Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Wast Water Near Housing Development


realize I have not been doing many personal posts over the last few weeks, I guess my life has become fairly unexciting but the fracking news just keeps coming ...


ND approves frack water disposal well near Killdeer

The North Dakota Industrial Commission on Monday approved the creation of a saltwater disposal well outside of Killdeer that some think is too close to a future subdivision.
By: By Bryan Horwath, The Dickinson Press
During a meeting in Bismarck, the IC ruled that Waterworks Killdeer LLC would be allowed to dispose of saltwater and other fluids used in the hydraulic fracturing process in an area where lots are for sale.

In a compromise of sorts, Waterworks Killdeer agreed to position its new injection well further away from the planned 20-lot subdivision, but not the 2,500 feet further away engineer and contracting owner Cory Ravnaas had requested for the site, which is about nine miles west of Killdeer.

In a letter sent to the IC in August, Ravnaas argued it would be “inappropriate to site a commercial saltwater disposal well immediately adjacent to a platted residential neighborhood,” according to the IC.

In a separate letter to the IC, Dahl Homestead Development owners Tim and Fayleen Fischer also requested the disposal well be moved away from the subdivision site, citing concerns about added truck traffic, noise and dust.

“We don’t have an issue with the well itself,” Fayleen Fischer said Tuesday. “We would just prefer it wasn’t so close to the site.”

Ravnaas went a step further in his letter, saying he thought it would be “disastrous to the success of the new rural residential community.”

Testifying on behalf of Waterworks Killdeer at an earlier hearing before the IC, Brent Lansberg stated the company was willing to move the surface facilities of the operation away from the subdivision site, though he said they would not move the requested 2,500 feet.

In its finding, the IC did not list a specific distance for surface operations to be moved. At the hearing, Lansberg had noted Waterworks Killdeer still needed to obtain an approach permit from the North Dakota Department of Transportation for access to the site and added the company would attempt to receive permission to gain access directly from Highway 200 to limit truck traffic.

Also in the finding, the IC noted that “the proposed injection well will be constructed in such a manner as to prevent the movement of fluids into or between underground sources of drinking water,” something the IC doesn’t take lightly, said Department of Mineral Resources Public Information Officer Alison Ritter.

“The construction of injection wells is something that is taken very seriously,” Ritter said. “All wells are tested monthly to make sure they are in full working order.”

Another subdivision, owned by a different company, is planned for an 80-acre site east of Killdeer. Work is expected to begin on that site later this year.

Ravnaas declined to comment to The Dickinson Press about the decision by the IC.

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

North Dakota outlook on the world


If you are thinking about moving to ND from a larger population center this article should give you a good taste of how our community perceives the outside world.



Medora teen in NY to share 'stupid' trick

When Ashley Ellison, 16, Medora, found out she could whistle through her eye socket, she didn’t think anything of it.
By: Katherine Grandstrand, The Dickinson Press

When  Ashley Ellison, 16, Medora, found out she could whistle through her eye socket, she didn’t think anything of it.

“It’s just me blowing air through my eye,” she said Monday morning at the Bismarck Airport waiting to board a plane on her way to New York. “I thought everybody could kind of do it and I didn’t think it was that rare of a thing, but I guess it is.”
But that quirk is sending the Belfield High School junior and her parents, Mary and Doug Ellison, on a trip to New York and she has a chance to be broadcast nationwide as part of stupid human tricks on “Late Show with David Letterman.”
She will be one of six performers in the segment, but only three will make the cut to the national broadcast this evening. The show is taped in the early evening and then edited and aired at 9:35 MDT.
The show paid for Ashley and one parent to fly to New York and stay Monday and tonight. They bought a third ticket so the whole family could go.
The Ellisons decided to send in a video of Ashley’s talent last spring, and it took about six months to get a response, she said.
“My parents did it just to annoy me,” Ashley said. “They’re like, ‘We’re going to send it to the Letterman show for Stupid Human Tricks,” and I’m like ‘OK, whatever,’ and, yeah, I guess it worked.”
She was very surprised when she found out she was chosen.
“I kind of went into shock,” Ashley said. “My parents called me to let me know when I was in the middle of algebra II.”
Her class thought it was bad news, like a death in the family.
“I couldn’t say sentences,” she said.
If picked, this appearance will complete a TV and film trifecta for the family. Mary was in the film “Wooly Boys,” which was filmed in Medora and Doug has appeared on The History Channel.
This is not the first time Ashley’s schedule has dictated a family vacation, Mary said.
“We feel like we keep following Ashley around,” she said. “We’ve been to Washington, D.C., because of her History Day participation and she needed to go to Mexico to get her scuba diving certification.”
New York wouldn’t have been the couple’s first choice for a getaway, Doug said.
“It’s kind of ironic, my wife Mary and I always had kind of said, ‘Who would want to go to New York City,’” Medora’s mayor said.
But Ashley is excited to see the world’s second-largest city.
“I’m hoping that we have some time to kind of tour around and see all of the stuff, like the Empire State Building and things like that, the Statue of Liberty,” she said.
The guests tonight are Kaley Cuoco from “The Big Bang Theory,” of which Ashley is a fan, and The Whigs.
While in New York, Medora’s mayor did not have any meetings planned with New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Doug said.
“His schedule is probably busier than mine,” he said. “So probably not.”
Late Show was contacted via email, but The Press did not hear back by 3 p.m. Monday.

