Over the last four years, emissions in  the United States declined more than in any other country in the world. Coal  plants and coal mines are being shuttered. That's not from increased use of  solar panels and wind turbines, as laudable as those technologies are. Rather  it's due, in large measure, to the technological revolution allowing for the  cheap extraction of natural gas from shale. By contrast, Europe, with its cap and trade program, and price on carbon, is  returning to coal-burning.
Could President Obama, during his second  term in office, turn this homegrown success story into  paradigm-shifting climate strategy? In a speech we gave to the Colorado Oil and  Gas Association yesterday, we argue that, after a season of ugly ideological  polarization, politicians, environmentalists, and the gas industry have a  chance to hit the reset button on energy politics. 
This will require the natural gas  industry to clean up its act, accepting better regulations, cracking down on  bad actors, and preventing the leakage of methane, a potent greenhouse gas. It  will require environmentalists to consider whether there might be a different  path to significant emissions reductions from the one they have pursued over  the last 20 years. And it will require Left and Right to put a halt to the  tribalism that has characterized the national debate over climate and  energy.  
— Michael and Ted
Uniting  a Fractured Republic
Innovation, Pragmatism, and the Natural Gas Revolution
by Ted Nordhaus and Michael Shellenberger
In 1981, George Mitchell, an independent Texas natural gas entrepreneur,  realized that his shallow gas wells in the Barnett were running dry. He had  millions of sunk investment in equipment and was looking for a way to generate  more return on it. Mitchell was then a relatively small player in an industry  that by its own reckoning was in decline. Conventional gas reserves were limited  and were getting increasingly played out.
As he considered how he might save his operation, Mitchell turned his  attention to shale. Drillers had been drilling shale since the early 19th  Century, but mostly they drilled right through it to get to limestone and other  formations. Dan Jarvey, a consultant to Mitchell at the time, told us,  "When you look at a [gas drilling] log from the 1930s or 1950s or 1970s it  is noted as a 'gas kick' or 'shale gas kick.' Most categorized it as 'It's just  a shale gas kick' – as in, 'to be expected, but to be ignored.'"
As Mitchell embarked on his 20-year quest to crack the shale gas code, most  of his colleagues in the gas industry thought he was crazy. But Mitchell  persisted and his efforts would ultimately culminate in today's natural gas  revolution.
In doing so, Mitchell upended longstanding assumptions about the future of  energy. Just a few years ago, the convention wisdom was that no source of  electricity could be cheaper than coal. Today, in the U.S., natural gas is cheaper.  As a result, coal's share as a percentage of electricity generated went from  over 50 percent in 2005 to 36 percent in 2012. While global coal use continues to rise, the  U.S. is at present leaving much of it in the ground. Meanwhile, estimates of  recoverable natural gas results in the United States have nearly doubled,  growing from 200 trillion cubic feet in 2005 to 350 trillion cubic feet today.
The implications for those of us concerned about climate change are also  significant. Leaving coal in the ground has been the longstanding goal of those  of us concerned about global warming. Natural gas releases emits 45 percent  fewer carbon emissions. In large part due to the glut of natural gas, U.S.  carbon dioxide emissions will have declined more in the United States than in  any other country in the world between 2008 and 2012 — an astonishing 500  million metric tons out of 6 billion, according to the Energy Information  Administration.
While we don’t imagine that any of this is news to most of you in this audience,  there is another part of the story that might be. That is the story of the ways  in which both the gas industry and the federal government helped Mitchell along  the way. In these intensely polarized times, when it seems that almost everyone  imagines that either government or corporations are the enemy, and it seems  impossible to imagine that the two might actually work together to further the  public interest, there are important lessons here too.
1.
  As Mitchell considered trying his hand at shale, he cast about to see what  was known at the time about how to get gas out of shale. A geophysicist who  worked with Mitchell recalled telling him that, "It looks similar to the  Devonian [shale back east], and the government's done all this work on the Devonian."
