Los Angeles Times

Kern County is ordered to halt new oil permits

Appeals court says industry-friendly system for approving drilling violates state environmen­tal laws.

- Associated press

FRESNO — A California county that pumps most of the state’s oil and has issued more than 1,000 drilling permits in five years violated state environmen­tal laws, a state appeals court ruled Tuesday in a victory for environmen­talists who argued the permit system threatened the region’s air and water.

The 5th District Court of Appeal gave Kern County 30 days to stop issuing permits until the county can correct violations of the California Environmen­tal Quality Act.

The county declined to comment Tuesday because attorneys were still studying the 150-page decision, Kern County Chief Administra­tive Officer Ryan Alsop told KGET-TV.

California is the thirdlarge­st producer of crude oil in the United States, and Kern County accounts for about 70% of the state’s oil production and nearly 80% of its gas production as of 2018, according to state statistics. The county has allowed wells to be constructe­d next to people’s homes in towns such as Arvin, a focus of a recent Times special report.

The county, which is in the agricultur­al Central Valley, also struggles with bad air quality because of ozone and dust. It also has water demands that require importing of water and pumping of groundwate­r.

A 2015 amendment to the county’s zoning code allowed the county to grant approval of new oil and gas extraction permits after a review that determined the applicatio­n would meet requiremen­ts of a blanket environmen­tal impact report.

Environmen­talists argued that the ordinance was designed to bypass a serious review process and instead rubber-stamp tens of thousands of new wells over the next 25 years.

A lower court struck down most arguments against the ordinance, but the appellate court found that the ordinance relied on a flawed environmen­tal impact report that failed to properly address pollution issues involving water, agricultur­al land and noise.

The ordinance was designed to streamline permitting and avoid costly and time-consuming environmen­tal reviews of individual wells and it was approved “despite its significan­t, adverse environmen­tal impacts,” the appellate court ruling said.

“The ordinance’s basic purpose is the accelerati­on of oil and gas developmen­t and the economic benefits that might be achieved by that developmen­t,” the ruling said. “Its basic purpose is not the protection of the environmen­t.”

The court ordered the county to set aside the ordinance and revise its environmen­tal impact report to fix the violations of state law before the county can re-approve the measure.

“This is a huge victory for our health and climate,” Hollin Kretzmann, an attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity, said in a statement. “The court ruled that Kern County violated the law when it fast-tracked more oil and gas developmen­t and hid the immense harm caused by drilling.”

“Oil and gas operations compete with families and farmers for scarce fresh water supplies and they pump deadly air pollutants into the Central Valley. Those impacts can’t be ignored,” said Colin O’Brien, an attorney with the group Earthjusti­ce who argued the case.

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? KERN COUNTY accounted for about 70% of the state’s oil production in 2018, according to state data.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times KERN COUNTY accounted for about 70% of the state’s oil production in 2018, according to state data.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States