Saturday, September 22, 2012

Century Training Week 4

Having over 6 months to get ready was an excellent decision.

This past week I did two 8.2mile days and today knocked out a 16miler. The 8.2 pushed me but were not to bad, I did start to encroach on darkness biking after work and put a headlamp on my helmet (great decision)

The 16mile ride today was excellent, it kicked my ass on the hills but overall I think that I will be able to do 30 miles next weekend. The downside to today's ride is it took me about an hour and a half, so that's about 10 miles an hour and the average time it looks for a century is 6hrs, thus i need to bump up my speed to about 17mph.

This week done, next week I am going to do some more 5milers and work on bumping up my speed. I have also taken to doing some excellent stretching post ride which i feel has really helped me prevent injuries.


Thursday, September 20, 2012

A Tribe’s Epidemic of Child Sex Abuse, Minimized for Years


I may have commented on this prior however if not here are a few observations. Having started my M.P.A. thesis looking at indigenous governance in the Philippines and finding that my understanding of indigenous groups entirely skewed by my american perception (tribal dances, living with mother earth, casinos, poverty, wealth, tradition, mafia type) I was excited to be moving to a state with one of the larger number Native American Communities and reservations. I was looking forward to becoming exposed and involved with these communities and hopefully breaking some of my perceptions. Sadly we are very divided and excluded. The perception of those living around me appear very negative I have heard outright comments about the natives as being dangerous, unfriendly, unsafe and drunks. People attend pow-wow's like they are an event such as the fair and not something that is part of their states populations life.


I have had two interactions with the Native American Communities since my arrival over a year ago. 
First was at a peace jam training in Bismark, several youth leaders from the New Town tribe attended and over the course of the two days we became conference friends, intelligent dedicated and interesting people. 
My second was when my roommate and I went up to the turtle mount area which has a very strong tribal presence. The people we met were lovely and wonderful, the realities of their living situation was dismal, deep community poverty and no clear way out.

My ranting aside, please take a moment to read this .... it has so many layers of things going on
- the abuse is unbelievable and must be addressed
- the case workers are very overworked
- the funding is not available
- the issued needs to be addressed but is federal take over of a "free" people the answer
- why do we only see headline stories about the reservations when they are negative
- The way we as a national continue to isolate the Native Americans


A Tribe’s Epidemic of Child Sex Abuse, Minimized for Years


Matthew Staver for The New York Times
The Spirit Lake Indian Reservation in North Dakota.


