Brooklyn Pipeline

California, Back in Frack

California Setback Analyses Summary

Air Pollution from Pennsylvania Shale Gas Compressor Stations – REPORT

New York State Oil & Gas Wells – 2020 Update

National Energy and Petrochemical Map

Governor Newsom Must Do More to Address the Cause of Oil Spill Surface Expressions

Oil & Gas Well Permits Issued By Newsom Administration Rival Those Issued Under Gov. Jerry Brown

Pipelines Continue to Catch Fire and Explode

The Hidden Inefficiencies and Environmental Costs of Fracking in Ohio

Fracking in Pennsylvania: Not Worth It

Fracking Threatens Ohio’s Captina Creek Watershed


How State Regulations Hold Us back and What Other Countries are doing about Fracking

New Method for Locating Abandoned Oil and Gas Wells is Tested in New York State


Abandoned Wells in Pennsylvania: We’re Not Doing Enough


The Underlying Politics and Unconventional Well Fundamentals of an Appalachian Storage Hub

Permitting New Oil and Gas Wells Under the Newsom Administration

Mapping the Petrochemical Build-Out Along the Ohio River

Impact of a 2,500′ Oil and Gas Well Setback in California

Production and Location Trends in PA: A Moving Target

The Falcon Public Monitoring Project

Release: The 2019 You Are Here map launches, showing New York’s hurdles to climate leadership

Idle Wells are a Major Risk

Literally Millions of Failing, Abandoned Wells

Wicked Witch of the Waste

The Growing Web of Oil and Gas Pipelines

Unnatural Disasters

Getting Rid of All of that Waste – Increasing Use of Oil and Gas Injection Wells in Pennsylvania

A Disturbing Tale of Diminishing Returns in Ohio

Pennsylvania Drilling Trends in 2018
216 Franklin St, Suite 400, Johnstown, PA 15901
Phone: +1 (717) 303-0403 | info@fractracker.org
FracTracker Alliance is a 501(c)3 non-profit: Tax identification number: 80-0844297
Leave a Reply
Want to join the discussion?Feel free to contribute!