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Politicians choose sides in Marcellus Shale drilling debate

12/13/09





Gov. David Paterson postponed it.

State Assemblywoman Barbara Lifton wants to slow it down.

Sen. Thomas Libous is for speeding it up.

Assemblywoman Donna Lupardo is torn between extremes.

Elected officials taking a position on Marcellus Shale development are facing strident demands from stakeholders who could become rich, go broke or possibly abandon hope, depending on Albany's response.

As a Dec. 31 public comment deadline approaches, the polarizing debate shows no sign of easing. Stakeholders continue to hold town hall meetings, sign petitions and write elected officials in an attempt to make or break the multibillion-dollar gas industry's move to the Southern Tier.

"This is by far the most contentious issue that I've worked on since joining the state Assembly," said Lupardo, a third-term Democrat from Endwell. "I'm compelled to do everything possible to protect our environment, while recognizing the enormous economic potential of the Marcellus. I'm trying to be a moderating voice in this process."

How much influence do the people and their elected officials actually have in determining when and if Marcellus drilling will begin in the Southern Tier?

If your name is David Paterson, the answer is: a lot.

Sometime next year, the Paterson administration is expected to finalize a regulatory update that lays the groundwork for Marcellus development. This comes after he called a two-year timeout for issuing Marcellus permits in order to assess the effects from the type of water-intensive horizontal drilling used to capitalize on the lucrative natural gas field under the Southern Tier and throughout the Appalachian Basin.

The public has until Dec. 31 to submit comments on the document, called the Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement (SGEIS). The 800-page tome is no easier to read than its name suggests, yet it is pivotal for those hoping to influence the outcome of the controversy for or against development.

Last week, about 6,000 parties, including Lifton, U.S. Rep. Eric Massa, the National Resources Defense Council, Common Cause, Earthjustice, Earthworks and the New York State Public Interest Research Group petitioned the governor to withdraw the newly drafted regulations, which they say are woefully insufficient.

Meanwhile, industry supporters and landowners locally and nationally are rallying their own support to move ahead with drilling.

George Phillips, challenging U.S. Rep. Maurice Hinchey, D-Hurley, for the 22nd District congressional seat, met with about 70 landowners and supporters at the Holiday Inn Arena in Binghamton last week to advocate the importance of Marcellus development and urge stakeholders to submit written comments to the state. Phillips is against Hinchey's plan to federally regulate the industry under the Clean Drinking Water Act, from which drillers are now exempt.

The national pro-drilling advocacy group Energy In Depth, meanwhile, rallied members to "share (their) views on the important role that responsible natural gas development can play in lifting the local economy and putting New Yorkers back to work."

Advertisements for and against natural gas drilling are targeting audiences in various national and local media outlets, including this paper's Web site.

Voices in opposition

Walter Hang, of Ithaca, has emerged as a leading voice of drilling opposition. He is organizing a somewhat disjointed grassroots movement into one unified approach. While drilling opponents "did their best to comment on the shortcomings of the incredibly complex draft SGEIS," he said, "I believe they fundamentally failed to develop a concrete plan."

His plan goes like this:

The state Department of Environmental Conservation's Division of Mineral Resources maintains there have been no problems related to any gas development in the state, although more than 10,000 wells have been drilled. That claim is not only false, it's at the root of the DEC's flawed regulations, according to Hang, a database specialist who has uncovered hundreds of incidents involving oil and gas mishaps and complaints in the state's Hazardous Spills Data Base.

The problems, ranging from blow-outs to spills, illustrate that the state's old regulations are insufficient, Hang said. Because the new ones governing Marcellus developments are simply amendments to the old ones, it follows the whole regulatory process has to be redone.

While Hang is using a grassroots lobby in an attempt to sway the Paterson administration with that argument, other challengers anticipate turning to the courts.

Deborah Goldberg, an attorney with Earthjustice, an environmental law firm, said the final SGEIS must include substantial changes to account for the cumulative effect of drilling thousands and perhaps tens of thousands of Marcellus wells in New York. If not, the firm will help spearhead a legal challenge, most likely in state Supreme Court in Albany. That would involve filing an Article 78 Proceeding challenging the DEC's adherence to the State Environmental Quality Review Act.

