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Description: "In 2013, New York's state government will decide whether to permit extraction of natural gas by hydraulic fracturing or, instead, turn its current moratorium into a permanent ban on this technology. In weighing their choice, New York officials have an abundance of useful data from neighboring Pennsylvania. There, nearly 5,000 wells have been hydrofractured since 2002. If New York lifts its moratorium, companies will be drilling the same type of wells to exploit the same subterranean source of gas—the Marcellus Shale. Pennsylvania's experience is a good guide to what would happen in New York. In this paper, we analyze the effect of hydrofracturing—at modest, moderate, and high levels—on jobs and income growth in Pennsylvania counties. We then use these data to project the benefits that New York counties stand to gain if the state again permits hydrofracturing." - from website, 2014 June 07
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Subject: Hydraulic fracturing, Hydrofracking, Economic development, Job creation--Econometric models, Economic impact analysis
Creator: Furchtgott-Roth, Diana, Gray, Andrew
Language: English
Date: 2013 May
Identifier: https://hdl.handle.net/1813.001/wa02676
Description: "In 2013, New York’s state government will decide whether to permit extraction of natural gas by hydraulic fracturing or, instead, turn its current moratorium into a permanent ban on this technology. In weighing their choice, New York officials have an abundance of useful data from neighboring Pennsylvania. There, nearly 5,000 wells have been hydrofractured since 2002. If New York lifts its moratorium, companies will be drilling the same type of wells to exploit the same subterranean source of gas—the Marcellus Shale. Pennsylvania’s experience is a good guide to what would happen in New York. In this paper, we analyze the effect of hydrofracturing—at modest, moderate, and high levels—on jobs and income growth in Pennsylvania counties. We then use these data to project the benefits that New York counties stand to gain if the state again permits hydrofracturing." - from website 2014 June 02
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Subject: Hydraulic fracturing, Hydrofracking, Economic impact analysis , New York (State), Marcellus Shale
Creator: Furchtgott-Roth, Diana, Gray, Andrew
Language: English
Date: 2013 May 06
Identifier: https://hdl.handle.net/1813.001/wa02720
Description: "In 2013, New York’s state government will decide whether to permit extraction of natural gas by hydraulic fracturing or, instead, turn its current moratorium into a permanent ban on this technology. In weighing their choice, New York officials have an abundance of useful data from neighboring Pennsylvania. There, nearly 5,000 wells have been hydrofractured since 2002. If New York lifts its moratorium, companies will be drilling the same type of wells to exploit the same subterranean source of gas—the Marcellus Shale. Pennsylvania’s experience is a good guide to what would happen in New York. In this paper, we analyze the effect of hydrofracturing—at modest, moderate, and high levels—on jobs and income growth in Pennsylvania counties. We then use these data to project the benefits that New York counties stand to gain if the state again permits hydrofracturing." - from website, 2014 May 09
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Subject: Hydraulic fracturing, Hydrofracking, Economic impact analysis , New York (State), Pennsylvania
Creator: Furchtgott-Roth, Diana, Gray, Andrew
Language: English
Date: 2013
Identifier: https://hdl.handle.net/1813.001/wa02738
Contributor: Empire Center for New York State Policy
Page 1 of 1 (3 Total Results)