Ray,

If the Rocky Mountains have to go so babies won't die of pneumonia in the North-East, then so be it.

What's that? Babies dying of pneumonia is hyperbole? Well, so is the destruction of much of the Rocky Mountains.

For all practical purposes, we have the choice of coal, or nuclear sources of massive power - something we need if we are to survive and enjoy life - even into the next Ice Age. Coal is a no-no for a dozen reasons - including the deaths it causes. Nuclear is the power source of the future until it can be supplemented with cheaper solar and turbines. However, these two alternatives are speculative - nuclear is real.

Meantime in California, we worry less about the Caldera than that the San Andreas Fault will become the San Andreas Canyon.

Or worse, the San Andreas Beach.

Harry
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------











Ray wrote:

Of course the earth cries and Harry never tires of saying that we have all
of that coal but what he doesn't say is that you will have to destroy much
of the Rocky Mountains to get it out.     Colorado as the new West Virginia.
I would feel bad for all of these Republican Ranchers but the only reason
they are crying is because it is THEIR ranch and not some one else.    They
have two senators in Congress and less than a million people.    Their
senator was that colorful character Alan Simpson, who now teaches at the
Kennedy School at Harvard and who stuck us with more than a few of the
inadaquate conservatives on the Supreme Court while trashing Anita Hill a
graduate of Fundamentalist Oral Roberts University and who was born and
raised in my father's hometown Morris, Oklahoma in the Creek Nation.
Well, folks, I've been there.     My hometown Picher is their future and
before they had their burning water we had tar creek where children played
and absorbed lead, zinc, cadmium, mercury and other heavy metals.    Horses
waded in the creek and the alkaline water ate the hair right off their legs.

These Republican Wyomans had better grow to like the Gowanus Canal in
Brooklyn which also burns and they may as well get used to polluted
aquafers, ground that will grow nothing because it has been so chewed up for
the coal that it is an unworkable stone and dirt mix, and bad water brined
with salt and sulphur.     To hell with beauty.    Down with the
environment.   After all this is the world and they are NOT of this world
but simply in it for a time, as they will tell you themselves if you listen
truly to what they are saying.

Of course that whole area is one giant Caldera and it is bound to blow at
some point or other.    When it does, it will be worse than the Asteroid
everyone keeps speaking about and could mean the end of humanity but until
then George W. will tweak the sleeping beast and try to steal a few golden
scales off of the sleeping dragon.   Gollum,  Gollum?     Is it any wonder
that the commercial artists are making so many movies about dragons these
days with methane breath?

Once its done, maybe they can turn it into something like Central City with
the Opera and gambling.    But in order to have that kind of business on
ruined used up land you need a big city next door like Denver and they don't
have that.    It will take more than Metamusal to keep "Old Faithful" Geyser
working in this sick environment.    In flow and out go and that is all that
matters in the world right?    Shall I talk about the morals of the
"wretched refuse" or the "walking wounded" again or maybe I should just talk
about all of those rich folks who are creating another Venezuala right here
in the good ole' US of A.    In flow and out go?    Maybe that is the key to
how that Caldera is going to blow and we are all going to die.

REH



December 29, 2002
Ranchers Bristle as Gas Wells Loom on the Range
By BLAINE HARDEN and DOUGLAS JEHL


GILLETTE, Wyo. - As it runs through Orin Edwards's ranch, the Belle Fourche
River bubbles like Champagne. The bubbles can burn. They are methane, also
called natural gas, the fuel that heats 59 million American homes. Mr.
Edwards noticed the bubbles two years ago, after gas wells were drilled on
his land. The company that drilled the wells denies responsibility for the
flammable river.

An hour's drive west, the artesian well on Roland and Beverly Landrey's
ranch has failed. After producing 50 gallons a minute for 34 years, the
well, the ranch's only source of water, stopped flowing in September. A well
digger who examined it blames energy companies drilling for gas nearby, but
the companies dispute that. So the couple - he is 83 and ailing; she
describes herself as "no spring chicken" - hauls water in gallon jugs and
drives 30 miles to town weekly to wash clothes and bathe.

