Las Vegas Review-Journal

California rejecting most fracking permits

Industry group sues, alleging de facto ban

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California regulators haven’t approved permits for the oil and gas extraction process known as fracking since February, effectivel­y phasing it out ahead of Gov. Gavin Newsom’s 2024 deadline to end it.

The state’s Geologic Energy Management Division, known as CALGEM, has rejected 109 fracking permits in 2021, the San Francisco Chronicle reported. That is the most denials the division has issued in a single year since California began permitting fracking in 2015. Fifty of the permits, mostly from Bakersfiel­d-based Aera Energy, were denied based solely on climate change concerns.

State oil and gas supervisor Uduak-joe Ntuk wrote in a September letter to Aera that he could “not in good conscience” grant the permits “given the increasing­ly urgent climate effects of fossil-fuel production” and “the continuing impacts of climate change and hydraulic fracturing on public health and natural resources.”

Newsom, a Democrat, called in 2020 for state lawmakers to ban the practice by 2024. But a proposal before lawmakers failed, leading Newsom to direct CALGEM to proceed with the timeline on its own. It’s only one piece of Newsom’s climate change agenda, which includes a complete end to oil and gas production in the state by 2045.

Kern County, where most fracking in the state occurs, and the Western States Petroleum Associatio­n have sued the state over the denials. WSPA’S lawsuit, filed in October, argues that state law requires CALGEM to permit fracking if it meets technical requiremen­ts and that the denials amount to a de facto ban that hasn’t been approved by the Legislatur­e.

A hearing in the Kern case is scheduled for Monday, and the state must respond to WSPA’S lawsuit by Dec. 2.

Fracking is the process of injecting high-pressure water into undergroun­d rock to help extract oil and gas. It accounts for 2 percent of oil production in California, but it is a controvers­ial practice because of concerns over water contaminat­ion and health impacts for people living nearby.

The denials are “a sign that the tide is starting to turn, and the state is starting to prioritize public health and the environmen­t over the profits of the oil industry,” Hollin Kretzmann, a senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity, told the Chronicle.

WSPA said in its lawsuit that the state’s permitting process includes stringent requiremen­ts designed to protect public health and safety.

CALGEM has approved just 12 fracking permits this year, down from 83 in 2020 and 220 in 2019.

 ?? Jeff Chiu The Associated Press file ?? Protesters in 2015 in San Francisco rally against fracking. California regulators are citing climate change for the first time as they deny new fracking permits.
Jeff Chiu The Associated Press file Protesters in 2015 in San Francisco rally against fracking. California regulators are citing climate change for the first time as they deny new fracking permits.

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