Repository for Oil and Gas Energy Research (ROGER)

The Repository for Oil and Gas Energy Research, or ROGER, is a near-exhaustive collection of bibliographic information, abstracts, and links to many of journal articles that pertain to shale and tight gas development. The goal of this project is to create a single repository for unconventional oil and gas-related research as a resource for academic, scientific, and citizen researchers.

ROGER currently includes 2303 studies.
Last updated: September 01, 2024

ROGER

Search ROGER

Use keywords or categories (e.g., air quality, climate, health) to identify peer-reviewed studies and view study abstracts.

Shale Gas Development: A Smart Regulation Framework for Governing Forward
Katherine E. Konschnik and Mark K. Boling, February 2014
Shale Play Politics: The Intergovernmental Odyssey of American Shale Governance
Barry G. Rabe, February 2014
Urban gas drilling and distance ordinances in the Texas Barnett Shale
Matthew Fry, November 2013
Oversight of shale gas production in the United States and the disclosure of toxic substances
Terence J. Centner, September 2013
Historical Analysis of Oil and Gas Well Plugging in New York: Is the Regulatory System Working?
Ronald E. Bishop, May 2013
Disclosure of hydraulic fracturing fluid chemical additives: analysis of regulations
Maule et al., February 2013
Regulation of Water Pollution from Hydraulic Fracturing in Horizontally-Drilled Wells in the Marcellus Shale Region, USA
Heather Hatzenbuhler and Terence J. Centner, December 2012
An Analysis of Unconventional Gas Well Reporting under Pennsylvania's Act 13 of 2012
Gehman et al., December 2012
The significance of regulation and land use patterns on natural gas resource estimates in the Marcellus shale
Blohm et al., November 2012
The Future of Fracking: New Rules Target Air Emissions for Cleaner Natural Gas Production
Bob Weinhold, July 2012
Economic Incentives and Regulatory Framework for Shale Gas Well Site Reclamation in Pennsylvania
Austin L. Mitchell and Elizabeth A. Casman, October 2011
Regulating hydraulic fracturing in shale gas plays: The case of Texas
Dianne Rahm, May 2011
Superfund to the rescue? Seeking potential CERCLA response authority and cost recovery liability for releases of hazardous substances resulting from hydraulic fracturing
Sean H Joyner, January 1970

Sign up for email updates!

Join our email list to learn about our latest research, analysis, and events.

Sign up for email updates!

Join our email list to learn about our latest research, analysis, and events.

Sign up for email updates!

Join our email list to learn about our latest research, analysis, and events.

Sign up for email updates!

Join our email list to learn about our latest research, analysis, and events.

Pin It on Pinterest

SIGN UP FOR EMAILS
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut