U.S. lawmakers Tuesday unveiled a bill that industry warns could
prevent development of trillions of cubic feet of natural gas by
putting regulation of a key production technique under federal
oversight.
It is unclear how much support the proposal could get in
Congress or from the White House, but the oil and natural-gas
industry has already geared up for a fight to oppose the provision
given its potential impact on the sector.
The legislation would repeal an exemption for the process of
"hydraulic fracturing" in the Safe Drinking Water Act that requires
disclosure of the chemicals used the production process.
By forcing hydraulic water, sand and a small percentage of
lubricating chemicals into unconventional types of reservoirs
called tight sand and shale gas, companies are able to fracture
underground rocks and release the trapped gas not traditionally
accessible. States' offices, such as Pennsylvania's Department of
Environmental Protection, currently regulate the 60-year-old
practice.
Despite its history, "fracking" has gained recent attention as
geologists have discovered massive unconventional natural-gas
resources around the U.S., multiplying estimates of the nation's
future production. For example, the Marcellus deposit that lies
under Pennsylvania, Virginia, Ohio and New York is estimated to
hold more than 500 trillion cubic feet, compared to total
conventional natural-gas resource estimates in the U.S. of around
378 trillion cubic feet, according to the U.S. Geological
Survey.
Critics of the exemption say federal oversight is needed to
protect drinking-water supplies, but proponents say state
regulation is sufficient. Industry officials say the EPA isn't
prepared to administer oil and gas permitting and federal
regulation could lead to long delays, court cases and possible
permit rejections.
That's why companies such as Range Resources Corp. (RRC), EOG
Resources Inc. (EOG), Devon Energy Corp. (DVN), Royal Dutch Shell
PLC (RDSA) and Chesapeake Energy Corp. (CHK) are lobbying against
the measure.
Anadarko Petroleum Corp. (APC) spokesman John Christinansen said
given state oversight, federal regulation is unnecessary and could
at the very least delay new development of unconventional natural
gas. "It would result in higher energy costs because it will
discourage production," he said.
Jay Ewing, the manager of completion and construction at Devon
Energy's Barnett field in North Texas, says the ultimate fear of
federal regulation "is totally eliminating hydraulic fracturing,
and that would eliminate a lot of resources."
Pressed at a recent congressional hearing, Environmental
Protection Agency Administrator Lisa Jackson said her office would
review the EPA's previous decisions not to push for federal
regulation.
Under Carol Browner, currently President Barack Obama's energy
and climate czar, the EPA in the mid-1990s decided that federal
regulation was unnecessary. "There is no evidence that the
hydraulic fracturing at issue has resulted in any contamination or
endangerment of underground sources of drinking water," Browner
wrote in 1995 as head of the EPA in a letter rejecting federal
oversight of a potentially precedent-setting case in Alabama.
In the House, the bill was introduced by Rep. Diana DeGette,
D-Colo., and Rep. Maurice Hinchey, D-N.Y., and in the Senate, by
Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa., and Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.
Hinchey said the exemption "enabled energy companies to pump
enormous amounts of toxins such as benzene and toluene into the
ground that then jeopardize the quality of drinking water." Also,
some environmentalists and lawmakers are concerned the water
supplies needed for the fracking process could over-tap sources
used for drinking.
But the natural-gas industry says that operators are required by
law to report the chemicals they use to the state authorities and
wouldn't be granted permits if their operations threatened public
health, safety or supplies.
Devon's Ewing said the three main chemicals used in the process
besides water and sand are guar - which is used in chewing gum -
soap similar to what's used in dish detergent, and biocides that
kill bacteria in the reservoir. Chemicals such as benzene can be
released from the reservoir, but are contained and regulated by the
state.
Industry officials also say most of the reservoirs are thousands
of feet below drinking water tables, with massive rock barriers
preventing any type of contamination.
Anadarko's Christiansen said "Since 1947, there's been a million
applications of hydraulic fracturing and not a single documented
case of water contamination credibly tied to fracking."
It is unclear how much support the bill will received in both
chambers, as lawmakers have been so far unsuccessful in their
attempts to include the legislation in energy bills considered in
the key committees. Although House Energy and Commerce Committee
Chairman Henry Waxman, D-Calif., has indicated he supports federal
regulation, he didn't allow it to be added as an amendment to the
energy and climate bill his panel passed last month, not wanting to
upset the delicate compromise he had crafted.
The proposal also isn't included in the oil and gas section of
the broad energy bill the Senate Energy and Commerce Committee is
near completing.
Furthermore, it's unclear whether the Obama Administration would
want to place a hurdle of any sort in front of natural gas
development. Natural gas has much lower carbon dioxide emissions
compared to oil and coal, and is vital to the administration's goal
of cutting greenhouse gases in a low-carbon economy. In their
congressional offices, both Obama and his now chief of staff Rahm
Emanuel sponsored legislation encouraging natural gas vehicles,
which would largely rely on unconventional resources.
- By Ian Talley, Dow Jones Newswires; (202) 862-9285;
ian.talley@dowjones.com;