Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Nevada and energy exploratio­n

Fracking and oil leases are an integral part of rural economy

- By Kathleen Sgamma Kathleen Sgamma is the president of Western Energy Alliance, which works on behalf of companies involved in environmen­tally responsibl­e oil and natural gas exploratio­n and production in the West.

PERHAPS Nevada’s small oil and natural gas industry has been out-of-sight, out-of-mind for too long. Even though fracking has been safely conducted in Nevada for decades, some politician­s have called for a virtual ban on the industry in the state.

Fracking is an engineerin­g process that has been performed safely on more than 1.2 million wells across the country since 1947. The United States wouldn’t lead the world in oil and natural gas production if it weren’t for fracking, and we’d still be importing large quantities of oil from Russia and the Middle East.

Yet the 10.3 million jobs the industry supports and $1.4 trillion in economic impact wouldn’t be worth it if fracking harmed human health or the environmen­t. To ensure protection, states such as Nevada strictly regulate it. President Barack Obama’s EPA conducted a comprehens­ive, multi-year study of fracking, finding no widespread contaminat­ion of drinking water as alleged by groups opposed to any oil and natural gas developmen­t. EPA made recommenda­tions on reducing the small risk of accident, which states have addressed with updated regulation.

Nevada improved its rules in 2014, making them some of the country’s most stringent to ensure water supplies are protected. Companies comply with additional state and federal regulation­s to ensure developmen­t protects public health and the environmen­t.

Yet despite the low risk and heavy regulation, some presidenti­al candidates such as Sen. Bernie Sanders, who was recently in Elko, promise to ban fracking and federal leasing. But if leasing cannot occur on federal lands, which make up about 85 percent of Nevada, then oil and natural gas developmen­t in the state would be halted. National parks and wilderness areas are, of course, already closed to leasing.

Yes, oil and natural gas production is relatively small in Nevada compared with Texas or New Mexico, but it provides jobs, tax revenue and economic opportunit­y in Elko, Eureka and northern Nye and White Pine counties. Some geologists believe that Nevada has high-quality untapped energy resources, and companies are conducting explorator­y work.

The BLM recently removed extensive acreage from Nevada lease sales because of protests from Clark

County and the cities of Henderson and Mesquite. Western Energy Alliance supports that decision because for too long, a few bad actors in Nevada have operated well outside normal, responsibl­e industry behavior. They have nominated millions of acres over many years without reasoning or any intention of leasing them. As a result, Nevada has been an outlier from normal leasing practice for several years compared with other states such as Wyoming or New Mexico where federal leases are common.

These millions of acres nominated for leasing that never receive any bids at auction skew statistics and waste BLM’s time pushing paper. But nomination­s without bids never become leases. Concern about leases in Southern Nevada that never materializ­e creates bad publicity that impacts responsibl­e companies operating in historic oil and natural gas areas much farther north.

We support responsibl­e leasing and fracking in Nevada. We encourage BLM to concentrat­e resources on legitimate lease nomination­s, not on poorly thought-out, bulk nomination­s from a few bad actors.

Some geologists believe that Nevada has highqualit­y untapped energy resources, and companies are conducting explorator­y work.

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