Dave Bullach, a welder who lives near Gillette, couldn't take it anymore.
For two sleep-deprived years, he endured the incessant yowl of a methane
compressor, a giant pump that squeezes methane into an underground pipeline.
There are thousands of these screaming machines in Wyoming, where neither
state nor federal law regulates their noise. Mr. Bullach stormed out of his
house at midnight last year with a rifle and shot at the compressor until a
sheriff's deputy hauled him off to jail.

This is the cantankerous world of energy extraction in the Rocky Mountain
West, where natural gas is abundant and cheap to remove, and where the Bush
administration, in its aggressive push to increase domestic energy
production, is on the brink of approving the largest-ever gas-drilling
project on federal land. Here in Wyoming's Powder River Basin, the Bureau of
Land Management says that early next year it will give final approval to the
drilling of 39,000 wells on eight million acres.

With natural gas consumption expected to soar in the next two decades, no
one questions the need for new sources of this clean-burning fossil fuel.
What alarms ranchers, along with environmental groups, is the hugely
disruptive process of getting gas out of all those wells.

It is a 15-year-old drilling technique called coal-bed methane extraction,
which can turn ranches and prairies into sprawling industrial zones, laced
with wells, access roads, power lines, compressor stations and wastewater
pits.

Stoking local outrage, the split nature of land ownership in much of the
West, with mineral rights owned separately from surface rights, allows
energy companies to operate on ranchers' land without their consent.
Environmentalists also doubt whether energy companies can actually remove -
in a way that is profitable and ecologically sound - the enormous amounts of
methane that federal experts say is available in Western coal seams.

"Ranchers have never truly thought much of tree-hugging environmentalists,"
said John Dewey, 76, who owns a small cattle ranch outside Sheridan, Wyo.
"But with these methane boys on our land, we are starting to see these
environmentalists as conservationists who want to help us preserve land for
our kids."

Most natural gas in the Rocky Mountain West lies fairly close to the
surface, in coal seams, trapped under huge aquifers. To get to the gas,
water is pumped out, peppering the landscape with large numbers of
relatively cheap and shallow wells.

Oddly, in an arid region prone to persistent drought, the primary waste
product - and environmental threat - of extracting coal-bed methane is
water, in phenomenal amounts. In the Powder River Basin, for example,
drillers are expected to pump out 3.2 million acre-feet of water - as much
as New York City uses in two and a half years.

It is primarily this immense draining of aquifers by thousands of wells that
makes drilling for coal-bed methane so environmentally intrusive.
Conventional gas wells are usually much deeper and more expensive to dig,
and do not drain huge quantities of groundwater.

This water can, of course, be a godsend to ranchers - if it is not too salty
and shows up in a convenient place and in usable amounts. But if the water
is contaminated with salts, as much of it is in Wyoming and across the West,
it can turn pasture barren.

In addition, coal-bed methane wells often produce far more water than a
rancher can conceivably use. Besides causing damaging erosion, too much
water can sharply lower water tables, sometimes for decades, while drying up
nearby wells and ruining natural springs used by wildlife. Methane drilling
can also send unwanted gas into nearby stock troughs, house wells and creek
beds.

These consequences can make ranchers loathe companies that extract methane.

"Polarization and demonization are absolute hallmarks of drilling for
coal-bed methane," said Mickey Steward, director of the Coal Bed Methane
Coordination Coalition, a Wyoming group that tries, and often fails, to make
peace between agitated ranchers and impatient producers. Energy producers
stopped giving the group money, complaining that it was too sympathetic to
ranchers and environmentalists. The coalition now relies on state and county
taxes.

"On one side, the producers feel very strongly they are helping to preserve
the American way of life," Ms. Steward said. "On the other side, drilling is
changing the lives of ranchers who are just not used to having anybody
affect where they live except for themselves."

Compounding the anger is the fractured ownership of land in much of the
Rocky Mountain West. Far more than in other parts of the country with oil
and gas reserves, landowners here do not own the wealth under them. Farmers
and ranchers settled more than 30 million acres of the West under the Stock
Raising Homestead Act of 1916. The act's rules, in almost all cases, granted
mineral rights not to homesteaders but to the federal government.

Companies that lease these rights from the Bureau of Land Management have
access to ranch land, whether ranchers want them there or not. Producers
almost always try to make surface-use agreements with ranchers. But even
without landowner consent, federal law allows them to build roads,
pipelines, power lines, compressor stations and well pads, as well as to dam
gullies and build wastewater reservoirs.

