Global Voices Author Night with Alex Prud’homme

Monday, November 4, 2013
6-8PM
Assembly Hall

Monday, November 4, 2013

6-8PM

Assembly Hall

Constantly in the news and the subject of much public debate, fracking, as it is known for short, is one of the most promising yet controversial methods of extracting natural gas and oil. Today, 90 percent of natural gas wells use fracking. Though highly effective, the process-which fractures rock with pressurized fluid-has been criticized for polluting land, air, and water, and endangering human health.

 

A timely addition to Oxford’s What Everyone Needs to Know series, Hydrofracking tackles this contentious topic, exploring both sides of the debate and providing a clear guide to the science underlying the technique. In concise question-and-answer format, Alex Prud’homme cuts through the maze of opinions and rhetoric to uncover key points, from the economic and political benefits of fracking to the health dangers and negative effects on the environment. Prud’homme offers clear answers to a range of fundamental questions, including: What is fracking fluid? How does it impact water supplies? Who regulates the industry? How much recoverable natural gas exists in the U.S.? What new innovations are on the horizon?

 

Supporters as diverse as President Obama and the conservative billionaire T. Boone Pickens have promoted natural gas as a clean, “21st-century” fuel that will reduce global warming, create jobs, and provide tax revenues, but concerns remain, with environmental activists like Bill McKibben and others leading protests to put an end to fracking as a means of obtaining alternative energy. Prud’homme considers ways to improve methods in the short-term, while also exploring the possibility of transitioning to more sustainable resources-wind, solar, tidal, and perhaps nuclear power-for the long term.
Written for general readers, Hydrofracking explains both the complex science of fracking and the equally complex political and economic issues that surround it, giving readers all the information they need to understand what will no doubt remain a contentious issue for years to come.

 

About the author: A graduate of Middlebury College, Alex Prud’homme has written for The New York Times, The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, and Time. He is also the author of five books, including The Ripple Effect: the Fate of Freshwater in the Twenty-First Century, and the co-writer of Julia Child’s bestselling memoir, My Life in France. Prud’homme is a gifted observer with an eye for writing about compelling ideas and trends that bear significance beyond their moment. His work makes a lasting impact and contributes to the debate on key issues facing us all.

 

This event is free and open to the public.

 

Presented by the Global Voices Lecture Series, the Seminary Co-op Bookstores, and the Program on the Global Environment.

 

Hydrofracking can be purchased through the Seminary Co-op Bookstore. For more information on Alex Prud’homme, visit www.alexprudhomme.com.

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