To hold up Marcellus production, however, the burden of proof rests with the plaintiffs, who would have to show "immediate and irreparable harm" would come from allowing drilling in New York.

Economics and environment

Federal and state lawmakers also could determine whether Marcellus drilling firms begin full-scale production in New York anytime soon, but it would take some galvanizing political event that brings consensus on the issue to Albany, which seems as likely as making a cement truck fly.

"I think it would be a stretch," said Lupardo, commenting on the feasibility of a ban or moratorium enacted by lawmakers.

As a member of the Environmental Conservation Committee, a member of the majority party and representative of an area with some of the highest stakes in gas development, Lupardo is in the thick of the debate. She is hopeful the DEC will sufficiently address concerns about drilling's effect on water supplies as it updates its regulatory framework for the industry.

Most of those concerns center on fracking, a process that involves injecting large quantities of water and chemical solution to stimulate well production. It produces similar amounts of waste -- which local plants are unequipped to treat -- including metals, brine and low-level radioactivity.

"I have concerns about the wastewater issues and lack of infrastructure to handle them," she said. "I've been waiting to see what the DEC does with the comments."

Even those who favor drilling share those concerns. Most of them, however, are convinced the revamped regulatory proposal and an enlightened citizenry holding sound leases with energy companies will prevent problems.

Moreover, they are growing frustrated with what they see as shortsighted "obstructionists" blocking a life-changing economic windfall for an area facing dire times.

Jim Worden, leader of a coalition in Windsor, said he knows landowners struggling to pay five-figure tax bills on their properties, who have lost their jobs and are unable to sustain themselves as farmers. Gas money would keep them from losing the farms as well as provide jobs and a rush of capital into the Southern Tier, he said.

Meanwhile, the profitability of farming continues to languish with the economy, said David Bradstreet, executive director of Cornell Cooperative Extension of Broome County.

"They are living off equity right now, and with the prices of milk, they are losing money every time they ship to market," he said.

Chris Denton, an attorney who represents large landowner groups looking to make lucrative deals with energy companies, put it this way: "Right now, we have the luxury of being able to have this discussion about what is the best way to regulate the Marcellus. But you don't worry about highfalutin intellectual matters when you are starving. There might be a time when we are in such economic distress, we just have to do it."

The national economic picture is not looking promising, he added: "Remember, we are at war."

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Activist claims well contaminated by gas drilling

12/10/09





VARICK -- An environmental activist says he's uncovered the "first documented case" of groundwater pollution caused by a controversial natural gas drilling practice.

Walter Hang of Toxics Targeting says the drinking water supply to a home in the Seneca County town of Varick was "contaminated" after the Chesapeake Energy Company used hydraulic fracturing of "fracking" to drill for natural gas some 2,000 feet below ground.

"Fracking" involves injecting a mixture of sand and chemicals to free up the natural gas by fracturing geological formations. The gas industry claims fracking is safe and there is not a single credible case of groundwater contamination from the practice.

Laurie Lytle disagrees. She says her well water became contaminated two years after after fracking was used on her neighbor's property. She says Chesapeake Energy paid for the damages by installing a filtration system but now she has a "major concern" after learning the process involved chemicals.

When contacted for a response, Matt Sheppard of Chesapeake Energy said "Chesapeake tested water at the Lytle residence on three separate occasions. Testing occurred prior to drilling, after drilling and once again after the well was completed, or fractured. The results of all three water analyses show little variation between the many different testing parameters and no apparent degradation in water quality. All analyses -- pre-drill, post-drill and post-completion -- demonstrated that no contamination had occurred."

Sheppard continued, saying "As a courtesy, Chesapeake has contacted Mrs. Lytle and will provide her with information about the frac additives used in completing the Swartley #2 well, and to reassure her through additional testing to confirm that none of the additives encroached into her well water."

Representing the gas industry, Chris Tucker of Energy In Depth says the "draft regulations...rank among the toughest and most aggressive in the entire nation." He adds, the activists.."got literally every single thing they asked for from this process."

