In a message dated 9/30/2009 11:03:17 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

New York  State Paves Way for Gas Drilling With Release of
Environmental  Review

by Abrahm Lustgarten, Joaquin Sapien, and Sabrina Shankman,  ProPublica
- September 30, 2009 7:57 pm  EDT
http://www.propublica.org/feature/new-york-state-paves-way-for-gas-drilling-
with-release-of-review-930

A  long-anticipated draft environmental review laying out proposed laws
for  natural gas drilling in New York’s Marcellus Shale has been
released by the  state after 18 months of study and several delays.
State officials say the  guidelines, which are 809 pages long and
extremely detailed [1], address  key concerns, including the disclosure
of fluids used in the drilling  process known as hydraulic fracturing
and the onsite handling of drilling  waste.

But according to a summary that accompanied the document [1],  which
was released just before 6 p.m. Wednesday, it would not ban  drilling
inside the New York City watershed, a central Catskill Mountain  area
that supplies drinking water to nine million people.

"The  State’s mitigation proposals are half measures," Manhattan
borough  president Scott Stringer said in a news release Wednesday
night. "I believe  the choice is simple: we either correct this error
and ban drilling now, or  soon enough the officials entrusted with
protecting our environment will be  asked to explain why they were
asleep at the switch when it mattered  most."

Provisions highlighted in the news release would make New York  State’s
environmental protections more stringent than those in many  other
drilling areas, but a quick review of the document indicates  those
provisions may be accompanied by conditions and stipulations,  making
it unclear exactly where the rules would apply and how they would  be
implemented.

We are beginning to work our way through the entire  document [1] and
will be reporting in depth on what we  find.

According to the DEC’s summary, the document [1] stipulates  that:

Energy operators must disclose all the chemicals used in  hydraulic
fracturing, including their concentration.
Operators must  complete a checklist and certification form before any
well can by  hydraulically fractured.
Residential drinking water wells near drilling  sites must be tested
for contaminants prior to drilling, in order to  establish baseline
information in case an accident occurs.
Certain kinds  of waste pits – which have been responsible for water
contamination in  other parts of the country – will be prohibited
inside the New York City  watershed and limited elsewhere in the state.
In some cases, drillers will  be required to store their waste in steel
tanks.
The review is a  supplement to a 16-year-old environmental impact
assessment that did not  address several of the issues raised by modern
drilling in the Marcellus  Shale, one of the largest unconventional
natural gas deposits in the United  States.

New York Gov. David Paterson ordered the Supplemental  Generic
Environmental Impact Statement in July 2008 [2], one day after  a
ProPublica investigation [3] raised questions about the  state’s
preparedness to handle a rush of drilling in the Marcellus Shale.  The
Governor has since made clear that drilling will eventually play  a
prominent role in the state’s economy.

The ProPublica  investigation [3] found that the DEC had told state
legislators that  hydraulic fracturing was safe, even though the agency
had not studied or  discussed the sometimes dangerous chemicals that it
uses and that later  wind up in its waste. The DEC also did not have a
plan for where the vast  amounts of water needed for fracturing would
come from or where it would be  treated after it was used.

Fracturing a Marcellus gas well can require  more than three million
gallons and a single well can be fractured as many  as eight times.
When the DEC’s last impact statement was released in 1992,  a typical
well required only about 80,000 gallons of water.

In 2008,  ProPublica also reported that New York was unprepared to
treat the  wastewater itself – the DEC said drillers would have to ship
it to  neighboring Pennsylvania. But ProPublica found that
Pennsylvania’s  specialized treatment plants don’t have the capacity
for it  either.

Hydraulic fracturing has made the Marcellus Shale and other  difficult-
to-reach deposits of gas accessible to drillers. The process  shoots
millions of gallons of water, sand and chemicals underground at  high
pressure to break up rock and release gas. According to some  estimates
the Marcellus holds enough gas to meet the country’s natural gas  needs
for more than 20 years.

Figuring out where to get water to  fracture the wells is among the
water-related questions the DEC is trying  to answer. When the water is
sucked back out of a well, it can contain  natural toxins dredged up
during drilling, including cadmium and benzene,  which both carry
cancer risks.

ProPublica will be examining the  details in today’s report [1]. In the
meantime, if you spot something send  us an e-mail. [4] The
environmental review can be found here [1].

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