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EPA's Fracking Rules Cover Only A Sliver Of Land

Posted: 05/09/2012 11:47 am

ProPublica's Lena Groeger Reports:

Last week’s media coverage of the Obama administration’s newly-proposed fracking rules focused so heavily on how drilling companies would have to disclose the chemicals they use that it largely overlooked the toughest provisions: Drillers would be required to test the physical integrity of their wells, and more water would be protected from drilling. Since many wells fail because the cement and casings crack, the new tests could prevent dangerous leakages.

One major limitation: Although widely understood as “national” guidelines, the draft rules would in fact only apply to a sliver of the nation’s natural gas supply. That’s because they would apply to mineral rights managed by the Bureau of Land Management, which means areas beneath most BLM and tribal land, but scarcely any U.S. Forest Service, private or state-owned lands – where most drilling occurs. Industry has criticized the proposed rules as too restrictive.

The draft rules would require companies to conduct “mechanical integrity tests.” These include pressure tests to make sure that the well can withstand the highly pressurized fluid used for fracking. Ensuring that wells are properly sealed is considered critical for preventing water and ground contamination.

The proposed rules also expand the scope of water protected from drilling to include not just fresh water but all “usable water” – meaning lower quality water used for agriculture and construction, as well as water that can be treated to make potable. Currently, only water with up to 5,000 parts per million of total dissolved solids is protected by the BLM. The new rules would expand that definition to include water with up to 10,000 parts per million, which matches the EPA’s definition for an underground source of drinking water.

“The proposed rule will modernize our management of well stimulation activities – including hydraulic fracturing – to make sure that fracturing operations conducted on public and Indian lands follow common-sense industry best practices,” Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar said in a statement.

The lands covered by the proposed rules are the source of “11 percent of the Nation’s natural gas supply and five percent of its oil,” according to the BLM. About 3,400 wells are drilled on these lands each year, according to the bureau, and 90 percent of those wells use hydraulic fracturing, a technique to extract natural gas by injecting into the earth highly pressurized fluids laden with chemicals, sometimes including potentially toxic ones such as benzene and lead.

Environmental activists wonder how likely the rules are to be enforced. In New Mexico, for example, the BLM oversees more than 30,000 active wells ­– with only 69 inspectors. “However strong the rules are, enforcement is only as good as staff on the ground,” said attorney Erik Schlenker-Goodrich of the Western Environmental Law Center.

Environmentalists also lambasted a provision that would require companies to disclose the chemicals they use to frack on some public lands. At issue was timing: The draft rule would allow companies to complete drilling before they make public the chemicals they had injected into the ground. Although some drilling companies report the chemicals they use to online public registries, they are not always required to do so. Many drillers claim that disclosure would amount to revealing “trade secrets.”

The timing of disclosure matters. Landowners who want to see if a nearby well is polluting their land or water need a baseline assessment of chemicals that are present before drilling. If they don’t know the chemicals the company will inject, the only way to get a baseline reading is to test for a vast number of chemicals, an expensive and impractical undertaking.

“Knowing after the fact is nice, but does not allow for any steps to be taken if the chemicals being used are of concern to the public. I urge the Interior Department to strengthen this rule,” Congressman Maurice Hinchey (D-NY) said in a statement. Hinchey co-authored national legislation to give the EPA the power to monitor all fracking activities in the U.S., which under current law the agency cannot regulate.

The proposed disclosure rules would not demand much more than the standards some states already have in place. For example Colorado and Wyoming have large swaths of public lands targeted by the draft rules, but they already have disclosure regulations that are equally stringent, if not more so, than the federal proposal. Colorado requires that companies disclose the chemicals they use in addition to their concentrations within 60 days of fracking activities. Wyoming requires disclosure of chemicals both before and after fracking, although its regulation has been criticized for not making all of those disclosures public.

“It seems like BLM has looked at state rules as a ceiling, not as a floor, for what should be done,” said attorney Schlenker-Goodrich, who charged that the administration was putting forward “half-measures.”

Industry charges that the rules would slow down drilling too much. The Independent Petroleum Association of America and ExxonMobil did not immediately respond to requests for comment, but the IPAA head Barry Russell told Reuters that the rules will “will undoubtedly insert an unnecessary layer of rigidity into the permitting and development process.”

Once the draft rule is published in the Federal Register, the BLM will take comments for 60 days before it finalizes the rule.

