(2) Greenhouse Gas Impact of Shale Gas Development

(2) Greenhouse Gas Impact of Shale Gas Development.

http://globalcouFractured Communities, Fractured Lives.Final Report: Grant from Mellon Foundation/Dickinson College including maps and photo-essays now available here! | Fractured Communities, Fractured Lives

Final Report: Grant from Mellon Foundation/Dickinson College including maps and photo-essays now available here! | Fractured Communities, Fractured Lives.

Playing for Keeps along the Susquehanna A Community-Integrated GIS of Land and Water Uses and Rights in Rural Pennsylvania’s Marcellus Shale Natural Gas Play Final Report Dr. Simona L. Perry 07/27/2011perrypostdoc_finalreport_july20111.pdf (application/pdf Object)

Playing for Keeps along the Susquehanna
A Community-Integrated GIS of Land and Water Uses and Rights in Rural Pennsylvania’s Marcellus Shale
Natural Gas Play
Final Report
Dr. Simona L. Perry
07/27/2011perrypostdoc_finalreport_july20111.pdf (application/pdf Object)
.

Chesapeake Bay battered by Susquehanna flooding – News – The Times-Tribune

Chesapeake Bay battered by Susquehanna flooding – News – The Times-Tribune.

Why should the solution fall on the sewer plants and the farmers instead of the gas industry that’s causing the increase in sediment and pollution?

On Sun, Oct 2, 2011 at 10:37 PM, Brett J <brett76544@hotmail.com> wrote:
This article looks just nice, but look into the numbers and remember
that the two year testing for how much sediment, total nitrogen, and
total phosporus is going on now.  So do you think PA will be above or
below the 2009 testing for the discharge into the Chesapeake Bay.
Then think about NY.  Then read the strick letter, from the EPA on 29
December 2009 to the head of the Chesapeake Bay Commission.  I guess
building sewer plants to the limits of technology may be in order if
the 2013 testing results are not better than 2009’s.  I think the 2011
testing is already exceeding the 2009.

This weekend I was able to talk with someone that did his thesis paper
on the Chesapeake Bay plan last December and it was great to talk to
someone that knew the ins and outs of the different TMDL’s.  The thing
both of us agreed on is no one will meet the TMDL or even the 60% goal
for 2017, but NY might be close to the 2017 goal.  There is just too
much coming from Virgina and Maryland.  Then the Susquehanna River is
just too, big to control and farmers are going to be a rare sight in
the SRBC area if the EPA does what is said it would do.

http://thetimes-tribune.com/news/chesapeake-bay-battered-by-susquehanna-flooding-1.1211973#axzz1ZgXGilox

Bret Jennings

dSGEIS economic/social section well build-out scenario

Here are some figures you may want to use as you comment on the
revised dSGEIS, testify at hearings, speak to your neighbors, etc.

The “average” (i.e. not low and not high) development scenario
explored in the socioeconomic section of the revised dSGEIS for Region
A (Broome, Chemung, & Tioga Counties) assumes that over the course of
30 years, 21,067 (18,923 horizontal wells and 2,144 vertical wells)
would be drilled in Region A.

This would mean that an average of 702 gas wells would be added to the
region each year, for 30 years. (In reality, some years would see
fewer wells than 702 added, some would see more.)

If 21,067 wells were drilled in Region A, the final well density would
be about 13 wells per square mile. That’s about one gas well for every
16 current residents of Region A. (References & calculations shown
below.)

On p. 4-6 of the socioeconomic section of the rdSGEIS, there is a
chart (Table 4-2) showing the major development scenario assumptions
for each representative region. Region A includes Broome, Tioga, and
Chemung Counties and is expected to be the most heavily drilled region
in the state. (See p. 4-5 of the rdSGEIS for discussion of drilling in
the various regions.)According to Table 4-2, in an “average” (i.e. not low and not high)
drilling scenario, over the course of 30 years, 21,067 (18,923
horizontal wells & 2,144 vertical wells) gas wells would be drilled in
Region A.I obtained the following figures from the U.S. Census Bureau. The
population figures are from the 2010 census; the land area figures are
from the 2000 census. (See http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/36000.html)Broome County:  population  200,600;  area  706.82 square milesTioga County:  population 51,125; area 518.69 square miles

Chemung County: population 88,830; area 408.17 square miles

Adding those up, we have, for the three-county region:  population
340,555; area 1633.68 square miles

Using the above three-county population and land area figures and
assuming the “average” development level given in Table 4-2 as 21,067
wells, it turns out that in 30 years, the three-county area would have
about 12.9 gas wells per square mile. That’s one gas well for every
16.17 current residents of the region. Since some areas (e.g. urban
cores) probably would not be drilled, an even higher well density in
the drilled areas would be needed to reach the estimated
_____________________

