Friday, January 15, 2010

PA Gov. Rendell on the Subject of Energy and an Extraction Tax

the Gov Monitor
Source: Governor of Pennsylvania
posted: January 15, 2010

January 14, 2010

To Members of the Pennsylvania General Assembly:

On Tuesday we received proof positive that we made a wise move in prudently limiting the number of acres bid for Marcellus gas leasing. Bids were opened earlier this week for six tracts in state forests. The successful bids, which were offered by five companies and made official yesterday by the Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, will generate approximately $128.4 million for the Commonwealth. This exceeds our expectations and means we can walk into next year with $68 million in unanticipated oil and gas revenues, with fewer acres exploited than planned. This revenue will certainly make a difference in another very tough year with respect to our budget.

Because I share some of the serious concerns about the potential impact of natural gas drilling on our public lands, I have directed DCNR Secretary Quigley to form a partnership with the largest drillers to document best practices that limit the footprint of the drilling and moderate the need for new roads or trails through the forest. This work will kick off this spring. DCNR is recognized nationally for their commitment, skill and effectiveness and will continue to be the steward of our lands. I have also directed DEP to beef up our permitting oversight and pace of inspections. We are aggressive in our environmental oversight of drilling – and we should be.

As you know, last year I proposed that we impose a tax on the Marcellus natural gas extraction. Based on information from the industry, I pulled back from that proposal with the intent of giving the industry a year to get its sea legs and embed itself in Pennsylvania. We have seen tremendous activity in the past year, with DEP issuing 1,984 Marcellus Shale drilling permits, and in the same period operators reporting 763 Marcellus wells drilled (compared to just 195 Marcellus wells drilled in 2008). The industry has informed DEP that it expects it will seek to permit 5,200 Marcellus wells just in 2010: a huge jump or a tripling of the number of Marcellus wells now permitted. This week’s auction results of more than $4,000 bid per acre – considerably higher than we anticipated – is further proof of how well the industry is doing and how much this commodity is valued.

Given that the industry is now firmly footed here and doing very well, I believe we should pursue the imposition of a tax on Marcellus natural gas extraction. I propose that this tax be effective this July and I hope the legislature will embrace this proposal.

Pennsylvania has an opportunity to hold onto the mantel of a leading state in alternative energy development as well as in natural gas extraction. Between the passage of the Alternative Energy Portfolio Standards (AEPS) in 2004, and nearly one billion dollars in state investments, we have made some remarkable progress. By the end of 2009, Pennsylvania will have 17 operating wind farms providing 800 megawatts of electricity – enough power for 270,000 homes. We ranked second nationally in wind power growth in the second and third quarters of 2009 and doubled the amount of wind power operating in Pennsylvania in a single year.

We are also making tremendous strides in bringing more solar capacity on line. By December 2010, Pennsylvania will rank in the top five states for solar in terms of megawatts operating. With the programs that we have in place today and the funds made available to us through the federal stimulus, this will bring our total solar capacity to nearly 60 megawatts, or enough to power 7,200 homes.

In 2004, when we passed our standards, they were considered among the most ambitious standards in the nation. The law required that by 2021, eighteen (18) percent of all retail electricity sold in Pennsylvania had to be from clean and renewable resources.

But as you know, the alternative energy field is changing very rapidly and there are new developments being announced almost every day. Other states have raised the bar since 2004 by enacting more aggressive requirements for renewable energy:

• Maryland now has a renewable requirement of 20 percent by 2022;
• New Jersey has a renewable requirement of 22.5 percent by 2021; and
• Illinois – the seventh largest coal producing state in the nation – has a renewable requirement of 25 percent by 2025.

We also have to take another look at solar energy. Pennsylvania’s solar requirement is currently 0.5 percent by 2021, which is below other states.

• New Jersey’s solar requirement is 2.12 percent by 2020.
• Maryland’s is 2 percent by 2015.
• Illinois’ requirement is 6 percent by 2015.

Recently, the Pew Charitable Trusts reported that Pennsylvania has the third highest number of clean energy jobs among the fifty states. That is good news, but we cannot hold onto that ranking if we don’t keep pace with other states with respect to our portfolio standards. When other states enact higher requirements for renewable energy, they make their own states more attractive for future investments and put our competitiveness at risk. We need to preserve the Commonwealth’s position as a leader in alternative energy and protect our investments and the thousands of associated jobs by raising our requirements for renewable energy.

I appreciate your attention to this request and I look forward to working closely with you to get both of these important energy bills done.

Sincerely,

Edward G. Rendell, Governor

LINK

DEMAND ACCOUNTABILITY!

by the way...

Dallas Business Journal
Fri., January 15, 2010

Independent oil and natural gas company Exco Resources Inc. said Friday that news reports suggesting the company has been issued a cease and desist order on drilling activities in a certain part of the Marcellus Shale are not accurate.

The Dallas-based company said a local township supervisor did send a letter to Exco raising some concerns about the zoning designation of an area where Exco had drilled a vertical well, but the company has the necessary permissions to drill in the area and operations continue.

... the letter was sent after two local citizens sent a letter raising concerns about the zoning. Exco issued a statement Friday ensuring that drilling in the Marcellus shale continues without interruption.

Exco added that the company has all the permits required for drilling and has scheduled meetings to discuss some of the zoning concerns of the residents.

LINK.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010



Gathering Line
- a special pipeline that transports gas from the field to the main pipeline.

The Gathering Line is a round-up of oil & gas drilling news brought to you by the National Alliance for Drilling Reform (NA4DR), a broad alliance of grassroots activists from states across the nation that are affected by drilling development.

