By Lone Star Chapter Sierra Club, Nov. 28, 2007
The Sierra Club is challenging a radioactive waste disposal facility proposed for Andrews County in West Texas.
The environmental group says that the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) should not have even prepared a draft license for the disposal of so-called radioactive “byproduct materials” because the application for the license by Waste Control Specialists (WCS) failed to meet the basic requirements of the state law governing these materials.
The Sierra Club said TCEQ should withdraw the draft license and return the application to WCS. If TCEQ refuses to do so, then the Sierra Club is requesting a contested case proceeding on the draft license on behalf of Club members living in Eunice, New Mexico just across the Texas-New Mexico border from the proposed facility.
Deficiencies in the Application
“The Environmental Analysis of the proposed waste dump prepared by TCEQ itself shows that WCS failed to meet the requirements of state law in its application for the facility,” noted Texas Sierra Club state director Ken Kramer.
“WCS failed to conduct a routine year-long monitoring program,
failed to adequately characterize the geology and hydrology of the proposed site,
failed to account for high-wind events and worst-case rain scenarios,
and ignored the interaction of the proposed radioactive waste operations with the existing hazardous waste operations at the WCS facility.”
“Clearly, the agency clearly should withdraw the draft license and force the applicant to reapply. If TCEQ does not do so, then the agency needs to grant our request for a contested case proceeding on the license.”
Concerns of Area Residents
Eleven residents or families in Eunice, New Mexico – just four miles west of the WCS disposal site and home to about 2500 people – as individuals also have asked TCEQ for a public meeting and a contested case proceeding on the matter if TCEQ does not withdraw the draft license.
The Eunice residents are concerned that the more than one million cubic yards of uranium and thorium byproduct waste that might be buried at the disposal site would impact their health and livelihoods.
Their concerns stem from the potential for groundwater contamination, traffic accidents involving trucks carrying radioactive materials, and wind-blown dispersal of radioactive dust and liquids, among other issues.
These are also some of the concerns noted by the Sierra Club in its request for a contested case proceeding. In its comments to TCEQ the Sierra Club cites two Eunice residents who are Club members - a caregiver living on the eastern edge of Eunice and a local business owner, who owns a flower shop, feed store, and 15 acres of alfalfa fields in the region.
“These individuals work, travel and make their livelihoods from the local groundwater, roads and resources of the area,” Kramer noted. “The fact that TCEQ prepared a draft license based on a WCS application that lacks basic information on and/or includes contradictions about the porosity, fissures, and saturation levels of the soils in which the radioactive waste will be dumped is unacceptable.”
“We live here and the trucks and railcars will be going literally by our houses,” noted Eunice business owner and Sierra Club member Rose Gardner. “I don’t want to be taking my flower boxes to the local landfill next to WCS and face the prospect of escaped radon gas infecting my lungs or uranium tailing waste leaching into my water well for my alfalfa.”
A copy of Sierra Club’s comments on the draft license prepared by TCEQ may be found on the Club’s Lone Star Chapter website .
A copy of the draft license (R05807) may be found on the TCEQ website .
DFW Regional Concerned Citizens collaborate to be informed on air quality and water issues. Breathable air and safe drinking water is essential. Air Quality impacts transportation funding, health and quality of life.
Gas drilling in the Trinity and Barnett Shale Aquifiers presents challenges for residents calling for sensible ordinances to balance safety, quality of life, water quality and water availabilty with other resources.
- TCEQ Rules for Service Station VRSs
- TCEQ Emission Tables by County - Barnett Shale
- SMU Pollution Study of Barnett Shale Gas Production, Transmission and Storage
- Preventable Pipeline Hazards
- NPR: Health and Gas in DISH
- News 33 Coverage of Daniel Dr Pipeline May 2009
- NCTCA
- Natural Gas Devastation: An Aerial View
- Natural Gas Devastation - Arial View
- E Arlington - Industrial Pipeline Construction
- Drilling Rigs In Arlington and Grand Prairie
- DFWRCC
- Daniel Dr. DFW Midstreams Pipeline Update
- Corinth Cares
- Child endangerment: Cedar Point Apt.and Bob Cook Park
- Child Endangerment in Arlington - open gas pipeline drilling holes
- Child Endangerment - Sump Holes in Residential Neighborhoods
- Blue Daze
- Atlngton Texan
About Air and Water
Thursday, November 29, 2007
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
I-10 Well Explosion closes traffic into Baton Rouge
Note: We are posting articles on ABOUT AIR AND WATER about this Louisiana well explosion because it illustrates what can occur in Texas. During TxDOT Trans Texas Corridor public meetings last summer Dale Henry testified that running pipelines too near major transportation corridors is a bad idea. One of the leading oil/gas field safety experts in the world, Dale Henry recognized the dangers and warned Texas Legislators and bureaucrats that roadways, rail lines and pipelines and gas/oil wells should be separated as much as possible. Transportation is snarled for hundreds of miles now in Louisiana. The photos and reports are dramatic and costly illustrations of the validity of Mr. Henry's insight.
