Drilling Santa Fe

Thursday, December 8, 2011

EPA: Fracking may cause groundwater pollution

By Mead Gruver, Associated Press


"CHEYENNE, Wyo. – CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) — The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced Thursday for the first time that fracking — a controversial method of improving the productivity of oil and gas wells — may be to blame for causing groundwater pollution.

The draft finding could have significant implications while states try to determine how to regulate the process. Environmentalists characterized the report as a significant development though it met immediate criticism from the oil and gas industry and a U.S. senator." More>>>>


 

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Debate over fracking heats up

SANTA FE (KSFR)

"Fracking debate before state Oil and Gas Commission

SANTA FE -- As the issue becomes talked about more and more, industry has moved to start talking about it publicly. The New Mexico Oil and Gas Association is taking part in a nationwide program conducted by the industry to disclose the chemical compounds in fracking fluids. When the initiative came up this past summer, Steve Henike of the state industry group says they want the Oil and Gas Commission to approve disclosure of fracking compounds after a well is drilled. But Doug Micklejohn of the New Mexico Environmental Law Center says disclosure should take place before, not after, the fact. " Listen>>>>

 

Monday, November 7, 2011

Supreme Court refuses to hear renewable fuel case

Market Pulse Archives

Nov. 7, 2011, 1:07 p.m. EST

By Steve Gelsi

"NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to hear a request from the oil and chemical industry to strike down the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS). The National Petrochemical and Refiners Association (NPRA); as well as the American Petroleum Institute submitted a petition in July for the U.S. Supreme Court to take up the case." More>>>


 

Cuadrilla Resources confirms that fracking caused earthquakes

ReutersLink
"LONDON, Nov 2 (Reuters) - Shale gas exploration triggered small earthquakes near Blackpool in northwest England earlier this year, UK firm Cuadrilla Resources said, adding to concerns about the safety of a technology that is transforming U.S. energy markets." More>>>>

 

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Senator wants debate on pipeline safety bill

CBS/AP

"(AP) WASHINGTON — The only senator opposed to a bill to toughen federal safety regulation of oil and gas pipelines said Wednesday he's willing to work with Senate leaders to schedule a debate on the measure, but he's still blocking expedited passage.

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., who is philosophically opposed to federal regulation, also blamed Democratic leaders for the Senate's failure to act on the measure, saying they could have scheduled a debate and vote on the bill at any time."...

..."The bill is supported by the industry's major trade associations — the Interstate Natural Gas Association of America, the American Gas Association and the Association of Oil Pipelines — as well as the Pipeline Safety Trust, a safety advocacy group."...

..."Paul's actions show he is "blinded by ideology" and "indifferent to the overwhelming evidence that self-regulation of the gas industry is a prescription for further death and injury," Speier said in a statement." More>>>>

 

Monday, September 19, 2011

New York fracking lawsuit could set drilling precedent

Reuters

Mon Sep 19, 2011 7:04pm EDT

"* Anschutz Exploration files suit against town of Dryden

* Unincorporated town amended zoning to bar gas drilling

* State department has recommended end to NY drilling ban

By Dan Wiessner

ALBANY, NY, Sept 19 (Reuters) - A lawsuit challenging a small town's ban on natural-gas drilling could have implications throughout New York state, where officials are poised to approve a controversial drilling method known as fracking.

Privately held Anschutz Exploration Corp filed suit on Friday against Dryden, a rural suburb of Ithaca with about 13,000 residents that last month amended its zoning laws to bar all gas drilling within its unincorporated borders.

New York's Department of Environmental Conservation has recommended ending a year-long ban on drilling in New York, although a public comment period on the rules was extended this month following concerns that fracking contaminates underground wells and aquifers.

The Anschutz suit, which asks the state Supreme Court in Tompkins County to invalidate the amendment, is the first to test the legal implications of the state's move.

Fracking, or hydraulic fracturing, involves cracking open rocks deep underground with a blast of sand, water and chemicals to unleash natural gas and oil.

Anschutz, which controls more than 22,000 acres in Dryden, said New York's Environmental Conservation Law bars local governments from any regulation of drilling." More>>>>



 

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Gold Firm Loses Lease

Albuquerque Journal North
Mark Oswald
Sept. 4, 2011


"A company with plans to mine for gold in the Ortiz Mountains southeast of Madrid says in a lawsuit that it has a better chance of getting the necessary approvals now that New Mexico has a governor with “a pro-business stance.” Also, the Albuquerque-based Santa Fe Gold Corp. says in a federal court complaint, Santa Fe County’s “politically liberal” population may be more willing to support mining operations these days, because of the jobs it could bring during the recession’s economic hard times.

But Santa Fe Gold Corp. has lost the lease to explore for and mine gold and other minerals on about 43,000 acres of the Ortiz Mine Grant.

On Tuesday, the mining company filed suit accusing mineral rights owner Ortiz Mines Inc., of Kansas of breach of contract.

The lawsuit also reveals that Santa Fe Gold – despite losing the lease – has already obtained a state “general mining permit” for preliminary work at the Ortiz Mountain site, issued Aug. 19.

The state Mining and Minerals Division provided a copy of the permit this week. It grants conditional approval for a year for a “mining disturbance” not to exceed two acres consisting of “collecting rock samples by hand and baseline environmental data collection.”

Santa Fe Gold obtained a seven-year mineral lease with Ortiz Mines in 2004 and made the deal public in 2008. Santa Fe Gold says in its lawsuit that it has made $753,224 in lease payments so far.

But Ortiz Mining served notice in June that it was terminating the lease, citing concerns about Santa Fe Gold’s effort to move the project forward."...

..."The suit goes on to note the current poor economy and record-high gold prices and says the “public fervor over Tecton’s plans to drill for oil and gas has largely abated.”

“While the population of Santa Fe County is politically liberal, current economic conditions make it more likely that public support can be generated for support of the Ortiz Project,” the suit states.

No county application"... More (subscription or trail pass required)>>>>


Related posts:

No Plans for Mine on Ortiz Ranch


Mineral Rights Questions Crop Up at Meeting


Santa Fe County Model Mining Ordinance Under Attack


"Gold claims draw skepticism"


Santa Fe Gold Corporation to Mine the Ortiz?


"Santa Fe Gold eyes mining in the Ortiz Land Grant" - KSFR



 

Friday, September 2, 2011

Energy Secretary signals green light likely for XL Pipeline

Nebraska StatePaper.com

"U.S. Secretary of Energy Steven Chu is saying nice things about the controversial sand tar oil pipeline that TransCanada wants to run across the Nebraska Sandhills and over the Ogallala Aquifer.

It is a clear signal that the Obama administration is likely to let TransCanada build the XL Pipeline that would / will run from Alberta across several states to the Gulf Coast of Texas."


More>>>>



 

BP Can Deny It All They Want But That Looks Like Oil Again At Deepwater

Business Insider

"Somehow the fact BP hired 40 ships to lay booms around the growing slick at the Deepwater site slipped past most media attention early last week.

The Tallahassee Examiner reports that on top of the 40 Vessels of Opportunity hired to contain the renewed spill, BP assigned two of its own vessels to the location. The Helix Producer 1 is an oil production ship able to manage 45,000 barrels of oil a day, and the Helix Express carries an underwater construction vessel."


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/deepwater-horizon-leaking-2011-9#ixzz1WoRFCmfG

 

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

U.S. to Slash Marcellus Shale Gas Estimate 80%

Bloomberg
By Jim Efstathiou Jr. and Katarzyna Klimasinska - Aug 23, 2011 2:17 PM MT

"The U.S. will slash its estimate of undiscovered Marcellus Shale natural gas by as much as 80 percent after a updated assessment by government geologists.

The formation, which stretches from New York to Tennessee, contains about 84 trillion cubic feet of gas, the U.S. Geological Survey said today in its first update in nine years. That supersedes an Energy Department projection of 410 trillion cubic feet, said Philip Budzik, an operations research analyst with the Energy Information Administration. Link

“We consider the USGS to be the experts in this matter,” Budzik said in an interview. “They’re geologists, we’re not. We’re going to be taking this number and using it in our model.”

The revised estimates, posted on the agency’s website, are likely to spur a debate over industry projections of the potential value of shale gas." More>>>>



 

Labels: http://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gif

Fracking might have caused Colorado/New Mexico Area Quakes

http://www.publicbroadcasting.net/ksfr/news.newsmain?action=article&ARTICLE_ID=1843949


Listen at KSFR

"SANTA FE, Aug. 23 -- Following a succession of earthquakes near New Mexico's northern border, geology professor Rick Astor of New Mexico Tech says one possibility for the "swarm" of quakes in that area is the prevalance of energy drilling there.

He says faults inside the earth have stress and often can slip. "Earthquakes could be induced if the fault's frictional properties are altered by the injection of (fracking) fluids."'

 

Monday, August 15, 2011

60 Minutes: "A look at the world's new corporate tax havens"

60 Minutes
August 14, 2011

"(CBS News)

Our government is in knots over ways to lower the federal budget deficit. Well, what if we told you we found a pot of money - over $60 billion a year - that could be used to help out?

That bundle is tax money not coming in to the IRS from American corporations. One major way they avoid paying the tax man is by parking their profits overseas. They'll tell you they're forced to do that because the corporate 35 percent tax rate is high in relation to other countries, and indeed it seems the tax code actually encourages companies to move businesses out of the country.

Tax havens: Do companies pay their fair share?
"60 Minutes" correspondent Lesley Stahl talks tax havens and the new ways American companies are stashing their profits abroad.

Companies searching out tax havens is nothing new. In the 80s and 90s, there was an exodus to Bermuda and the Cayman Islands, where there are no taxes at all.

When President Obama threatened to clamp down on tax dodging, many companies decided to leave the Caribbean, but as we first told you in March, instead of coming back home, they went to safer havens like Switzerland.

Several of these companies came to a small, quaint medieval town in Switzerland called Zug.

Hans Marti, who heads Zug's economic development office, showed off the nearby snow-covered mountains. But Zug's main selling point isn't a view of the Alps: he told Lesley Stahl the taxes are somewhere between 15 and 16 percent.

"And in the United States it's 35 percent," Stahl pointed out.

"I know. It's half price," Marti said.

Marti told Stahl that Zug most probably has the lowest tax rates in Switzerland.

"So you're kind of a tax haven within a tax haven?" she remarked.

"Maybe, yes," he acknowledged.

The population of the town of Zug is 26,000; the number of companies in the area is 30,000 and growing at an average rate of 800 a year. But many are no more than mailboxes.

Texas Democratic Congressman Lloyd Doggett questions whether the recent moves of several companies are legit. "A good example is one of my Texas companies that's been in the news lately, Transocean," Rep. Doggett told Stahl.

Transocean owned the drilling rig involved in the giant BP oil spill. They moved to Zug two years ago.

Extra: Benefits of bringing back cash
Extra: How to shift profits

"I'm not sure they even moved that much. They have about 1,300 employees still in the Houston area. They have 12 or 13 in Switzerland," Doggett told Stahl.

"And yet they claim that they're headquartered over there," Stahl remarked.

"They claim they're Swiss. And they claim they're Swiss for tax purposes. And by doing that, by renouncing their American citizenship, they've saved about $2 billion in taxes," Doggett explained.

Stahl and "60 Minutes" decided to visit their operations in Zug.

A woman at the door told Stahl, "At the moment my boss is not here."

She said her boss wasn't there and we should call someone halfway around the world, in Houston.

"But this is the headquarters," Stahl remarked.

"I know," the woman said.

When asked if the CEO was there or is normally at the Zug office, the woman said "No."'

Produced by Shachar Bar-On


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Link>>>>

 

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Gas Fracking Poses Serious Environmental Risks, U.S. Panel Finds

Bloomberg
By Jim Efstathiou Jr. - Aug 11, 2011 9:23 AM MT

"Natural-gas companies risk causing serious environmental damage from hydraulic fracturing unless they commit to the best engineering practices, a task force named by Energy Secretary Steven Chu concluded.

Regulations to protect public health will work best when drillers embrace techniques that avoid “undesirable consequences,” according to a draft report today by a subcommittee of the Secretary of Energy Advisory Board. The increased use of fracturing, or fracking, which forces water and chemicals into rock, raises the potential for a “serious problem,” the panel found.

The report offered recommendations for companies involved in fracking, such as Chesapeake Energy Inc. and Southwestern Energy Co. (SWN), to follow, and guidelines for state regulators that oversee drilling.

“While many states and several federal agencies regulate aspects of these operations, the efficacy of the regulations is far from clear,” according to the report. “Effective action requires both strong regulation and a shale-gas industry in which all participating companies are committed to continuous improvement.”

The Environmental Working Group in Washington, which advocates for clean air and water, questioned the findings of a panel it said was dominated by the gas industry. The Independent Petroleum Association of America in Washington, which represents oil and gas companies, said the report marks “a useful starting point,” for discussions." More>>>>Link



 

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

New Mexico Oil and Gas Association proposes rule for disclosing makeup of fracking fluids

SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN Associated Press

"ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Looking to avoid the criticism that has dogged energy producers in other states, a New Mexico industry group introduced a proposal Monday that would require drilling companies to be more transparent when it comes to using hydraulic fracturing fluids to extract oil and gas." More>>>>

 

Saturday, August 6, 2011

EPA takes hard line on PNM power plant pollution

(2011-08-05)
SANTA FE (KSFR) -
"In a victory for environmentalists, the EPA is going to require that PNM reduce nitrogen oxide emissions at its four-corners generating station by 80 percent. The company and the state had both recommended a 20 percent reduction.

