Energy companies insist they can extend gas leases; landowners take them to court | syracuse.com

Energy companies insist they can extend gas leases; landowners take them to court | syracuse.com.

Energy companies insist they can extend gas leases; landowners take them to court

Published: Sunday, February 27, 2011, 10:10 AM     Updated: Sunday, February 27, 2011, 11:43 AM

2011-02-17-db-Hydrofracking.JPGMark Petitte crossed out a clause on his gas drilling lease with Chesapeake Energy that would have allowed the company to automatically renew the lease when it expired Feb. 11. The company says it is extending the lease on his Otisco property anyway.

Upcoming Events

New York Gas Development Update & Leasing Considerations

(Free and Open to the Public)

Monday, February 28, 2011, 7-9 Grange Auditorium, NYS Grange Headquarters, Cortland, NY

Brett Chedzoy, Cornell Cooperative Extension: Update on the current status of gas development in NY and leasing recommendations. Joe Heath, GDACC: Terminating an Expired Lease
Sponsored by the Cortland County Soil and Water Conservation District (SWCD)

What Teachers Should Know About Hydrofracking (Free and Open to the Public)
Wednesday, March 2, 2011, 7pm, SUNY Cortland, Sperry 205

Chris and Bob Applegate, GDACC (Gas Drilling Awareness for Cortland County)

Sponsored by the SUNY Cortland Education Club and the Center for Gender and Intercultural StudiesWomen of the Shale: Many Routes to Activism (Free and Open to the Public)
Thursday, March 3, 2011, 4:30pm,  SUNY Cortland Old Main G10

Jeanne Shenandoah, Onondaga Nation
Lindsay Speer, Neighbors of the Onondaga Nation, ShaleshockCNY
Lisa Wright, Shaleshock
Sponsored by the SUNY Cortland Center for Gender and Intercultural Studies, Native American Studies Committee


Women of the Shale: Teaching and Activism (Free and Open to the Public)
Wed, March 9, 2011, 7pm  SUNY Cortland, Sperry 205
Chris Applegate, Sheila Cohen, MJ Uttech, Mary Menapace, GDACC
Sponsored by the SUNY Cortland Education Club,  Center for Gender and Intercultural Studies, and GDACC

Sky 4 Video: Firefighters Battle Thick Smoke, Flames In Washington County – Video – WTAE Pittsburgh

Sky 4 Video: Firefighters Battle Thick Smoke, Flames In Washington County – Video – WTAE Pittsburgh.

Sky 4 Video: Firefighters Battle Thick Smoke, Flames In Washington County–Gas well fire

POSTED: 8:38 pm EST February 23, 2011

Residents With Expiring Leases Fight Extensions

Residents With Expiring Leases Fight Extensions–Cortland Standard Feb. 22, 2011

Libous pushes N.Y. role for gas-drilling industry | Press & Sun-Bulletin | pressconnects.com

Libous pushes N.Y. role for gas-drilling industry | Press & Sun-Bulletin | pressconnects.com. Feb. 18, 2011

BINGHAMTON — Sen. Thomas W. Libous has seen the region’s economic future: Drilling for natural gas in the Marcellus Shale.

The era when Broome County could lure significant economic development to the region from other states is over, the senator told members of the Greater Binghamton Chamber of Commerce on Thursday during a chamber-sponsored legislative dialogue with state elected officials.

“This is an opportunity,” Libous said of drilling in the Marcellus Shale, a portion of which lies beneath Broome County. “Let’s not blow it.”

Libous, along with Assemblywoman Donna A. Lupardo, D-Endwell, and Assemblyman Clifford Crouch, R-Guilford, were quizzed Thursday on a variety of topics, including a state-proposed 2 percent property tax cap, pension reform and a proposal from Gov. Andrew Cuomo to create statewide Economic Development Councils.

Libous, a Binghamton Republican who is also deputy majority leader in the Senate, said about 88,000 jobs connected with gas drilling have been created so far in Pennsylvania. Libous said he recently spoke to a trucker from Texas who he met by chance at Greater Binghamton Airport.

Growing in Power, Natural Gas Attracts Enemies – NYTimes.com

Growing in Power, Natural Gas Attracts Enemies – NYTimes.com.

By ANNE C. MULKERN of Greenwire
Published: February 16, 2011
Green

A blog about energy and the environment.

As the fuel grows in market share and political power, several green groups have launched campaigns highlighting potential problems. They raise questions about everything from how natural gas is extracted to how much of a climate benefit it offers over competitors.

“Natural gas, especially newly available unconventional gas, has the potential to dramatically shift the energy landscape in the U.S.,” said Matt Watson, senior energy policy manager at Environmental Defense Fund. “Done right, it could be an important part of de-carbonizing our economy as we ramp up on truly clean energy resources. Done wrong, it could further entrench us on the losing side of the climate equation and do very real damage.”

The efforts build on the buzz of Oscar-nominated “Gasland,” an anti-drilling documentary. The natural gas industry, which calls many aspects of that movie erroneous, argues that the concerns of environmental groups are misplaced.

