Industrialization of Finger Lakes

Seneca Lake Entergy Storage Facility  Photos of Industrialization of Seneca Lake.

 

I recently learned that you among others passed a bill designating Seneca Lake as a Scenic By-Way.

Attached please find several photographs of what is happening on Seneca Lake, as Kansas-City based Inergy prepares to turn Upstate NY into the gas storage and transport hub of the North East, with Seneca Lake at its epicenter. Please take a look at the attached photos. This unsightly project is visible from across the lake while driving down Route 414, the very section of road that would be designated as “scenic”.This will have a seriously negative impact on the Wine, Tourism and Agricultural businesses in our region, and will cause a major increase in truck traffic along our rural roads.

There seems to be a disconnect between your vision of the region and what is actually happening. We need your help, before it is too late. Please stop Inergy from industrializing the Finger Lakes.

Elected Officials to Protect New York

Elected Officials to Protect New York

Press Release:
Tompkins Officials Among More Than 250 Across the State Urging Governor to Require More Study Before Hydrofracking Moratorium is Lifted
(Released June 4, 2012 at 7:41 PM.)
 
More than 280 municipal leaders from across New York State—including more than 50 from Tompkins County—have signed a non-partisan letter to Governor Cuomo, urging the Governor to  maintain the State’s current moratorium on hydrofracking until potential health, economic, and cumulative environmental impacts on local communities from such drilling are properly addressed.  Those signing the letter to the Governor include representatives of cities, towns, villages, and county governments, including 12 members of the Tompkins County Legislature.
 
Leaders launched the “Elected Officials to Protect New York” initiative at a news conference this afternoon in Albany.  Among those speaking was County Legislature Chair Martha Robertson.  At the event, it was reported that the letter had been signed by at least 282 officials from 34 of the State’s counties.
 
The letter to the Governor urges that high-volume hydraulic fracturing not be permitted until the following independent assessments have been completed:
 
– A comprehensive health impact assessment of the entire shale gas extraction process—including, but not limited to, direct and indirect health effects and cumulative health impacts;
 
– A revised and thorough analysis that considers all potentially negative socioeconomic impacts—including, but not limited to, increased demands on local governments, first responders and law enforcement, and the effects of drilling on property values and home mortgages, existing businesses and economies, and local community character;
 
– A revised and properly thorough study of cumulative environmental impacts—including, but not limited to, those affecting the rural landscape, water resources, air quality, and greenhouse gas emissions, and the lack of safe alternatives for wastewater disposal.
 
The letter calls for all studies to be made available for public review and comment before regulations are finalized or the moratorium is lifted.
 
“As elected officials from across New York State, we share with you the responsibility to protect and
defend our people and our state,” the letter states.  “Although the geographic area where drilling may occur may be limited, the impacts will be felt across the state.  Unless and until the facts and the science prove that horizontal hydraulic fracturing is safe, New York’s de facto moratorium must remain in place.”
 
Elected Officials to Protect New York will continue to collect signatures on the letter to Governor Cuomo, through its website at http://www.nyelectedofficials.org.
 
Contact:  Martha Robertson, Chair of the Legislature, 607-274-5434 or 607-272-0584.
 
– END –
——
Marcia E. Lynch
Public Information Officer
Tompkins County
125 E. Court Street
Ithaca, NY  14850
Cortland County Elected Officials who signed on to the letter  as of 6/5/12
Gregory K. Leach
Councilmember
Town of Cortlandville
Cortland County
John C. Proud
Councilmember
Town of Cortlandville
Cortland County
Theodore V. Testa
Councilmember
Town of Cortlandville
Cortland County
Kevin Whitney
Legislator
Cortland County
Kathie Arnold
Legislator
Cortland County
Richard C. Tupper
Councilmember
Town of Cortlandville
Cortland County
James Doring
Supervisor
Town of Preble
Cortland County
Ronald L. Rocco
Councilmember
Town of Cortlandville
Cortland County
Donald Spaulding
Legislator
Cortland County

Sandra Steingraber: Safe Hydrofracking Is the New Jumbo Shrimp

Sandra Steingraber: Safe Hydrofracking Is the New Jumbo Shrimp.

Residents express opposition to fracking at public hearing – City of Buffalo – The Buffalo News

Residents express opposition to fracking at public hearing – City of Buffalo – The Buffalo News.

Silica handling in Owego

Stopping yesterday in Owego just west of Binghamton, I toured the town depot where silica is brought by rail from the west, stored in a large 4 chamber tower, loaded into silver tankers, and transported to Pennsylvania for fracking.  How many other such depots exist in our NYS towns, blowing dangerous silica dust over its citizenry in addition to the workers on the site?
Suzannah Glidden, Director
Croton Watershed Clean Water Coalition
914-234-6470
www.newyorkwater.org
CrotonWshed@aol.com

Pennsylvania Game Commission accepting bids for leasing local game lands to gas companies – News – Daily Review

Pennsylvania Game Commission accepting bids for leasing local game lands to gas companies – News – Daily Review.

