Unfractured: A Documentary on Activism, Family and the Fight Against Fracking

mikulka color
on

Unfractured, the new documentary about environmental activist and ecologist Dr. Sandra Steingraber, is primarily about the personal sacrifices made by individuals like Steingraber while fighting for environmental causes and futureย generations.

โ€œI try to tell my kids, ‘Mom is on the job,’โ€ Steingraber explains. โ€œThat is my job. To protect you and to plan for your future.โ€ However, as Steingraber makes clear elsewhere in the film, we learn the reality:ย โ€œIt is not possible to do itย all.โ€

While the documentary primarily follows the battle against fracking in New York, Steingraber also travels to Romania to meet with anti-fracking protesters there and then returns to New York to join efforts to stop natural gas storage in Seneca Lake saltย caverns.

The Accidentalย Activist

Like many others, Steingraberโ€™s life of environmental activism was initially driven by personal health experiences which laterย brought her to the cause. Steingraberโ€™s hometown in rural Illinois experienced a cancer cluster and she was diagnosed with bladder cancer in her 20s. This experience led to her writing Living Downstream, a book published in 1997ย about the links between cancer and environmental pollution, which has also been turned into a documentary.

As someone already involved with the environment and public health concerns, the fight to ban frackingย in New York was a natural move for Steingraber. In 2012 she received aย $100,000 prize from the Heinz Foundation and she used much of that money to start the group New Yorkers Againstย Fracking.

While in Unfractured we see Steingraber attending rallies and panels about fracking, we also get an intimate look at her personalย life as her husband โ€” just in his 50s โ€” begins to experience a series of debilitating strokes. Itย all seems overwhelming to Steingraber but she vows toย continue her advocacy workย despite the odds.ย The reality of the emotional juggling this requires hits home in a scene whenย Steingraber is riding to yetย another rally while reassuring her husband that she renewed their health insurance and he didnโ€™t need toย worry.

This film is full of such moments showing the constant challenges of trying to mix a family, a career, and a life of activism. At one point in the film, Steingraber worriesย about what it would have been like to fight to ban fracking in New York and โ€ฆ thenย lose.

This documentary isnโ€™t going to make anyone run out and join an environmentalย movement for the glamor and fun. However, Steingraberโ€™s commitment and effort are likely to inspire newย activists.

Romania, Fracking, and the Corporateย Police

In the middle of the documentary, Steingraber is inspired by a video of fracking protesters in Romania and decides she needs to meet them in person. โ€œI just want to go there and talk to them,โ€ she says to the camera. โ€œI just feel this overwhelming need toย go.โ€


Fracking rig in Romania. Credit: Screen capture from Unfractured

So, accompanied by her teenage son, she heads to Romania, where they meet activists trying to stop Chevron from using fracking techniques on local farm land. The situation thereย appearsย very similar to the protests in America: impassionedย activists pushing backย on behalf of the land against global corporations and the policeย employed byย thoseย companies.

Steingraber and her son quickly learn they will be followed by the police everywhere they go in Romania, and safety is clearly a concern for her as she navigates the protests with herย son.


Romanian children protesting Chevron fracking efforts.ย  Credit: Screen capture from Unfractured

We Are Senecaย Lake

After Steingraber’s trip to Romania, the documentary mostly focuses on the efforts to stop plans for natural gas storage in old salt caverns below Seneca Lake,ย near where Steingraber lives. Seneca Lake provides drinking water for 100,000 people in theย region.

Steingraber is part of the group We Are Seneca Lake, whichย organizes against the build-out of additional natural gas infrastructure in the region. The protests focus on using civil disobedience to block access to the natural gas facility, resulting in hundreds of arrests โ€” includingย Steingraber.

โ€œToday we are letting our bodies speak because we have tried our voices, we have tried every single recourse that we can think of within the law,โ€ Steingraber tells a crowd preparing to beย arrested.

During one of theย Seneca Lake protests, a scene unfolds in which Steingraber and the others learn that New York will ban frackingย โ€” an announcementย theyย met withย considerableย rejoicing.

Later, Steingraber is asked what she was feeling at the time she learned that New York would ban fracking โ€ฆ and that they hadย won.ย 

She answers: โ€œI felt so overwhelmed โ€ฆ the years and years of how hard it was and how much I miss my family.โ€

Unfractured will screenย Friday, January 12 andย Saturday January 13ย atย 7:00 p.m. PST at the Wild & Scenic Film Festival in Nevada City,ย California.

UNFRACTUREDOFFICIAL TRAILER from Chanda Chevannes on Vimeo.

Main image: Sandra Steingraber speaking in Romania. Credit: Screen capture from Unfractured

mikulka color
Justin Mikulka is a research fellow at New Consensus. Prior to joining New Consensus in October 2021, Justin reported for DeSmog, where he began in 2014. Justin has a degree in Civil and Environmental Engineering from Cornell University.

Related Posts

on

Is the Gulf of Mexico the "single best opportunity" to store climate-warming gas โ€” or an existential threat to wildlife and people?

Is the Gulf of Mexico the "single best opportunity" to store climate-warming gas โ€” or an existential threat to wildlife and people?
on

DeSmog reflects on some of the major moments in U.S. LNG policy, the courts, and protest in a turbulent year for this fossil fuel.

DeSmog reflects on some of the major moments in U.S. LNG policy, the courts, and protest in a turbulent year for this fossil fuel.
Analysis
on

Our editors and reporters weigh in on a year of seismic political events, and what theyโ€™re paying close attention to in 2025.

Our editors and reporters weigh in on a year of seismic political events, and what theyโ€™re paying close attention to in 2025.
on

A new lawsuit alleges toxic, radioactive waste leaked into a PA familyโ€™s water well, uncovering a regulatory abyss for miles of fracking pipelines in the state.

A new lawsuit alleges toxic, radioactive waste leaked into a PA familyโ€™s water well, uncovering a regulatory abyss for miles of fracking pipelines in the state.