I-10 closed until December;
DNR to review company's rig permit after well blowout
By Mike Hasten - Lafayette Daily Advertiser - Nov. 20, 2007
BATON ROUGE - Interstate 10 between Lafayette and Baton Rouge will remain closed until Dec. 4 while crews battle a natural gas well fire that erupted Thursday less than a football field away from the roadway.
Dan Eby of Crudd Well Control, which has been hired to extinguish the fire at the Bridas Energy USA Inc. well site, said Dec. 4 is "not an ultra-optimistic estimate and it is not an ultra-pessimistic estimate" of when the work will be finished and the highway can reopen. "It is a realistic estimate" and he would be surprised if it took longer
But Eby cautioned, "you never know what you're going to get into" when fighting a well fire.
State Police Commander Colonel Stanley Griffin and Department of Transporta-tion and Development Secretary Johnny Bradberry said eastbound I-10 traffic will continue to be routed up I-49 at Lafayette on to U.S. 190 into Baton Rouge and I-10 westbound will be routed through Baton Rouge to LA 415 west of Port Allen, where it will link to U.S. 190 toward Opelousas.
He said he has contacted major trucking lines and advised them to reroute traffic to Interstate 20 across Louisiana until the problem is cleared. He also advised motorist to try to find alternate routes, like U.S. 90 if they are headed to New Orleans from Lafayette.
The additional traffic at times slows U.S. 190 between Opelousas and Baton Rouge to a crawl, Bradberry said, so "If you can think of another way without traveling over 190, do it."
The well, located about two miles west of the Ramah/Maringoin exit on the Atchafalaya Basin floodway side, blew out Thursday while the company was attempting to drill a second shaft after the original one ran into trouble.
Louisiana Department of Natural Resources spokesman Chris Frink said Monday that the agency is investigating what went wrong on the well and at the same time is reviewing the soundness of its policy that allowed a well to be drilled so close to a major highway.
"We are still gathering all the facts," Frink said in an interview. "Our first priority is public safety, to get that thing capped. When the investigation is complete and we have all the facts, we will look again at our policies with an eye n maintaining public safety."
A primary factor in that review, he said, is the current policy that allows a well to be drilled near a roadway with the only stipulation that it be far enough away that if the drilling derrick falls, it will not block the road.
The Bridas well, he said, "was within our policies." It's 90 yards from the elevated westbound lanes of I-10.
Bradberry said Gov. Kathleen Blanco has ordered an immediate review and possible change of that policy.
Bridas Energy USA Inc., based in Longview, Texas, "has got a good safety record with us," Frink said.
Since 1998, the company has received permits to drill 49 wells in six fields in Caddo and DeSoto parishes. This is its first one in south Louisiana.
State Sen. Robert Adley of Benton, who once was in the gas well drilling business, said "Caddo and DeSoto are a whole lot different than what they're drilling down there" because the pressure is much greater in south Louisiana. "There must be an incredible amount of pressure."
Adley questions why the well blew out and is still going strong.
"With the technology we have today, they should have been able to handle it," he said. "I'm just astounded they haven't been able to get control of it."
Don Briggs, executive director of the Louisiana Oil and Gas Association, said all drilling rigs have blowout preventers and "obviously, something didn't work."
Briggs said it's standard operation when a well is drilled to pump heavy drilling mud into the hole to hold back the pressure. The higher the pressure, the more mud is needed. If the pressure builds up faster than mud can be pumped in, "that's why you have blowout preventers. When you have a blowout, something had to have gone wrong."
Briggs said, using an expression in the business, "they got their mud cut and it came to see 'em. I'm sure those guys hate seeing their reservoir drained."
Blowouts are not supposed to be commonplace, he said, but they're common enough to keep a number of blowout specialists and well firefighters in business.
