Chris Burger at Lake Como Jan 22, 2-3:30pm

HYDROFRACKING
 
How will it impact people who enjoy the outdoors: hunters, fishermen, hikers, snowmobilers, cross country skiers?

An Afternoon with Chris Burger*

 Lake Como Inn, Jan 22, 2-3:30pm

A presentation on Marcellus Shale Gas, covering history of how gas is formed and extracted, and how the build up and gas extraction process impacts our outdoor activities.

You might want to come early to snowshoe or ski the beautiful trails in nearby Bear Swamp State Forest.  Then buy some of Al’s soup or chili to warm you up back at the Lake Como Inn.

 Sponsored by the Tri-County Skaneateles Lake Pure Water Association

For more info and future events in the Skaneateles Lake watershed  fivetownwatershed.wordpress.com
Questions?  msmenapace@gmail.com

*Chris  Burger owns Horizon Enterprises; is Co-founder and Chair of the Binghamton Regional Sustainability Coalition; and is a member of: the Broome County Government Gas Drilling Education Committee, the Center for Civic Engagement , the NYS Sierra Club Gas Task Force,  NYS Council of Churches Public Policy Commission, and the Southern Tier East Regional Development Strategy Committee.

Dr. Ingraffea’s Letter from Gas Industry

Oct 15: This is the letter the gas industry WOULD write if they were as keen on safety as they claim to be – by Prof. Tony Ingraffea

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alison-rose-levy/an-engineer-drafts-a-lett_b_762133.html

Alison Rose Levy
www.healthjournalist.com
Posted: October 15, 2010 12:46 PM
  
What if the Gas Industry Really Wanted to Make Fracking Safer?

Do you know those letters you write to people who are really troubling you — but you usually never send? Well, Cornell Professor Anthony Ingraffea just wrote one.

But in this case, the distinguished senior engineer wrote the letter that the gas industry would write if they were as keen on safety as they claim to be. Although his letter is a fantasy, in it, an earnest, diligent, accountable, and safety concerned gas drilling industry reaches out to all of the citizens of New York and the dozen or so other states where fracking (a higher risk gas drilling process) is happening, or pending.

Admittedly, none of the valuable suggestions that Professor Ingraffea, (who is the Dwight Baum, Professor of Engineering at Cornell), offers in this letter are routine gas company practices. They fully resist such measures. Still, citizens of states where fracking is pending or present, would be well-advised to read Ingraffea’s letter to learn what they are in for, should fracking proceed.

Dear Citizens:

We are writing to ask your permission to develop shale gas in your states using high-volume, slickwater, hydraulic fracturing from long horizontal well legs (HVSHF).

Although you have allowed us to produce oil and gas for many years, we recognize that we are now asking you to allow us to do much more intense development than ever before, using a technology never before used in your area. We acknowledge our development plan for your states might eventually involve over 400,000 wells alone, with thousands more in other shale, and be valued in the trillions of dollars, over decades to come.

We have seen how such intense development with this technology has caused problems where we are using it already in gas shales. We have listened closely to your concerns about these problems, and others on the horizon, so we are writing you now to make a compact with you. We understand that you are granting us a privilege, that, collectively, all of you have to give us the right to develop your gas, because, quite honestly, our plans will significantly affect all of you, not just landowners with whom we might have a business relationship.

Therefore, if you give us the permission we seek, here are our promises to you:

1. Since we will not be developing in your area for another 2-3 years, we have time to help you prepare for our arrival:

* We will immediately fund appropriate training programs in your community colleges to produce homegrown workers for our industry. We will subsidize tuition for the students who commit to work in our industry. Those workers will get right-of-first-refusal on our job openings.

* We will immediately fund appropriate training programs for your emergency response teams — fire, police, medical, and spill hazards — and we will equip them at our expense.

* We recognize that our heavy equipment will damage many of your roads and bridges. We will start now to pay to upgrade these so that they all remain usable not just by our equipment, but by you, too, throughout the development process. This will be a “stimulus” to help your unemployment situation now. When development is complete in an area, we will pay for final repairs necessary to leave all impacted roads and bridges in state-of-the-art condition. This will be a legacy gift to you from our industry.