Tucker continues, saying “Fracturing technology has been in commercial use for more than 60 years, has been deployed 1.1 million times, and is used on 9 out of 10 wells developed today. In all that time, not a single credible case of groundwater contamination has ever been linked to hydraulic fracturing. So yes: I do believe the Marcellus can be explored safely and efficiently, and no -- I do not believe, and the history does not show, that the public’s water would in any way be affected under a scenario that allows producers, under the watchful eye of DEC, to develop the region's abundant reserves of clean-burning natural gas – and create thousands of local jobs in the process.”

“The draft regulations released by DEC easily rank among the toughest and most aggressive in the entire nation -- not a single stage of the process was excluded from oversight. Activists wanted no-drill buffer zones; they’re in there. Activists wanted DEC inspectors on-site; they’ll be there. Activists wanted every drop of water tested and analyzed before it leave the well-pad; that’s in there. Activists wanted complete and unconditional access to the materials used in the process; that’s in the there too. These folks got literally every single thing they asked for from this process. Now they just want one more thing: Let’s shut the whole thing down.

“Mr. Hang may have gotten 6,000 folks to sign a petition, but 900,000 other New Yorkers are currently out of work. Thankfully, we’re talking about a technology and a process that stands to create tens-of-thousands of high-wage jobs right here in New York,” says Tucker.

Hang and Lytle are calling for the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation to investigate the incident and block proposed regulations for gas drilling in the Marcellus shale formation that would involve fracking.

6,000 sign petition asking DEC to strengthen natural gas-drilling regulations

12/09/09



An Ithaca environmental activist and 6,000 other individuals and organizations asked the governor Tuesday to withdraw the state's newly drafted regulations on natural gas drilling, saying the state's entire regulatory framework needs to be strengthened before more drilling occurs.

Walter Hang, president of Toxics Targeting, is the activist who last month publicized 270 spill reports from the state Department of Environmental Conservation's own database, documenting well contamination and other environmental pollution related to the conventional, vertical gas drilling that has gone on in New York State for decades.

"DEC's own data document systematic, on-going failures to prevent oil and gas drilling pollution impacts or to clean them up. It is imperative that DEC resolve those regulatory shortcomings prior to issuing new drilling permits," the petition states.

Signatories include state Assemblywoman Barbara Lifton, U.S. Congressman Eric Massa, the National Resources Defense Council, Common Cause, Earthjustice, Earthworks, and the New York State Public Interest Research Group.

The Ithaca Town Board also voted unanimously Monday night to urge the governor to withdraw the regulations.

Meanwhile, as the Dec. 31 deadline for public comment on the DEC's regulations nears, a pro-drilling group is rallying supporters with their own petitions and form letters to the DEC.

The national pro-drilling advocacy group Energy In Depth this week urged its members to "share (their) views on the important role that responsible natural gas development can play in lifting the local economy and putting New Yorkers back to work."

"In just a single year, the state of Pennsylvania leveraged its share of the Marcellus into 29,000 high-wage jobs and $240 million in state and local taxes -- numbers that are expected to nearly double in the year to come," a sample letter says. "Similarly extraordinary opportunities lie ready to be realized right here in New York. According to one recent study, Broome County in the Southern Tier has enough natural gas within its boundaries to create 16,000 jobs and $14 billion in local economic activity."

Since Hang publicized the 270 spill reports recorded by DEC, he said he's been contacted by many individuals with wells or gas leases who are concerned about whether state regulations will adequately protect them.

One of those people is Laurie Lytle, a resident of Varick, Seneca County, who signed a gas lease with Chesapeake shortly after buying her home near Geneva in September 2006. By fall 2007, Chesapeake was drilling and hydro-fracturing (fracking) a vertical well in the Queenston formation, 660 feet from Lytle's property line, according to Lytle and a DEC representative.

The morning after the fracking occurred, Lytle said she was surprised to discover that her water was gray and full of sediment. She said she contacted Chesapeake and they told her it would stop in three to four days once the ground settled. After three days, Lytle said the sediment was gone, but the water was still cloudy. She contacted Chesapeake again and they agreed to install a water filter on her well.

Lytle kept copies of the check and invoice made out to her and her husband, signed by Chesapeake and describing the purpose of the money as "Damages."

