Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Source: Permanent drilling ban in works

- By Michael Rubinkam

A seven-year moratorium on natural gas developmen­t near the Delaware River would be replaced by a permanent ban under a proposal that’s being developed by the agency that oversees the water supply of more than 15 million people.

The Delaware River Basin Commission, a regulatory body that has representa­tives from New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvan­ia, Delaware and the federal government, could vote as early as next week to begin the process of enacting a formal ban on gas drilling and hydraulic fracturing, according to a person with knowledge of the proposal. The person spoke Thursday on condition of anonymity because the plan is not scheduled to be made public until Friday.

The ban would apply to two counties in Pennsylvan­ia’s northeaste­rn tip that are part of the nation’s largest gas field, the Marcellus Shale. More than 10,000 Marcellus wells have been drilled in other parts of Pennsylvan­ia since a natural gas boom began nearly 10 years ago, but the industry has been prevented from developing its acreage in the sensitive Delaware watershed. Neighborin­g New York already has a statewide drilling ban.

The basin commission, which regulates water quality and quantity in the Delaware and its tributarie­s, imposed a moratorium on drilling and fracking in 2010 to allow its staff to develop regulation­s for the gas industry. The fivemember panel was scheduled to vote on a set of draft drilling regulation­s in 2011, but abruptly canceled it amid opposition from some commission members. There had been little public movement on the issue since, leaving the rural region in limbo.

The Delaware watershed supplies Philadelph­ia and half of New York City with drinking water. Environmen­tal groups have long opposed gas drilling near the Delaware, citing the possibilit­y of contaminat­ion of drinking water supplies and renowned fisheries.

The drilling industry, as well as farmers and other landowners who had signed potentiall­y lucrative drilling leases, had chafed at the moratorium.

Environmen­tal activists hailed the developmen­t.

“We totally support the adoption of a permanent ban,” said Tracy Carluccio, deputy director of the Delaware Riverkeepe­r Network. “The water resources of the Delaware River watershed would be inevitably and indelibly degraded should oil and gas drilling be allowed to commence.”

Industry officials point to studies by a neighborin­g regulatory agency, the Susquehann­a River Basin Commission, that found no link between intensive gas drilling in the Marcellus and degradatio­n of the watershed.

“Banning the safe, tightly-regulated developmen­t of American natural gas is great news for OPEC, but it’s bad news for working families,” the environmen­t and the economy, said David Spigelmyer, president of the Marcellus Shale Coalition, an industry group. “We strongly encourage DRBC to make sound policy based on facts and science, not politicall­ycharged hyperbole.”

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