ENVIRONMENTAL ADVOCATES OF NEW YORK–A Fracking To-Do List

ENVIRONMENTAL ADVOCATES OF NEW YORK.

 

March 7, 2011

A Fracking To-Do List

Last week, Environmental Advocates of New York rolled out our “fracking to-do list” for state leaders and lawmakers at a briefing in the state capital. Hydraulic fracturing, often called “fracking,” is an environmentally dangerous technique used to extract natural gas from underground shale deposits. We’re worried about all phases of the drilling process—the impact of the withdrawal of millions of gallons of water from area lakes, rivers, and streams, the toxic chemicals used in fracking fluids and their potential to leach into drinking water, and the state’s ability to treat and dispose of fracking wastewater, particularly when it’s radioactive.

Fracking has poisoned waterways from Wyoming to Pennsylvania. Our to-do list is comprehensive and designed to safeguard the health and safety of New York’s drinking water. Here’s what we want state leaders to do:

  • Pass legislation that will protect water resources and establish a regulatory permitting program to oversee large water withdrawals statewide.
  • Regulate fracking fluids by requiring the gas industry to disclose the chemical components in fracking fluids and prohibit the use of fluids that pose a risk to human health. New York’s environmental regulator shouldn’t be allowed to issue drilling permits until such regulations are adopted.
  • Close the hazardous waste loophole in current state law and require that all fracking wastewater that meets the definition of hazardous waste be considered hazardous for the purpose of transport and treatment.
  • Revise the state’s draft drilling plan and release it only when it’s ready and not a minute before. An Executive Order requires the Department of Environmental Conservation to update their draft plan on or about June 1st of this year.
  • Improve the plan so it updates and revises drilling regulations and include a cumulative impact analysis that addresses the worst-case scenario of up to 2,500 wells per year.

At the briefing, Susan Christopherson, the J. Thomas Clark Professor of City & Regional Planning at Cornell University, discussed the potential economic impacts of fracking for New York’s communities. Professor Christopherson’s research on fracking shows that individual New Yorkers may stand to benefit, but that the costs to local government are significant. Depending on the pace and scale of drilling, local governments may not have the capacity to respond to new demands.

New York is a battleground in the national debate about natural gas drilling and fracking. Drilling-related accidents across the country have contaminated drinking water, created air quality hazards and violations, and polluted streams.

Click here to see our own Katherine Nadeau interviewed about our fracking on Your News Now
.

Click here to read The New York Times‘ recent groundbreaking series, “Drilling Down,” on the dangers of fracking.

 

Cornell Cooperative Extension–Upcoming Events

Upcoming Events.

Upcoming Events
Seminar Series: #1 Gases in the Subsurface and the Marcellus – presented by Larry Cathles, Dept. of Earth & Atmospheric Sciences, on Tuesday, March 8, 2011, 12:00-1:00 PM in 205 Thurston Hall, Cornell University. Open to the public. The Marcellus is a huge gas resource underlying our area that we have just appreciated can be remarkably effectively produced using horizontal drilling and hydrofracing.  Dramatic pictures of exploded water wells, faucets being lit on fire, and gas escaping  from the ground have been attributed to the fracing process, but in fact are not related at all in the sense that these hazards and phenomena would exist whether or not the Marcellus is produced. The talk will lay the geologic foundations for understanding where the Marcellus gas and the gas escaping from the surface fit in the natural petroleum generation system.  The size of the Marcellus resource and its potential value to the community and nation will then be outlined, and the areas of concern evaluated.  Finally we will tour Dimock County in Pennsylvania from the ground and air to  view the changes gas development have brought there.  In closing I will make recommendations on how I think we should proceed.

Seminar Series: #2 Developing Natural Gas in the Marcellus and other Sale Formations is likely to Aggravate Global Warming – presented by Robert Howarth, Renee Santoro and Tony Ingraffea, Dept. of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology and School of Civil Engineering on Tuesday, March 15, 2011, 12:00-1:00 PM in 205 Thurston Hall, Cornell University.  Open to the public.

A Systems Approach to Energy Transitions: Land, Economic and Community Transformations – a two-day conference will be held on March 30-31, 2011 at the Watkins Glen Harbor Hotel, Watkins Glen, NY. Primary audiences: municipal officials, professional planners, Extension educators, Planning/Zoning board members, community leaders and land managers. Conference objectives: to increase overall comprehension of major energy transitions, energy literacy and capacity to assess emerging energy development scenarios; and to encourage planning for the future.  Sponsors: Cornell Cooperative Extension, Community and Energy Program Work Team, Cornell Marcellus Shale Team, Community and Regional Development Institute (CaRDI). For more information, click here.  A draft agenda is now available.
To register:  Cornell or Association EmployeesGeneral PublicHotel InformationInformation about having a Display

Gas Drilling, Sustainability & Energy Policy: Searching for Common Ground – a two-day Environmental Law Society Energy Conference hosted by the Cornell Law School will be held on April 1-2, 2011 in Myron Taylor Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY.  For more information, click here.