The EPA is giving PNM two additional years to meet the requirement at its 40-year-old, coal-fired San Juan power plant. It must complete the work in five years instead of the three-year period that had been discussed.

PNM says the EPA plan will cost upwards of $750 million while the company's alternative would have cost about 10 percent of that amount. PNM says customers may well have to shoulder the costs.

PNM says it plans to appeal the decision."

http://www.publicbroadcasting.net/ksfr/news.newsmain/article/1/0/1837032/KSFR.Local/EPA.takes.hard.line.on.PNM.power.plant.pollution

 

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Board eyes greenhouse-gas rules

Environmentalists decry decision to reopen hearings

Jeri Clausing | The Associated Press

"ALBUQUERQUE — A state board appointed by Gov. Susana Martinez agreed Monday to consider repealing greenhouse-gas regulations opposed by her administration, utilities and oil and gas companies.

The Environmental Improvement Board scheduled a series of public hearings beginning Nov. 8 on the rules, which were put in place under former Gov. Bill Richardson.

Martinez calls the carbon controlling rules a "cap and tax" and included them on a list of Richardson-era environmental regulations that she has targeted as hampering business growth in the state.

Public Service Company of New Mexico and others had gone to court seeking to overturn the rules. The state Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court agreed recently to let the parties take the issue back to regulators for consideration.

The decision to reopen hearings on the matter raised the ire of environmentalists, who have accused Martinez's administration of secretly colluding with polluters by holding meetings with the plaintiffs in the lawsuit in an effort to move the case out of the courts and back under the administration's control. " More>>>>

 

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Enviros win voice in carbon battle

Court: Groups can intervene in feud over emissions rules repeal

Susana Montoya Bryan | The Associated Press
Posted: Wednesday, July 27, 2011

"The New Mexico Supreme Court on Wednesday cleared the way for environmental groups to intervene in an ongoing legal battle over whether the state should regulate greenhouse-gas emissions.

Attorneys for the groups said the justices' unanimous decision will ensure that proponents of the regulations will have a seat at the table if courts have to determine the fate of the state's carbon emissions policies. " More>>>>

 

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Showdown in Tierra Amarilla

Land Grant Committee (interim) meeting tomorrow regarding the Tierra Amarilla Land Grant mineral rights issue:

Details from the Rio Grande Sun:

"The state legislature’s interim Land Grant Committee scheduled a meeting beginning at 10 a.m. July 28 at the Abiquiú Community Center. The meeting aims to address various land grant issues, focusing on the Tierra Amarilla Land Grant mineral rights issue at 1:45 p.m. Wells, the president of the Board, is scheduled to testify."

The rest of the story:

"Oil company's quiet deal with Land Grant sparks anger, internal mistrust"

By Andrew Kasper
SUN Staff Writer
Published:
Thursday, July 21, 2011 10:08 AM MDT
"After news of a questionable buyout and controversial plans to drill for oil on the Tierra Amarilla Land Grant became public, oil man Jack Steinhauser stepped into the lion’s den.

He visited Tierra Amarilla July 13 and stood before a group of agitated and confused Land Grant heirs and attempted to explain his plans to drill on land that belonged to their ancestors, while also trying to clarify how a $233,000 payment that was intended for the entire Land Grant ended up in the hands of just three Board members — without the rest of the members’ knowledge.

The payment was in exchange for a 2008 legal promise, or waiver, by the Land Grant that none of the members would pursue a future claim to the oil Steinhauser and his company, Wind River Energy, are poised to extract from 93,000 acres in northern Rio Arriba County and southern Colorado." More>>>>

 

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Governor considers replacement of state's top water official

Staci Matlock | The New Mexican

"The governor's staff is once again looking for candidates for the state's top water job.

Current State Engineer John D'Antonio, confirmed under former Gov. Bill Richardson, is welcome to reapply for the job, said Scott Darnell, a spokesman for Gov. Susana Martinez.

"No decision has been made to replace Mr. D'Antonio, but the Governor wants to ensure that a wide range of options are considered before selecting a permanent State Engineer," Darnell said via email."...

..."Hernandez said he was told he was part of a search committee. "They called us individually and asked us to submit names by today (Monday)," Hernandez said. "I was the first one called, so I assumed I would head the committee."

Darnell, however, said no formal search committee has been formed. "We are asking for input from people throughout the state who are familiar with the critical water issues facing New Mexico ... ," Darnell said. "Unlike the transition, this is not a formal search committee; rather, it is an effort to cast a wide net and be inclusive in seeking a full range of options regarding the State Engineer's Office. We have reached out to a number of individuals and groups seeking their input, ranging from farmers, business people, and even the New Mexico Environmental Law Center."

Douglas Meiklejohn, executive director of the New Mexico Environmental Law Center, confirmed the organization was asked to submit names for state engineer. "We respectfully declined to be involved in that process," he said, also declining to comment on why.

Meiklejohn also declined to comment on whether or not he thought D'Antonio should be replaced. " More>>>>

 

Environment Department official resigns after bureau move

Staci Matlock | The New Mexican

"A top official with the state Environment Department resigned Tuesday morning, a day after the bureau overseeing Los Alamos National Laboratory's compliance with hazardous-waste regulations was moved from his division.

It was one more shake-up in a department that's seen more than a few in the last six months."...

..."The decision to move the bureau was made by Environment Department Secretary F. David Martin and Deputy Secretary Raj Solomon. They did not respond to questions regarding Davis' departure.

People familiar with the situation, who asked to remain anonymous for fear of repercussions, said the decision to yank the bureau from Davis' division was the final straw in a string of disagreements he had with the new administration. They believe the change was prompted by a recent notice of violation that Davis' division was pursuing against LANL for failing to meet some terms of the consent decree. A LANL spokesman confirmed there was a notice of violation, with fines proposed, but the spokesman referred questions to the Environment Department.

Gov. Susana Martinez made it clear in the first week of her administration that she intended to do away with any policies she deemed unfriendly to business. The Environment Department rapidly became a focus of her attention. The administration set out to undo or overturn new rules and regulations, from green-building codes to greenhouse-gas emissions, which officials said were detrimental to industry." More>>>>

 

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

MOODY'S PLACES RATINGS OF FIVE OF 15 Aaa STATES ON REVIEW FOR POSSIBLE DOWNGRADE DUE TO U.S. SOVEREIGN RISK VULNERABILITY

Deregulation of the financial industry set the table for the financial crisis. As deregulation continues to be proffered for budget woes, such as for oil and gas drilling, the following Moody's warning is something to keep an eye on and to keep in mind as part of the many unfolding consequences of financial deregulation.

"APPROXIMATELY $24 BILLION OF RATED DEBT AFFECTED; HIGH FEDERAL EMPLOYMENT AND MEDICAID EXPOSURE CITED

New York, July 19, 2011 -- Moody's Investors Service has placed on review for possible downgrade the Aaa ratings of the states of Maryland, New Mexico, South Carolina, Tennessee, and the Commonwealth of Virginia. In connection with Moody's July 13 action placing the Aaa government bond rating of the United States on review for downgrade, Moody's announced that it would assess the ratings of Aaa-rated states to gauge their sensitivity to sovereign risk. The review actions affect a combined $24 billion of general obligations and related debt.

