Washington
Examiner...
Obama
USDA delays shale drilling, up
to 200k jobs
November 21, 2011
President
Obama’s United States
Department of Agriculture has delayed shale gas drilling in Ohio for up
to six
months by cancelling a mineral lease auction for Wayne National Forest
(WNF).
The move was taken in deference to environmentalists, on the pretext of
studying the effects of hydraulic fracturing.
“Conditions
have changed since the
2006 Forest Plan was developed,” announced WNF Supervisor Anne Carey on
Tuesday. “The technology used in the Utica & Marcellus Shale
formations
need to be studied to see if potential effects to the surface are
significantly
different than those identified in the Forest Plan.” The study will
take up to
six months to complete. The WNF study reportedly “will focus solely on
how it
could affect forest land,” despite the significance of hydraulic
fracturing to
united proponents of the delay, “and not how it could affect
groundwater.”
Speaking
of the WNF gas drilling, one
environmentalist group spokesman suggested that moving forward with
drilling
“could turn the Ohio Valley into Ozone Alley,”
even though Wayne National Forest already has
nearly 1300 oil and gas
wells in operation which this study does not affect.
The
Ohio Oil and Gas Energy Education
Program (OOGEEP) recently estimated that drilling in the Utica shale,
which is
affected by the suspension of the mineral lease auctions, would produce
up
204,500 jobs by 2015. [Update: the USDA estimates that the creation of
only a few
dozen to 200 jobs will be delayed by this study.]
“The
President’s plan is to simply say
‘no’ to new energy production,” House Natural Resources Committee
chairman Doc
Hastings, R-Wash, said to Interior Secretary Ken Salazar during a
hearing
pertaining to hydraulic fracturing. “It’s a plan that is sending
American jobs
overseas, forfeiting new revenue, and denying access to American energy
that
would lessen our dependence on hostile Middle Eastern oil.”
Salazar
denied that suggestion, noting
the sales of mineral leases over the last two years, but he also
affirmed
environmentalist concerns. “The increasing use of hydraulic fracturing
has
raised a number of concerns about the potential impacts on water
quality and
availability, particularly with respect to the chemical composition of
fracturing fluids and the methods used.”
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