Rodney Mallett, communications director for the state Department of Environmental Quality, said inspectors with air and water monitors have been on-site since Thursday and have detected "not a thing" that would harm the environment. "It's pretty much a clean-burning gas" and so far, no distillates have been detected that would harm the environment.
DEQ has constructed retaining walls around the well site to collect the massive amount of water expected to be sprayed on the fire to knock it out, Mallett said. It's possible the water could contain material that would affect the Atchafalaya Basin, so it will be collected and removed from the site.
Briggs said he received a report that crews at the well have dragged off bags of chemicals that he termed "caustic" and removed melted metal structures from the well area in anticipation of the high-powered water spray.
Bradberry said DOTD inspectors have found no damage to I-10 and will be safe to use as soon as the fire is extinguished and no gas is escaping. Until then, he said, it is not safe for traffic.
I-10 closed until December;
DNR to review company's rig permit after well blowout
By Mike Hasten - Lafayette Daily Advertiser - Nov. 20, 2007
BATON ROUGE - Interstate 10 between Lafayette and Baton Rouge will remain closed until Dec. 4 while crews battle a natural gas well fire that erupted Thursday less than a football field away from the roadway.
Dan Eby of Crudd Well Control, which has been hired to extinguish the fire at the Bridas Energy USA Inc. well site, said Dec. 4 is "not an ultra-optimistic estimate and it is not an ultra-pessimistic estimate" of when the work will be finished and the highway can reopen. "It is a realistic estimate" and he would be surprised if it took longer
But Eby cautioned, "you never know what you're going to get into" when fighting a well fire.
State Police Commander Colonel Stanley Griffin and Department of Transporta-tion and Development Secretary Johnny Bradberry said eastbound I-10 traffic will continue to be routed up I-49 at Lafayette on to U.S. 190 into Baton Rouge and I-10 westbound will be routed through Baton Rouge to LA 415 west of Port Allen, where it will link to U.S. 190 toward Opelousas.
He said he has contacted major trucking lines and advised them to reroute traffic to Interstate 20 across Louisiana until the problem is cleared. He also advised motorist to try to find alternate routes, like U.S. 90 if they are headed to New Orleans from Lafayette.
The additional traffic at times slows U.S. 190 between Opelousas and Baton Rouge to a crawl, Bradberry said, so "If you can think of another way without traveling over 190, do it."
The well, located about two miles west of the Ramah/Maringoin exit on the Atchafalaya Basin floodway side, blew out Thursday while the company was attempting to drill a second shaft after the original one ran into trouble.
Louisiana Department of Natural Resources spokesman Chris Frink said Monday that the agency is investigating what went wrong on the well and at the same time is reviewing the soundness of its policy that allowed a well to be drilled so close to a major highway.
"We are still gathering all the facts," Frink said in an interview. "Our first priority is public safety, to get that thing capped. When the investigation is complete and we have all the facts, we will look again at our policies with an eye n maintaining public safety."
A primary factor in that review, he said, is the current policy that allows a well to be drilled near a roadway with the only stipulation that it be far enough away that if the drilling derrick falls, it will not block the road.
The Bridas well, he said, "was within our policies." It's 90 yards from the elevated westbound lanes of I-10.
Bradberry said Gov. Kathleen Blanco has ordered an immediate review and possible change of that policy.
Bridas Energy USA Inc., based in Longview, Texas, "has got a good safety record with us," Frink said.
Since 1998, the company has received permits to drill 49 wells in six fields in Caddo and DeSoto parishes. This is its first one in south Louisiana.
State Sen. Robert Adley of Benton, who once was in the gas well drilling business, said "Caddo and DeSoto are a whole lot different than what they're drilling down there" because the pressure is much greater in south Louisiana. "There must be an incredible amount of pressure."
Adley questions why the well blew out and is still going strong.
"With the technology we have today, they should have been able to handle it," he said. "I'm just astounded they haven't been able to get control of it."
Don Briggs, executive director of the Louisiana Oil and Gas Association, said all drilling rigs have blowout preventers and "obviously, something didn't work."
Briggs said it's standard operation when a well is drilled to pump heavy drilling mud into the hole to hold back the pressure. The higher the pressure, the more mud is needed. If the pressure builds up faster than mud can be pumped in, "that's why you have blowout preventers. When you have a blowout, something had to have gone wrong."
Briggs said, using an expression in the business, "they got their mud cut and it came to see 'em. I'm sure those guys hate seeing their reservoir drained."