Express Energy Uses Mafia Like Tactics On A Fellow Blogger NEW Information On Express Energy! Express Energy Being Sued For MULTIPLE Employment Violations Read it at Cheap
Tricks and Costly Truths
.

Take a photo-tour of some of the wells in our backyard in Upstate NY at Marcellus Effect

The Texas Department of State Health Services is looking into a possible cancer cluster in Flower Mound. 5 children and 2 adults have been diagnosed with Leukemia. All live near gas drilling activity. Read about it at www.stopthedrilling.blogspot.com

How does Texas compare with other states? A statistical analysis with graphs reveals the truth at Bluedaze: DRILLING REFORM FOR TEXAS.

How do yoga, the Bible, and hydrofracking relate to each other? Peacegirl sees a connection. If it were an answer by Karnak the Magnificent (you would have to be a certain age to know about Karnak!), it would be amusing, but it's not. Yoga, the Bible, and Hydrofracking brings up the issue of doing harm. Is hydrofracking harmless? No. Another question: Who will listen? There are many people who are telling their stories about how gas drilling has adversely affected their lives. Is anyone listening? From Peacegirl at Gas Wells Are Not Our Friends.

From atop the Marcellus Shale, Splashdown reports that a recent PA Supreme Court ruling states local municipalities can regulate where gas wells are located through zoning ordinances, pre-empting PA's Oil and Gas Act. Read how Greenfield Twp. stopped Exco Resources from drilling a misplaced well, despite their DEP permit.

Monday, January 11, 2010

Bradford, Susquehanna and Tioga Co. Drilling Permits...

CLICK HERE to have a look!

DEMAND ACCOUNTABILITY!

Saturday, January 9, 2010

BYOW: Bring Your Own Water... or, HOW "THEY" THINK

Prosperity in a Pipeline – Senator Casey Blocks
The Conservative Reform Network Blog
January 9th, 2010 | by BGuzzardi


Oil and Gas Journal reports: US oil and gas production would drop 20.5% over 5 years if federal regulation of hydraulic fracturing becomes law, the American Petroleum Institute said on June 9 as it released a new study. This would have huge impact on Pennsylvania’s economy. Marcellus Shale Natural Gas brings more energy at an affordable price to Pennsylvania residents and other Americans.
Splashdown: Here comes the irrationality:
What is the point of limiting the supply of affordable energy for Pennsylvania.
“Protecting Drinking Water” ?
Seems odd to bring that up. (!!!) Is this real or an effort of anti-free market environmentalists to suppress growth by suppressing energy that is, literally, necessary to fuel growth and raise standard of living.
Duh... Why aren't we colonizing Mars?
Yes indeed! Let's get some of our boys up there and see if we can raise us a decent standard of living!


DEMAND ACCOUNTABILITY!

Railroad buys line in pursuit of natural gas business

thetimes-tribune.com
January 9, 2010

PORT CLINTON - Reading, Blue Mountain and Northern Railroad Inc. has bought about six miles of railroad in the Marcellus Shale region, according to a Friday press release.

The railroad bought the line, which runs between Towanda and Monroeton in Bradford County, from Joseph Zadrusky of Scranton on Dec. 30.

Railroad president Wayne A. Michel said the railroad could gain business from gas-well-servicing companies by transporting equipment.

DEMAND ACCOUNTABILITY!

Greenfield Twp. says gas driller violated zoning ordinance and must stop

GREENFIELD TWP. - The host municipality of the first and only Marcellus Shale natural gas well drilled in Lackawanna County has told the gas exploration company that it violated the township's zoning ordinance and must stop all drilling operations on the site.

Greenfield Twp. issued the violation notice on Tuesday to Exco Resources (PA) Inc., formerly Exco-North Coast Energy Resources, after receiving a complaint from a township resident in December.

The well site is located on a parcel adjacent to the Skyline Golf Course on Route 247 in an area zoned commercial recreation. Township supervisor Joseph Slebodnik said gas drilling is not an allowable use in that zone. Gas drilling is a conditional use in Greenfield's rural agricultural zones, which make up about 80 percent of the township, and industrial districts, he said.

Some township zoning maps mistakenly label the plot where the Skyline well was drilled as rural agricultural, he said, which might have caused some confusion.

"Evidently they didn't check into it far enough," he said.

Efforts to reach the president of Exco's Pennsylvania operations Friday evening were unsuccessful.

Exco received a well permit from the state Department of Environmental Protection in August and drilled the well in late September and October.

Township zoning officer Paul Fortuner said the township did not act earlier on the zoning violation because it did not know it could have a say on gas development within its borders.

The state law that governs gas drilling, the Oil and Gas Act, explicitly pre-empts local municipalities from regulating anything already outlined in the law, including how far wells must be from structures and water sources.

But the state Supreme Court found for the first time in February that local municipalities can regulate where gas wells are located through zoning ordinances.

"Originally we weren't a part of the loop at all. We had no way of restricting it at all," Mr. Fortuner said. "Now they gave us that little bit."

Exco has 30 days to appeal the violation notice to the township's zoning hearing board.

DEMAND ACCOUNTABILITY!

RURAL IMPACT VIDEOS, 6 parts

Natural gas development in Colorado, the impacts on communities, environment and public health. A primer for public servants and residents of counties that care for their lifestyles.

Drilling for Gas in Bradford County, PA ... Listen!

Cattle Drinking Drilling Waste!

EPA... FDA... Hello? How many different ways are we going to have to eat this? ... Thank you TXSharon for all you do! ... Stay tuned in at http://txsharon.blogspot.com

Landfarms

A film by Txsharon. Thank you Sharon for all you do. Click HERE to read the complete article on Bluedaze: Landfarms: Spreading Toxic Drilling Waste on Farmland

SkyTruth: Upper Green River Valley - A View From Above