Bill in Albany to Set Up Fund for Hydraulic Fracturing Accidents – NYTimes.com
August 9, 2011
Bill in Albany to Set Up Fund for Hydraulic Fracturing Accidents – NYTimes.com.
Gas Drilling Awareness for Cortland County
August 8, 2011
Waterfront project seeks input from residents | Press & Sun-Bulletin | pressconnects.com.
Those who have an opinion about the recreational use of area rivers are invited to participate in a survey that will be used for future planning of the region’s waterways.
The online survey is part of the Broome County Intermunicipal Waterfront Project, which seeks input on recreation use along the Chenango, Delaware, Susquehanna, and Tioughnioga rivers. The survey was developed by the BU Center for Applied Community Research & Development, according to Project Administrator Ruth Lewis.
The survey will be posted throughout the month of August and can be accessed at either the Town of Vestal Parks
Department website — Four Rivers Recreational Survey– or at www.surveymonkey.com/s/XXXG7HT.
The survey was developed as a result of the demographic data provided by the project consulting firm, Lewis said.
“By conducting this survey,” she said, “we are hoping to collect current information that applies specifically to the people of Broome County and the Southern Tier, rather than to a census-based population group that Broome County falls into. We are hoping that if a sufficient number of people participate in the survey, we’ll have a more accurate picture of local outdoor recreational practices and preferences.”
The more accurate and comprehensive the data collection, Lewis said, the better able planners will be able to develop long-range plans that are responsive to the needs and wants of the public.
“Thus, we are encouraging everyone to spend a few minutes taking the survey and sharing their views,” she said.
The Broome County Intermunicipal Waterfront Project is funded by a grant from the state’s Local Waterfront Revitalization Program. Twenty-two municipalities on four rivers are participating in the project, which is an economic development endeavor. The Town of Vestal, working in conjunction with Broome County, is lead agency for the project.
For questions about the waterfront project or the survey, contact Lewis at 748-1514, ext. 388, at 749-4541 or at rlewis@vestalny.com.
August 6, 2011
DEC, major gas company locked in land battle | The Ithaca Journal | theithacajournal.com.
ALBANY — One of the country’s largest natural gas
producers and the state of New York appear headed for a battle over a soon-to-be-expiring contract for the natural gas rights on state forestland.
Chesapeake Energy is contending that the company’s gas leases on 15,472 acres of state-owned land in central New York
and the Southern Tier should be extended as the state decides how to regulate hydraulic fracturing to extract natural gas.
The leases, which were signed in 2006, are set to expire Nov. 15.
In a letter obtained by Gannett’s Albany Bureau, Chesapeake wrote to the state Department of Environmental Conservation in February that the leases should be extended until the state starts issuing certain drilling permits.
Because the state has yet to allow high-volume hydraulic fracturing — a newer technique used with natural gas drilling — the company believes it has legal ground to prolong the lease, wrote Henry Hood, the company’s senior vice president.
“Chesapeake regrets these circumstances, including the need for this communication,” Hood wrote. “Chesapeake looks forward to the time when it can move forward with the safe and responsible development of the shale resources in New York State
.”
The company made the claim under “force majeure,” a legal clause inserted in many contracts that allows either party to extend the length of the deal if unforeseen circumstances prevent it from being carried out. For the state’s leases with Chesapeake, the clause includes “acts of God, work stoppages due to labor disputes or strikes, fires, explosions, epidemics, riots, war rebellion, sabotage or the like.”
In a statement, the DEC didn’t rule out legal action to end the leases in November.
“We are in the process of determining our next steps,” spokeswoman Emily DeSantis said.
Similar attempts to extend gas leases have ended up in the courtroom.
Chesapeake is battling two lawsuits in federal court by Southern Tier landowners who received force majeure letters about their leases in recent years. The original expiration dates on those leases, which date back a decade, have already passed. The landowners want to end them permanently — in large part because the land would be more valuable under a new deal.
