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Measuring Environmental and Economic Opinions about Hydraulic Fracturing: A Survey of Landowners in Active or Planned Drilling Units
10
Citations
48
References
2017
Year
EngineeringLand UseEnvironmental Impact AssessmentEastern Ohio LandownersFracturing OperationsEnvironmental EconomicsLand DegradationEnvironmental PlanningEnvironmental PolicySocial SciencesDrilling UnitsEconomic OpinionsRecent BoomFracturing FluidsLand Use PlanningEnvironmental GovernanceHydraulic FracturingPublic PolicyEnvironmental PoliticsMan-land RelationshipCivil EngineeringLand ManagementSocio-environmental ImplicationLand EconomicsNatural Resource EconomicsPolitical PartisanshipUnconventional ResourceNatural Resource Extraction
Abstract We investigate how Eastern Ohio landowners affected by the recent boom in high‐volume hydraulic fracturing (HVHF) view the industry and the factors that affect their attitudes. Our unique sample almost exclusively contains individuals whose land is under lease for and/or experiencing HVHF. Nation‐ and state‐wide surveys that investigate HVHF attitudes tend to find nearly even splits between opposed and supportive respondents, whose views are strongly influenced by political partisanship. These trends largely do not manifest among Eastern Ohio landowners, for whom personal experiences with HVHF crucially influence attitudes. Most respondents support HVHF and say it has benefited their community economically. Political partisanship does not significantly impact HVHF views. Contrary to arguments in the literature that economic considerations drive variation in support for HVHF, landowners’ support for the industry also appears influenced by perceptions of its environmental and infrastructure impacts. Environmental concerns appear to more powerfully shape attitudes than economic benefits.
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