The work Mitchell's geophysicist was referring to was the Eastern Gas Shales  Project, which was started in 1976 by President Ford. The Shales Project was  just one of several aggressive government-led efforts to accelerate technology  innovation to increase oil and gas production. Already in 1974 the Bureau of  Mines was funding the study of underground fracture formations, enhanced  recovery of oil through fluid injection, and the recovery of oil from tar  sands. One year later, the government funded the first massive hydofracking at  test sites in California, Wyoming and West Virginia, as well as  "directionally deviated well-drilling techniques" for both oil and gas drilling.
The mandate from Congress was for government scientists and engineers to  hire private contractors rather than do the work in-house. This was consistent  with the tradition of the Bureau of Mines, which would set up trailers around  the country to support oil, coal and gas entrepreneurs. This strategy  contrasted with the government's nuclear energy R&D work, which had been  hierarchical since its birth in the military's Manhattan project. This  decentralization proved wise, as it ensured that the information would rapidly  reach entrepreneurs in the field and not gather dust inside of a federal  bureaucracy.
From early on, Mitchell and his team relied heavily on information coming  out of the Eastern Gas Shales project. "We were all reading the DOE papers  trying to figure out what the DOE had found in the Eastern Gas Shales,"  Mitchell geologist Dan Steward told us, "and it wasn't until 1986 that we  concluded that we don't have open fractures, and that we were making production  out of tight shales."
Through the 1980s, Mitchell didn't want to ask the government – or the Gas  Research Institute, which was funded by a fee on gas pipeline shipments to  coordinate government research with experiments being conducted by  entrepreneurs in the field – for help because he worried that he wouldn't  be able to take full advantage of the investment he was making in innovation.
But by the early 1990s Mitchell had concluded that he needed the  government's help, and turned to DOE and the publicly-funded Gas Research  Institute for technical assistance. The Gas Research Institute, which had  worked with other industry partners to demonstrate the first horizontal fracks,  subsidized Mitchell’s first horizontal well. Sandia National Labs provided  high-tech underground mapping and supercomputers and a team to help Mitchell  interpret the results. Mitchell’s twenty-year quest was also made possible by a  $10 billion, 20-year tax credit provided by Congress to subsidize  unconventional gas, which was too expensive and risky for most private firms to  experiment with otherwise.
By 2000, the combination of technologies to cheaply frack shale were firmly  in place. The final piece of the puzzle was the sale of Mitchell Energy to  Devon Energy, which scaled up the use of horizontal wells. Over the next ten  years the use of this combination of technologies would spread across the  country, resulting in today's natural gas glut.
Though the collaboration between Mitchell and the government was one of the  most fruitful public-private partnerships in American history, it was mostly  unknown until we started interviewing the key players involved around this time  last year.
After our findings were verified by other researches and reporters,  including the New York Times and the Associated Press, some in the oil and gas industry, like T. Boone  Pickens, have tried to downplay the government's role.
But the pioneers of this technology have been forthright. "I'm  conservative as hell," Mitchell's former Vice President Dan Steward told  us, but DOE "did a hell of a lot of work and I can't give them enough  credit… You cannot diminish DOE's involvement." Fred Julander said, “The  Department of Energy was there with research funding when no one else was  interested and today we are all reaping the benefits." 
2.
  Today marks the end of one of the most divisive chapters in American  political history. There is more partisan polarization in Congress than at any  time since Reconstruction. There are vanishingly few swing voters. And the  ideological divide between liberals and conservatives at times appears  unbridgeable.
One of the most insidious aspects of today’s political polarization is the  way gross exaggerations turn into ossified caricatures. Left and Right view the  other as ignorant, insane, or immoral.
  From the Right we have heard that President Obama is taking the country to  socialism, and that Big Government is destroying the American dream. From the  Left we have heard that Governor Romney would have exported all our jobs to  China, and turn Congress over to Big Business. Where this downward spiral takes  us is to the conclusion that America is fundamentally broken. The two great  institutions of American life — business and government — are viewed by one  side or the other as corrupt and nefarious.