Minard-Run-Oil-Company-Finger-Lakes-Development-Plan

In March, Minard Run from Bradford PA  purchased from CHK, over 400
wells in Cayuga county and Onondaga county including wells near
Skaneateles Lake, just outside the 4000′ setback from the watershed
and many wells in Cayuga County near Cayuga Lake.

Included in their purchase is one of the three NY injection disposal
wells near the head of Cayuga Lake.

They intend to apply for permits to develop more Queenston wells, and
eventually go for the Utica.  they hold over fifteen thousand
Marcellus leasehold acres in Bradford county.  minardrunoil.com

http://www.scribd.com/doc/95762186/Minard-Run-Oil-Company-Finger-Lakes-Development-Plan

Thanks to Bill Hecht for the head’s up on this.

Sierra Club: No new gas plants | GJSentinel.com

Sierra Club: No new gas plants | GJSentinel.com.

In Land of Hydraulic Fracturing, a Battle Over Water Pollution – NYTimes.com

In Land of Hydraulic Fracturing, a Battle Over Water Pollution – NYTimes.com.

Abandoned wells

Yesterday on the NPR station WSKG broadcast of Living on Earth ( http://www.loe.org/) there was a segment on locating abandoned oil/gas wells in PA – very interesting and relevant.

Some excerpts:

DOE Looks for Orphan Wells

CURWOOD: It’s Living on Earth, I’m Steve Curwood. For more than 150 years prospectors in the United States have drilled countless holes in the ground in search of oil and gas. Most of the resulting wells were sealed once they became unprofitable. But improperly sealed ones can lead to explosions and other hazards.
With the gas rush now underway in the Marcellus Shale in the Eastern U.S., the federal Department of Energy has made the search for so-called “orphan wells” a high priority.

….The helicopter has special equipment mounted on long, white poles on either side. At the end of each pole is a white cylinder pointed at the ground. Inside, these canisters are essentially advanced metal detectors. They can pick up cars, natural metals like gold, or the metal casings found in abandoned oil and gas wells.

….An abandoned well, if it’s not properly plugged, it provides a conduit for gases to come to the surface. These gases could be, of course, methane, natural gas, or something like radon.

….The first natural gas well in Pennsylvania was drilled in 1859. But the industry wasn’t regulated until 1956. That left almost a century’s worth of wells drilled, with little or no records of where they were located. It’s estimated there are more than 100,000 of these so-called “orphan wells” sitting in Pennsylvania.

.One problem with looking for wells, Carter says, is a lot of the metal casings used to detect these wells are gone. 
 (The program does not explain how these wells are located, as the sensing system is based on magnetism detecting the steel casing.)
…..Our story on orphaned wells comes to us from the radio show The Allegheny Front.
From the DEC’s revised DSGEIS
Preliminary Revised Draft SGEIS 2011, Page 7-59
To ensure that abandoned wells do not provide a conduit for contamination of fresh water
aquifers, the Department proposes to require that the operator consult the Division’s oil and gas
database as well as property owners and tenants in the proposed spacing unit to determine
whether any abandoned wells are present.  If (1) the operator has property access rights, (2) the
well is accessible and (3) it is reasonable to believe based on available records and history of
drilling in the area that the well’s total depth may be as deep or deeper than the target formation
for high-volume hydraulic fracturing, then the Department would require the operator to enter
and evaluate the well, and properly plug it prior to high-volume hydraulic fracturing if the
evaluation shows the well is open to the target formation or is otherwise an immediate threat to
the environment.  If any abandoned well is under the operator’s control as owner or lessee of the
pertinent mineral rights, then the operator is required to comply with the Department’s existing
regulations regarding shut-in or temporary abandonment if good cause exists to leave the well
unplugged.  This would require a demonstration that the well is in satisfactory condition to not
pose a threat to the environment, including during nearby high-volume hydraulic fracturing, and
a demonstrated intent to complete and/or produce the well within the time frames provided by
existing regulations.
A criticism of the of this section is that this “proposal” could easily miss wells which have long since been abandoned, especially those from which the casing was removed for scrap steel.  From the DEC’s website:

Long Abandoned Wells Predate Strict Rules

DEC has a strict environmental regulatory program for oil and gas wells drilled in New York. New York has had an active oil and gas industry since the 1880’s and DEC estimates that more than 75,000 oil and gas wells have been drilled in the state. Most of these wells existed prior to the establishment of New York’s regulatory program in 1963 that ensures the proper plugging of wells. DEC has identified about 4,800 unplugged, abandoned oil and gas wells in New York for which no known owner can be located. It estimates that at least as many more unplugged and abandoned wells exist that are yet to be discovered. Many of the older wells were abandoned by their owners when low production and/or low prices made it unprofitable for them to continue production.
I expect that this airborne scanning technology will be cited by the DEC to deflect some of the criticism about undocumented wells.
Jim Weiss
1. They didn’t talk about cost to find/time to find
2. They didn’t talk about cost to plug
3. They didn’t talk about alternative technologies to find (there is ALWAYS som other way(s)
4. They didn’t talk about old abandoned water wells – another contamination vector
5. Sigh,  S