Marcellus Shale Multi-State Academic Applied Research Conference – will be held beginning at 1:00 PM on Tuesday, May 10, 2001 through 12:15 PM Wednesday, May 11, 2011 at the Blair County Convention Center, One Convention Center Drive, Altoona, PA 16601. The conference will: 1) bring together researchers from across the Mid-Atlantic region to help identify the research needs related to the impacts of Marcellus Shale development, 2) identify on-going research activities related to Marcellus Shale, 3) build multi-institutional academic partnerships focused on Marcellus Shale, 4) endeavor to develop a broad applied research agenda that includes natural resource, wildlife, social, community and economic implications as well as research on production methods/technologies, and 5) help inform outreach and education. The conference is a collaboration between Cornell University, Penn State University and West Virginia University and is being coordinated by the Marcellus Center for Outreach and Research. For a summary of the conference, an invitation to attend, an event agenda, and information on registration, & lodging, please click here.

Natural Gas Drilling, in the Spotlight – NYTimes.com

Natural Gas Drilling, in the Spotlight – NYTimes.com.

Once PA Wilds, Now PA Wells | NorthCentralPA.com

Once PA Wilds, Now PA Wells | NorthCentralPA.com.

Once PA Wilds, Now PA Wells

March 3, 2011

The invasion of northcentral Pennsylvania by the Marcellus shale gas industry has opened up an entirely new state tourism promotional possibility. It’s no longer “Come see the PA Wilds.” Now it’s “Come see the PA Wells.”

Come see the thousands of gas industry water, equipment and construction trucks rolling along our two-lane roads, 24 hours a day, every day. Come and listen to their steady rumbling and roaring, their screeching “Jake” brakes.

Come see the shattered bodies of our deer, bear, opossums, raccoons, squirrels, rabbits, skunks, porcupines, and groundhogs along these same roads.

Come see our beautiful pines and oaks being transported by truck out of our forests to clear the way for the gas well pads.

Come see our bald eagles, hawks, blue herons and other birds frantically flying in circles, startled by the constant truck traffic and the drilling-related activities.

Come see the “frack water” spills and crashes involving gas industry trucks.

Come, especially in the summer, to see the dust-covered houses along our roads, caused by the many trucks wheeling through.

Come see and enjoy bouncing through our potholes and along our washboard roads, especially in the spring.
Come see the water trucks feeding from our waterways, and the pumps sucking water from the same to be transported in pipes over and under our land.
Come see the gashes across our mountaintops, hillsides and valleys, where gas and water pipes are being laid.
Come see the lurid, red glow at night of the burn-off of methane gas at the well sites. It’s our own aurora borealis show.
Come see the gas riggings gracing our land, especially on the mountaintops, our industrial-age scarecrows.

Come see our hiking and cross-country skiing trails, severed and interrupted by gas company pipe and property lines.

Come see the helicopters whirring above the treetops, dropping off equipment and supplies at the well pads, and surveying for new drilling sites.

Come see the happy landlords, renting their apartments and houses out to gas industry employees at exorbitant rates.

Come see the happy residents who have signed leases allowing the gas companies to drill on their land—their smiling faces reflecting their hope for future wealth from royalties.

Yes, the PA Wells has all this technological age excitement to offer the tourist looking for a 21st century vacation second-to-none. Visitors will certainly leave and tell others back in their hometowns to come up here. They’ll no doubt say, “It’s a real gas vacationing in northcentral PA!”

Bay Daily: The Big Sellout? State Forests Now Controlled by Enron Oil & Gas and Other Drilling Companies

Bay Daily: The Big Sellout? State Forests Now Controlled by Enron Oil & Gas and Other Drilling Companies.

Fracking will cause ‘irreversible harm’

Fracking will cause ‘irreversible harm’.

Leaked EPA Documents Expose Decades-Old Effort To Hide Dangers of Natural Gas Extraction | Toxics Targeting

Leaked EPA Documents Expose Decades-Old Effort To Hide Dangers of Natural Gas Extraction | Toxics Targeting.

Leaked EPA Documents Expose Decades-Old Effort To Hide Dangers of Natural Gas Extraction

March 4, 2011

Efforts by lawmakers and regulators to force the federal government to better police the natural gas drilling process known as hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking” have been thwarted for the past 25 years, according to an expose in the New York Times. Studies by scientists at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on fracking have been repeatedly narrowed in scope by superiors and important findings have been removed under pressure from the industry. The news comes as the EPA is conducting a broad study of the risks of natural gas drilling with preliminary results scheduled to be delivered next year. Joining us is Walter Hang, president of Toxics Targeting, a firm that tracks environmental spills and releases across the country based in Ithaca, New York, where fracking is currently taking place.

The Marcellus Effect: Despite “Consent Order” Dimock Story Unresolved

The Marcellus Effect: Despite “Consent Order” Dimock Story Unresolved.

Climate Activist Found Guilty Of Placing Fake Drilling Bids, A Felony : The Two-Way : NPR

Climate Activist Found Guilty Of Placing Fake Drilling Bids, A Felony : The Two-Way : NPR.