Blowouts are not supposed to be commonplace, he said, but they're common enough to keep a number of blowout specialists and well firefighters in business.
Rodney Mallett, communications director for the state Department of Environmental Quality, said inspectors with air and water monitors have been on-site since Thursday and have detected "not a thing" that would harm the environment. "It's pretty much a clean-burning gas" and so far, no distillates have been detected that would harm the environment.
DEQ has constructed retaining walls around the well site to collect the massive amount of water expected to be sprayed on the fire to knock it out, Mallett said. It's possible the water could contain material that would affect the Atchafalaya Basin, so it will be collected and removed from the site.
Briggs said he received a report that crews at the well have dragged off bags of chemicals that he termed "caustic" and removed melted metal structures from the well area in anticipation of the high-powered water spray.
Bradberry said DOTD inspectors have found no damage to I-10 and will be safe to use as soon as the fire is extinguished and no gas is escaping. Until then, he said, it is not safe for traffic.
Labels:
Baton Rouge,
explosion,
gas dilling,
I-10,
RAMAH,
well blow out
Friday, November 23, 2007
Texas Firm Indicted for Disposing Hazwaste Underground
By Environmental News Services, November, 20, 2007
HOUSTON, Texas, November 20, 2007 (ENS) - The owner of a hazardous waste transport company and his operations manager face federal charges for their roles in a conspiracy to illegally transport and dispose of hazardous waste underground. Their alleged misuse of an underground injection well may have contaminated drinking water.
The men were arraigned Friday in U.S. District Court in Houston. They are charged with 14 felony counts including conspiracy, violating the Safe Drinking Water Act and violating the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, which regulates storage, transportation and disposal of hazardous wastes.
John Kessel, the president and owner of Texas Oil and Gathering, Inc., and Edgar Pettijohn, the company's operations manager, were arrested and charged with illegally disposing of hazardous waste at a facility only approved to take oil and gas production waste.
Texas Oil and Gathering, Inc., a licensed hazardous waste transporter and used oil handler, was also named in the indictment.
Kessel and Pettijohn allegedly conspired to purchase hazardous waste from multiple generator facilities and process it at their Texas Oil and Gathering facility in Alvin, 12 miles southeast of Houston.
The men then sold portions of the waste as a fuel additive, and allegedly directed their employees to transport the remaining hazardous waste, disguised with documents indicating the waste was from an oil production well, to Disposal Facility A.
This facility is not permitted by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to accept, store or dispose of hazardous material.
Once at Disposal Facility A, the hazardous waste allegedly was disposed into Class II injection wells in violation of the law.
Class II injection wells are for disposing of saltwater or brine that is produced when oil and gas are extracted from the Earth. It is illegal to dispose of anything other than these fluids through Class II wells.
The Safe Drinking Water Act prohibits the unauthorized use of these injection wells to prevent contamination of drinking water sources.
In furtherance of the conspiracy, Kessel and Pettijohn allegedly falsified bills of lading and trip tickets which misrepresented the origin and type of waste they were transporting.
If convicted of all charges, Kessel and Pettijohn each faces five years in prison, and the business faces fines of up to $7 million.
The investigation was conducted by the EPA's Criminal Investigation Division, the Texas Environmental Task Force, the Houston Police Department, and the Department of Transportation, Office of Inspector General.
The prosecution is being handled by the Justice Department's Environmental Crimes Section.
This is not the first time Texas Oil and Gathering has been in trouble with the EPA. In 1999, the company settled with the federal agency for selling diesel fuel with an illegally high proportion of sulfur. While denying the allegations, the company paid a civil penalty of $6,300.
Copyright Environment News Service (ENS) 2007. All rights reserved.
HOUSTON, Texas, November 20, 2007 (ENS) - The owner of a hazardous waste transport company and his operations manager face federal charges for their roles in a conspiracy to illegally transport and dispose of hazardous waste underground. Their alleged misuse of an underground injection well may have contaminated drinking water.
The men were arraigned Friday in U.S. District Court in Houston. They are charged with 14 felony counts including conspiracy, violating the Safe Drinking Water Act and violating the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, which regulates storage, transportation and disposal of hazardous wastes.
John Kessel, the president and owner of Texas Oil and Gathering, Inc., and Edgar Pettijohn, the company's operations manager, were arrested and charged with illegally disposing of hazardous waste at a facility only approved to take oil and gas production waste.