Few issues have become more polarizing than energy. Both sides have taken  ever more extreme positions. Prominent conservatives have exaggerated both the  size of Obama's clean energy investments and the number of bankruptcies. They  have described global warming and other environmental problems as either not  happening or not worth worrying about. Some environmentalists have taken the  opposite tack, exaggerating the negative impacts of gas drilling, downplaying  the benefits, and accusing anyone who disagrees with them of being on the take.
As we say in California — everyone needs to chill out. There is too much at stake  for America, our environment, and our economy, for such hyper-partisanship to  continue.
In our rush to point fingers and interpret everything in catastrophic terms,  we have lost sight of the fact that we are the richest nation on earth, and one  with improving environmental quality, precisely because the private sector and  the government have worked so well together. The failures of Big Business and  Big Government should be put in their appropriate historical context.
When the Colorado Oil and Gas Association asked us to give this speech at  its conference the day after the election, we agreed on two conditions: that we  pay our own way and that COGA invite local environmental and elected leaders to  attend. We are glad to see them in the audience, because we need a common  dialogue.
As two individuals who came out of the environmental movement, where we  spent most of our careers, we are best known for our writings calling for  reform and renovation of green politics. In particular, we have advocated that  environmentalists drop their apocalyptic rhetoric, which is self-defeating and  obscures the very real environmental problems we face.
And we have argued that environmentalists have been overly focused on  regulations, when our focus should also be on revolutionary technological  innovation, which is needed to make clean energy and other environmental  technologies much cheaper, so that all seven going on 10 billion humans can  live modern, prosperous lives on an ecologically vibrant planet.
But our work has also focused on reminding private investors and corporate  executives of the critical role played by the government in creating our  national wealth. While economists have long recognized that innovation is  responsible for most of our economic growth, few realize that many of our  world-changing innovations would have been unlikely to occur without government  support. A short list of recognizable technological innovations includes  interchangeable parts, computers, the Internet, jet engines, nuclear power and  every other major energy technology.
Consider the information revolution. The government funded the R&D and  bought 80 percent of the first microchips. The Internet started out as a  federally funded program to connect networks of computers of government. Every  major technology in the iPhone can be traced to some connection with government  funding. The driver-less robot car that Google has invented relies on  technologies that come out of government innovation programs.
While high tech executives who are our age or younger are unaware of the  government roots of the IT revolution, the old-timers of Silicon Valley do, and  frequently expresses their gratitude for it.
While interviewing the participants of the shale gas revolution, we were  struck by how much respect and deference each side gave to the other. In many  cases the government scientists and engineers acted as consultants to private  firms like Mitchell's — "We never forgot who the customer was," said  Alex Crawley, who ran the DOE's fossil innovation program for many years.
As environmentalists, we were taught to be suspicious of such cozy  relationships between industry and government workers, that government could  not simultaneously promote industry while also attempting to regulate it. But  when it comes to technology innovation, those cozy relationships, and the  revolving door between government agencies, whether DoD or DoE, and private  companies like Mitchell Energy, are absolutely essential to allowing knowledge  to rapidly spillover and flow throughout the sector.
And yet, there is also an important role for regulation, not only to protect  the public from accidents and environmental degradation, but also to improve  technologies and promote better practices throughout the industry. Wise  regulation in the long run promotes, rather than hinders, the spread of new  technologies and new industries, and this has never been more true than in the  case of fracking. While US gas production has taken off, many European nations  banned fracking for fear of the local environmental impacts and have started to  return to burning coal.
Last August, George Mitchell and New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced  they would fund a large effort by the states to establish better fracking  practices. They called for stronger control of methane leaks and other air  pollution, the disclosure of chemicals used in fracking, optimizing rules for  well construction, minimizing water use and properly disposing of waste water,  and reducing the impact of gas on communities, roads, and the environment.
You would be hard pressed to find very many Americans who would call those  reforms unreasonable. They are the kinds of things that die-hard anti-fracking  activists and much of the natural gas industry could agree to. And indeed,  states like Colorado, and environmental groups like the Environmental Defense  Fund, deserve credit for bringing regulators and the gas industry together to  improve practices. By squarely addressing the methane leakage problem, and  reducing the local environmental impacts, the government and the industry can  make natural gas an even more obviously better alternative to coal.