Matthew Staver for The New York Times
Betty Jo Krenz, a former tribal social worker, said she oversaw 131 children — 100 more than the state’s average caseload.
Federal officials are now moving to take over the tribe’s social service programs, according to members of the tribe, government officials and documents. The action comes after years of failure by government and tribal law enforcement officials to conduct proper investigations of dozens of cases of child sexual abuse, including rape.
While members of the tribe say that sexual violence against children on the reservation is common and barely concealed, the reasons for the abuse here are poorly understood, though poverty and alcohol are thought to be factors. The crimes are rarely prosecuted, few arrests are made, and people say that because of safety fears and law enforcement’s lack of interest, they no longer report even the most sadistic violence against children. In May 2011, a 9-year-old girl and her 6-year-old brother were killed on the reservation after being raped and sodomized.
“It bothers me that it is so accepted, that it is considered so normal. It’s lawless,” said Molly McDonald, who was a tribal judge until March, handling juvenile cases.
The reservation has 38 registered sex offenders among its 6,200 residents, a rate of one offender for every 163 residents. By contrast, Grand Forks, N.D., about 85 miles away, has 13 sex offenders out of a population of 53,000 — a rate of about one in 4,000. In one home on the reservation, nine children are under the care of the father, an uncle and a grandfather, each a convicted sex offender, a federal official said. Two of the children, brothers who are 6 and 8, were recently observed engaging in public sex, residents said.
“Those little boys are crying out for help,” said a neighbor, who called the Bureau of Indian Affairs Police but said that officers declined to take a report or notify child welfare officials.
Another member of the tribe said that police officers and social workers failed to act after a 9-year-old girl described giving oral sex to a man.
Neither the tribe nor the federal government provided current figures on abuse, but in 2007 there were 26 confirmed cases of child sexual abuse and nearly 10 times as many allegations of abuse or neglect. Ms. McDonald said she presided over 20 to 30 cases of child sexual abuse each year. In 2011, fewer than a dozen cases of sex crimes against children were prosecuted by either the tribe or the federal government, which has jurisdiction, according to federal and tribal records.
Betty Jo Krenz, a former tribal social worker, said she oversaw 131 children — 100 more than the state’s average caseload. In some instances, members of the tribe say, there are generations of victims from the same family who have been preyed upon by generations of child rapists from other families. Others abuse their own children, including one tribal government employee who publicly complained that his young daughter had bitten his penis, according to a relative of the man and a federal official.
Federal agencies, however, have sought to minimize the extent of the problem, including disciplining employees who have spoken publicly about sexual abuse and questioning the competence of others, according to federal and tribal officials.
Thomas F. Sullivan, a director of the federal Administration for Children and Families, who has emerged as a crucial whistle-blower, is among those who have been prevented from speaking to reporters, he said. Still, his periodic reports to his superiors in Washington have been blistering.
“If we fail in our role as leaders, we will deserve the same condemnation society so correctly applied to those leaders at Penn State and in the Catholic Church who, knowing of the abuse being inflicted on children by their colleagues, did nothing, failing in their basic obligation to protect children,” Mr. Sullivan wrote last month to his supervisors.

And weeks before the scheduled federal takeover on Oct. 1 of the reservation’s social service system, which is responsible for the care of the tribe’s sexually abused children, senior staff members at the Bureau of Indian Affairs continued to play down the issue.
Matthew Staver for The New York Times
Some Spirit Lake Sioux say that because few arrests are made, they do not report even the most sadistic crimes against children.
Hankie Ortiz, deputy bureau director of the Office of Indian Services, said the news media and whistle-blowers had exaggerated the problem. “Their social service program has made steady progress,” Ms. Ortiz said, adding that she was unable to discuss specific cases under privacy laws or because she was unaware of them.
Roger Yankton, the tribe’s chairman, did not respond to requests for interviews.
But in a letter published last month in The Devils Lake Journal, a local newspaper, tribal officials cast blame on whistle-blowers and a lack of federal money.
“The tribe’s elected leaders and its people are well aware of the gravity and difficult nature of these problems,” the letter said, “particularly because we live with their consequences every day.”
But members of the tribe say their leadership has often sought to hide abuse.
Ms. McDonald said that the police investigated sex crimes against children only if a victim requested hospitalization, and that tribal leaders frequently sought to sway judges’ opinions improperly. She said she was forced to dismiss many cases because social workers forgot to submit required paperwork.
“The perpetrators know they can get away with it because the authorities don’t do anything,” said Joanne Streifel, a tribal elder.
Among the sex offenders is Quentin Yankton, 61, who stands 6 feet 5 inches and is a brother of the tribe’s chairman. He was first convicted of raping a child in 1976, state records show. In 1992, he was convicted of a similar crime after he forced his 15-year-old niece into sex. The girl became pregnant with twins, and DNA analysis showed that he was the father.
Mr. Yankton told the police, according to court documents, that he thought he was entitled to have sex with his niece because she told him that she had previously been sexually abused by her father.
Mr. Yankton was sentenced to 12 years in prison. The girl’s father was never prosecuted, but Alfred Longie, 67, a half-brother of the men, was convicted in 2008 for undressing and rubbing the genitals of a 12-year-old who had passed out after he had given her alcohol.
Joseph Alberts, 59, who plays Santa Claus for the tribe, was convicted of rape in 1983, and in 1986 was found guilty of committing lewd acts with a child under 14 on four different occasions. He served one year in jail for that crime and 18 months for the rape.
In another case, after a woman tried to burn down her house with her 5-year-old daughter inside, the girl was put in a foster home where a sex offender was living, according to Mr. Sullivan and a member of the tribe. Once the foster parent’s criminal record was discovered, the tribe removed the child and put her back in her mother’s home.
But when the child proved too much for the mother to care for, Mr. Sullivan said, she sold her daughter back to the family of the registered sex offender for $50 and a ride to Grand Forks.