Texas Oil and Gathering, Inc., a licensed hazardous waste transporter and used oil handler, was also named in the indictment.
Kessel and Pettijohn allegedly conspired to purchase hazardous waste from multiple generator facilities and process it at their Texas Oil and Gathering facility in Alvin, 12 miles southeast of Houston.
The men then sold portions of the waste as a fuel additive, and allegedly directed their employees to transport the remaining hazardous waste, disguised with documents indicating the waste was from an oil production well, to Disposal Facility A.
This facility is not permitted by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to accept, store or dispose of hazardous material.
Once at Disposal Facility A, the hazardous waste allegedly was disposed into Class II injection wells in violation of the law.
Class II injection wells are for disposing of saltwater or brine that is produced when oil and gas are extracted from the Earth. It is illegal to dispose of anything other than these fluids through Class II wells.
The Safe Drinking Water Act prohibits the unauthorized use of these injection wells to prevent contamination of drinking water sources.
In furtherance of the conspiracy, Kessel and Pettijohn allegedly falsified bills of lading and trip tickets which misrepresented the origin and type of waste they were transporting.
If convicted of all charges, Kessel and Pettijohn each faces five years in prison, and the business faces fines of up to $7 million.
The investigation was conducted by the EPA's Criminal Investigation Division, the Texas Environmental Task Force, the Houston Police Department, and the Department of Transportation, Office of Inspector General.
The prosecution is being handled by the Justice Department's Environmental Crimes Section.
This is not the first time Texas Oil and Gathering has been in trouble with the EPA. In 1999, the company settled with the federal agency for selling diesel fuel with an illegally high proportion of sulfur. While denying the allegations, the company paid a civil penalty of $6,300.
Copyright Environment News Service (ENS) 2007. All rights reserved.
Court Throws Out Bush Fuel Economy Standards
By Environmental News Service - November 16, 2007
SAN FRANCISCO, California -- The Bush administration's fuel economy standards for many sport utility vehicles, minivans and pickup trucks have been rejected by a federal appeals court because they set a zero value on reducing emissions of carbon dioxide that cause global warming.
Thursday, the 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals sided with 11 states and five environmental groups who argued federal regulators ignored the effects of carbon dioxide emissions when determining fuel economy standards for light trucks.
The court sent its decision back to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, NHTSA, for a full Environmental Review of the gas mileage standards.
The ruling, written by Senior Circuit Judge Betty Binns Fletcher, found against the administration's decision to exempt SUVs and light trucks from fuel-economy standards.
"That class 2b trucks have never been regulated by NHTSA is not a reason for not regulating them now. We remand to NHTSA to revisit this issue and promulgate average fuel economy standards for these vehicles, or to provide a validly reasoned basis for continuing to exclude them from the regulation."
"This ruling is a big help in holding the Bush administration accountable for its refusal to accept the realities of global warming and forcing it to start taking responsible actions to implement the obvious solutions," said Kassie Siegel, who directs the Climate, Air, and Energy program for the Center for Biological Diversity, the lead plaintiff in the case..
"Raising fuel-economy standards is one of the most effective actions the government can take to quickly and significantly reduce greenhouse gas pollution. There's no reason SUVs and light trucks should be exempt from these standards," Siegel said.
The case, filed on behalf of the Center for Biological Diversity by the Stanford Environmental Law Clinic, is consolidated with similar challenges by California, Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, District of Columbia, the city of New York, and four other public interest groups, the Sierra Club, Natural Resources Defense Council, Public Citizen, and Environmental Defense.
The new mileage standards, announced in March 2006, required an increase in the average fuel economy for all passenger trucks sold in the United States from 22.2 miles per gallon to 23.5 miles per gallon by 2010.
Under the Energy Policy and Conservation Act, adopted four decades ago in response to the Arab oil crisis, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administrations sets gas mileage standards for motor vehicles. The Bush administration, ordered a one mile per gallon increase, from 22 to 23 miles per gallon by 2010, and exempted SUVs and light trucks.
Plaintiffs argued that the administration violated the Energy Policy and Conservation Act by setting low fuel-economy standards of 22.5, 23.1, and 23.5 miles per gallon for upcoming model years 2008, 2009, and 2010 respectively.
Plaintiffs also argued that the Bush administration violated the National Environmental Policy Act by failing to consider greenhouse gas emissions and global warming before selecting the low mileage standards.