Also on HuffPost:

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ProPublica's Lena Groeger Reports: Last week’s media coverage of the Obama administration’s newly-proposed fracking rules focused so heavily on how drilling companies would have to disclose the...
ProPublica's Lena Groeger Reports: Last week’s media coverage of the Obama administration’s newly-proposed fracking rules focused so heavily on how drilling companies would have to disclose the...
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Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
02:07 PM on 05/11/2012
Don't you dare even slow us down,

or we will turn off your lights.

Charge them for the water, require full disclosure of chemicals, and Independence, preferable government lab testing every month, on site.

Then the fracked "cheap" gas will cost what it actually costs us all.

Stop giving fossil and nukes and breaks. we don't want more of it, and supposedly they are profitable companies. Give it all to rooftop solar and waste bio fuels feed in tariffs and breaks for offshore wind.

Fossils and nukes still get 100 times the total breaks that solar wind and wastes does!

Why after 100 and 50 years of republic help do we continue this?

The private market has gone the other way. Solar wind and waste are getting more investment than nukes and fossils.

http://arstechnica.com/science/2011/07/renewable-power-booms-in-developing-world-as-it-tops-nuclear-in-the-us/

That vast majority of people world wide and in the USA want much more solar offshore wind and waste fuel and energy recovery
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Craig Bovia
Vermont, 1791, women can vote, no slavery allowed
01:26 PM on 05/10/2012
We created the EPA to protect US from the Profit Pigs and what do they do. They spend billions to hire lobbyist to insure it does as little as possible if it does US any benefit at all. Profit is King and Humans just keep getting in the way. Ain't Amerika Great?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vexed weasel
12:33 AM on 05/10/2012
Scab of a nation, driven insane.
12:25 AM on 05/10/2012
Thanks so much for this excellent, disturbing article. It's stunning that the new EPA fracking rules only cover 11% of all the natural gas wells and the BLM oversees more than 30,000 active wells with only 69 inspectors. This is the Wild West and is completely out of control.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Craig Bovia
Vermont, 1791, women can vote, no slavery allowed
01:29 PM on 05/10/2012
We are the same ol' Plutocracy we have always been. Most people bought into the Democracy BS. The internet is educating the ignorant, unfortunately it is slower than dial-up.
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02:27 PM on 05/09/2012
I just had a long talk with my brother today. He's a metallurgical/chemical engineer who has spent the lion's share of his time (over 30 years) in alternative energy companies. He currently is a co-founder of a company that turns bio-mass into "green plastics". He tells me that fracking IS safe but that negligence "could" create issues but that's the nature of any business. His view is that there is no other way but to aggressively push for more domestic natural gas and oil production in America because solar and wind are not cost effective yet and there has to be a bridge. Contrary to popular belief among the green lobby, there is enough oil and natural gas in America for, wait for this, not hundreds but THOUSANDS of yearsif all that oil and natural gas was ONLY used by America. Energy IS our next national boom. It can greatly reduce energy costs in America, attract overseas business for that cheaper energy and greatly enhance our GDP. More important, the types of energy jobs that come with these operations are well suited to bolster the middle class. American Energy!
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01:57 PM on 05/09/2012
Halliburton's Dick Cheney had so much to do with cramming fracking through the system of no regulations - not even having to abide by the Clean Water & Air Act ... and they're wondering about the casings holding up in these wells? Didn't Halliburton casings blow out during the BP Horizon debacle? Many oil and gas wells have been capped and are very old, however, these very wells are ones that the O & G companies are also going back into for hydraulic fracturing ... they can frack the same well up to thirty times each. This self regulated industry - turnstile to government - back to industry is but another "bankster" situation and the fallout is irrevocable. We have and have had the technology for clean renewable energy and yet we allow these corporate/government thieves to rule. Occupy! Occupy our homeland.
oil patch
if you voted obama, you are to blame
10:41 PM on 05/09/2012
"Didn't Halliburton casings blow out during the BP Horizon debacle? "
no, first they don't sell casing, second no
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Craig Bovia
Vermont, 1791, women can vote, no slavery allowed
01:31 PM on 05/10/2012
I would love to see shamey fracked. What a waste of a good heart.
12:38 PM on 05/09/2012
The tsunami of misinformation spewed by the gas industry is drowning the truth. How can 69 inspecters cover 30,000 wells in New Mexico? If the new rules only cover 5 to 10 percent wells on Government lands, and the inspection agency is so underfunded, it is preposterous to claim it is too restrictive. If every industry could get away with toxic pollution because it is a "trade secret" we would have the same safety and ecological restraints as China.