Should the U.S. government's rating be downgraded to Aa1 or lower, these five states' ratings would likely be downgraded as well. Moody's will review the ratings of the five states on a case-by-case basis and announce any rating actions within seven to ten days following a sovereign action."...


..."NEW MEXICO

• Sensitivity to national economic trends compared to other Aaa-rated states based on Moody's Economy.com measure of employment volatility due to U.S. fluctuations: Below average

• Federal employees as a percentage of the state's total employment: Above average

• Capital markets risk: Relatively high due to above average amount of puttable variable rate debt outstanding

• Federal procurement contracts as a percentage of state gross domestic product: Above average

• Medicaid as a percentage of total expenditures: Above average

• Available fund balance as a percentage of operating revenue: Above average" More>>>>

Related article:

Big US Banks Ate Everyone's Lunch: Strategist

 

Monday, July 18, 2011

BP slips up again

MarketWatch Blogs

"In a fresh challenge for BP PLC’s BP effort to clean up its act, up to 4,200 gallons of oil-containing fluids leaked from a BP pipeline during a pressure test at its Lisburne oil field in Alaska’s Prudhoe Bay, according to reports over the weekend. The Anchorage Daily reported that local officials said the ground shook from the force of the line break. BP Exploration (Alaska) Inc. estimated the spill size at 2,100 to 4,200 gallons of methanol and other fluids, including crude oil." More>>>>

 

Friday, July 15, 2011

The World Factbook: Natural gas - proved reserves

Central Intelligence Agency

An excerpt from The World Factbook:

"This entry is the stock of proved reserves of natural gas in cubic meters (cu m). Proved reserves are those quantities of natural gas, which, by analysis of geological and engineering data, can be estimated with a high degree of confidence to be commercially recoverable from a given date forward, from known reservoirs and under current economic conditions." Link >>>>

Top ten:

"1 Russia 47,570,000,000,000

2 Iran 29,610,000,000,000

3 Qatar 25,470,000,000,000

4 Turkmenistan 7,504,000,000,000

5 Saudi Arabia 7,461,000,000,000

6 United States 6,928,000,000,000

7 United Arab Emirates 6,071,000,000,000

8 Nigeria 5,246,000,000,000

9 Venezuela 4,983,000,000,000

10 Algeria 4,502,000,000,000"

 

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Exxon exec says doesn’t know Montana spill’s cause

By Molly Born

"WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) — An Exxon Mobil executive on Friday told a House committee that the firm had met all regulatory standards even as the company takes full responsibility for an oil spill that dumped an estimated 42,000 gallons of crude into Montana’s Yellowstone River this month."...

..."Tester, a Democrat, appeared before the House pipelines subcommittee to make a statement at the beginning of the hearing and said Exxon needs greater regulation. In this case, Exxon was tasked with regulating itself and now “we’re paying a price for it,” he said.

“Does that sound familiar?” Tester said. “Wall Street had no regulators either and it lead to the collapse of our nation’s economy.”...More>>>>


 

"Battle for Brooklyn"

“BATTLE FOR BROOKYLN,”
THE STORY OF ONE NEIGHBORHOOD’S FIGHT AGAINST THE CONTROVERSIAL ATLANTIC YARDS PROJECT at The SCREEN

August 25th directors in attendance

Santa Fe:

For showtime:

The Screen

Movie website


 

Monday, June 27, 2011

Report: Natural Gas Insiders Question Feasibility, Profitability of Industry

DemocracyNow!

"Newly disclosed figures and internal documents are raising fresh doubts about natural gas drilling in the United States. According to the New York Times, well-placed financial analysts and experts have circulated warnings about the feasibility and profitability of drilling in shale gas wells across the nation. An August 2009 memo from the firm IHS Drilling Data says, “The word in the world of independents is that the shale plays are just giant Ponzi schemes and the economics just do not work.” Earlier this year, an analyst at PNC Wealth Management compared natural gas projects to the dot-com boom, saying, “money is pouring in” even though drilling is “inherently unprofitable.” In another memo, a retired geologist for a major oil giant writes, “These corporate giants are having an Enron moment… They want to bend light to hide the truth.” A review of more than 9,000 wells shows many wells are failing to meet industry projections, with just 10 percent recouping their estimated costs after seven years. Just 20 percent of wells in three highly regarded shale formations in Texas, Louisiana and Arkansas are believed to actually be profitable. The previously undisclosed data could raise questions about whether companies are illegally inflating claims about the size and productivity of their wells. A former Enron executive who went on to work for an energy company compared the behavior of shale gas firms to his former employer, writing, “I wonder when they will start telling people these wells are just not what they thought they were going to be?”' Link>>>>

 

The New York Times
By IAN URBINALink
Published: June 26, 2011

..."In scores of internal e-mails and documents, officials within the Energy Information Administration, or E.I.A., voice skepticism about the shale gas industry.

One official says the shale industry may be “ set up for failure.” “It is quite likely that many of these companies will go bankrupt,” a senior adviser to the Energy Information Administration administrator predicts. Several officials echo concerns raised during previous bubbles, in housing and in technology stocks, for example, that ended in a bust."... More>>>>



 

Monday, June 13, 2011

Firm says deal with land grant opens area to drilling

Tom Sharpe | The New Mexican
Posted: Sunday, June 12, 2011


"A Canadian firm says it has a deal with a land-grant association that could open up parts of Rio Arriba County to petroleum drilling that previously were restricted by questionable land titles.

Wind River Energy Corp. says it has agreements with the board of trustees of the Tierra Amarilla Land Grant that could mean billions of barrels of oil, mostly from shale deposits that require "fracking."

"Wind River believes that the waiver will resolve a 150-year-old historical title cloud that has constrained oil and gas development on the Tierra Amarilla Land Grant," a recent news release says.

The Vancouver, British Columbia-based company has issued three news releases since late last year, announcing it has acquired from a Texas firm a waiver and an indemnification agreement with the Tierra Amarilla Lane Grant board, which was paid $233,979.

Wind River's Denver-based president and chief executive officer, Jack Steinhauser, said the news releases are public disclosures required by the regulations of the Toronto Venture Exchange, where Wind River's stock is traded." More
Link

 

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

"Gasland" Screening in Santa Fe


"On Tuesday, June 21st at 7:00 p.m...." "...a screening of Gasland at the Center for Contemporary Arts in Santa Fe with the event's cosponsors: Conservation Voters New Mexico, Drilling Mora County and representatives from several organizations who are opposing fracking in New Mexico. And after the event, we will have a panel discussion that will feature representatives from these organizations and our Executive Director, Wenonah Hauter who will discuss our national efforts to ban fracking. Come early to chat with us and learn what you can do to make a difference.