California Attorney General Edmund G. Brown Jr. hailed the 9th Circuit's decision striking down national automobile mileage standards, calling it a "stunning rebuke" to the Bush administration's failed energy policies.
Commenting on the decision Brown said, "This decision sends a clear message that the Congress must get serious about combating dangerous foreign oil dependency and global warming. This is a major victory."
"This is an important victory in the fight against global warming," said Deborah Sivas, director of the Stanford Environmental Law Clinic and the attorney of record on the case. "It's hard to imagine a federal action more significant to the problem of climate change than one which dictates fuel-consumption standards."
The Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, AAM, an industry association representing the major automotive firms, commented, "Announced more than 19 months ago the MY 2008-2011 light truck fuel economy rule represented the largest fuel economy increase in the history of the CAFE [Corporate Average Fuel Economy] program. It has become the basis for product planning through 2011. Any further changes to the program would only delay the progress that manufacturers have made towards increasing fleet wide fuel economy."
"The federal government and the automobile industry should have embraced higher fuel economy standards years ago," said David Doniger, policy director of the Climate Center at the Natural Resources Defense Council, NRDC, and an attorney on the case.
"The U.S. auto industry is having a tough time today because Detroit's top management spent years hiding from the future," he said. "Well, the future is now. We have the technology to do this, and it's time we got started."
"Better fuel economy makes this country more secure, cuts dangerous global warming pollution, and saves consumers billions of dollars a year," said Doniger. "With the price of oil creeping up to $100 a barrel we need more efficient cars and trucks."
The AAM says its members are working towards more efficient vehicles. "Automakers support aggressive fuel economy increases that would raise the standards for all vehicles to as much as 35 miles per gallon by 2022. We share the goal of an energy bill and CAFE standard that is good for the consumer, environment and energy security. We continue to believe such a bill can be reached with industry support."
"This ruling comes at a key moment in our efforts to avoid the worst impacts of global warming," said Doniger. "The president has ordered the EPA to propose global warming standards by the end of the year, but White House officials are busy trying to water them down. The court's decision is a clear signal that it's time to set serious standards to cut global warming pollution."
Copyright Environment News Service (ENS) 2007. All rights reserved.
SAN FRANCISCO, California -- The Bush administration's fuel economy standards for many sport utility vehicles, minivans and pickup trucks have been rejected by a federal appeals court because they set a zero value on reducing emissions of carbon dioxide that cause global warming.
Thursday, the 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals sided with 11 states and five environmental groups who argued federal regulators ignored the effects of carbon dioxide emissions when determining fuel economy standards for light trucks.
The court sent its decision back to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, NHTSA, for a full Environmental Review of the gas mileage standards.
The ruling, written by Senior Circuit Judge Betty Binns Fletcher, found against the administration's decision to exempt SUVs and light trucks from fuel-economy standards.
"That class 2b trucks have never been regulated by NHTSA is not a reason for not regulating them now. We remand to NHTSA to revisit this issue and promulgate average fuel economy standards for these vehicles, or to provide a validly reasoned basis for continuing to exclude them from the regulation."
"This ruling is a big help in holding the Bush administration accountable for its refusal to accept the realities of global warming and forcing it to start taking responsible actions to implement the obvious solutions," said Kassie Siegel, who directs the Climate, Air, and Energy program for the Center for Biological Diversity, the lead plaintiff in the case..
"Raising fuel-economy standards is one of the most effective actions the government can take to quickly and significantly reduce greenhouse gas pollution. There's no reason SUVs and light trucks should be exempt from these standards," Siegel said.
The case, filed on behalf of the Center for Biological Diversity by the Stanford Environmental Law Clinic, is consolidated with similar challenges by California, Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, District of Columbia, the city of New York, and four other public interest groups, the Sierra Club, Natural Resources Defense Council, Public Citizen, and Environmental Defense.
The new mileage standards, announced in March 2006, required an increase in the average fuel economy for all passenger trucks sold in the United States from 22.2 miles per gallon to 23.5 miles per gallon by 2010.
Under the Energy Policy and Conservation Act, adopted four decades ago in response to the Arab oil crisis, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administrations sets gas mileage standards for motor vehicles. The Bush administration, ordered a one mile per gallon increase, from 22 to 23 miles per gallon by 2010, and exempted SUVs and light trucks.
Plaintiffs argued that the administration violated the Energy Policy and Conservation Act by setting low fuel-economy standards of 22.5, 23.1, and 23.5 miles per gallon for upcoming model years 2008, 2009, and 2010 respectively.