The company’s force majeure claims are significant because the acreage sits above the massive, gas-rich Marcellus and Utica shale formations. The state leases are on gas rights below state forests in Broome, Tioga, Chemung, Cortland, Schuyler and Steuben counties.
In 2006, the DEC took bids on about 19,000 acres of gas rights below state-owned forestland. Chesapeake and Fortuna Energy (now Talisman Energy) were the winning bidders, paying a combined $9 million up front to the state with a promise of 12.5 percent royalties on any gas produced.
Since then, technological advancements to the hydrofracking process — which injects water, sand and chemicals deep underground to break up shale formations — have made the Marcellus accessible to gas companies.
The value of the gas rights on the land above the formation, such as the state forestland in dispute, has skyrocketed.
In July 2008, then-Gov. David Paterson announced that the state couldn’t issue permits for high-volume hydrofracking until the DEC completed an environmental review and set up permitting guidelines. Last year, he called for the DEC to put out a second draft of its review for public comment, which is set to kick off later this summer.
The DEC is expected to complete its review at some point next year, but put out a preliminary report last month. Chesapeake says the length of the lease has essentially been on pause since July 2008 and will restart when permits are issued.
A Chesapeake official said the company is trying to protect its investment, and the state’s decision to hold off on hydrofracking prevents the company from “fulfilling its obligation for natural-gas production on these properties.”
“Chesapeake has taken reasonable and legal measures to extend the terms of many of our leases in New York State,” Paul Hartman, the company’s director of state government relations in New York, said in a statement. “These measures are based upon the original lease agreements, which can allow for extensions of the original lease term for various reasons.”
Talisman has not filed an extension claim on any of the 3,754 acres of state gas rights it has leased until November. A spokeswoman for the company did not return a call for comment.
Talisman has faced criticism for trying to enforce its expired leases. In 2009, the company agreed to a $192,500 settlement after then-Attorney General Andrew Cuomo found it was misleading customers with its force majeure claims.
Attorneys for private landowners have argued in lawsuits that the state’s permitting freeze doesn’t prohibit Chesapeake from upholding their end of the contract. They have contended that other gas-producing formations — such as the Trenton Black River and the Herkimer sandstone formation — are still accessible and can be drilled without high-volume hydrofracking.
Because the leases date back a decade, the gas-rich Marcellus and Utica formations weren’t on the company’s radar screen at the time, the lawsuits argue.
But while the private landowners’ lawsuits against Chesapeake seek to have the force majeure claims thrown out and allow their below-market-value leases to expire, the situation with the state-owned land could be more complicated.
A draft of the DEC’s proposed regulations for high-volume hydrofracking proposes a ban of surface drilling on state land, despite the existing Talisman and Chesapeake leases. About 32,500 acres of other state-owned gas rights — mostly in the southwest corner of the state — are also under lease to energy companies so long as existing wells on those properties continue to produce natural gas.
The new technology, however, allows companies to drill on a private piece of land before turning the drill bit horizontal and burrowing under neighboring properties. So if the company holds the rights to a private parcel near the state land, it could obtain gas from that state land by drilling horizontally — despite the surface-drilling ban.
But the DEC holds a significant trump card.
Since the department decides whether or not to grant permits, it could simply decide to reject any applications from Chesapeake that includes any drilling on the forestland in question.
Chesapeake declined to discuss specifics, but Hartman said the company would prefer drilling for gas rather than debating over contract language.
“Chesapeake would much rather be drilling wells and creating value for New Yorkers, especially in the Southern Tier where economic development is much needed and for the whole state where clean energy is much needed,” Hartman said.
Once the Chesapeake and Talisman leases do expire, the DEC could choose to put them out for bid again to generate revenue for the state, with a provision banning drilling on the surface of the state’s properties.
The department spokeswoman, however, said it’s not currently in the cards.