Oil exec in Stark County Court for frack water disposal practices


Oil exec in Stark County Court for frack water disposal practices

Oil executive Nathan Garber made an initial appearance at the Stark County Courthouse in Dickinson on Wednesday on charges that he illegally threatened area drinking water with his company’s hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” waste disposal practices.
By: Bryan Horwath, The Dickinson Press
Oil executive Nathan Garber made an initial appearance at the Stark County Courthouse in Dickinson on Wednesday on charges that he illegally threatened area drinking water with his company’s hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” waste disposal practices.
Garber faces a felony charge for allegedly knowingly attempting to deceive Industrial Commission inspectors.
Garber is set to return for a preliminary hearing over the charge, though no date had been set.
The North Dakota Attorney General’s Office is charging Garber with a violation of the rules and regulations of the IC in a case that represents the state’s first criminal charge against an oil and gas operator.
Stark County Judge Zane Anderson began the approximate 10-minute hearing by inquiring if Garber had read the charge against him. After answering softly that he had, Anderson told Garber that it was “important that you speak up so we can get your answer on the record.”
Anderson agreed to release Garber, listed in court records as a resident of Kalispell, Mont., on his own recognizance, as requested by Garber’s lead attorney, Mandy Maxon. Garber’s council pointed out that he has no criminal history and that he made the initial appearance voluntarily.
The state alleges that Garber, president of Executive Drilling LLC, knowingly violated IC rules by directing employees of another company to modify their fracking waste water dump site practices. The state alleges that Garber’s action could have led the drinking water near the Lodgepole formation to be contaminated with salt water.
The Class C felony charge carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison, a $5,000 fine or both.
The IC has control of the site in question and officials continue to run tests for possible contamination. Any findings related to groundwater testing would not be released until a trial, North Dakota Department of Mineral Resources spokesperson Alison Ritter said.
Garber and his attorneys would not respond to questions on their way out of court.

Monday, September 17, 2012

First 3 weeks of training

If anyone has been following along I apologies my blogging has been almost as dedicated as my training. Almost is the key here.

After a good start with biking to work and I have biked to work about 5 times over the last two weeks. One day about a week and a half ago I went to the gym prepared to do my first long ride of the training. I had 15miles on my mind when I walked in and I was prepared. However 2 miles into my ride my knee started to have intense pain and i pushed through for another mile. Being unable to stand the pain i switched type of stationary bike and did another painful mile. Giving up on the bike I went to the treadmill and walked a final mile, totaling 5 miles for the day. Super bummed I slowly walked back to my apartment and iced my keen while trying to find the cause. Self diagnosis, i had the seat a bit to high and was using my toes more than I should have putting strain on my knee mussel.

Two days of pain and ice before I was back in go mode. I went to the swimming pool and did 30min of laps to help build the muscle group back with almost zero impact. That was a very good choice and I was back on the bike within two days.

Over the past week I have been doing 5 mile rides that are lovely, even if the oil trucks make things a bit dusty, just being on the back roads has been excellent.

Biking North Dakota
Goal for this week bump the 5milers up to 8mile rides and if the weather turns to get a gym pass and do leg training  I am not quite ready to get back on a stationary bike, I read many horror stories after my knee a few weeks ago and think that I want much stronger legs before I try the bike again.

Friday, September 14, 2012

Fracking in Stark County ND


Trying to break down the scientific into lay and understand what is being disclosed to be in the Fracking fluid at the wells in Stark County.