Plaintiffs also argued that the Bush administration violated the National Environmental Policy Act by failing to consider greenhouse gas emissions and global warming before selecting the low mileage standards.
California Attorney General Edmund G. Brown Jr. hailed the 9th Circuit's decision striking down national automobile mileage standards, calling it a "stunning rebuke" to the Bush administration's failed energy policies.
Commenting on the decision Brown said, "This decision sends a clear message that the Congress must get serious about combating dangerous foreign oil dependency and global warming. This is a major victory."
"This is an important victory in the fight against global warming," said Deborah Sivas, director of the Stanford Environmental Law Clinic and the attorney of record on the case. "It's hard to imagine a federal action more significant to the problem of climate change than one which dictates fuel-consumption standards."
The Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, AAM, an industry association representing the major automotive firms, commented, "Announced more than 19 months ago the MY 2008-2011 light truck fuel economy rule represented the largest fuel economy increase in the history of the CAFE [Corporate Average Fuel Economy] program. It has become the basis for product planning through 2011. Any further changes to the program would only delay the progress that manufacturers have made towards increasing fleet wide fuel economy."
"The federal government and the automobile industry should have embraced higher fuel economy standards years ago," said David Doniger, policy director of the Climate Center at the Natural Resources Defense Council, NRDC, and an attorney on the case.
"The U.S. auto industry is having a tough time today because Detroit's top management spent years hiding from the future," he said. "Well, the future is now. We have the technology to do this, and it's time we got started."
"Better fuel economy makes this country more secure, cuts dangerous global warming pollution, and saves consumers billions of dollars a year," said Doniger. "With the price of oil creeping up to $100 a barrel we need more efficient cars and trucks."
The AAM says its members are working towards more efficient vehicles. "Automakers support aggressive fuel economy increases that would raise the standards for all vehicles to as much as 35 miles per gallon by 2022. We share the goal of an energy bill and CAFE standard that is good for the consumer, environment and energy security. We continue to believe such a bill can be reached with industry support."
"This ruling comes at a key moment in our efforts to avoid the worst impacts of global warming," said Doniger. "The president has ordered the EPA to propose global warming standards by the end of the year, but White House officials are busy trying to water them down. The court's decision is a clear signal that it's time to set serious standards to cut global warming pollution."
Copyright Environment News Service (ENS) 2007. All rights reserved.
Monday, November 19, 2007
Toxic waste to be shipped by rail to West Texas from NY
By SCOTT STREATER - Star-Telegram staff writer - Sat, Nov. 17, 2007
Tons of toxic waste dredged from the Hudson River in New York are about to be shipped by rail to a disposal and storage site in West Texas.
General Electric Co. has chosen Dallas-based Waste Control Specialists to bury tons of sediment contaminated with polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs, at its waste disposal facility in Andrews County, on the New Mexico border. The decision is expected to be approved by the federal Environmental Protection Agency.
The PCBs, which are classified as probable human cancer-causing agents, were dumped in the Hudson River from two GE plants. The pollution covers 40 miles of the river north of Albany, making it the largest federal Superfund hazardous waste site in the nation.
Beginning in May 2009, about 81 railcars will make the 2,200-mile trip to West Texas each week. Federal regulators, and officials at GE and Waste Control Specialists, say that transporting the waste by rail is safe. The exact route is not likely to be made public.
"If you look at the statistics, no matter what type of hazardous waste you're transporting, it's the safest way to do it," said Steve Kulm, a spokesman for the Federal Railroad Administration in Washington.
Waste Control Specialists officials say that once the toxic materials are buried, they will stay there forever.
"What gives this site a position of strength for this type of disposal is that it's sitting on a very solid, thick clay formation that holds the waste in place," said Chuck McDonald, a company spokesman.
But others disagree. Cyrus Reed, a lobbyist with the Lone Star chapter of the Sierra Club, said he's not as worried about the railcars as he is about the disposal at the West Texas site. He said the state has never adequately studied whether the site is suitable to hold the waste.
"We believe if you're going to grant permits for additional waste to come in, you better make darn sure that none of this stuff ever reaches the aquifer below," Reed said. "We're not sure there's sufficient monitoring to make sure that doesn't happen."
Toxic cleanup
The contaminant
Polychlorinated biphenyls are industrial coolants and lubricants banned from manufacture in the U.S. in 1977. PCBs can damage the lungs and liver and are classified as probable human cancer-causing agents.