The 81,000-well figure is in the same general ballpark as the “high”
development model in the rdSGEIS, which assumes 62,781 shale gas wells
statewide with 31,395 of those wells being in Region A (the counties
of Broome, Chemung, & Tioga). Chances seem fairly certain that Region
A will see a higher density of wells than most regions. The revised
rdSGEIS assumes that the Broome/Chemung/Tioga area will be the
location of about half the shale gas wells in the state, so if the
81,000-well figure is correct, perhaps our area will see something
like 40,000 wells (i.e. about twice the density I discussed in my
original post in this thread).While no one knows for certain how many wells there will be, it’s
important to communicate the ballpark figures to the public. I think
the number of wells being contemplated–whether it’s 20,000 wells in
the three-county area or 30,000 or 40,000–is almost certainly far
higher than what most people living in those counties are
envisioning.Large numbers are difficult to visualize, so I think it is critical to
state these numbers in ways that will allow us all to visualize the
impact. As I said above, using the DEC’s own “average” development
scenario, we would end up with a number of wells equivalent to having
about 13 wells per square mile in every single square mile of Broome,
Chemung, & Tioga Counties. Since there will almost certainly be some
parts of the three-county area that will not be drilled (e.g. urban
cores), the areas that are drilled would have to end up with a higher
density than 13 wells per square mile in order to reach the 21,067
well figure. Another way to say it is that there would be about one
gas well for every 16 current residents (men, women, & children) of
the three counties. Even with multiple wells clustered on each pad,
that is obviously an enormous level of industrialization, particularly
when one considers the access roads, pipelines, compressor stations,
truck traffic, noise, etc that will accompany the wells. (I am
wondering, as I type this, just how much more prone to flooding our
area will be when a lot of the trees have been cut to make way for
well pads, roads, and pipelines. That’s what we all need–more
flooding, right?)

The high profits being projected are based on drilling a huge number
of wells with an accompanying high degree of industrialization (i.e.
pipelines, access roads, compressors, etc). So when people hear how
much money there is to be made, they need to understand that in order
to get the money wells will have to be drilled at a tremendous rate.
Again, we’re talking, ballpark, 13 wells per square mile, one gas well
for every 16 residents. The wells would be constructed over 30 years,
with an average of 700 wells drilled each year in the Broome/Chemung/
Tioga area. That’s 700 new chances for industrial accidents, every
year, year after year, for 30 years, and if they hope to reach that
21,067-well number, they will not just be drilling in remote areas.

Remember: 13 wells per square mile, one well for every 16 residents–
and that’s the DEC’s “average” development scenario, NOT the high-
development scenario. How many people would want to live with that? We
need to get the word out–a lot of people probably have no idea what
these numbers are.

——————–

The 81,000-well figure is in the same general ballpark as the “high”
development model in the rdSGEIS, which assumes 62,781 shale gas wells
statewide with 31,395 of those wells being in Region A (the counties
of Broome, Chemung, & Tioga). Chances seem fairly certain that Region
A will see a higher density of wells than most regions. The revised
rdSGEIS assumes that the Broome/Chemung/Tioga area will be the
location of about half the shale gas wells in the state, so if the
81,000-well figure is correct, perhaps our area will see something
like 40,000 wells (i.e. about twice the density I discussed in my
original post in this thread).

While no one knows for certain how many wells there will be, it’s
important to communicate the ballpark figures to the public. I think
the number of wells being contemplated–whether it’s 20,000 wells in
the three-county area or 30,000 or 40,000–is almost certainly far
higher than what most people living in those counties are
envisioning.

Large numbers are difficult to visualize, so I think it is critical to
state these numbers in ways that will allow us all to visualize the
impact. As I said above, using the DEC’s own “average” development
scenario, we would end up with a number of wells equivalent to having
about 13 wells per square mile in every single square mile of Broome,
Chemung, & Tioga Counties. Since there will almost certainly be some
parts of the three-county area that will not be drilled (e.g. urban
cores), the areas that are drilled would have to end up with a higher
density than 13 wells per square mile in order to reach the 21,067
well figure. Another way to say it is that there would be about one
gas well for every 16 current residents (men, women, & children) of
the three counties. Even with multiple wells clustered on each pad,
that is obviously an enormous level of industrialization, particularly
when one considers the access roads, pipelines, compressor stations,
truck traffic, noise, etc that will accompany the wells. (I am
wondering, as I type this, just how much more prone to flooding our
area will be when a lot of the trees have been cut to make way for
well pads, roads, and pipelines. That’s what we all need–more
flooding, right?)

The high profits being projected are based on drilling a huge number
of wells with an accompanying high degree of industrialization (i.e.
pipelines, access roads, compressors, etc). So when people hear how
much money there is to be made, they need to understand that in order
to get the money wells will have to be drilled at a tremendous rate.
Again, we’re talking, ballpark, 13 wells per square mile, one gas well
for every 16 residents. The wells would be constructed over 30 years,
with an average of 700 wells drilled each year in the Broome/Chemung/
Tioga area. That’s 700 new chances for industrial accidents, every
year, year after year, for 30 years, and if they hope to reach that
21,067-well number, they will not just be drilling in remote areas.

