Rappoport on Coast to Coast AM: the Hawaii volcano

Rappoport on Coast to Coast AM: the Hawaii volcano

Why isn’t the press connecting fracking and the Hawaii volcano eruption?

by Jon Rappoport

June 21, 2018

Last night, I was on Coast to Coast AM with George Noory, and I reported on fracking and the eruption of the Hawaii volcano.

Since very few journalists are looking into this, I’m reprinting my recent article on the subject. Obviously, if fracking were found to be the reason for the eruption, the process would be exposed as a great danger for all the world to see—

On the Big Island of Hawaii, where the Kilauea volcano has explosively erupted, there is a geothermal energy plant. It is the Puna Geothermal Venture (PGV) Plant, in Puna.

There is a long-running debate about whether PGV is fracking. The debate is a matter of terminology, because in the geothermal process, as hawaiifracking.com reports, “…the drilling and the injection of cold water into hot rocks used in geothermal energy plants does fracture the rocks, which can induce earthquakes and through contamination of the atmosphere and water tables can affect our health and safety.”

Whether deep injection of fluid aims to capture oil, gas, or heat (geothermal), the beginning stage of the process is the same.

Earthquakes induced by this water-injection could obviously trigger a volcano.

For example, here is an alarming article about a geothermal project in Switzerland. Swissinfo.ch, December 10, 2009: “The authorities in canton Basel City say they will cancel a geothermal energy project, which three years ago caused minor tremors that damaged many buildings.”

“A risk analysis study published on Thursday found that the danger of setting off more earthquakes was too great if drilling at the site resumed.”

“The project was put on hold three years ago after thousands of claims for damage were filed with insurers. Total costs for the damage were around SFr9 million ($8.78 million).”

“The study, commissioned by the canton, concluded that Basel was ‘unfavourable’ for geothermal power generation.”

“It said the resumption of Deep Heat Mining project and its operation over a 30-year period could set off around 200 tremors with a strength of up to 4.5 on the Richter Scale – in 2006, the quakes were about 3.4.”

“This would result in damages up to SFr40 million.”

“The Basel facility drilled five kilometres into the earth. The borehole was designed to be injected with water to capture the extreme heat. Back at the surface, the hot water – at a temperature of around 160° Celsius – would run a steam turbine coupled with a generator.”

This Swiss article outlines the risks, and also confirms that deep water-injection is used in the geothermal process—which can and does trigger earthquakes.

Here is another reference—The Guardian, July 11, 2013: “Pumping water underground at geothermal power plants can lead to dangerous earthquakes even in regions not prone to tremors, according to scientists.”

“Prof Emily Brodsky, who led a study of earthquakes at a geothermal power plant in California, said: ‘For scientists to make themselves useful in this field we need to be able to tell operators how many gallons of water they can pump into the ground in a particular location and how many earthquakes that will produce’.”

“It is already known that pumping large quantities of water underground can induce minor earthquakes near to geothermal power generation and fracking sites. However, the new evidence reveals the potential for much larger earthquakes, of magnitude 4 or 5, related to the weakening of pre-existing underground faults through increased fluid pressure.”

“The water injection appears to prime cracks in the rock, making them vulnerable to triggering by tremors from earthquakes thousands of miles away. Nicholas van der Elst, the lead author on one of three studies published on Thursday in the journal Science, said: ‘These [injected] fluids are driving [earthquake] faults to their tipping point’.”

“The analysis of the Californian site showed that for a net injection of 500m gallons of water into the ground per month, there is an earthquake on average every 11 days.”

“Heather Savage, a co-author on the same study said: ‘It is already accepted that when we have very large earthquakes seismic waves travel all over the globe, but even though the waves are small when they reach the other side of the world, they still shake faults [such as the faults induced by geothermal water-injection]. This can trigger seismicity in seismically active areas SUCH AS VOLCANOES where there is already a high fluid pressure.” (emphasis added)

So, on the Big Island of Hawaii, where there is a massive volcanic eruption underway, there is a geothermal plant, PGV. How close to the volcano is PGV?

The Washington Post, May 12: “Long a concern for residents and the target of lawsuits challenging its placement ON AN ACTIVE VOLCANO, the Puna Geothermal Venture (PGV) is a major safety issue [i.e., chemicals stored at PGV] in the wake of the eruptions and earthquakes that have shaken the Big Island for days, government officials say.” (emphasis added)

I see. PGV is ON the volcano.

Who owns PGV? Ormat Technologies. Through internal merger and stock swapping, Ormat appears to be a jointly owned Israeli and US company now.

