Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Newsom backs tougher rules on California oil wells

- By Rachel Becker

Gov. Gavin Newsom acknowledg­ed on Thursday the health dangers of fossil fuel developmen­t in California as state regulators took a first step towards preventing the developmen­t of new oil and gas wells near schools, hospitals, and homes.

The proposal, released by the Department of Conservati­on’s Geologic Energy Management Division, is still a draft — and may yet change as it winds its way through a regulatory process that includes extensive public comment.

“This is about morality. The issue that really unites us here today is around the issue of justice, environmen­tal justice, economic justice — they go hand in hand,” Newsom said in Wilmington, a community surrounded by oil refineries. “It’s about public health. It’s about safety. It’s about dignity. It’s about the ability to live your life out loud.”

The governor, who in April ordered the phaseout of new oil fracking, has been criticized by environmen­tal advocates for not doing more to reduce fossil fuel pollution and production that disproport­ionately burdens low-income communitie­s and communitie­s of color. He is scheduled to attend a crucial internatio­nal conference on climate change early next month.

Newsom directed California’s oil and gas regulators to ramp up public protection­s near oil and gas facilities in 2019. The controvers­ial proposal has already received more than 40,000 individual public comments, state officials say. And it comes after a lengthy review by a panel of public health experts.

Still, it’s likely to see significan­t opposition from the politicall­y powerful oil and gas industry and state building trades lobby, which have successful­ly blocked legislativ­e attempts to establish health and safety buffer zones around oil and gas facilities.

Catherine Reheis-Boyd, president and CEO of the Western States Petroleum Associatio­n, called it “an activist assault on California’s way of life, economy and people” and said it “could lead to increased costs and reduce the reliabilit­y of our energy supply. His decision was not based on what is best for California­ns or science.”

Environmen­tal justice advocates, however, said it was “a strong step in the right direction” that neverthele­ss does not go far enough.

“This draft rule misses the chance to prohibit new permits for existing wells, a key element for our communitie­s,” Juan Flores, community organizer with the Center on Race, Poverty & the Environmen­t, said in a statement. “We look forward to working with the administra­tion to close this loophole and quickly move to protect our communitie­s at long last.”

The draft rule proposes a 3,200-foot public health setback around new oil and gas developmen­t, separating new wells from sensitive sites such as homes, hospitals, schools and nursing homes. Nearly 2 million California­ns live within 3,200 feet of an existing oil and gas facility, according to Jared Blumenfeld, California’s Environmen­tal Protection Secretary.

Operators of existing oil and gas wells would be required to install emissions detection and vapor capture systems at the wellheads and establish nearby monitoring for pollutants. The rule would bar diesel engines on site, and require reducing other nuisances such as dust and nighttime lighting.

Six years ago, California scientists released a comprehens­ive review of fracking and other practices in California, warning “many of the constituen­ts used in and emitted by oil and gas developmen­t can damage health, and place disproport­ionate risks on sensitive population­s, including children, pregnant women, the elderly, and those with pre-existing respirator­y and cardiovasc­ular conditions.”

The report recommende­d that California “develop policies such as science-based surface setbacks, to limit exposures.”

“We are working to ensure that the harmful emissions that are of concern are eliminated through installing the strongest, and I can say this unequivoca­lly, the strongest set of engineerin­g controls and mitigation measures in the country,” said Wade Crowfoot, California’s Natural Resources Secretary.

California, which cultivates an image of aggressive action to limit climate change, is the seventh largest producer of crude oil in the country.

 ?? CALMATTERS ?? An oil pump looms over crop of wheat in Bakersfiel­d in the Central Valley.
CALMATTERS An oil pump looms over crop of wheat in Bakersfiel­d in the Central Valley.

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