"Ways of life are being changed for the purpose of energy extraction," said
Jim Ventrello, a Republican county commissioner in Delta County, Colo., "and
it is not the quality of life that we seek here."

That overwhelmingly Republican rural county in western Colorado banned
coal-bed methane operations this year. "We heard horror stories from other
places in the West," Mr. Ventrello said, "and we decided not to allow this
to go forward unless we can make sure it is done right."

Delta, though, is one of only two counties in the West to slam the brakes on
coal-bed methane. While energy companies are vigorously challenging the
county moratoriums in the courts, coal-bed methane extraction is continuing
to hurtle forward across much of the West, thanks to policies put in place
by the Clinton administration and accelerated under President Bush, with the
encouragement of state governments that rely on tax money from gas drilling.

The Need for More Gas


The eagerness of energy companies and the Bush administration to produce
more coal-bed methane can be explained by these numbers: The United States
consumes about 23 trillion cubic feet of natural gas a year, nearly all
domestically produced. By 2020, demand is expected to jump by about a third,
according to government projections.

The main hope for finding supplies to meet that demand in the long term is
the Gulf of Mexico, the country's single largest natural gas resource. But
energy companies and the White House see coal-bed methane from the interior
West, the country's second-largest gas resource, as a vital part of the
short-term solution.

The cost difference between conventional and coal-bed methane drilling is
extraordinary. A conventional well on land usually costs several million
dollars. An offshore well costs tens of millions. A coal-bed methane well
can be dug for about $90,000.

Coal-bed methane accounts for only about 9 percent of the country's proven
natural gas reserves, or less than one year's production at current
consumption levels, according to the Energy Department. But over the last
decade, estimates of likely reserves have soared.

The federal Energy Information Administration has described the Rockies as
having the potential to become "a Persian Gulf of natural gas."

There are serious questions, however, about how real that potential is. "In
the 1970's, oil shale was hailed as our energy salvation, and it turned into
a huge bust," said Pete Morton, an economist with the Wilderness Society.
"This could be history repeating itself."

In a new assessment released in mid-December, the United States Geological
Survey said coal seams in five Western basins, including Powder River, might
contain a total of 42 trillion cubic feet of additional gas. The agency,
which said in 1995 that Powder River probably held undiscovered coal-bed
methane resources of 1.5 trillion cubic feet, raised that estimate to 14.3
trillion cubic feet in its current study.

Another study, commissioned by the Energy Department and released in
December, was even more optimistic. It estimated undiscovered coal-bed
methane in the basin at 39 trillion cubic feet, or nearly two years' worth
of national consumption.

Even if they are accurate, such estimates often gloss over how much gas is
economically recoverable. In the Powder River Basin, the Energy Department
study said that as much as 29 trillion cubic feet might be recovered in a
cost-effective way. But it noted that the number could vary widely,
depending on how particular environmental safeguards were adopted.

Environmentalists say any realistic cost-benefit analysis makes coal-bed
methane look much less rosy.

More Drilling Than Grazing


In the San Juan Basin of New Mexico, where ranch land is as rugged as any in
the West, gas wells outnumber cattle two to one. Over the last 15 years, the
basin has been the pioneer in the coal-bed methane process.

Pinon and juniper woodlands are interwoven with thousands of miles of roads
and pipelines. With 20,000 gas wells in production and at least 10,000 more
planned, a swath of federal land the size of Connecticut accounts for 80
percent of the coal-bed methane produced in the United States.

Increasingly, however, the state's pride in coal-bed methane, which is a
major source of tax revenue, is mixed with misgivings. Ranchers like Tweeti
Blancett, a sixth-generation New Mexican, warn that a fragile balance
between production and conservation is falling badly out of whack.

"We are a multiple-use land, and we understand that," Ms. Blancett said the
other day, bouncing along roads rutted by drilling rigs and water tankers on
land that is owned by the federal government but leased for both ranching
and energy exploration. "But we want industry to understand that there are
other users out there."

Ms. Blancett, a lifelong Republican, was Mr. Bush's political organizer in
northwestern New Mexico for the 2000 presidential campaign. In November, she
and her husband, Linn, and two other ranching families locked out energy
companies whose plumbing of the gas beneath the surface of the land, they
say, threatens their livelihood.

