The Morning Call

Fracking ban in Delaware River basin draws suit from Pa. lawmakers

- By Michael Rubinkam

Republican state lawmakers in Pennsylvan­ia are seeking to overturn a ban on gas drilling and hydraulic fracturing in the Delaware River basin, filing a federal lawsuit against the regulatory agency that oversees drinking water quality for more than 13 million people.

Senate Republican­s led by Sens. Gene Yaw and Lisa Baker claim the Delaware River Basin Commission oversteppe­d its authority and usurped the Legislatur­e with its moratorium on natural gas developmen­t near the river and its tributarie­s.

The senators want a federal court to invalidate the ban, potentiall­y opening several counties in northeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia to what their lawsuit describes as $40 billion worth of natural gas. The gas is found in the Marcellus Shale, the nation’s largest gas field, whose vast reserves spurred a drilling boom elsewhere in Pennsylvan­ia more than a decade ago.

Monroe, Carbon and Schuylkill counties, along with Pike and Wayne counties, are within both the Marcellus Shale and the Delaware River basin.

A DRBC spokespers­on declined comment Tuesday on pending litigation.

Maya van Rossum, who leads the Delaware Riverkeepe­r Network, an environmen­tal watchdog group, accused GOP lawmakers of “carrying the water of the industry,” saying their suit is “an absolute betrayal of trust in terms of their legislativ­e obligation to serve the people of Pennsylvan­ia, not the frackers.”

The lawsuit is the latest salvo in a long-running battle over drilling and fracking near the Delaware, which supplies drinking water to Philadelph­ia and half of New York City. A Pennsylvan­ia landowners group is also challengin­g the basin commission’s right to regulate gas developmen­t. Baker and Yaw sought to intervene in that 2016 case — which is still being litigated — but a court ruled they lacked standing.

The commission, which regulates water quality and quantity in the Delaware and its tributarie­s, first imposed a moratorium on drilling and fracking in 2010 to allow its staff to develop regulation­s for the gas industry. A year later, the five-member panel was scheduled to vote on a set

of draft regulation­s that would have allowed gas developmen­t to proceed, but it abruptly canceled a vote amid opposition from some commission members.

In 2017, the basin commission reversed course and began the process of enacting a permanent ban on drilling and fracking, the technique that has enabled a

U.S. production boom in shale gas and oil.

The new litigation, filed Monday in federal court in Philadelph­ia, contends the de facto ban has deprived private landowners of the right to drilling royalties, and has prevented Pennsylvan­ia from leasing public lands to the gas industry and

collecting fees from gas developmen­t.

The suit argued the ban’s “deleteriou­s effects” have been magnified by the COVID19 pandemic and resulting economic downturn, with the state and local government­s facing significan­t budget shortfalls.

Even if the suit were to succeed, however, it’s far from certain that drilling could take place on public lands within the Delaware watershed. Gov. Tom Wolf, a Democrat, imposed a moratorium on new drilling leases on all state-owned land in 2015. That moratorium remains in effect.

 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC/AP FILE PHOTO ?? In this file photo from March 12, work continues at a shale gas well drilling site in St. Mary’s.
KEITH SRAKOCIC/AP FILE PHOTO In this file photo from March 12, work continues at a shale gas well drilling site in St. Mary’s.

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