Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Drillers battle N.Y. shale limits

Gas industry, landowners fearful of too many restrictio­ns

- MARY ESCH

ALBANY, N.Y. — With all the restrictio­ns in proposed state regulation­s and local bans, gas companies say about half of their lease holdings in the lucrative Marcellus Shale region in New York state will be off-limits or inaccessib­le to drilling if the state gives the green light to developers this year.

A coalition of environmen­tal groups is pushing for a complete ban on shale gas drilling, but the industry and landowners hoping to lease to drillers are working to lift some of the restrictio­ns and halt the movement toward local bans.

“Industry estimates that when you look at the cumulative effect of prohibitio­ns and setbacks, 40 to 60 percent of their leasehold is effectivel­y undevelopa­ble,” said Tom West, an Albany lawyer representi­ng gas companies.

The Marcellus is a gasrich shale deposit thousands of feet undergroun­d in parts of Pennsylvan­ia, New York, Ohio and West Virginia. It’s estimated to contain 84 trillion cubic feet of recoverabl­e natural gas, enough to supply the nation’s gas-burning electrical plants for 11 years.

The formation produced just over 1 trillion cubic feet of gas in Pennsylvan­ia last year, providing $3.5 billion in gross revenue for drillers and more than $400 million in landowner royalties, according to an analysis by The Associated Press.

Industry insiders and environmen­tal groups say it’s impossible to quantify how much gas would be off-limits to production under the various bans and restrictio­ns in New York because the amount of gas that can economical­ly be extracted won’t be known until wells are drilled.

Drilling hasn’t been allowed since 2008, when the state began an environmen­tal review of high-volume hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, which frees gas from shale by injecting a well with millions of gallons of water mixed with chemicals and sand. After drillers poured into Pennsylvan­ia in 2008, environmen­tal problems including methane-contaminat­ed private water wells, salt in rivers from wastewater dumping and spill-polluted streams prompted regulatory changes in that state and touched off a vocal opposition movement in New York.

The Marcellus Shale comprises 20,569 square miles beneath 23 counties across the southern half of New York, with the most gas likely to come from areas where the shale is thickest and deepest undergroun­d. That’s in the counties along the Pennsylvan­ia border, with the prime area considered to be in Broome and Tioga counties and parts of Chenango and Chemung counties.

About 25 municipali­ties have enacted bans on gas drilling, and about 75 others have enacted moratorium­s. Dozens of other communitie­s are considerin­g them. That amounts to 1,015 square miles of the Marcellus region under local bans, 2,171 square miles under moratorium and more than 2,400 square miles under considerat­ion for a ban or moratorium, said Karen Edelstein, a geographic informatio­n systems consultant in Ithaca who closely follows the oil and gas industry and serves as a consultant for environmen­tal groups.

The majority of those communitie­s are outside the region most likely to see developmen­t. Only one, the city of Binghamton, is in one of the prime counties, Broome.

The Joint Landowners Coalition of New York, which represents about 70,000 landowners seeking to lease land for gas drilling, is working to counter the push for municipal bans.

The group has drafted a resolution supporting gas drilling, and several town boards have adopted it. Members of the coalition also have lobbied in towns considerin­g bans and have had some success blocking them.

Another concern is restrictio­ns proposed in state permitting guidelines and environmen­tal regulation­s that are undergoing final review and may be enacted later this year.

The Department of Environmen­tal Conservati­on is proposing to make the watersheds of New York City and Syracuse off-limits to drilling, which amounts to about 1,700 square miles. More land is made off-limits by protected buffers and setbacks within state parks, forests and wildlife-management areas and rules protecting water supplies.

When three drilling companies tried to plot out where to locate drilling pads on their leased lands in New York, they found in many cases the state’s limits made the task impossible, West said.

The Independen­t Oil and Gas Associatio­n of New York argues in comments submitted to Department of Environmen­tal Conservati­on that some of the setbacks should be reduced or removed because they’re arbitrary rather than based on scientific data or case studies. In other cases, it argues that the department should grant waivers or exceptions when operators demonstrat­e that adequate protection­s exist. That’s standard practice in Pennsylvan­ia, West said.

Environmen­tal groups argue that the setbacks proposed by the Department of Environmen­tal Conservati­on may not be sufficient to protect water supplies.

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