Although bipartisan support for fracking remains high among public officials, Pennsylvania voters continue to be divided and ...
PITTSBURGH (KDKA) — Vice President Kamala Harris said she won't ban fracking natural gas, telling KDKA-TV that her position hasn't changed since she joined the Biden ticket in 2020. As a senator ...
The fracking boom has transformed the United States into the world’s leading producer of oil and gas. With presidential ...
Since Vice President Kamala Harris became the Democratic nominee for president this summer, national attention on the issue of fracking in Pennsylvania—and what it means for the outcome of the ...
The state has had conventional wells, which don’t use fracking to tap the reserves, for more than 100 years. While there are a lot more conventional wells, they do not produce nearly as much oil and ...
Trump is hitting Harris with TV ads about her fracking flip. But the drilling process might not be as important to voters as pundits suggest. If it’s true that support for a fracking ban is ...
Fracking wastewater, a byproduct of natural ... to extract oil and gas has gotten a lot of attention for its ability to tap into potentially limitless geothermal energy sources anywhere in the ...
Vice President Kamala Harris argued this week that an ad showing a clip of her past rhetoric about fracking is misleading and "intended to make people afraid of my presidency." CBS Pittsburgh's ...
The state has had conventional wells, which don’t use fracking to tap the reserves, for more than 100 years. While there are a lot more conventional wells, they do not produce nearly as much oil and ...
HARRIS WILL BAN ALL FRACKING. WILL YOU COMMIT TO IMPLEMENTING A FEDERAL BAN ON FRACKING? YOUR FIRST DAY IN OFFICE? THERE’S NO QUESTION I’M IN FAVOR OF BANNING FRACKING. YES, HARRIS WOULD MAKE ...
A 5-year-old video of Vice President Harris touting her support for a fracking ban resurfaced on social media over the weekend, highlighting an issue that has plagued the vice president in her run ...
(The Center Square) — Pennsylvanians remain split about the future of fracking, but most of them are open to stronger regulations for air monitoring, information disclosure and setbacks.