And the good news is that reducing methane leakage is something the industry  already knows how to do. Little innovation is required to make sure that old  pipelines are not leaking, and that new cement jobs are done properly.  Similarly, responsible disposal of fracking fluids is not rocket science, it is  something that the oil and gas industry does routinely in other contexts.  Promising efforts are also underway to develop more environmentally sound  fracking fluids and to further minimize water usage.
There are costs, of course, associated with all of these efforts. But if the  history of fracking proves anything, it is that costs will come down quickly.  Indeed, if history is any guide, we will see great improvements to fracking  technologies and techniques over the next 30 years that will be mutually  beneficial to the industry, the public, and the environment, for the history of  the shale gas revolution has been a history of incremental improvements to the  technology. The water intensity of fracking, for instance, was originally not  an environmental problem for drillers but an economic one. Only once Mitchell  and others developed methods that required vastly less water to crack the shale  did fracking become economically viable.
For all of these reasons, we should both regulate fracking fairly and  effectively, and also continue to support innovation to improve unconventional  gas technologies. Doing so will help assure a future for gas beyond the  precincts in which it is already well established. We also need to support  innovation in new gas technologies well beyond fracking practices to include  carbon capture and storage, which is more viable economically and technologically  for gas than for coal, because gas plants are more efficient, and the emissions  stream much purer. In a world in which there may remain significant obstacles  to moving entirely away from fossil fuels, gas CCS looks much more viable than  coal CCS. As such, we need government and the gas industry to work  together to demonstrate carbon capture technologies at sites around the  country, similar to how we conducted the Eastern Gas Shales Project.
And the gas industry should support innovation beyond natural gas to include  support for innovation in renewables, nuclear and other environmentally  important technologies. Championing energy innovation more broadly would do  more for the industry than the millions it is currently spending on slick  30-second TV ads and will remind Americans that supporting gas as well as  renewables is not a zero sum proposition. Getting our energy from a diversity  of sources is in the national interest and gas will thrive for a long time  regardless of the energy mix. Moreover, until we have cheap utility scale  storage, renewables need cheap gas for backup.
For all of this to happen, the gas industry and environmentalists alike must  change their posture toward regulation. While it is the goal of a small number  of us to rid the world of particular practices, whether shale-fracking or  atom-splitting, most of the rest of us want to improve them.
Over the last 10 years, our message to the environmental movement has been  that it must change its attitude toward technological innovation. Technologies  are not essentially good or bad but rather in a process of continuous  improvement. But there is another side to that story that industry must  remember. Regulations that are often bitterly opposed sometimes end up being a  boon for industry, paving the way for the broad acceptance of new technologies  and pushing firms to improve those technologies in ways that make them more  economical as well as more environmental.
In closing we’d like to invoke the title essay of our last e-book, “Love  Your Monsters,” which was written by one of our Senior Fellows, a well-known  French anthropologist named Bruno Latour. In the essay, Latour monkey-wrenches  the Frankenstein fable. The sin of Dr. Frankenstein, according to Latour, was  not creating the monster, but rather abandoning him when he turned out to be  flawed. We must learn to love our technologies as we do our children, he  concluded, constantly helping and improving them. In so doing, we too become  all the wiser.
As we consider the implications of the gas revolution for the future of both  our energy economy and our environment, we should commit ourselves to the  larger effort of improving our technological creations. In so doing, the gas  industry and the environmental movement might together update the concept of sustainability  for the 21st Century. We should seek not to put limits on the aspirations of  1.5 billion people who still lack access to electricity, nor on the billions  more yearning for enough to power washing machines and refrigerators. Nor  should we want to sustain today's energy technologies to be used in perpetuity.  Rather, we should embrace technological innovation as the key to creating  cleaner and better substitutes to today's energy and non-energy resources alike  so that we might sustain human civilization far into the future.