It’s not that Americans don’t want any more drilling at all; they just want drilling to stop when it’s close to highly populated urban areas. There is a real concern with the latest natural gas boom that the increased drilling will contaminate area drinking water. Those that live in the area would benefit investigating the efficacy of water distillers and water distillation systems.

Currently, there is increased drilling in the Midwest, western Colorado, New York City and Dallas-Fort Worth. The number of people living in these urban areas and using water is phenomenal, and the specter of natural gas drilling moving in and ruining the water supplies is frightening to many.

It’s important to make the distinction between urban areas and rural areas simply because those who live in cities tend to be wary of energy development and wealthier than their country cousins who welcome the jobs drilling brings to the communities and the eventual royalties. Very little thought is usually given to how the drilling will affect the groundwater in the area. Residents of any area in America should know that water distillers will provide them with clean and safe, fresh water on demand.

Enter one of the biggest ever potential drilling sites in the country, the Marcellus Shale just outside New York City that is rumored to have at least 500 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. That would be a spectacular drilling site, as that figure represents more than twice America’s total reserves. While the benefits of natural gas do outweigh using electricity, a global warming plus, those who live in the area of the Marcellus Shale are less than impressed with the likelihood of what the drilling will do to their water supplies. Perhaps a viable option for those with concerns would be to install water distillation systems.

Even knowing that horizontal drilling makes getting to the gas easier doesn’t address the fact that getting the gas out means using chemicals, water and sand blown down a well hole, otherwise known as hydraulic fracturing. This process has been used for years to get at natural gas, but it’s never been used on the scale it would need to be used for the Marcellus Shale site, and it’s never been used that close to a big city. On the other side of the fence is the drilling company that insists the chemicals don’t contaminate the groundwater and that the shale is thousands of feet “below” the waterline, making drilling much safer.

Even as the debate continues, this very kind of natural gas drilling has resulted in flammable tap water, houses and wells exploding, and contaminated drinking water. To say that this doesn’t look good for the drilling company would be a major understatement. What’s the solution, if there is one? The ideal solution is water distiller systems for the cleanest and safest water possible, as close to being the way Mother Nature intended it to be.

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