Fracking, Toxics, and Disclosure

dc.contributor.author

Fetter, T

dc.date.accessioned

2016-11-07T06:04:40Z

dc.date.available

2016-11-07T06:04:40Z

dc.date.issued

2016-11-07

dc.description.abstract

Information-based regulations, increasingly common in regulatory policy, attempt to take advantage of societal or managerial pressure as a means to promote desirable policy aims. However, the success of disclosure as a tool to promote public welfare depends on to the degree to which the information is accessible, stakeholders can meaningfully interpret it, and managers respond to internal or external pressure by altering their strategy or operations. Disclosure has been shown to improve outcomes in consumer-facing domains such as restaurant hygiene (Jin and Leslie 2003), electricity generation (Delmas et al. 2010, Kim and Lyon 2011), and drinking water provision (Bennear and Olmstead 2008). In non-consumer-facing domains, however, few empirical studies have been conducted using methods that can accurately assess the causal effect of disclosure (Bennear and Olmstead 2008). I analyze how disclosure regulations affect firms’ use of toxic additives in hydraulic fracturing, in which engineers stimulate production of shale gas and oil by injecting large quantities of chemical slurry. Though regulators and the public have expressed alarm over the chemicals used, almost no regulations directly limit their use. I exploit differences in the timing of state-level disclosure regulations to estimate a causal effect, inferring pre-regulation chemical use from numerous voluntary reports made prior to mandatory disclosure, and using the fact that many operators work in multiple states and therefore may have had wells regulated at different times. I find that firms reduced their reported use of toxic chemicals in response to the mandatory disclosure regulations, but the effect did not persist more than about two years. Further, regulated firms’ use of unspecified “proprietary” chemicals increased over the same time period, although this appears to be a secular trend and not caused by mandatory disclosure regulations.

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/12993

dc.title

Fracking, Toxics, and Disclosure

dc.type

Other article

pubs.confidential

false

pubs.declined

2016-11-12T19:40:03.635-0500

pubs.organisational-group

Duke

pubs.organisational-group

Student

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