They call it an act of desperation. The industry has derided it as a
publicity stunt. But many in New Mexico describe it as emblematic of a
growing unease about the effect of coal-bed methane on the state's landscape
and the ranchers' way of life.

"It would be disingenuous to pretend that there aren't impacts," said Steve
Henke, director of the land management bureau office in Farmington, N.M. He
oversees nearly all energy exploration in the basin because the federal
government owns all but a tiny fraction of the land.

"If people are looking for peace and quiet and solitude, they're not going
to find it in the oil patch," Mr. Henke said.

Oil and gas exploration is not new to the basin. The first drilling rigs
arrived nearly a half-century ago. But it was not until the late 1980's,
when drilling began to increase, that the relationship between ranchers and
energy companies turned adversarial.

"It may be a clean fuel," said Don Schreiber, a rancher who joined the
Blancetts and another rancher, Chris Velasquez, in locking out the energy
companies, "but it is a very dirty business."

Across the basin, energy exploration occupies 8 percent of the land.
Coal-bed methane production has pumped out 5.8 billion gallons of
groundwater since the late 1980's. Nearly all of this water - most of it
unsuitable for drinking or agriculture - has been reinjected deep
underground.

Energy leases in the San Juan Basin date from the 1950's and 1960's, long
before coal beds were explored for natural gas. The leases have allowed
producers broader latitude than would be permitted under tighter
environmental regulations today.

Ranchers say the effects have been upsetting, including cattle killed by
traffic and spilled chemicals, and erosion set in motion by roads, pipelines
and drilling pads.

The land bureau concedes that its oversight has failed to keep pace, and it
has stepped up enforcement. Partly because of the impact of drilling, the
bureau has reduced the number of cattle it allows to graze on federal land.
The year-round total is now fewer than 10,000 head, down from the hundreds
of thousands that roamed the dry highlands early this century.

In financial terms, ranchers in the basin have become insignificant tenants
on federal land. They pay the government a total of about $100,000 a year
for grazing rights. Energy companies pay about $350 million in federal
royalties on gas they produce.

Against that backdrop, Mr. Henke says it may be wrong to imagine that the
interests of ranchers and energy production can be balanced to the
satisfaction of all.

"Ranchers are losing out to the energy industry in terms of their capability
to grow grass," Mr. Henke said.

"Stepping back, though, what's in the public interest? It's not that this
area is unsuited to ranching. But we've got a world-class gas resource
here."

The Big Gas Play in Wyoming


Early next year, the federal regulatory gates are set to swing open in the
Powder River Basin. When they do, there is almost certainly going to be a
rush by ranchers to hire lawyers and file lawsuits.

Part of the reason is split ownership of land. Of the eight million acres in
the basin, three-quarters of the surface rights are privately owned, while
about two-thirds of subsurface rights are federally owned and leased to
energy companies.

These numbers mean that most of the basin's 4,000 ranch families will have
no choice but to put up with strangers on their land for the next 10 to 15
years. Except for nominal access fees, most ranchers will get little
financial benefit from the hundreds of millions of dollars in gas revenue
generated beneath their land.

As it is in the San Juan Basin, the land bureau will be charged with a
seemingly impossible task. Under orders from the Bush administration - which
requires the agency to fill out an "energy impact statement" whenever it
denies a drilling permit - the agency is expected to cut through red tape
and make it easy for drilling companies to get to work fast.

But the agency will also have to deal with increasingly angry ranchers,
litigious environmental groups and a nervous state on Wyoming's northern
border. They have all had a sneak preview of the fuss coal-bed methane can
cause.

So has Wyoming's governor-elect, Dave Freudenthal, a Democrat. He believes
that the ranchers' restiveness and the threat of environmental damage from
coal-bed methane are "huge problems," said his chief of staff, Phil Noble.

Drilling began about five years ago on state and private land in the Powder
River Basin. More than 15,000 wells are already in the ground. While many
have been well managed, some have triggered uncontrolled water runoff,
flooded pastures, eroded land and pumped large amounts of salty water into
streams and creeks.

