Authors
Mitchell J Small, Paul C Stern, Elizabeth Bomberg, Susan M Christopherson, Bernard D Goldstein, Andrei L Israel, Robert B Jackson, Alan Krupnick, Meagan S Mauter, Jennifer Nash, D Warner North, Sheila M Olmstead, Aseem Prakash, Barry Rabe, Nathan Richardson, Susan Tierney, Thomas Webler, Gabrielle Wong-Parodi, Barbara Zielinska
Publication date
2014/8/5
Source
Environmental science & technology
Volume
48
Issue
15
Pages
8289-8297
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Description
A broad assessment is provided of the current state of knowledge regarding the risks associated with shale gas development and their governance. For the principal domains of risk, we identify observed and potential hazards and promising mitigation options to address them, characterizing current knowledge and research needs. Important unresolved research questions are identified for each area of risk, however, certain domains exhibit especially acute deficits of knowledge and attention, including integrated studies of public health, ecosystems, air quality, socioeconomic impacts on communities, and climate change. For these, current research and analysis are insufficient to either confirm or preclude important impacts. The rapidly evolving landscape of shale gas governance in the U.S. is also assessed, noting challenges and opportunities associated with the current decentralized (state-focused) system of …
Total citations
201420152016201720182019202020212022202320244283234432118201032
Scholar articles