RSVP and spread the word today!
https://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/1185/p/salsa/event/common/public/?event_KEY=69644

Hope to see you there

Sam Schabacker
Senior Organizer

Food & Water Watch

sam(at)fwwatch(dot)org"


Tuesday, 6/21, 7-9 pm

Center for Contemporary Arts
Moving Image Lab
1050 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, 87505
Google map


Food & Water Watch is a nonprofit consumer organization that works to ensure clean water and safe food. We challenge the corporate control and abuse of our food and water resources by empowering people to take action and by transforming the public consciousness about what we eat and drink."

 

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Posting hiatus continues

The posting hiatus will continue for a while.

Until posting resumes, it is hoped that all is well.

 

Monday, March 21, 2011

Posting Break

Until about the 1st of May, there will be a break in posting.

See you in the Spring!

 

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Summary of 2011 NM legislative session

The Associated Press

"A summary of developments in the Legislature's 60-day session, which ended Saturday.

Gov. Susana Martinez has until April 8 to sign or veto bills passed during the final stretch of the session.


ENERGY-ENVIRONMENT(equals)

Passed: Governmental task force to investigate natural gas outages; create energy conservation bonds; tax credit for biofuels produced from algae; expand scope of cost cap for utilities in meeting with renewable energy requirements; update abandoned mine reclamation law to remain eligible for federal funding; Renewable Energy Transmission Authority bonding changes.

Failed: Invalidate state regulations on greenhouse gas emissions; allow severance tax fund investments in New Mexico renewable energy projects; tax credit for converting vehicles to run on natural gas; define ownership rights in underground pore space that can be used for storage of carbon dioxide." More>>>>


 

Friday, March 18, 2011

Biggest radioactive spill in U.S. history was in New Mexico (Listen again)

"Biggest radioactive spill in U.S. history was in New Mexico (Listen again)

(2011-03-18)
SANTA FE (KSFR) -
Follow KSFR News on Twitter and on Facebook.
Subscribe to KSFR News Podcasts.



As concern in the U.S. continues over the nuclear-reactor crisis in Japan, what few remember is that the biggest radioactive spill in U.S. history happened right here in New Mexico.

Listen.

© Copyright 2011, KSFR" Link>>>>

 

Charting the Human Cost of Different Types of Energy

by Nicholas Kusnetz and Marian Wang
ProPublica, March 18, 2011, 4:25 p.m.


"Since this time last year, we’ve seen a deadly mine disaster [1], the worst oil spill in U.S. history [2], and now a nuclear crisis in Japan [3]. That got us wondering—how does one compare or quantify the human cost of different sources of energy?

As it turns out, a Swiss research organization, the Paul Sherrer Institute, has been doing just that. Using data from the institute, we pulled together a few visualizations." More>>>>


 

Monday, March 14, 2011

States ask Supreme Court to dismiss utility-emission case

E&E News

Lawrence Hurley, E&E reporter

"Connecticut and five other states seeking to persuade the Supreme Court to allow greenhouse gas emissions to be regulated via federal common law have suggested the justices should avoid deciding the case and instead send it back to a lower court.

In their final brief filed in American Electric Power v. Connecticut, the states maintain their position that greenhouse gas emissions can be regulated as a "public nuisance" under federal common law.

But they say that the court should wait to see what happens to the ongoing efforts by U.S. EPA to regulate emissions before deciding the issue.

The states point in particular to the recent settlement in which EPA agreed to set new greenhouse gas limits for refineries and power plants (Greenwire, Dec. 23, 2010).

That announcement came several weeks after the Supreme Court decided to hear the case, which is due to be argued April 19." More>>>>


 

Environmental, construction rules top targets of state task force

Staci Matlock | The New Mexican

3/13/2011


"A task force established by Gov. Susana Martinez to review the impact of state regulations on small businesses has focused narrowly on environmental and construction rules, with an eye toward some major overhauls.

A "mid-point report" sent by the task force Feb. 18 to the governor's chief of staff, Keith Gardner, noted the group's review would focus on rules and regulations in the state Environment, Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources, and Game and Fish departments. The task force will "determine the best approach to rescind or revise the troublesome rules/regulations," according to the report.

The task force, which has met twice, noted that environment and construction are two areas "in which industries have been significantly and economically affected by rules and regulations." The task force is to make a full, formal report to Martinez by April 1.

So far, no one interviewed from the task force or asked to comment on the group's work has publicly produced anything concrete about how specific environmental and construction rules impact small businesses. "...

..."The task force is focusing on the revised pit rule for oil and gas waste, now 2 years old; a 5-year-old enforcement and compliance rule for oil and gas wells; and new building codes, among other things.:...

..."The report notes "the task force does not wish to present a laundry list of problems to the Governor but develop solutions. The goal is to provide the Governor and/or agencies cover when repealing or revising a rule or regulation thus avoiding litigation if possible."

The pit rule, first approved in 2003 and amended in 2008 and 2009, requires oil and gas producers to contain the waste products from drilling in a lined pit or a closed loop system from which the waste is hauled to a licensed facility. The updated rule in 2008 came after more than a year of public hearings, analysis of well samples near drilling operations and a report by a task force of representatives from state agencies, environmental groups, and the oil and gas industry. Former Gov. Bill Richardson ordered the rule amended after oil prices fell and the industry asked for help.

The oil and gas industry has maintained the rule has chased out well drillers and is too expensive to meet, statements not borne out by the level of drilling and production that has occurred in the last year around the state." More>>>>

Related posts:

Clearly New Mexico Feb 24 Are You Sitting Down? Here Are The Recommendations From The Gov’s “Small Business-Friendly” Task Force


Public Records Request Shows Gov’s “Small Business-Friendly Task Force” Met In Secret; Is Packed With Lobbyists for Oil and Gas, Mining and Dairy


 

Friday, March 11, 2011

Mexico, Canada eye imports of U.S. shale gas

Nathanial Gronewold, E&E reporter

"HOUSTON -- The United States' North American neighbors are considering importing U.S. natural gas to meet their burgeoning electricity needs.

Mexico's chief energy minister said yesterday that his nation is carefully eyeing the U.S. revolution in shale gas production to help fuel Mexico's fast-growing economy.

Mexico's new development of renewable energy resources and fossil-fuel power is not occurring fast enough to meet the growth, the energy minister, José Antonio Meade, told a major energy industry conference here. The U.S. shale gas boom and the potential for exporting U.S. drilling technologies has been a dominant theme at the gathering (Greenwire, March 10).

"Because of the new technology advances in terms of generating shale gas, now this continent is one of the cheapest in terms of using gas for generating electricity," Mede said. "Mexico, I think, is in a good position to take advantage of that."' More>>>>


 

Republicans Urge More Energy Production

The New York Times
The Caucus
March 10, 2011, 2:01 pm
By CARL HULSE


"Is “drill, baby, drill” about to make a comeback?