* We will fund the construction or upgrading of regional industrial waste treatment and disposal facilities with adequate capacity to process safely all of the solid and liquid wastes we produce. We will not truck our wastes to other states.

2. We will be transparent about our entire plan for development:

* We will tell you as soon as practicable, but no later than 1 year before start of activity, where and when we will drill, and what pipelines and compressor stations will be needed where and by when.

* We will publish gas and waste production figures from every well, accurately, and on-time.

* We will tell you where your gas is going to market, and not sell your gas to foreign markets.

* We will disclose, completely, all chemicals and other substances we use.

3. We will accept, without debate, all new regulations that might be proposed by your regulatory agencies: your existing regulations are inadequate to cover the new technologies and cumulative impact of HVSHF. We will offer your agencies suggestions for continuous evolution of the regulations as a result of lessons we are learning.

4. With respect to your natural environment legacy:

* For every tree we uproot, we will plant at least 1 replacement. We will reforest all access roads as quickly as we can, and minimize the width of all forest cuts.

* We will pay a fair price for the water we extract from your lakes and rivers, which will average several million gallons per gas well.
* Whatever we break, despoil, or pollute, we will repair, replace, or remediate, at our expense.

5. We will safely dispose of all liquid and solid wastes from our development:

* We will never store any flowback fluids or produced water in open pits. All such fluids will be recycled to the highest extent possible by existing technologies, regardless of increase in cost to us.

* All liquid and solid wastes remaining from recycling will be treated at the above-mentioned industrial waste treatment plants.

* We will provide radiation monitoring equipment on every well pad: any materials, including drill cuttings, leaving a well pad that trigger an alarm will be sent to a licensed radioactive waste disposal facility.

6. We will not cause an increase in the tax levy on your citizens.

* We will agree to a substantial increase in permit fees to reflect the expected 4-fold increase in person-time we expect you to spend on review of permits for HVSHF.

* We will agree to a state severance tax, the level of which will be floating, according to an accurate accounting of all costs to the state and municipalities.

7. We will practice what we preach about clean fuels and emissions:

* Every truck, every generator, every pump, every compressor will run on natural gas — no diesel, no gasoline engines.

* We will not allow uncaptured gaseous emissions from any of our processes: no evaporation from open pits, no pressure releases from compressor stations or condensate tanks.

8. We will be sensitive to noise and light pollution, even if a community does not have zoning restrictions in place to regulate such:

* All of our pads and compressor stations will have sound/light suppression measures in place before startup.

* Site drill pads, compressor stations, and pipelines in collaboration with the community.

9. We will not unduly stress any of your communities:

* We will never experiment with drilling many wells in a small area over a brief period of time.

* We will abide by all area and time restrictions on permitting.

* We will never contest loss of water use by any citizen. If a well is lost, we will replace it with whatever type of supply is requested by its owner at our expense.

* We will never require a citizen harmed by our development to promise silence in return for remediation.

Finally, and humbly, we note that even our best plans and efforts will come up short, sometime, someplace, somehow. Therefore, in addition to all the contributions noted above, we also pledge to establish an escrow account which will receive 1% of the value of all gas produced from shale gas wells using HVSHF each year. This account will be administered by an independent 3rd party, advised by an independent panel you select, and will be used as an emergency fund to compensate those financially or physically harmed by our development in your state.

Yours truly,
The Gas Industry

**************************************************************************************

Gosh, that’s a pretty thorough letter. Too bad they’ve never written one like it. But what if they did? How should citizens respond? Would fracking be safe enough to consider if we all woke up one day, and (surprise) all of these measures were guaranteed to be implemented?

Well, Professor Ingraffea has a draft response. Here it is:

Dear Gas Industry

We have observed, calculated, thought, done the science, and we have concluded that
even “doing it right” is wrong.

No thanks.