Product: Fresh Water

Product: Methanol

Product: MAGNACIDE 575

REGISTRATION NUMBER: 33677- 7-AA- 10707
COMPANY NAME: BAKER PETROLITE CORPORATION
PESTICIDE TYPE
   D0   ANTIMICROBIAL

HEALTH HAZARD
B2   CAUSES SKIN IRRITATION
B6   CORROSIVE, CAUSES EYE DAMAGE
A1   FATAL IF SWALLOWED
B0   SKIN/EYE
A0   ORAL

ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARD
E0   FISH
H0   CHILDREN/HUMANS
A0   WATER (DO NOT APPLY DIRECTLY TO WATER)

Product: Techni-Hib 604 – this well uses Product Name: Techni-Hib 604W, however no information on the Techni-Hib 604W was available.
HEALTH HAZARD DATA
Effects of Overexposure
Eye Contact: may tearing, conjunctivitis, burning of the eyes, and corneal injury.
Skin Contact: may cause burns and tissue destruction.
Inhalation: may cause irritation to the respiratory tract.
Ingestion: may cause severe burns to the mucous membranes of the digestive tract.
Target Organs: eyes, skin and lungs.
FIRE AND EXPLOSION HAZARD DATA
Flash Point (Test Method): NONE
Extinguishing Media Material is not combustible. Use extinguishing agent appropriate for surrounding fire.
Fire fighters should wear full protective clothing and self-contained breathing apparatus. Protection is needed against corrosive vapors, if liquid is released.
Unusual Fire and Explosion Hazards May release toxic or corrosive material if container is destroyed in a fire.
HAZARDOUS INGREDIENTS
Component Name CAS# % Range
ammonium bisulfite 010192-30-0 < 75%
water 007732-18-5 < 60%
nickel chelate catalyst < 5%

Product: SSA-2  - Coarse Silica Flour
HEALTH HAZARDS
Causes serious eye irritation
May cause respiratory irritation
May cause damage to organs through prolonged or repeated exposure

Product: Techni Hib 767 - this well uses Product Name: Techni-Hib 767W, however no information on the Techni-Hib 767W was available. Techni Hib 767 is contains Methanol and aqueous ammonia (ammonia dissolved in water)
Health Hazards          
Respiratory
Eye Irritation
Headache
Burns (Chemical and Thermal)
Skin Irritation
Nausea/vomiting
Dizziness
Shortness of Breath/ Chest Tightness

Product: SAND - PREMIUM WHITE
Hazard Overview CAUTION!   - ACUTE HEALTH HAZARD
May cause eye and respiratory irritation.
DANGER!   - CHRONIC HEALTH HAZARD
Breathing crystalline silica can cause lung disease, including silicosis and lung
cancer.  Crystalline silica has also been associated with scleroderma and kidney
disease.
This product contains quartz, cristobalite, and/or tridymite which may become
airborne without a visible cloud.  Avoid breathing dust.  Avoid creating dusty
conditions.  Use only with adequate ventilation to keep exposures below
recommended exposure limits.  Wear a NIOSH certified, European Standard EN
149, or equivalent respirator when using this product.  Review the Material Safety


Product: MO -67- Corrosive

Health Hazards
Causes severe respiratory irritation.
Skin Contact Causes severe burns.
Eye Contact Causes severe eye burns.
Ingestion Causes burns of the mouth, throat and stomach.
Aggravated Medical Conditions Skin disorders.
Chronic Effects/Carcinogenicity Prolonged, excessive exposure may cause erosion of the teeth
Product: BA-20 Buffering – classified as an acute health hazard
Health Hazards
May cause respiratory irritation.
Skin Contact Causes severe burns. May cause an allergic skin reaction.
Eye Contact May cause severe eye irritation. May cause eye burns.
Ingestion Causes burns of the mouth, throat and stomach.
Aggravated Medical Conditions Skin disorders.
Chronic Effects/Carcinogenicity No data available to indicate product or components present at greater than 1% are
chronic health hazards.

The above well is operated by whiting oil, fracked on 2012-05-10 with identification information as follows
Total Water Volume (gal)*: 1,359,518
True Vertical Depth (TVD): 10,387
Production Type: Oil
Long/Lat Projection: NAD83
Latitude: 46.86
Longitude: -103.19
Well Name and Number: Duletski 11-16 TFH
WHITING OIL & GAS
CORP EBUSINESS
Operator Name:
API Number: 33-089-00640
County: Stark
State: North Dakota

In gathering this information Halliburton safety documents were the most user friendly and easily found. I am not an expert in this arena and the information above is based on my ability to Google the components listed for the well site and discover the layman’s explanation of hazards.  The above chemicals are the first page of ingredients listed in the Fracking mixture for this well located near Belfield.

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Water safety has me unconvinced


Regardless of if this is a re-occurring issue or not, should we not be concerned, upset or even outraged that the public concerns about the safety and quality of water are being given a caviler response when testing and examination of our water should occur.