Ormat is no stranger to scandals. At blog.heartland.org, H Sterling Burnett writes (4/1/15): One scandal that could haunt [Harry] Reid for his remaining time in the Senate (and possibly beyond) was reported on recently in the Washington Free Beacon and Courthouse News. It seems the Reid helped the green energy company, Ormat Technologies, a firm that owns and manages geothermal plants in California and Hawaii, secure nearly $136 million in economic stimulus funding from the 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.”

“Two former employees are suing the firm, claiming Ormat executives defrauded the United States of more than $130 million by reporting false information about two projects to get government grants, a federal judge ruled Tuesday.”

“Reid’s ties to Ormat are deep. The company runs geothermal plants in Nevada and Reid has been a big booster of the company in D.C. As reported in the Free Beacon, ‘Reid bragged about securing Ormat a $350 million loan guarantee from the Department of Energy (DOE) and took credit for expanding the Treasury program that the former employees say illicitly provided Ormat with millions more in taxpayer funds’.”

“It is also worth noting that Ormat’s DOE award came a year after investors sued the company for allegedly inflating its stock price through ‘fraudulent accounting and overstated financial results.’ Ormat settled the allegations in 2012 for $3.1 million.”

Ormat potentially faces a much larger scandal now.

A massive volcanic eruption on the Island of Hawaii.


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Jon Rappoport

The author of three explosive collections, THE MATRIX REVEALED, EXIT FROM THE MATRIX, and POWER OUTSIDE THE MATRIX, Jon was a candidate for a US Congressional seat in the 29th District of California. He maintains a consulting practice for private clients, the purpose of which is the expansion of personal creative power. Nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, he has worked as an investigative reporter for 30 years, writing articles on politics, medicine, and health for CBS Healthwatch, LA Weekly, Spin Magazine, Stern, and other newspapers and magazines in the US and Europe. Jon has delivered lectures and seminars on global politics, health, logic, and creative power to audiences around the world. You can sign up for his free NoMoreFakeNews emails here or his free OutsideTheRealityMachine emails here.

6 comments on “Rappoport on Coast to Coast AM: the Hawaii volcano

  1. Abe says:

    That rat bastard Harry Reid will have all sorts of things bite his ass soon!!

  2. swo8 says:

    I heard you on Coast to Coast last night. Good work Jon.
    Leslie

  3. middleway says:

    Are we witnessing Mother Earth’s response to being forcibly vaccinated by the 4th Reich corporate globalists?

  4. Spiritof42 says:

    Recommend Jon and readers visit Dutchsinse on YouTube. Fracking certainly weakens and stresses the crust making it susceptible to waves of energy below the surface. But is not the initial cause. Another site, suspicious observers attributes the initial cause to the sun. Volcanoes and earthquakes are on the increase all over the planet. Then there is earth’s shifting magnetic poles and global cooling. It’s all connected to a decrease of energy coming from the sun. Fracking is the least of our problems.

  5. Reblogged this on John Barleycorn and commented:
    One perspective

  6. JB says:

    To me this is a perfect example of irresponsible and shoddy journalism.

    “Earthquakes induced by this water-injection could obviously trigger a volcano.” And just as obviously to the better informed, could not.

    Notice throughout the diatribe the use of “can” and “could”. The fact is, it is NOT known what does cause an earthquake. I read a scientific report just a week ago on this very topic and the frustration scientists are having in nailing down the forces that produce them, as well as the early indicators that are thought useful for alerting the populace.

    Notice that Iceland’s geothermal activities are not mentioned anywhere. Only when the sensational destruction of real estate and homelessness do journalists pay any attention.

    Notice how fracking, a process engaged in since WWII, has not been an issue until the Fukushima disaster.

    What has been known for quite some time now is the high correlation between earthquakes, volcanoes, and the solar activity level:

    http://www.longrangeweather.com/global_temperatures.htm

    There is a lot of ancillary research (geological, astronomical, hydrological) being done which has brought forth considerable clarity about the physical forces involved. But there is yet a great deal more investigation needed to produce definitive causation.

    Solar activity is modulated by the conjunctions of the major planets, and the corresponding shift in the sun’s barycenter. The ripple effect of this is the El Niño/Niña cycles and related cycles that modulate warm and cool weather (Medieval Warm and Little Ice Age periods).

    Would it be wise to shut down PGV under volcanic activity? Surely. Would it be wise to diminish or cut off power to the populace under these conditions? No. Like any other natural calamity, people are trying to deal with it as best they can under conflicting constraints.

    Modern muckraking, yellow journalism in my mind.

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