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Fracking on NPR

Check out this segment by Jeff Brady on NPR: Face-off Over ‘Fracking’: Water Battle Brews On Hill (Click for an audio link and synopsis)

The Newest Gold Rush: The Frenzy for Natural Gas Threatens New York's Water

The Newest Gold Rush: The Frenzy for Natural Gas Threatens New York’s Water by Adam Federman, Earth Island Journal, on Alternet:

In New York, even though the drilling hasn’t begun, the battle lines have been drawn. Environmental organizations have been forced to play catch up; to educate the public about a drilling process that has not been widely used in this part of the country; and to argue against drilling, at a time of unparalleled economic distress and budget shortfalls, in what may be the largest natural gas reservoir in the nation. And they’re also up against the oil and gas companies. “We’ve never seen the circus come to town before,” says Bruce Ferguson, a member of Catskill Citizens for Safe Energy who lives in Sullivan County.

Read the rest…

Tompkins County Legislature asks for safeguards on gas drilling

Good news in Tompkins County Legislature asks for safeguards on gas drilling by Stacey Shackford:

Tompkins County officials are urging the state to delay the permitting of natural gas drilling in the Marcellus Shale until it has adequately developed and funded an inspection and enforcement program.

At their regular meeting Tuesday, county legislators unanimously passed a resolution outlining some of their concerns about the state regulatory process, which is being re-evaluated by the Department of Environmental Conservation to take into account the potential for large-scale horizontal hydro-fracture drilling.

The controversial process requires pressurized injection of millions of gallons of water containing proprietary chemicals into the underground shale to release the gas, and many have expressed concerns about the potential for aquifer and well water contamination.

Among the legislators’ requests were:

  • The state calculates how many inspectors and staff will be needed to adequately oversee the fracking process.
  • Gas drilling companies are charged severance taxes and permit fees to underwrite the cost of regulation and oversight.
  • Any substances that might be introduced into wells through the drilling process are identified publicly, with special notification to emergency personnel and health care providers.
  • The comment period on the state’s draft proposals is extended to at least 60 days.

Read the rest…

Hinchey Gets EPA Administrator Jackson to Acknowledge Agency Should Review Hydraulic Fracturing Impact on Drinking Water

Washington, DC — Continuing his efforts to close a legal loophole that exempts hydraulic fracturing for oil and natural gas exploration and drilling from regulation under the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA), Congressman Maurice Hinchey (D-NY) used a House Appropriations Subcommittee on Interior hearing today to ask U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Lisa Jackson to conduct a review of her agency’s policy on the risk that fracturing poses to drinking water supplies.  Jackson told Hinchey that she believed her agency should review the risk that fracturing poses to drinking water in light of various cases across the country that raise questions about the safety.
 
“It’s imperative that we protect our drinking water supplies from harmful chemicals that are being pumped into the ground by oil and gas companies looking to produce on more and more land in New York and across the country,” Hinchey said. “I was extremely pleased that EPA Administrator Jackson recognized the need for the EPA to reexamine the Bush administration’s misguided views on the risks associated with hydraulic fracturing.  We are in a much stronger position to protect our drinking water now that we have an administration in place that is committed to environmental protection.  While there is value in drilling for natural gas, it’s imperative that we do so in a manner that doesn’t have long-term environmental consequences on our drinking water — a resource that is critical to human health and survival.”
 
In the now infamous 2005 Energy Policy Act, which Hinchey strongly opposed and voted against, Congress shockingly exempted hydraulic fracturing from the Safe Drinking Water Act, which was designed to protect people’s water supply from contamination from toxic materials. This loophole, which some have called the Halliburton Loophole, has created an extremely dangerous set of circumstances.
 
Hydraulic fracturing — also known as “fracking” — involves injecting fluids into a well at extremely high pressure to crack open an underground formation and then prop open the new fractures in order to facilitate the flow of oil and gas out of the well.  More than 90 percent of oil and gas wells in the U.S. undergo this treatment with many undergoing it more than once over the life of the well. 
 
More than 1,000 cases of contamination have been documented by courts and state and local governments in New Mexico, Alabama, Ohio, Texas, Pennsylvania, and Colorado. In one case, a house exploded after hydraulic fracturing created underground passageways and methane seeped into the residential water supply. 
 
A 2004 EPA study, which was haphazardly conducted with a bias toward a desired outcome, concluded that fracturing did not pose a risk to drinking water.  However, Hinchey noted that the more than 1,000 reported contamination incidents have cast significant doubt on the report’s findings and the report’s own body contains damaging information that wasn’t mentioned in the conclusion. In fact, the study foreshadowed many of the problems now being reported across the country.   
 
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Jeff Lieberson
Administrative Assistant/Communications Director
Office of Congressman Maurice Hinchey (D-NY22)
jeff.lieberson@mail.house.gov

Officials in three states pin water woes on gas drilling

Officials in three states pin water woes on gas drilling by ProPublica’s Abrahm Lustgarten:

Norma Fiorentino’s drinking water well was a time bomb. For weeks, workers in her small northeastern Pennsylvania town had been plumbing natural gas deposits from a drilling rig a few hundred yards away. They cracked the earth and pumped in fluids to force the gas out. Somehow, stray gas worked into tiny crevasses in the rock, leaking upward into the aquifer and slipping quietly into Fiorentino’s well. Then, according to the state’s working theory, a motorized pump turned on in her well house, flicked a spark and caused a New Year’s morning blast that tossed aside a concrete slab weighing several thousand-pounds. (Read the rest)

Speak up about drilling: Natural-gas exploration carries many risks for environment

Speak up about drilling: Natural-gas exploration carries many risks for environment by Lisa Ann Wright, in the Ithaca Journal:

It is up to us – the taxpaying, voting citizens of this community – to ask smart questions and make our demands known so that we are not hapless victims of accidents and contamination. Despite the gas-rush mentality of pro-drilling corporate lobbyists, we who live here have a duty to keep speaking up for sound and responsible regulations of this industry. (Read the rest)

How communities can minimize damage caused by natural gas drilling

Official: Drilling oversight requires vigilance by Tim Ashmore for the Ithaca Journal:

A task force was created in Sullivan County to examine how it can best ready itself for the expected side-effects of gas drilling, like spills, contamination and deteriorated roads. “We look at it as managing public assets,” [Sullivan County Planning Commissioner William Pammer] said. “Towns should ask themselves the life cycle of their roads and what’s the capital cost of them.” (Read more)