Foul odor in water draws complaints

A foul odor and taste in the local water supply had Dickinson residents voicing their concern to City Hall on Monday.
By: Bryan Horwath, The Dickinson Press
official at the Southwest Water Authority, however, said the city’s water is safe for consumption and that the issue is temporary.A foul odor and taste in the local water supply had Dickinson residents voicing their concern to City Hall on Monday.
“This is an issue we typically deal with twice a year in the spring and again in the fall,” said SWA administrative assistant Pam Courton. “Lake Sakakawea actually turns over when the temperatures change, stirring up algae and vegetation within the lake.”
Lake Sakakawea, supplies water to the Southwest Pipeline, which is operated by the SWA. The water from the lake is treated and stored before it makes its way to Dickinson residents.
Dickinson City Administrator Shawn Kessel said the city had received a number of complaints from residents about the odor.
“We took a number of calls about that issue (Monday), which we passed along to the Southwest Water Authority,” Kessel said. “It’s our understanding that they’re aware of the problem and it’s something that they would handle.”
Duane Ott, owner of bottled water distributor Dakota Water Treatment in Dickinson, said he has fielded complaints about the city’s water in the past, but hadn’t received any in the past few days.
“This time it came a little earlier than expected due to some recent low temperatures, but this is something residents can expect twice every year,” Courton said. “My understanding is that the lake turned this past weekend. It can sometimes take a week or two for the affected water to be flushed out of the pipeline.”
Courton said that it there is no specific area or neighborhood affected and that some may be more sensitive to the change. Courton added that sodium permanganate, a disinfectant chemical, is typically applied to the water because of the odor issue.
“We understand why residents are concerned,” Courton said. “But the water people are drinking and bathing in is completely safe.”

Monday, September 10, 2012

China is expected to start fracking by the end of the year.


Rajasthan, India (CNN) -- Rajinder Kumar has a spring in his step and a big smile on his face these days.
The 35-year-old farmer from Sri Ganganagar, a district in Rajasthan, northwest India, says life has never been better.
It's all because of what he grows in his fields -- a desert crop called guar.
"It's a miracle," he says.
Guar gum powder, made by crushing seeds of the guar crop, is used in a number of products in the food and cosmetics industries, including ice cream, breads, pastries, lipsticks and even diapers.
In just one year the price of guar has surged tenfold, from about 30 rupees (about 50 U.S. cents) to around 300 rupees for each kilogram of the precious seed.

Behind the phenomenal price rise is a surge in demand.
Oil and gas companies in the United States have developed a massive appetite for guar gum powder -- a key ingredient in a process called fracking, which is used to extract natural and shale gas from beneath the Earth's surface.
Guar gum powder has unique binding, thickening and emulsifying qualities which make it ideal for fracking, explains B.D. Agarwal, the founder and managing director of Vikas WSP, an Indian company that specializes in producing the product.
So far, oil companies have not been able to find a suitable substitute, he says.
Since 90% of the world's guar is grown in the desert belt of northwest India, local farmers in this poor area are enjoying the benefit of the guar rush.
Kumar says he had debts of almost $12,000. "I thought I'd never be able to pay it off," he says.
"There is a saying that in a house where there's no food, there are fights. We used to fight all the time."
But thanks to the high price of guar these days, Kumar has been able to pay off his debt. He's building a house for his family, has bought mobile phones, an air cooler and a satellite dish. He can afford to send his children to school. "We are all happy now," he adds.
Agarwal, meanwhile, is confident the guar rush will grow. He says shale gas reserves have been identified in 32 countries and 48 basins around the world, including India. Only the U.S. and Canada, and very recently Argentina, have attempted to extract it. China is expected to start fracking by the end of the year.
As demand grows, Agarwal predicts the value of the guar industry will jump, suggesting it could go from a $2 billion business today, to $200 billion by 2020.
So he's encouraging farmers like Rajinder to keep growing it.
In May this year, Vikas gave 15 kilograms of guar seeds to 200,000 farmers and guaranteed them returns.
"Everyone in the village is now growing guar," Kumar's wife, Dayawanti, says. "No one talks of anything else. It's changed the village. If you came here two years ago, you wouldn't see joy on anyone's face."
Her neighbors' house is bursting with joy. Musicians beat traditional drums to welcome guests as the community gets together to celebrate a marriage.
The bridegroom -- also a guar farmer -- says he would never have been able to afford this pomp if it wasn't for guar.
Locals call the little green bean "black gold" and in Sri Ganganagar, it's easy to understand why.