Representatives from Chesapeake were unable to respond to questions about Lytle's complaint by press time Tuesday.

Lytle said she didn't think much more about the incident until she began seeing press reports related to the Marcellus Shale this fall. At her request, Chesapeake tested her water after the incident, but the company tested for only 12 basic substances such as total solids and e. coli bacteria, not the long list of chemicals that can be used in fracking fluid, she said.

"The main thing I would like to have happen is I would like to know what is in my water," Lytle said. "If there are chemicals in there that are of concern for my health and my family's health, I would like to have that remediated, so I would like them to take responsibility for handling that situation so I don't have to have that concern."

DEC Spokesman Yancey Roy said the DEC has a record of the Chesapeake well near Lytle's house -- but no record of a complaint, spill, or problem with Lytle's well.

"It is likely that if any turbidity was experienced in a nearby water well, it occurred when the well was being drilled -- not when it was hydraulically fractured. Also, turbidity essentially is stirred up sediment -- and problems with turbidity do not involve toxicity," Roy said by e-mail.

Lytle wasn't comforted by that explanation.

"Well if my well's contaminated with sediment, then obviously there's a pathway that water can seep in, and there may be chemicals in the water now," she said.

Hang said he was even more concerned that Chesapeake apparently didn't report the problem with Lytle's well to the DEC. DEC rigorously enforces regulations on petroleum spills, Hang said -- companies are required to report petroleum spills within two hours, and they can be assessed fines of $25,000 per day if they don't. There's nowhere near the rigor in reporting incidents related to gas drilling, Hang said.

"This really underscores that these problems are occurring, even though the DEC has said they've never had a single fracking incident. And it's not at all clear what these companies have to do as far as disclosing these problems, and it's not at all clear what they have to test for or do about them," he said.

Thousands Petition Gov. To Scrap Nat. Gas Regulations

12/09/09





ITHACA -- Thousands of New Yorkers signed a petition asking Gov. David Paterson to scrap natural gas drilling regulations, and start from scratch.

Environmentalists, landowners -- even politicians -- are voicing concerns over the DEC's draft environmental impact statement on horizontal gas drilling.

Ithaca environmentalist Walter Hang found hundreds of spills not properly cleaned up after they were drilled using the traditional vertical method. He says if that could happen, horizontal drilling could also be problematic.

"The proposed Marcellus Shale regulations are totally inadequate. You have to go back to the drawing board, and we want this proposal withdrawn," said Hang.

Hang, and 6,000 other people who signed a letter to the governor, say DEC documents prove hydraulic fracturing has its problems. And before horizontal drilling begins, everything should be on the table -- including the original gas drilling regulations, published in 1992.

Hang says the DEC needs reform.

"You're looking at an agency that has terrific leadership -- unsurpassed in the country. But they've suffered brutal cuts in the last decade," said Hang.

But Chris Tucker of Energy In Depth, an organization that represents independent gas drillers, said, "This was a culmination of a three year process. This wasn't just done overnight."

Tucker says the DEC has done its due diligence with the horizontal regulations, and its time the state reaps the economic benefits.

"What they produced was essentially one of the most comprehensive and aggressive regulatory program as it relates to natural gas exploration in the entire country," said Tucker.

Hang says there is a safe way to drill for natural gas, but...

"You have to have an adequate regulatory bureaucracy literally to stand there and watch the drilling occur," said Hang.

Public comment on the draft supplemental environmental impact statement is open through the end of the month.

Hydrofracking a threat to Southern Tier Ecosystem

12/09/09





Natural Gas Companies' “Hydrofracking” Represents a Dangerous Threat to the New York State Ecosystem, New York City Water Supply

The Marcellus Shale Formation is an immense unit of marine sedimentary rock that spreads over most of northwestern Pennsylvania and across New York State from the far southwest corner in Chautauqua County to the Catskill Mountains, where the great New York City drinking water reservoirs are located. Throughout this massive, ancient geological formation is a tremendous amount of natural gas—all within close proximity to New York City and the rest of the energy hungry eastern seaboard. The energy corporations have been eying it for years, quietly buying up drilling rights throughout the region.

