DelCo lawmaker wants to end shale game in PA forests
Monday, February 15th, 2010
Governor Rendell's state budget proposal includes a plan to lease more state forest land for gas drilling. The plan could bring in another $112 million dollars and the governor says Pennsylvania needs the money.
Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.
Gas companies are eager to lease the land so they can drill down past the Marcellus Shale rock formation to tap natural gas reserves underneath. Conservationists want Pennsylvania to halt new lease offers until the state better understands the environmental impacts of the drilling plans already in the works.
Myron Arnowitt is the Pennsylvania director of Clean Water Action.
Arnowitt: Hopefully we can learn something from how we handled coal mining in this state where initially there was very little regulation and we saw a lot of damage that happened to the state. All these people want to drill for gas in Pennsylvania, we want to make sure that we get this right from the beginning.
Governor Rendell's spokesman says the plan to lease additional forestland in the coming budget year was settled during last year's budget negotiations when lawmakers were looking for recurring revenue sources. But Delaware County lawmaker Greg Vitali says there was a one-time plan to offer leases in the current fiscal year but no deal for the next year.
Vitali: There very well may have been a secret agreement made behind closed doors, but if that were the case we were deceived.
Vitali says he'll fight the proposal.
Conservationists see Rendell's proposal as a dramatic expansion that could hurt the environmental balance of state forests.
Drilling companies blast the Marcellus shale with a high-pressure mix of water and chemicals to release the natural gas. Conservationist say the process called "fracking" produces toxic wastewater. Nancy Taylor says her company disagrees.
Taylor: We don't believe that water should be at risk in any way. The geological formations — being what they are — we are way below where the water table is at. So I don't think we can affect the water for any citizens that live in the area or the creeks or streams.
Taylor is spokeswoman for the gas exploration company Seneca Resources. Seneca leases state forestland for drilling and hopes to bid on more.
Pennsylvania's latest Marcellus lease offer generated $128 million for the Commonwealth.
The group Clean Water Action is supporting a bill sponsored by Representative Vitali that calls for an environmental review on existing drilling plans and a five-year moratorium on future gas leases.
Vitali says Pennsylvania has gone far enough.
Vitali: We need to step back and assess what impact this drilling — that will come anyway — will have before we decide to lease more land. It's going to take us a few years because these drills aren't even producing yet.
So far, just a handful of wells are producing on state forestland now, but Vitali says as many as six thousand wells will begin operating in the next 15 years.


http://www.originoil.com/
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/science/news/article.cfm?c_id=82&objectid=10626164
Ck it out
There is no need to drill anymore if this is true one year hold will not be that long untill the Air Force is done testing this out Exon Moble and so forth
This is just a bad idea. This piece explains the process and shows why it's not worth the risk: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=104565793
The geology of the northeast contains highly folded and fractured bedrock. That is an absolute fact. The oil industry knows that every layer of rock between the Marcellus formation and our drinking water aquifers has fractures. They're just banking on the hope they'll be long gone before, one by one, our wells and surface waters show the first signs of contamination from the frackwater left underground. NY has a drilling moratorium…why doesn't PA?
I agree, lets stop all this drilling and heat our homes and businesses with wood. No, wait, that would make to much smoke for others to breath. What to do, we all want gas to heat our homes, and oil for our cars, but don't drill in my backyard.