“While this would be possible under the revised draft (regulations), we have no plans to do so at this time,” DeSantis said.
Campbell is a staff writer for the Gannett Albany Bureau.
August 4, 2011
Dryden confirms ban on hydraulic fracturing | The Ithaca Journal | theithacajournal.com.
DRYDEN — Applause erupted from most of the 50 or so residents in attendance when the town board unanimously voted to ban hydraulic fracturing in Dryden.
“I’m overjoyed (by the decision),” said resident Hilary Lambert, a member of the Dryden Resource Awareness Coalition, the group that gathered 1,700 residents’ signatures asking the board to ban hydraulic fracturing in town. “I’m hoping that the example set by the Town of Dryden will be paid attention to by other towns state-wide.”
By Tuesday night’s action, Dryden became the second town in Tompkins County after Ithaca
to ban the gas drilling technique, and at meetings over the past several months, it appeared that at least three quarters of residents in attendance supported a ban. Ulysses, whose residents also circulated a petition asking for a ban, is widely expected to also vote into law its own drilling ban on Aug. 10.
Dryden Supervisor Mary Ann Sumner said that the heavy industry and pollution associated with hydraulic fracturing for naturalgas
is at odds with the town’s comprehensive plan and many residents’ way of life.
“Sometimes we’re not able to do things that the majority wants, but this time we can,” she said.
The board’s decision, she said, was not a ban so much as a clarification of existing zoning, which “prohibits all uses which are not expressly permitted,” and does not permit extractive industry, she said.
“It removes any doubt that extractive activities are permitted,” said board member Jason Leifer, who co-authored the legislation.
In addition, the ban will be added only to the current zoning, not the proposed new zoning code that town officials have been working toward completing in coming months, though Leifer said they plan to add the ban to the proposed zoning as well. As with any legislation, board members said in the event that the town decides hydraulic fracturing has become safer, or if citizens elect a new town board, the ban can be overturned.
Sumner and each town board member explained their feelings on the vote
, with all stating that they felt a ban was the only way to represent the electorate and keep their consciences clean.
While town officials have said previously that they could face legal action as a result of a blanket ban, Sumner said the recent Draft Generic Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement released by the state Department of Conservation regarding hydraulic fracturing proposes that drilling applications conform to local zoning, which she said reaffirms the town’s ban.
“It’s one more way of hearing from the state that local land use authority may be respected,” she said.
There were a few opponents in attendance, who were displeased by the board’s vote.
“The town board didn’t look at the economic risk of this,” said Henry Kramer, a resident and member of the newly created Dryden Safe Energy Coalition, which supports regulated gas drilling in the area. “They assumed power they didn’t have. This will not end here. There’s the possibility of an appeal, and litigation.”
Resident Ron Szymanski, who is opposed to a blanket ban on gas drilling, said he presented town board members with questions he wanted answered about how drilling would affect the town’s tax base and residents’ right to their mineral rights, and he hasn’t heard back.
“They said ‘we’ll get to it when we can,’ but that’s not acceptable,” he said.
August 3, 2011
Interesting that IOGA is meeting with local editorial boards.
August 2, 2011
Editorial overlooked facts on Auburn waste
To the Editor:
Is the erosion of the fourth estate at hand? One would expect hyperbole and condescension from cable news pundits, but newspapers, the last bastion of credibility, are they too caving into the economic pressures of the current news climate? My cause for concern is the July 25 editorial, “Money-Loser: Wastewater ban will cost Auburn’s ratepayers next year.”
The tone of the piece was drenched with derision and offered little to no facts. A fact that was glaringly overlooked was that Municipal Utilities Director Vicki Murphy asked the natural gas companies to stop delivering because pre-treatment testing showed that pollutant levels were out of compliance with the permits. So the fiscally responsible members of Auburn City Council, namely Mayor Michael Quill and Councilors Gilda Brower and Thomas McNabb, wanted to be prudent in not budgeting money from this tenuous revenue stream. They knew the money would not be there.
