The Morning Call

Agency permanentl­y bans fracking near Delaware River

- By Michael Rubinkam

A regulatory agency that’s responsibl­e for the water supply of more than 13 million people in four Northeaste­rn states voted Thursday to permanentl­y ban natural gas drilling and fracking near a crucial waterway, asserting that gas developmen­t poses an unacceptab­le threat.

The Delaware River Basin Commission cited “significan­t immediate and long-term risks” from gas extraction, asserting that drillers have “adversely impacted surface-water and groundwate­r resources, including sources of drinking water, and have harmed aquatic life in some regions.”

The ban applies to two counties in Pennsylvan­ia’s northeaste­rn tip — Pike and Wayne — that are part of the nation’s largest gas field, the Marcellus Shale. Nearly 13,000 wells have been drilled elsewhere in the vast Marcellus formation, turning Pennsylvan­ia into the nation’s No. 2 gas-producing state.

Republican state lawmakers in Pennsylvan­ia as well as a landowners group have filed lawsuits challengin­g the commission’s right to regulate gas developmen­t in the watershed. The commission has representa­tives from Pennsylvan­ia, New York, New Jersey, Delaware and the federal government.

Thursday’s vote was 4-0, with the federal government abstaining.

Business and industry groups condemned the ban, which made permanent a moratorium on drilling and fracking in the Delaware watershed that had been in place for more than a decade.

“There is no support to any claim that drilling results in widespread impacts to drinking water, rivers or groundwate­r,” said Gene Barr, chief executive of the Pennsylvan­ia Chamber of Business and Industry. “This was a political decision uninformed by science.”

Farmers and other landowners who had once leased their land to drilling companies have bitterly opposed the moratorium.

Drilling opponents, meanwhile, have long contended that largescale gas exploratio­n could not be done safely so close to crucial waterways and renowned fisheries. The Delaware and its tributarie­s supply drinking water to Philadelph­ia and half the population of New York City.

“This is a watershed moment for protecting one of America’s most iconic watersheds,” PennEnviro­nment Executive Director David Masur said. “Fracking shouldn’t be allowed anywhere, much less near an iconic natural waterway like the Delaware River.”

Conservati­on officials once estimated that gas companies had more than 300 square miles of watershed land under lease. The drillers have long since pulled up stakes amid the longstandi­ng moratorium.

The water agency imposed what it said was a temporary moratorium on gas developmen­t in 2010, citing the need to develop environmen­tal regulation­s for the industry, before reversing course in 2017 and signaling it would enact a permanent ban.

Energy companies combine horizontal drilling with hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” a technique that injects vast amounts of water, along with sand and chemicals, undergroun­d to break up the shale and release the gas.

 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC/AP ?? A regulatory agency that’s responsibl­e for the water supply of more than 13 million people in four states, including Pennsylvan­ia, has voted to permanentl­y ban natural gas drilling and fracking in the watershed of the Delaware River.
KEITH SRAKOCIC/AP A regulatory agency that’s responsibl­e for the water supply of more than 13 million people in four states, including Pennsylvan­ia, has voted to permanentl­y ban natural gas drilling and fracking in the watershed of the Delaware River.

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