Back to Show
Earth Focus
Fracking Goes Global
(Earth Focus: Episode 52) U.S. domestic gas production is on the rise because of hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, a controversial method of extracting natural gas from shale rock by pumping millions of gallons of water mixed with sand and chemicals underground at high pressure. Environmentalists say this gas boon threatens water supplies and pollutes air. Now, as fracking expands around the world, so does growing resistance. "Earth Focus" looks at three countries on the new fracking frontline: South Africa, Poland, and the UK. Reported from South Africa by Jeff Barbee and Andrew Wasley from Poland and the U.K.
Image: @iStock/cta88
Support Provided By
Season
Earth Month
26:40
Diablo Canyon ignites conversations about nuclear power in the state’s energy future.
Earth Month
26:40
Love for Joshua Tree endangers the local life—both people and ecosystems.
Earth Month
26:40
Ravens threaten Mojave Desert tortoises, and solutions call on shifts in human behavior.
Earth Month
26:40
A transformed L.A. River is envisioned by the communities that live at its edge.
Earth Month
26:40
The L.A. River is reimagined through explorations of history, hydrology, and architecture.
26:47
Everyday people are standing up against the e-commerce giants polluting the Inland Empire.
56:40
Climate change takes a toll on mental health in rural areas.
56:41
Stories of patients and doctors reveal the environmental determinants of health in South Gate, CA.
26:39
South Africa faces a stark reality as the continent’s largest greenhouse gas emitter.
26:39
In-depth profiles of four young environmentalists: Alexandria Villaseñor in California, Carl Smith in Alaska, Ayakha Melithafa in South Africa and Litokne Kabua in the Marshall Islands.
26:40
The realities of milk production are forcing dairy communities across the globe to rethink the dairy production process.