The $600,000 figure is an arbitrary figure used by Councilor Matt Smith for political gain. There is no sound, documented evidence that the 2011-2012 budget should have included that figure, given the fact that the companies were out of compliance in the previous fiscal quarter.
So that leaves us with the question: Why did the editorial board slam a small group of native Auburnians trying to protect their downstream neighbors from the contaminants in gas drilling wastewater? Perhaps it was easier to listen to an angry, uniformed, opportunistic politician than to research and look at the documented facts.
Terry Cuddy
Auburn
Jul 25, 2011 … Auburn rocks! The council sure struck a blow against hydrofracking, … from natural gas wells at the municipal sewage treatment plant?
http://blog.syracuse.com/opinion/2011/07/money-loser_wastewater_ban_wil.html
Original July 7 report http://www.syracuse.com/news/index.ssf/2011/07/auburn_votes_to_ban_accepting.html
August 1, 2011
Corporate_Presentation_110724.pdf (application/pdf Object).
Norse Energy Plans for New York
August 1, 2011
August 1, 2011
ALBANY — The public will likely have to wait until September to get its say on the state’s review of the controversial hydraulic fracturing process for natural gas drilling.
The Department of Environmental Conservation received a report late last month from a Buffalo-based consulting company that proposes ways to limit the effects on communities and municipalities from an anticipated spike in activity by the natural gas industry.
The department now is considering how to plug the consultant’s recommendations into its own proposed regulations, spokeswoman Emily DeSantis said Monday. After that, an updated draft of DEC proposals will be made public and opened up to a 60-day comment period by “late summer,” likely beginning in September, she said.
The comment period was originally expected to start this month.
“What we’ve been saying all along is that there is no firm time frame for this,” DeSantis said. “We’re taking the time to make sure this is done right.”
The DEC’s recommendations for curbing the environmental impact of high-volume hydrofracking — a method involving the injection of a mix of water, sand and chemicals deep into gas-rich underground shale formations — have been three years in the making.
An initial draft review received 13,000 comments and packed auditoriums at public hearings in 2009.
Ecology and Environment Inc. was hired by the DEC earlier this year to highlight both the positive and negative socioeconomic effects of natural gas drilling in the Marcellus and Utica shale formations, which sit beneath the Southern Tier and other portions of New York.
The company’s report, which will be made public when the comment period opens, was also set to include an analysis of visual and noise impacts from the industry, as well as the effects of increased truck traffic on the state’s infrastructure.
Katherine Nadeau, water and natural resources program director for Environmental Advocates of New York, said she hopes the consultant’s study considers human health.
“Part of what we’re hoping to see here is some assessment of human health impacts,” Nadeau said. “This is not something that has been included anywhere else in the (DEC) document, and it’s something that concerned citizens across the state have been calling for.”
The DEC also hasn’t made a final decision on whether or not to host public hearings on its latest draft review. That decision will be announced when department officials have a better handle on the time frame of the public-comment period, DeSantis said.
Scott Kurkoski, an attorney representing the Joint Landowners Coalition of New York, said the coalition’s members are urging the DEC not to host another round of hearings.
Hydrofracking-related hearings across the Southern Tier have at times attracted large protests and heated rhetoric.
“These public hearings are used for political reasons and end up being circus atmospheres,” Kurkoski said. “The good, substantive comments can be put in writing and sent to the DEC, and we know the DEC will really be able to look at all of those substantive comments.”
“From the landowners’ point of view, we just want the DEC to stay on track and to have this released in a timely manner,” he continued.
Nadeau disagreed, calling public hearings an “incredibly important part of the public process.”
“Public hearings are a really important vehicle for everyone who wants to be heard to have their comments heard and to be counted on the record,” Nadeau said.
Permits for high-volume hydrofracking won’t be issued until a final version of the DEC report is complete, which isn’t expected until some point next year, according to the department.