Rivers from the basin flow north to Montana, where irrigators have pressured
their own government to demand strict limits on the salinity of the water
that comes out of Wyoming.

In the last year, the land bureau has lost two court challenges to its
environmental plan for opening federal lands to gas drilling in the basin. A
rewrite of the plans is expected in January, and the agency says it is ready
to handle the permitting of 39,000 new wells, while protecting the
environment.

"We have staffed up to handle the situation," said Richard Zander, resource
manager for the agency in Buffalo, Wyo. "Our intent is not to leave a scar
on the land."

Local environmental groups and many ranchers are skeptical. They point out
that federal and state law does not require energy companies to repair all
drilling damage. Companies do have to put up bonds, but they cover only the
removal of drill pads and water impoundment ponds - not the removal of roads
and other scars.

Ranchers can negotiate binding surface agreements to cover such damage, but
to do so they need legal help.

"If you have enough money to spend on lawyers, you might get somewhere,"
said Jill Morrison, senior organizer for the Powder River Basin Resource
Council, a local environmental group.

Then, as always in the arid West, there is the question of water. Little of
the 3.2 million acre-feet of water pumped out in the Powder River Basin will
be pumped back into the ground. Companies say it is too expensive. Some
water will naturally filter back into the ground, and some can be used for
livestock or crops, but the federal government estimates that 57 percent to
85 percent will be lost to runoff and evaporation.

Neither Wyoming nor the federal government assigns any monetary value to the
wasted water, state and federal officials say. Accordingly, energy companies
need pay nothing for its disappearance.

Because of the water issue - and the high probability that drilling in the
Powder River Basin will disturb wildlife - one prominent energy executive in
Wyoming says that coal-bed methane drilling cannot be considered
environmentally sound.

"Looking after the Earth is a pay-as-you-go process, but they don't have a
plan like that here," said Raymond Plank, chairman of the board of Apache
Corporation, one of the largest independent natural gas and oil companies in
the United States. It does not operate coal-bed wells in Wyoming.

"What happened here is ready, fire, aim," Mr. Plank said.

He said that if energy companies had to pay for the water they waste, as
well as put up bonds to cover all costs of restoring land when wells run
dry, they would not make money in the basin.

"I don't happen to think that this gas here is probably economically viable
with responsible land and water practices," he said.

Mr. Plank, it should be noted, has a Wyoming rancher's bias. A 20,000-acre
ranch he has owned for decades and recently donated to a nonprofit
foundation has been scarred by coal-bed methane drilling.

----- Original Message -----
From: "Brad McCormick, Ed.D." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Bruce Leier" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: "'Harry Pollard'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, December 29, 2002 2:30 PM
Subject: [Futurework] "One word: 'coal'" "Yessir." (From: The Yale 68 Skull
and Bones Graduate)


> There is a "wonderful" article in today's NYT about a new
> kind of fiver which the extraction of natural gas from the coal
> in Wyoming has produced: "Ranchers Bristle as Gas Wells
> Loom on the Range" (p.A1).  THis new kind of river bubbles
> (people always liked the bubbling stuff in Yellowstone
> or is it Yosimite?...), and you can ignite it [should help
> ranchers see on moonless nights?].
>
> You all know how I love the beauties of nature.  So I saved
> the picture in case you miss it. It's like something
> out of Werner Herzog's powerful film about the First Gulf War:
>
>      Lessons of Darkness
>
> But with a difference: In Kuwait, all the lakes were
> covered with oil (or were oil in toto) but they deceptively
> *looked* like water.  This stuff obviously is not just
> Poland Spring....
>
>      http://www.users.cloud9.net/~lcp/gaswater.jpg
>
> Enjoy!
>
> \brad mccormick
>
> --
>    Let your light so shine before men,
>                that they may see your good works.... (Matt 5:16)
>
>    Prove all things; hold fast that which is good. (1 Thes 5:21)
>
> <![%THINK;[SGML+APL]]> Brad McCormick, Ed.D. / [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> -----------------------------------------------------------------
>    Visit my website ==> http://www.users.cloud9.net/~bradmcc/
>
> _______________________________________________
> Futurework mailing list
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> http://scribe.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework



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Harry Pollard
Henry George School of LA
Box 655
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[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Fax: (818) 353-2242
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