The Citizens who live over the Marcellus Shale

 

Oil, Gas Firms Find It Harder To Drill On U.S. Land : NPR

Oil, Gas Firms Find It Harder To Drill On U.S. Land : NPR. Jan 5, 2011

Since the Deepwater Horizon accident in the Gulf of Mexico, the oil industry has complained loudly that the government is dragging its feet in approving new offshore drilling projects. Now the industry says it’s experiencing similar problems in the Rocky Mountains.

There, companies bid for the right to drill for natural gas on federal land. In recent years, environmental groups have found they can slow down the boom-town pace of drilling by challenging those leases, as a way of protecting special places.

It’s a tactic that has upset companies that drill for natural gas.

“We’re tired of spending our money, having the government cash our check and taking our money, and not issuing leases,” says Nerd Gas Co. senior vice president Cary Brus.

“We believe it’s a breach of contract. … They took our money; we want our leases,” says Brus, whose company has joined a lawsuit that claims the Bureau of Land Management is breaking the law.

The Mineral Leasing Act says the BLM has 60 days to award a lease. But a government report released last summer found that the agency was able to meet that deadline less than 10 percent of the time in the Rocky Mountain region.

Part of the reason is that these leases are also subject to other regulations designed to protect the environment. Environmental groups have challenged leases after they are sold, based on concerns for animals like pronghorn antelope, mule dehttp://seamus.npr.org/new_cms/SelectStoryEditorRouting.do?routingAction=LoadFeature&selEditFeature=132658302er and sage grouse that could be pushed out of their native habitat by drilling operations.

“One of the great things about this state is, we have world-class wildlife,” says Joy Bannon, field director for the Wyoming Wildlife Federation. “We also have world-class energy resources, and we need to find a balance of that.”

Environmental groups have worried that special places were being handed over to the oil and gas industry without much scrutiny.

Joy Bannon of the Wyoming Wildlife Federation examines a map for a BLM lease sale her group challenged.
Enlarge Jeff Brady/NPRJoy Bannon of the Wyoming Wildlife Federation examines a map for a BLM lease sale her group challenged.

Joy Bannon of the Wyoming Wildlife Federation examines a map for a BLM lease sale her group challenged.

Jeff Brady/NPRJoy Bannon of the Wyoming Wildlife Federation examines a map for a BLM lease sale her group challenged.

“Under the last half of the Bush administration, there was an avalanche of oil and gas leasing activity,” says Erik Molvar, executive director of the Biodiversity Conservation Alliance.

Molvar says groups like his started challenging leases as a way of slowing that avalanche. In his view, public land in Wyoming should be available for all kinds of uses, including recreation.

“For so many years, the oil and gas industry has had the entire pie of all the public lands all to themselves,” Molvar says.

But that changed when Barack Obama became president nearly two years ago. While George W. Bush’s administration was focused on oil and gas development on public land, Obama favors renewable energy. Those changing priorities made it difficult for BLM workers to keep up with awarding leases.

“Prior to February 2009, we were about two months behind,” says Julie Weaver, chief of fluid minerals adjudication at the BLM office in Cheyenne, Wyo.

“After the change in the administration, we had to step back and do some re-evaluation, and because of that we have a backlog,” she says.

The agency hopes to be caught up by Feb. 1, Weaver says. The BLM is also changing its leasing process, so that concerns from environmental groups are addressed before a lease goes to auction. That will likely lead to fewer leases sold, and less money for the federal treasury.

Meanwhile, the industry has started losing interest in drilling on public land.

“I think you have seen some pullback in activity,” says Kathleen Sgamma, director of government and public policy at Western Energy Alliance. “We’ve gotten very clear signals from this administration that it’s going to be difficult to get leases, it’s going to be difficult to get permits and project approvals.”

Sgamma says that’s a shame, because her industry could be providing thousands of jobs at a time when the country needs them.

 

Incidents where hydraulic fracturing is a suspected cause of drinking water contamination | Amy Mall’s Blog | Switchboard, from NRDC

Incidents where hydraulic fracturing is a suspected cause of drinking water contamination | Amy Mall’s Blog | Switchboard, from NRDC.