With gas prices soaring, Congressional Republicans are clamoring for more domestic energy production, echoing the theme of an impromptu 2008 protest when Republicans occupied the floor of the House during the summer recess to demand that Congress lift a ban on drilling off of much of the nation’s coastline.

At a press conference on Thursday, Speaker John A. Boehner said Republicans were moving ahead with an umbrella initiative that would seek to spur more domestic energy production and end federal policies he said were contributing to rising gas costs.

“Through the American Energy Initiative, we will work to help lower gas prices, reduce our dependence on foreign oil and create new jobs,” Mr. Boehner said." More>>>>

 

PA Governor Gives Energy Executive Supreme Authority Over Environmental Permitting

by Abrahm Lustgarten , Nicholas Kusnetz and Joaquin Sapien
ProPublica, March 9, 2011, 10:50 p.m.


"Pennsylvania has come under fire lately as pollution from drilling in the Marcellus Shale threatens water resources across the state. But instead of ratcheting up oversight, Gov. Tom Corbett wants to hand authority over some of the state’s most critical environmental decisions to C. Alan Walker, a Pennsylvania energy executive with his own track record of running up against the state’s environmental regulations.

Walker, who has contributed $184,000 to Corbett’s campaign efforts since 2004, is CEO and owner of Bradford Energy Company and Bradford Coal, which was once among Pennsylvania’s largest coal mining companies. He also owns or has an interest in 12 other companies, including a trucking business and a central Pennsylvania oil and gas company." More>>>>


 

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Another One Of Those Small Business-Friendly Tactics?

Clearly New Mexico

By Tracy Dingmann

"A bill that would bar the New Mexico Environmental Improvement Board from making any greenhouse gas rules that are more stringent than federal law is making its way through Senate committees.

The bill, SB 489, sponsored by Clinton Harden, (R-Clovis), would not reverse the two carbon cap proposals that were approved in the waning days of the Richardson Administration. Those proposals drew strong opposition from the oil and gas industry and from Gov. Susana Martinez, who vowed during her campaign to reverse them if elected governor.

(A few weeks ago, Clearly New Mexico learned that Gov. Martinez had appointed a Small Business-Friendly task force filled with representatives of the oil and gas industry and other large corporate interests to evaluate regulations like the carbon caps. The group made it clear that rolling back regulations was their number one priority, and discussed a number of strategies to accomplish this that included legislation, executive orders, and other tactics.)

Though SB 489 wouldn’t reverse the current caps, it would severely hamper New Mexico’s ability to protect its environment in the future, opponents say.

Friends of the Environment Oppose It" More>>>>



 

Wyoming Air Pollution Worse Than Los Angeles Due To Gas Drilling

The Huffington Post

"CHEYENNE, Wyo. -- Wyoming, famous for its crisp mountain air and breathtaking, far-as-the-eye-can-see vistas, is looking a lot like smoggy Los Angeles these days because of a boom in natural gas drilling.

Folks who live near the gas fields in the western part of this outdoorsy state are complaining of watery eyes, shortness of breath and bloody noses because of ozone levels that have exceeded what people in L.A. and other major cities wheeze through on their worst pollution days." More>>>>



 

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

NM governor nominates Bemis to head energy agency

Associated Press - March 8, 2011 7:25 PM ET

"SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) - Gov. Susana Martinez has nominated an assistant commissioner at the State Land Office to serve as head of the state Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department.

Martinez says John Bemis' experience in overseeing energy development at the Land Office makes him a qualified candidate.

Bemis joined the State Land Office in 2003 and has served as assistant commissioner for oil, gas, and mineral resources since 2004. He previously worked as senior attorney for the Farmington region at Burlington Resources, Inc." More>>>>


 

NM House Bills 297 & 422

CVNM: Protect New Mexico Twitter:


  1. HB297, which would jeopardize groundwater quality passes the House 48-20.
  2. HB422, the anti-cultural property bill, passed with no recommendation out of House Energy & Natural Resources 8-4.

 

NM SB 421 Tabled

Email from Jerry

"A substitute bill for SB 421 was tabled by the Senate Judiciary Committee at about 9:50 pm last evening. Many thanks to all who helped make that happen."

See:

Oil-slick sleight of hand

 

Monday, March 7, 2011

Oil-slick sleight of hand

Email from Kim:

"Hello friends

I wish there were an easier more predictable way for use to make ourselves heard, but here’s the update:

HB 422 and SB 421, the twin bill s that would allow mineral rights owners absolute veto over State historic listing of any property or district, did NOT get heard last week.

If you haven’t contacted legislators to oppose these, there is still time, especially for SB 421. See earlier e-mails for phone numbers.

If there’s any chance of attending a hearing, here is the most current info:

HB 422 is one of 4 bills up in front of House Energy & Natural Resources, (Egolf’s committee). They will meet Monday the 7th at 8:30 am, different room than usual: room 309.

The good news is that with the early schedule, they can be counted on to meet when they say.

SB 421 will be in front of the Senate Judiciary Committee. They meet in Room 321, “at 2:30 or half an hour after the main Senate floor session ends”. It is one of 14 bills on their agenda.

I spent Friday from 2:30 till 6:00 when the committee actually convened, and then found they’d dropped 421 from the day’s agenda. It’s frustrating, but if you can spare the time, our voices are needed.

You may have seen the New Mexican editorial about how Bratton’s Brats (the HENRC GOP) maneuvered HB 297 (weakening the Oil Conservation Division) past HENRC using technicalities, contrived absences, and quorum manipulation. Read the editorial, then call or e-mail to express your disapproval and ask Reps to oppose it on the floor of the House.

We’re all getting tired, but only 13 more days to go. Do whatever you can, please.

Kim"

Link to editorial>>>>


 

Friday, March 4, 2011

Pressure Limits Efforts to Police Drilling for Gas

The New York Times
By IAN URBINA
Published: March 3, 2011
" When Congress considered whether to regulate more closely the handling of wastes from oil and gas drilling in the 1980s, it turned to the Environmental Protection Agency to research the matter. E.P.A. researchers concluded that some of the drillers’ waste was hazardous and should be tightly controlled.

Ozier Muhammad/The New York Times

Carol M. Browner, left, the E.P.A. administrator in the Clinton administration, has argued both for and against exemptions for the oil and gas industry.

Drilling Down

An Agency's Limits

Articles in this series examine the risks of natural-gas drilling and efforts to regulate this rapidly growing industry.

Complete Series »

Questions, additional information or related tips can be sent to urbina@nytimes.com.
Multimedia
Interactive Feature
Documents: The Debate Over the Hydrofracking Study’s Scope
Graphic
Lax Rules for the Natural Gas Industry
Related
  • Green Blog: Pressure Grows for Answers on Fracking (March 2, 2011)
Enlarge This Image
Left, Manuel Balce Ceneta/Associated Press; Stephen Crowley/The New York Times

In its efforts to oppose new federal regulations, the oil and gas industry found allies in Senator James M. Inhofe, left, and Senator Tom Coburn, Republicans from Oklahoma.

