What is the "biggest unfinished business for the Obama administration?" According to a report from Bill McKibben, the outspoken climate alarmist who calls for all fossil fuels to be kept in the ground, it is "to establish tight rules on methane emissions"'emissions that he blames on the "rapid spread of fracking."

McKibben calls methane emissions a "disaster." He claims "methane is much more efficient at trapping heat than carbon dioxide" and that it does more damage to the climate than coal. Methane, CH4, is the primary component of natural gas.

Apparently, his progressive friends in California agree, as they are now, according to the Wall Street Journal (WSJ): "seeking to curb the natural gas emanating from dairy farms"'more specifically cow manure and flatulence. The August 12 editorial says that the California Air Resources Board "suggests that dairy farms purchase technology to capture methane and then sell the biogas to customers." It acknowledges that the supposed cure would only be cost-effective with "substantial government subsidies and regulatory credits." WSJ points out that while California's proposed regulations might produce the "least GHG intensive" gallon of milk in the world, it would also be the "most expensive."

To buttress his anti-fracking argument, McKibben is selective on which studies he cites. He starts with a paper from "Harvard researchers" that shows increased methane emissions between 2002 and 2014 but doesn't pinpoint the source of the methane. He, then, relies heavily on "a series of papers" from known fracking opponents: Cornell Scientists Robert Howarth and Anthony Ingraffea. Within his report, McKibben mentions Howarth's bias, but, I believe, intentionally never mentions Ingraffea's. Earlier this year, in sworn testimony, Ingraffea admitted he'd be lying if he said that every one of his papers on shale gas was "entirely objective." Additionally, a group that Ingraffa co-founded and for which he serves as Board Chair, Emeritus: Physicians, Scientists and Engineers for Healthy Energy, received, at least, tens of thousands of dollars in coordination with wealthy foundations to support the broad movement of opposition to shale gas drilling.

Because of bias, McKibben claims to reach out to an "impeccably moderate referee": Dan Lashof. Mckibben then goes on to report on Lashof as having been "in the inner circles of climate policy almost since it began." In addition to writing reports for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and crafting Obama's plan to cut "coal plant pollution," Lashof was the "longtime head of the Clean Air Program at the Natural Resources Defense Council" and he now serves as COO for "billionaire Tom Steyer's NextGen Climate America." Lashof is hardly an "impeccably moderate referee."

Because McKibben goes to great lengths trying to appear balanced in his conclusions, a casual reader of his report might think the research cited is all there is and, therefore, agree with his cataclysmic views. Fortunately, as a just-released paper makes clear, much more research needs to be considered before cementing public policy, such as the Environmental Protection Agency's "tight rules on methane emissions."

In the 28 peer-reviewed pages (with nearly 70 footnotes) of Bill McKibben's terrifying disregard for fracking facts, Isaac Orr, research fellow for energy and environment policy at The Heartland Institute, states: "Although McKibben'a journalist, not a scientist'accurately identifies methane as being exceptionally good at capturing heat in Earth's atmosphere, his G

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