Posts Tagged ‘state forest land’
Bill may halt gas leasing on forest land
The Associated Press
HARRISBURG — A bill to temporarily stop the leasing of state forest land for natural gas drilling has state House approval and is headed to the Senate.
The House of Representatives approved the bill 157-33 on Tuesday. It would immediately enact a three-year moratorium.
Proponents want a thorough environmental assessment of the impact of drilling on the land before more can be leased.
A spokesman for the Senate’s Republican majority says there’s no plan to act and the state already has strong regulatory authority.
The Rendell administration has leased more than 100,000 acres to companies hungry to explore the Marcellus Shale natural gas formation.
Copyright: Times Leader
Activists advocate gas drilling regulations
PennEnvironment group wants to ensure water, land isn’t damaged by natural gas exploration.
CBy Rory Sweeneyrsweeney@timesleader.com
Staff Writer
According to a state environmental advocacy group, Pennsylvania needs to do more to ensure that gas drilling creating profits today won’t end up like the coal mining of yesterday that left a costly environmental legacy for the next generation.
In a recent report, PennEnvironment outlined various changes it recommends to the state’s approach to the drilling industry.
They include: strengthening clean-water laws and regulatory tools; making sensitive public lands off limits to drilling and instituting a severance tax on the extracted gas.
“I think we’ve leased out too much state forest land,” said state Rep. Greg Vitali, D-Delaware County, who attended a teleconference last week.
He added that it’s “irresponsible” to lease more until the production is taxed.
“It’s only political influence … that’s kept the Marcellus Shale from being taxed,” he said.
He hoped to get such a tax in the next state budget cycle.
At issue is how to best oversee the increased drilling in the gas-laden shale, which is about a mile underground throughout much of northern and western Pennsylvania. While the state Department of Environmental Protection has promised increased oversight, a rash of issues at various drilling sites has residents concerned that companies will strip out the gas and leave pollution in their wake.
The report lists various regulatory changes PennEnvironment believes would minimize the potential realization of those fears.
“We disagree with the idea that dilution is the solution,” said Brady Russell of the Clean Water Action organization.
He suggested that drilling companies should foot the estimated $300 bill for landowners to get baseline water testing before drilling begins because it can be difficult for landowners to find that money.
The report also calls for better right-to-know laws to force drillers to release the kinds and amounts of chemicals they use and account for the water they consume, while providing for public input that includes allowing health officials opportunities to review proposed permits.
The report also suggests rewriting the municipal code to give local officials primacy over state law for siting wells, which would overrule a recent state Supreme Court decision.
Regarding regulations, the report suggests expanding buffer zones around streams where drilling is prohibited and account for cumulative impacts of drilling when considering additional well permits.
The report calls for banning wastewater discharge to publicly owned treatment works and requiring recycling and reuse of all flow-back wastewater, while setting zero-discharge limits at treatment facilities.
While the report doesn’t address the threat of concentrating naturally radioactive refuse from the drilling process – an issue of concern in New York as the state considers regulations for drilling – Erika Staaf of PennEnvironment said the issue hasn’t come up in Pennsylvania because it doesn’t seem that anyone has tested for it yet.
Rory Sweeney, a Times Leader staff writer, may be reached at 970-7418.
Copyright: Times Leader
More drilling sought on Pa. land
The Associated Press
HARRISBURG — Republicans in Pennsylvania’s House of Representatives are proposing a plan to expand natural gas drilling on 390,000 additional acres of state forest land.
The Republicans proposed the plan Tuesday as an alternative to Democratic Gov. Ed Rendell’s plan to impose a severance tax on natural gas production.
Drilling is a major issue in Pennsylvania since exploration companies are eager to tap the natural gas trapped in the Marcellus Shale rock formation.
Republicans say the leasing under their plan would take place over the next three years and provide $260 million per year.
Rendell expects his 5 percent tax on gas production to provide $236 million to the state budget in its first full year.
The state raised $190 million last year by leasing 74,000 acres of state forest to drilling companies.
Copyright: Times Leader
Rendell to allow gas drilling in state forests
The Associated Press
HARRISBURG — Despite opposition from environmentalists, the Rendell administration will give exploration companies thirsty to capitalize on sky-high natural gas prices new territory to drill in Pennsylvania’s state forests.
Read more Natural Gas Leases – Marcellus Shale articles
The state Department of Conservation and Natural Resources said it is ending a five-year-old moratorium on allowing new shallow wells, and that it will auction the rights to drill on an additional 75,000 acres of state forest land for the first time since 2002.
If successful in the bidding that will take place later this year, the exploration companies will be able to take a shot at two deep gas reservoirs, the Marcellus Shale formation, about 6,000 to 8,000 feet underground, and the Trenton-Black River, which is more than 10,000 feet deep.
Both are thought to contain large quantities of natural gas, and have drawn the interest of exploration companies from Texas to Canada that have asked for access to all of Pennsylvania’s 2.1 million acres of state forests.
Much of the land to be leased is in north-central Pennsylvania, and department officials argue that the deeper wells, spaced farther apart, inflict less forest damage than shallow wells, which are typically drilled closer together.
New shallow wells may only be drilled if gas is found during the development of deeper gas fields, officials said.
“We’re very excited about the opportunity,” said Stephen W. Rhoads, the president of the Pennsylvania Oil and Gas Association, “We just wish it were larger; 75,000 acres is not a whole lot of land.”
Jeff Schmidt, who directs the Pennsylvania chapter of the Sierra Club, said the department gave in to pressure from oil and gas company lobbyists, as well as legislators sympathetic to the industry.
“These are publicly owned lands and we don’t believe the average citizen supports turning over these lands to the oil and gas industry,” Schmidt said.
“We just wish it were larger; 75,000 acres is not a whole lot of land.”
Stephen W. Rhoads
Pa. Oil and Gas Association
Copyright: Times Leader