The biggest fracking fight in the country is now taking place in Colorado. And the most important man in the ring is 45-year-old Shane Davis, a self-identified fractiv颅ist, who wants a total ban on the practice. Some activists focus their energy on civil disobedience, others on protests. Davis crunches data, digging deep into state and industry records to illuminate fracking鈥檚 damage across the state. He even speaks in statistics.
鈥淔orty-three percent of all operator spills have already caused groundwater contami颅nation in Weld County, Colorado,鈥 Davis says. 鈥淥ne point seven million gallons of toxic waste was never recovered from the ground.鈥

Davis distributes those findings via his website, , to environmental activists, ranchers, and homeowners, who then use them to enact local moratoriums and bans. 鈥淪hane is not just a thorn in the side of Colorado鈥檚 oil and gas industry, he鈥檚 become a model for other fractivists and a nexus of information,鈥 says , a reporter who has covered the energy industry for 15 years. 鈥淢uch of the resistance building along the Front Range is due to his efforts.鈥
While working with the Sierra Club in late 2009, Davis was researching a matter unrelated to fracking: the dumping of 172 barrels of toxic waste, allegedly buried near a river north of Denver. An activist who goes by the name Nancy Drew sent Davis to the , where by law data on the state鈥檚 fracking activity must be logged. The site wasn鈥檛 a secret, but it was nearly impossible to navigate.

鈥淚t鈥檚 like, which door do I go through to get the data I鈥檓 looking for?鈥 says Davis. The answer: all of them. It鈥檚 less a matter of technical wizardry than suffering through 鈥渢housands of hours鈥 of distillation. To remedy the situation, Davis is creating a user-friendly site supplied with the industry鈥檚 own data. 鈥淩esidents can plug in their address and pull up the information they need,鈥 he says.
He鈥檚 also branching out. Davis is employing the same methods of data extraction for activist groups in California and Florida, and he鈥檚 giving seminars across the country, creating a legion of data miners who can spur their own movements. It鈥檚 that spread of information that Davis believes will win against what he calls a 鈥渞ogue industry.鈥
鈥淭his is a method that the industry cannot beat,鈥 he says.
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