Remember: 13 wells per square mile, one well for every 16 residents–
and that’s the DEC’s “average” development scenario, NOT the high-
development scenario. How many people would want to live with that? We
need to get the word out–a lot of people probably have no idea what
these numbers are.

Elizabeth Radow on Real Estate impacts of Residential Drilling on The Capitol Pressroom for October 3, 2011 | WCNY Blogs

The Capitol Pressroom for October 3, 2011 | WCNY Blogs.

Coming up on the Capitol Pressroom –

Brian McMahon, ED of the NYS Economic Development Council helps us understand how the 4+ billion dollar investment in the state by high tech firms will work.

And

Elizabeth Radow, Special Counsel in the firm of Cuddy and Feder, with duel expertise in real estate finance law and transactional law has some legal advice for New Yorkers who have signed leases with gas drillers. Specifically, she has up-to-date information about insuring yourself against
liability. Radow is in the New York State Bar Association’s Real Property and Environmental, Energy and Resources Section.

Attorney Elizabeth Radow will be appearing as a speaker along with Al Appleton at the Mamaroneck Public Library at 7pm – 9pm tomorrow for a program focusing on gas drilling’s impacts to county residents. She will specifically address the risks from underinsured gas companies to homeowners, the secondary mortgage market and ultimately, taxpayers. Al Appleton, former commissioner of the New York City Department of
Environmental Protection will be speaking as well For more information on this forum called:

“Why Natural Gas Drilling in Upstate NY Impacts Westchester County Residents”

FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT:
Elisabeth Radow, (914) 761-1300; (914) 833-3753

Posted in : Capitol Pressroom

Hydrofracking panel in disagreement on future plans – YNN, Your News Now

Hydrofracking panel in disagreement on future plans – YNN, Your News Now.

Hoping to help the homeless – News – Daily Review

Hoping to help the homeless – News – Daily Review.

Drilling and the DEC: Responding to Economic Impacts Oct. 15, Ithaca, 1-3:30

Drilling and the DEC: Responding to Economic Impacts
Free, public forum 

Saturday, October 15, 2011
1:00 – 3:30 p.m., Women’s Community Building
100 W. State Street, Ithaca, NY
Grassroots activists, experts, and local officials concerned about protecting our local agriculture and tourism economies, community character, roads and infrastructure, will offer information on the revised Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement (SGEIS).  Speakers will address the portion of proposed drilling guidelines that intends to mitigate adverse social and economic impacts such as truck traffic, threats to food crops, and demand on local services.
Panel Moderator:
Martha Robertson, Chair of the Tompkins County Legislature
Panelists: 
Ed Marx, Tompkins County Commissioner of Planning
Jannette Barth, Ph.D., Economist, Pepacton Institute
Barbara Lifton, NY State Assemblywoman for Tompkins and Cortland Counties
James (Chip) Northrup, Partner and investor in oil and gas projects, served on Governor of Texas’ Energy Advisory Council
Wes Gillingham (invited, not confirmed), Program Director, Catskill Mountainkeeper
The NY DEC hired a consulting firm, Ecology and Environment, to assist in analyzing social and economic impacts.  Join us for this event to learn what’s better about the new sGEIS, what concerns remain, and what are some recommendations for the DEC.
Attendees will be encouraged to submit comments on the newly revised SGEIS to the DEC.  Instruction on how to use online formatting and informational links will be provided and made available widely afterwards.
This event will be videotaped and available through the internet at www.shaleshockmedia.org several days following the meeting.
The forum is sponsored by numerous local organizations including:
Shaleshock Action Alliance  *  ROUSE (Residents Opposing Unsafe Shale-gas Extraction)  *  DRAC (Dryden Resource Awareness Coalition)  *  Cayuga Lake Watershed Network  *  Social Justice Committee, First Unitarian Church of Ithaca  *  ENSAW (Enfield Neighbors for Safe Air and Water)  *  NYRAD  *  Groton Resource Awareness Coalition  *  Sustainable Tompkins  *  Committee on Justice, Peace, and the Integrity of Creation, Ithaca First Presbyterian Church  *  Concerned Citizens of Ulysses  *  FLEASED  *  Neighbors of the Onondaga Nation  *  GDACC (Gas Drilling Awareness for Cortland County)  *  People for a Healthy Environment  *
For more information contact Martha Robertson: mrob@twcny.rr.com,
Hilary Lambert: hilary_lambert@yahoo.com, Sara Hess: sarahess63@yahoo.com.

Throop buys in to test drilling waste at Keystone – News – The Times-Tribune

Throop buys in to test drilling waste at Keystone – News – The Times-Tribune.