But that is not what Congress heard. Some of the recommendations concerning oil and gas waste were eliminated in the final report handed to lawmakers in 1987.

“It was like the science didn’t matter,” Carla Greathouse, the author of the study, said in a recent interview. “The industry was going to get what it wanted, and we were not supposed to stand in the way.”

E.P.A. officials told her, she said, that her findings were altered because of pressure from the Office of Legal Counsel of the White House under Ronald Reagan. A spokesman for the E.P.A. declined to comment.

Ms. Greathouse’s experience was not an isolated case. More than a quarter-century of efforts by some lawmakers and regulators to force the federal government to police the industry better have been thwarted, as E.P.A. studies have been repeatedly narrowed in scope and important findings have been removed.

For example, the agency had planned to call last year for a moratorium on the gas-drilling technique known as hydrofracking in the New York City watershed, according to internal documents, but the advice was removed from the publicly released letter sent to New York.

Now some scientists and lawyers at the E.P.A. are wondering whether history is about to repeat itself as the agency undertakes a broad new study of natural gas drilling and its potential risks, with preliminary results scheduled to be delivered next year.

The documents show that the agency dropped some plans to model radioactivity in drilling wastewater being discharged by treatment plants into rivers upstream from drinking water intake plants. And in Congress, members from drilling states like Oklahoma have pressured the agency to keep the focus of the new study narrow.

They have been helped in their lobbying efforts by a compelling storyline: Cutting red tape helps these energy companies reduce the nation’s dependence on other countries for fuel. Natural gas is also a cleaner-burning alternative to coal and plentiful within United States borders, so it can create jobs.

But interviews with E.P.A. scientists, and confidential documents obtained by The New York Times, show long and deep divisions within the agency over whether and how to increase regulation of oil and gas drillers, and over the enforcement of existing laws that some agency officials say are clearly being violated.

Agency lawyers are heatedly debating whether to intervene in Pennsylvania, where drilling for gas has increased sharply, to stop what some of those lawyers say is a clear violation of federal pollution laws: drilling waste discharged into rivers and streams with minimal treatment. The outcome of that dispute has the potential to halt the breakneck growth of drilling in Pennsylvania.

The E.P.A. has taken strong stands in some places, like Texas, where in December it overrode state regulators and intervened after a local driller was suspected of water contamination. Elsewhere, the agency has pulled its punches, as in New York.

Asked why the letter about hydrofracking in the New York City watershed had been revised, an agency scientist involved in writing it offered a one-word explanation: “politics.”

Natural gas drilling companies have major exemptions from parts of at least 7 of the 15 sweeping federal environmental laws that regulate most other heavy industries and were written to protect air and drinking water from radioactive and hazardous chemicals.

Coal mine operators that want to inject toxic wastewater into the ground must get permission from the federal authorities. But when natural gas companies want to inject chemical-laced water and sand into the ground during hydrofracking, they do not have to follow the same rules.

The air pollution from a sprawling steel plant with multiple buildings is added together when regulators decide whether certain strict rules will apply. At a natural gas site, the toxic fumes from various parts of it — a compressor station and a storage tank, for example — are counted separately rather than cumulatively, so many overall gas well operations are subject to looser caps on their emissions.

An Earlier Reversal

The E.P.A. also studied hydrofracking in 2004, when Congress considered whether the process should be fully regulated by the Safe Drinking Water Act.

An early draft of the study discussed potentially dangerous levels of contamination in hydrofracking fluids and mentioned “possible evidence” of contamination of an aquifer. The report’s final version excluded these points, concluding instead that hydrofracking “poses little or no threat to drinking water.”

Shortly after the study was released, an E.P.A. whistle-blower said the agency had been strongly influenced by industry and political pressure. Agency leaders at the time stood by the study’s findings.

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Pit & Rig - Near the Canadian River

Pit & Rig - Near the Canadian River

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Drilling Santa Fe
We are citizens concerned with promoting protections from resource extractive activities in Santa Fe County. Tax deductible donations [501(c)3] for DSF should be made to the Concerned Citizens of Cerrillos for the Drilling Santa Fe Fund, P.O. Box 23921, Santa Fe, NM 87502. Donations are not set up via the internet.
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Mission Statement I

The mission of Drilling Santa Fe is to protect the cultural, environmental, and economic resources of Santa Fe County from the adverse impacts of oil and gas exploration and production within the County.


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Santa Fe County Gas & Oil Ordinance

  • Santa Fe County Oil and Gas Ordinance Primer
  • Update of the Santa Fe County General Plan and Land Development Regulations
  • Adopted Oil & Gas Ordinance (12/9/2008) (5MB)
  • New Mexico Environmental Law Center
  • Revised Oil & Gas Ordinance (12/2/08) (827kb)
  • Revised Oil & Gas Ordinance (posted 11/18/08) (5 MB)
  • Revised Oil & Gas Element (11/18/08) (15 MB) ADOPTED
  • Public hearings & tracking
  • Santa Fe County Oil and Gas Ordinance and Federal Preemption
  • Revised Oil and Gas Ordinance (5MB) 11/12/2008
  • Revised Oil and Gas Element (15MB) 11/12/2008
  • First Draft of Plan Ordinance powerPoint presentation » [PDF 2.4MB]
  • Oil and Gas Plan » [PDF 11.6MB]
  • Santa Fe County Ordinace (DRAFT) » [PDF 2.9MB]
  • Santa Fe County Oil & Gas Drilling Ordinance Webpage
  • Next steps » [PDF 84kb]
  • Comments, Acoustic Ecology: Noise
  • Comments, Eldorado Gas & Oil Team: EGOT!
  • Theo Colborn, PhD Colorado Rule Making Comments
  • Hydrogeological constraints on oil and gas drilling in the Galisteo Basin
  • Comments: (Draft) SMA
  • Ecotourism
  • Comments: Steven Sugarman
  • Comments: New Mexico Environmental Law Center
  • National Congress of American Indians
  • NMELC Revised Draft
  • Santa Fe County Commission Viewpoints Blog
  • Drill, Baby, Drill Flyer

OCD Special Provisions for Santa Fe County and the Galisteo Basin

  • Notice
  • Application for Rule Amendment
  • Oil Conservation Division
  • Common Ground United Signed On Comments
  • Drilling Santa Fe Comments
  • December 3rd Comments

Santa Fe County Emergency Interim Development Ordinance and Oil & Gas Ordinance Planning

  • Santa Fe County Oil & Gas Webpage
  • Galisteo Basin Growth Management Area Map
  • Our Planning Works Website
  • Ordinance prohibiting drilling permits
  • Map "Exhibit A"
  • Santa Fe County Oil & Gas Moratorium: Video

