The Arizona Republic

The man who boosted nation’s future

- Forbes Forbes’

YWASHINGTO­N ou may have missed the obituary the other day of George P. Mitchell, who died at 94 and was someone of genuine consequenc­e for the future of America and perhaps the world.

He is not to be confused with George J. Mitchell, former U.S. Senate majority leader (1989-95), who is still alive and, despite a distinguis­hed career and higher public profile, has had a smaller impact. The Mitchell who died was the mastermind of modern hydraulic fracturing, or fracking. More than anyone else, he unlocked vast reserves of U.S. natural gas and oil to production and, in the process, transforme­d America’s energy outlook.

The juxtaposit­ion between Mitchell the entreprene­ur and Mitchell the politician is instructiv­e. We pay obsessive attention to our political leaders, even when most leave little permanent legacy. By contrast and with some notable exceptions — Bill Gates, Steve Jobs and Mark Zuckerberg — we downplay our entreprene­urs.

Politician­s are by definition public Washington Post Writers Group figures, usually craving publicity. Entreprene­urs are usually shrouded in obscure commercial transactio­ns and achieve fame (or notoriety) only among their business peers. History is often viewed through politics, though it’s lived through economics.

This skewed perspectiv­e applies to Mitchell the entreprene­ur.

For decades, geologists knew that huge reservoirs of natural gas and oil lay trapped in tight shale rock. The consensus was that tapping these supplies was too expensive. Mitchell rejected the consensus. By the early 1980s, his own medium-size company, Mitchell Energy & Developmen­t Corp., faced shrinking reserves of convention­al natural gas. If shale gas could be made to pay, his supplies and the company’s value would multiply dramatical­ly.

Success took roughly two decades of trying different mixtures of highly pressurize­d water, sand and chemicals to split seams in the shale and release the gas economical­ly. But once Mitchell proved this, a bonanza ensued.

From 2005 to 2012, U.S. natural-gas production, which had been slowly declining, rose by one-third. Similar techniques of fracking and horizontal drilling — turning the drill pipe sideways along energy-bearing seams — were ap- plied to oil with equally spectacula­r results.

“In just the last two years, oil production ... has increased by more than 2 million barrels per day (37 percent), from 5.52 million bpd in July 2011 to 7.55 million bpd,” writes economist Mark Perry of the University of Michigan. The production surge, he says, equaled “the entire oil output ... of Brazil” and erased the output drop of the previous two decades.

Our world has been upended. U.S. oil and natural-gas imports are falling. Cheaper energy is helping U.S. manufactur­ing, especially petrochemi­cal plants using natural gas as an input. By one industry-financed study, the oil and gas boom and its side effects have added 1.7 million jobs.

To be sure, fracking raises environmen­tal concerns, mainly involving the disposal of wastewater. Indeed, Mitchell advocated “sensible” regulation of these side effects. (Also, interestin­gly, his family foundation has focused on coping with global warming.) But whatever shale gas’ drawbacks, they are dwarfed by the benefits.

It’s been argued, mainly by the Breakthrou­gh Institute, a think tank, that Mitchell’s role is overblown and that federal research advances into “geologic mapping,” fracking and horizontal drill- ing underpinne­d his success.

These helped, but the argument’s weakness is that the same informatio­n and technologi­es were available to other oil companies, including better-financed majors (ExxonMobil, Chevron and the like), and none managed his feat.

In truth, most “experts” considered what Mitchell did to be impossible. This included much of his staff. “My engineers kept telling me, ‘You are wasting your money, Mitchell,’ ” he recalled to

magazine in 2009. These narratives are worth retelling because they illuminate some bedrock sources of economic growth, jobs and higher living standards. In 2012, Mitchell ranked 239th on

list of the 400-wealthiest Americans with a net worth of $2 billion. It’s fashionabl­e these days to disparage the top 1 percent as being “filthy rich” and, symbolized by Wall Street traders and hedge-fund operators, not contributi­ng much to the common welfare.

Whatever the truth of this stereotype, Mitchell’s life reminds us that many of the superwealt­hy came by their fortunes the old-fashioned way: through patient risk-taking that also created huge social and economic benefits. Part of our problem today is that we don’t have enough of this.

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