The Guardian (USA)

Trump plans to allow fracking near California's national parks

- Gabrielle Canon

The Trump administra­tion has issued a plan to open more than a million acres in California to fracking, including areas close to Yosemite, Kings Canyon and Sequoia national parks.

In its proposal, the government made a case that the effects on a range of delicate issues – from degrading air quality to threats to cultural and Native American resources in the area – could be avoided or minimized on 1,011,470 acres across eight counties. The plan could end a five-year fracking moratorium in California enforced by a federal judge.

Environmen­tal groups are planning to put up a fight. “We will push back every step of the way against this reckless plan to subject more of California’s lands, wildlife, and communitie­s to fracking,” Monica Embrey, a senior campaign representa­tive at the Sierra Club, said in a statement.

Making good on a campaign promise, Donald Trump has attempted to lift environmen­tal regulation­s on federal lands across the country and has vowed to increase America’s energy independen­ce by opening up drilling domestical­ly. This has put him directly at odds with California leaders, who are are pursuing a greener future.

In 2018, when the administra­tion first rolled back regulation­s to make way for new leasing opportunit­ies, California’s attorney general, Xavier Becerra, called the repeal a “federal overreach” and vowed to resist increased fracking in the state. “The risks of fracking to our health and to our environmen­t are real … from the evaporatio­n of toxic chemicals, to low-level seismic events, to the contaminat­ion of our drinking water.”

Maps included in the report, which outline potential areas where fracking leases could be most fruitful, highlight swaths of land that border national parks and national forests. The boundaries are just south of Yosemite and bump up to the edge of Sequoia national forest. Advocates at the National Parks Conservati­on Associatio­n (NPCA) claim the scope of the proposal falls within two miles of that park.

“The risks posed to our national parks by further oil and gas developmen­t, particular­ly these iconic treasures that helped to inspire the modern-day conservati­on movement, is saddening to say the least,” said Mark Rose, a field representa­tive with NPCA. “Yosemite, Sequoia and Kings Canyon already experience some of the worst air quality within the park system, posing unpreceden­ted threats to visitors and the natural resources that call these places home.”

There will be a 45-day period for the public to weigh in on the new plan. Environmen­tal groups have called on California’s governor, Gavin Newsom, to ban all new fracking in the state, pointing to research from the California Council on Science and Technology, which found that fracking can poison drinking water with toxic chemicals.

Another study, released in 2017, revealed that pollutants from the process can harm infants and children. Fracking has been banned in many European countries, including France, Germany and Ireland.

The government report states that additional fracking wells might require 80m gallons of water a year, even though some residents in the area face drinking water shortages.

 ??  ?? Pump jacks are used in an oil field near Lost Hills, California. A proposal by the Trump administra­tion would bring fracking back to the state after a five-year moratorium. Photograph: David McNew/Getty Images
Pump jacks are used in an oil field near Lost Hills, California. A proposal by the Trump administra­tion would bring fracking back to the state after a five-year moratorium. Photograph: David McNew/Getty Images

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