Governor Richardson Executive Ordered Galisteo Basin Report

  • Galisteo Basin Report
  • Governor Richardson's Executive Order to Extend the Galisteo Basin Moratorium
  • Governor Richardson's Executive Order for Galisteo Basin Drilling Moratorium

Tecton Energy, LLC Three Proposed Galisteo Basin Oil & Gas Well Sites Map

  • Oil Conservation Division Map of Proposed Sites
  • Tecton Applications
  • EMNRD Well Info Link

OCD Pit Rule

  • Highlights
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • OCD Fresh Water Stations Memo
  • Training

Galisteo Basin Drilling

  • Santa Fe New Mexican Composite Links
  • Tecton Energy, LLC
  • Quantum Energy Partners

Galisteo Basin

  • Defined
  • Timeline
  • Archaeology
  • Hopi-Tewa (Tano)
  • Tewa
  • San Marcos
  • Mission San Marcos
  • Ohkay Owingeh

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      • PA Governor Gives Energy Executive Supreme Authori...
      • Another One Of Those Small Business-Friendly Tactics?
      • Wyoming Air Pollution Worse Than Los Angeles Due T...
      • NM governor nominates Bemis to head energy agency
      • NM House Bills 297 & 422
      • NM SB 421 Tabled
      • Oil-slick sleight of hand
      • Pressure Limits Efforts to Police Drilling for Gas
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waste pit

waste pit
OCD Pit Testing (See Link Below)

Analytical Results of OCD's Pit Sampling Program

  • OCD Environmental Bureau

drillingsantafe.com

  • drillingsantafe.com bumperstickers plus

Pit & River

Pit & River

Conservation Voters New Mexico - legislative tracking site

  • protectnm.org

Link to

  • Santa Fe County Commissioners

Petition Links

  • Democracy for New Mexico
  • Forest Guardians
  • Petition

Exploratory Oil Drilling

Exploratory Oil Drilling

Educational Links:

  • (EMNRD) New Mexico Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department
  • (OCD) New Mexico Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department Oil Conservation Division
  • (OGAP) Oil & Gas Accountability Project
  • (SOPA) Surface Owners Protection Act
  • Examples of Forced Pooling
  • Fracing Article - Salon
  • Groundwater Contamination from Oil & Gas
  • Halliburton Technology
  • Highway Freight Traffic Associated with the Development of Oil & Gas Wells
  • New Mexico State Land Office
  • New Mexico Wildnerness Alliance
  • San Juan Citizens Alliance
  • The Local Economic Impacts of Natural Gas Development in Valle Vidal, NM
  • Tweeti Blancett - High Country News
  • Tweeti Blancett - National Geographic
  • Tweeti Blancett - Otero Mesa
  • Tweeti Blancett - Sierra Club
  • Tweeti Blancett -The Mad Gas Rush - Audubon

Erosion

Erosion

Deep Burial

Deep Burial

Related News & Reports

  • "A Political speech the West needs to hear" -- High Country News
  • "All's well at camps for well builders?" - denverpost.com
  • "Commentary: Fluid response to Otera Mesa" - Albuquerque Tribune
  • "Eased oil rules cause tension, many more oil wells in Greeley and Weld County" - The Tribune
  • "Gas Drillers need permit for water" - The Durango Herald
  • "Groups call for halt to drilling for remediation" - Billings Gazette
  • "Oil in North Dakota Brings Job Boom and Burdern" -- New York Times
  • "Residents bemoan blowout cleanup" - Star Tribune
  • "Search for Westland oil begins as shareholder vote looms" - Albuquerque.bizjournal 2006
  • "The last stand?" - The News-Record
  • OCD Pit Testing - New Mexico Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department Oil Conservation Division (OCD)
  • Oil and Gas Lease Sale - New Mexico State Land Office

dead bird in waste pit

dead bird in waste pit
From OCD Pit Testing (Above Link)

Links, News & Videos

  • "No Vacancy" - Jackson Hole Star Tribune
  • "Some roughnecks' rough behavior grates on law enforcement" -- The Daily Sentinel
  • Democracy for New Mexico: Tweeti Blancett (News)
  • Orion Magazine - Taking on Goliath (Link)
  • Sierra Club Chronicles Episode 4: Range Wars Rage On (Video)

Tweeti Blancett Videos , Santa Fe, July 17, 2007

  • Tweeti Blancett Videos by R3 Productions

Pit Before

Pit Before

Pit After

Pit After

Pit After (up close)

Pit After (up close)

Leaking Tank (first picture)

Leaking Tank (first picture)

Leaking Tank (second picture)

Leaking Tank (second picture)

Comments about SOPA (for ref. Educational Links: Surface Owners Protection Act & H.R. 2337 Ed Links)

Bob Gallagher of the New Mexico Oil and Gas Association noted that the state's landowner protection law, which just went into effect July 1, was borne out of cooperation between landowners and energy companies. The result was a balanced, fair bill that protected both sides, he said.

"It does not delay or deny access to mineral resources," Gallagher said.

Gallagher implied that the federal legislation, by contrast, is too one-sided. "It is not a good start. It is not a good finish. It was not written by someone in the field doing the work," he said.

Aside from the split-estate provisions, H.R. 2337 would amend sections of the 2005 Energy Policy Act that accelerated oil and gas drilling on public lands, severely limit the Interior Department's royalty-in-kind program and establish a fee on nonproducing leases. The measure also aims to bolster carbon sequestration studies and require new studies for wind power siting, and it would establish an intra-agency panel to address the effect of warming on federal lands, oceans and federal water infrastructure (E&E Daily, July 16).

Gable is an independent energy and environmental writer in Woodland Park, Colo

The House of Representatives will vote next week. Congressman Udall: Phone 202-225-6190 or 505-984-8950

"The Gold of the Ortiz Mountains " - William Baxter

"The Gold of the Ortiz Mountains - A Story of New Mexico and The West's First Major Gold Rush," by William Baxter is not only a fascinating read, but puts the potentially impending black gold rush into context. Again, big interests have their sites set on the Ortiz Mountains area for mineral extraction (see memo Ortiz Mines, Inc. Memo of Oil & Gas Lease below).

Referenced Links: "Oil and Gas Exploration in Santa Fe County":

  • Albuquerque-Santa Fe Rift
  • Bruce Black
  • Go-Tech
  • The Heritage Foundation - Oil Shale
  • Waste Pit
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Ortiz Mines, Inc Memo of Oil & Gas Lease Exhibit A Part 1

Ortiz Mines, Inc Memo of Oil & Gas Lease Exhibit A Part 1

Ortiz Mines, Inc Memo of Oil & Gas Lease Exhibit A Part 2

Ortiz Mines, Inc Memo of Oil & Gas Lease Exhibit A Part 2

Cloud Cliff Cafe Meeting

Cloud Cliff Cafe Meeting

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Tweeti Blancett Press Release

Tweeti Blancett Press Release