Albuquerque Journal

Group: Fracking ban would be devastatin­g

Study says 27,000 jobs would be lost and $7 billion in economic activity would be eliminated in New Mexico

- BY SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN

Campaign pledges made by Democratic presidenti­al candidates to ban hydraulic fracturing by the oil and natural gas sector would have dire economic consequenc­es for New Mexico and the rest of the country if implemente­d, said the head of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s Global Energy Institute.

Marty Durbin is in New Mexico to highlight the results of a study that shows there would be billions of dollars in lost tax revenue and thousands of layoffs if a ban was imposed on fracking, a technique used to extract oil and gas. Durbin was among the speakers Wednesday at business luncheon in Albuquerqu­e.

According to the study, 27,000 jobs would be lost and $7 billion in economic activity would be eliminated in New Mexico within the first year of a prohibitio­n on fracturing. It also states that household income would drop by $2 billion, and $681 million in state and local tax revenue would be lost.

Durbin said the effects over five years would be even greater, with 142,000 jobs lost and a $86 billion loss in gross domestic product. Household income would drop by $26 billion and government revenue would shrink by $16.3 billion.

New Mexico is enjoying a windfall of tax revenue and other economic benefits from an oil boom concentrat­ed in the Permian Basin, which straddles parts of southeaste­rn New Mexico and West Texas. Industry experts say drilling in the region is still on pace to set production records for 2019 and state economists say income for the last fiscal year surpassed forecasts by $85 million.

Durbin said the benefits stretch beyond funding for New Mexico’s schools and other government programs to giving the United States a favorable position when it comes to global politics and the stabilizat­ion of oil prices.

“We’re having a shale energy revolution that’s benefiting the entire country and New Mexico is a huge piece of that,” he told The Associated Press.

That means New Mexico now

stands out as a state where the real-world effects of a fracking ban would hit hard, he said.

New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham and leaders of the Democratic­led Legislatur­e have praised the industry for its contributi­ons to the state’s coffers, but they also have been pushing for policies that promote renewable energy and ween the state from its reliance on fossil fuels.

The first-year governor also campaigned on cracking down on methane emissions by the oil and gas industry.

Democratic politician­s in New Mexico and on the national stage have the backing of environmen­tal groups concerned about fracking, a technique that uses a high-pressure mix of water, sand and other chemicals to unlock oil and gas deposits.

Environmen­talists renewed their criticism Wednesday, saying the record breaking oil production in New Mexico and Texas needs to be reined in.

“The Permian Basin is an oil and gas carbon bomb that’s exploding, and it’s happening right now,” said Ethan Buckner with the Washington-based environmen­tal group Earthworks. He contends that oil companies are trying to lock in decades of demand by building infrastruc­ture from the Permian to the Texas Gulf Coast.

 ?? JIM THOMPSON/JOURNAL ?? Pump jacks in Maljamra, just east of Artesia, in 2018.
JIM THOMPSON/JOURNAL Pump jacks in Maljamra, just east of Artesia, in 2018.

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