“We are proud of the extraordinary role that natural gas can play in power generation, transportation and manufacturing to advance cleaner air and improve U.S. energy security,” said Dan Whitten, spokesman for America’s Natural Gas Alliance, the trade group for independent companies. “Our members are committed to the safe and responsible development of this resource.”

Natural gas is surging in use, pushed by record low prices for the fuel.

In 2010, natural gas constituted 24 percent of power generation, from 13 percent in 1996, according to U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA).

EIA projects that by 2024, natural gas will drop back slightly to 21 percent because of growth in renewable power and because the price of natural gas will start to rise, making coal more competitive.

But it could be buoyed by Congress. Some are talking about including the fuel in a clean energy standard, a requirement that utilities generate a portion of their power from less polluting sources.

President Obama in his State of the Union address said he wanted the country to use 80 percent clean power by 2035. In addition to renewable sources, the White House has mentioned meeting that goal with nuclear power, coal with carbon sequestration and some natural gas.

Groups like the Sierra Club have watched that growth and natural gas’s growing clout, and decided that they needed to seek more federal oversight.

“It became very evident that this was a huge, looming problem and we needed to get it right,” said Bruce Hamilton, director of the Sierra Club’s Global Warming and Energy Program. “We don’t just want to open the floodgates [and] at the same time not address the very, very serious impacts that natural gas has on the human and the natural environments.”

The Sierra Club argues that drilling for the fuel can lead to groundwater contamination and problems with leaks into homes. Natural gas drillers, the green group said, enjoy exemptions from parts of several environmental rules.

The Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) contends that there are doubts about the widely held belief that natural gas emits half the greenhouse gases of coal.

The Natural Resources Defense Council, meanwhile, is filing lawsuits against developers it believes have violated federal law. NRDC also is also lobbying for beefed-up regulation of the hydraulic fracturing technique used in some drilling.

On Thursday, the cause gets help from Hollywood. NRDC and Environmental Working Group will join “Gasland” director Josh Fox in lobbying lawmakers on the need for more drilling regulation. Mark Ruffalo, an Oscar-nominated actor, also will attend. Ruffalo lives in New York and Fox part-time in Pennsylvania in towns affected by shale gas development.

The natural gas industry said it has plenty of regulation.

“Natural gas is routinely produced safely in communities across the country,” Whitten said. “This is due to the commitment of our industry to responsible development, and credit also is due to the vigilant oversight of state regulators.

Click link above for more.

WFP Petition to Cuomo to Ban Hydrofrackin in NYS

If we want to protect New York’s drinking water from risky natural gas drilling, we need to act now.

The New York Times just reported on a Congressional investigation into hydraulic fracturing (“fracking”), a drilling method that threatens our water supply and our environment. The investigation reported that companies including Halliburton have been pumping tens of millions of gallons of diesel oil into our water supply as part of the fracking procedure.

After grassroots pressure from tens of thousands of concerned New Yorkers, the State Senate approved a moratorium on fracking this summer. But it’s time to tell Gov. Cuomo that a moratorium isn’t enough — we need to ban fracking permanently in New York before our water supply becomes contaminated.

Sign the Working Families Party telling Gov. Cuomo to ban fracking.  Just go to:

http://action.workingfamiliesparty.org/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=3271

60 Minutes: Undermined in Australia

60 Minutes: Undermined on MSN Video.

http://video.au.msn.com/watch/video/undermined/xslwxn0?tab=m163&mediaid=292658&from=39

Minutes –  Undermined

How’s this for a raw deal: a big company marches onto your land, sinks a well without your permission then proceeds to threaten your livelihood, all with the approval of the government. This is happening all over central west Queensland, as natural gas companies invade Aussie properties in search of riches.
Pub. Date: 16/05/10
Views: 8711
Network:  Channel Nine
Related Links:

Don Siegel: Natural gas condemnation is no laughing matter – Another Voice – The Buffalo News

Don Siegel: Natural gas condemnation is no laughing matter – Another Voice – The Buffalo News.

New drilling concerns in Brockway

New drilling concerns in Brockway.

New drilling concerns in Brockway

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Water stopped flowing briefly to a Brockway Borough Municipal Authority-owned artesian well Thursday when drilling by Flatirons Development pierced the aquifer.
Authority President Mike Arnold said Monday that Flatirons Development started to drill and set the first well casing last week on the borough’s watershed.
Arnold said when the well was drilled and cased, the water came back.
The authority and Flatirons reached an out-of-court settlement last month after the authority sought an injunction to stop Marcellus Shale drilling on its waterhsed. The agreement outlines Flatirons’ obligations if its operations interrupt the availability of water or contaminate the supply. It does not preclude drilling.
“I take it then there’s a direct link between the drilling and the water supply,” PJ Piccirillo, a member of the Brockway Area Clean Water Alliance, said.
Alliance member Bruce Miller asked if every time Flatirons drills a new well this is likely to happen.