Now, as public pressure builds to curb CO2 emissions, the fossil fuel industry has begun to push natural gas as the “clean energy alternative.” In reality, the extraction of natural gas from the Marcellus Shale of upstate New York promises to be an environmental disaster. It would permanently mar the landscape of a region that depends heavily upon agriculture and tourism. It would create an untenable burden for the public roads and other infrastructure of small, rural communities across New York's Southern tier. And it threatens to contaminate the clean drinking water of the entire southern half of the state, including New York City itself.

To fully appreciate the danger one must first understand how the energy corporations plan to extract this natural gas. Traditional natural gas and oil drilling has involved sinking a vertical well to access a large pool of gas or oil. The unique geological nature of the Marcellus Shale makes this traditional method impossible—within the Marcellus, the natural gas is spread out in tiny pockets and bubbles, far too small to be profitably tapped by a traditional well. Instead the natural gas companies have devised a method they call “hydrofracking.”

In hydrofracking, a hole is drilled straight down into the earth, then horizontally out into the shale. This hole is then violently flooded with between 2 and 9 million gallons of water mixed with sand and toxic chemicals, in order to fracture and corrode the shale and release the small pockets of natural gas. Essentially, a giant underground slurry is created, full of water, sand, pulverized shale, industrial chemicals, the newly released natural gas and also radioactive heavy metals and hydrocarbons, which the water picks up in the process of “fracking” open the well. About half of this slurry remains underground. The other half is brought back to the surface, where the natural gas is separated out from it.

What is left is between one and four and half million gallons of toxic waste, which must be somehow disposed of. Often it is pumped back into a dry well. The current regulations proposed by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation allow for it to be stored in open pits, provided they are fenced and posted with warning signs. How, say, migrating birds or other wildlife are supposed to read these signs has not been addressed by the DEC.

Most of the recent advances in hydrofracking have been made by Halliburton, and are protected as “proprietary trade secrets.” This means it is impossible to even know exactly what chemicals are being pumped down into the ground and then pulled back out and trucked away for disposal. Halliburton describes the fracking fluid as “like soap and oil.” Samples from fluid pits in Colorado have revealed more than 200 different chemicals, over 95% of which are carcinogens. But not even the local emergency workers who would be called upon to respond to an accident involving this toxic waste are not allowed to know what is in it. During the Bush/Cheney years, the energy corporations were granted exemptions to the Emergency Planning and Right to Know Acts, along with the Clean Air and Water Acts.

The New York State DEC, and the gas companies themselves, have been astonishingly blas about the potential for a trucking accident involving this waste; given the pure volume of trucks that will be hauling this stuff, it is almost certain that some will crash. A single 2 million gallon well would require 183 tanker truck loads to haul the waste water away. Each well can be fracked up to ten times and they are proposing thousands of potential wells. The roads in the Catskill and Southern Tier regions of New York are rural roads, not particularly well maintained, steep and windy. With thousands of new tractor trailer trips over them, they will deteriorate quickly. Every winter several milk trucks jack knife on these roads. Spilt milk is nothing to cry over. A spilt load of hydrofracking waste would kill wild life and permanently contaminate rivers, streams and the watershed for miles around.

The carbon footprint associated with hydrofracking far offsets any potential benefits derived from burning the relatively cleaner natural gas. In addition to the potentially millions of new tractor trailer trips, diesel generators and drill rigs will run 24 hours a day. Flaring wells produce tremendous amounts of volatile organic compounds and nitrogen oxide, which combine with sunlight to produce ozone. In high density drilling areas in Colorado and Wyoming, rural communities now have higher ozone levels than Los Angeles.

Time is may be running out to prevent this environmental nightmare. Through the end of December, the New York State DEC is taking comments on their draft proposal for regulating hydrofracking. But the DEC's own spill reports, as documented by Ithaca Geologist Walter Hang on his website toxicstargeting.com, already show that existing regulations have failed to potentially protect the public. Hang has drafted a letter to New York Governor David Patterson, requesting that he immediately withdraw the DEC's draft supplemental GEIS and start over with a new document. You do not even need to be a New York State resident to sign the letter. Concerned people can also visit shaleshock.org, to learn more about hydrofracking and about the citizen movement rising up to oppose this environmentally destructive practice.

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