The plan
The toxic materials to be sent to Waste Control Specialists beginning in 2009 are the first from a two-phase Hudson River cleanup plan. The first phase involves the dredging and transport of 265,000 cubic yards of PCB-laden sediment -- the equivalent of more than 17,000 dump-truck loads. The contaminated sediments will be spread out in lined landfills and covered with compacted clay and a synthetic liner. The larger second phase, which involves dredging and transporting 2 million cubic yards of sediment, would begin in 2011, said Mark Behan, a General Electric Co. spokesman. The total cost of the cleanup: $700 million.
The site
The Waste Control Specialists site in West Texas is one of only about 10 authorized to dispose of PCBs, said Kristen Skopeck, an EPA spokeswoman. The state also recently granted a draft permit to Waste Control Specialists to store tons of radioactive waste from a long-abandoned Ohio uranium-processing plant at the site.
Toxic cleanup
The contaminant
Polychlorinated biphenyls are industrial coolants and lubricants banned from manufacture in the U.S. in 1977. PCBs can damage the lungs and liver and are classified as probable human cancer-causing agents.
The plan
The toxic materials to be sent to Waste Control Specialists beginning in 2009 are the first from a two-phase Hudson River cleanup plan. The first phase involves the dredging and transport of 265,000 cubic yards of PCB-laden sediment -- the equivalent of more than 17,000 dump-truck loads. The contaminated sediments will be spread out in lined landfills and covered with compacted clay and a synthetic liner. The larger second phase, which involves dredging and transporting 2 million cubic yards of sediment, would begin in 2011, said Mark Behan, a General Electric Co. spokesman. The total cost of the cleanup: $700 million.
The site
The Waste Control Specialists site in West Texas is one of only about 10 authorized to dispose of PCBs, said Kristen Skopeck, an EPA spokeswoman. The state also recently granted a draft permit to Waste Control Specialists to store tons of radioactive waste from a long-abandoned Ohio uranium-processing plant at the site.
Read more in the Fort Worth Star Telegram
Tons of toxic waste dredged from the Hudson River in New York are about to be shipped by rail to a disposal and storage site in West Texas.
General Electric Co. has chosen Dallas-based Waste Control Specialists to bury tons of sediment contaminated with polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs, at its waste disposal facility in Andrews County, on the New Mexico border. The decision is expected to be approved by the federal Environmental Protection Agency.
The PCBs, which are classified as probable human cancer-causing agents, were dumped in the Hudson River from two GE plants. The pollution covers 40 miles of the river north of Albany, making it the largest federal Superfund hazardous waste site in the nation.
Beginning in May 2009, about 81 railcars will make the 2,200-mile trip to West Texas each week. Federal regulators, and officials at GE and Waste Control Specialists, say that transporting the waste by rail is safe. The exact route is not likely to be made public.
"If you look at the statistics, no matter what type of hazardous waste you're transporting, it's the safest way to do it," said Steve Kulm, a spokesman for the Federal Railroad Administration in Washington.
Waste Control Specialists officials say that once the toxic materials are buried, they will stay there forever.
"What gives this site a position of strength for this type of disposal is that it's sitting on a very solid, thick clay formation that holds the waste in place," said Chuck McDonald, a company spokesman.
But others disagree. Cyrus Reed, a lobbyist with the Lone Star chapter of the Sierra Club, said he's not as worried about the railcars as he is about the disposal at the West Texas site. He said the state has never adequately studied whether the site is suitable to hold the waste.
"We believe if you're going to grant permits for additional waste to come in, you better make darn sure that none of this stuff ever reaches the aquifer below," Reed said. "We're not sure there's sufficient monitoring to make sure that doesn't happen."
Toxic cleanup
The contaminant
Polychlorinated biphenyls are industrial coolants and lubricants banned from manufacture in the U.S. in 1977. PCBs can damage the lungs and liver and are classified as probable human cancer-causing agents.
The plan
The toxic materials to be sent to Waste Control Specialists beginning in 2009 are the first from a two-phase Hudson River cleanup plan. The first phase involves the dredging and transport of 265,000 cubic yards of PCB-laden sediment -- the equivalent of more than 17,000 dump-truck loads. The contaminated sediments will be spread out in lined landfills and covered with compacted clay and a synthetic liner. The larger second phase, which involves dredging and transporting 2 million cubic yards of sediment, would begin in 2011, said Mark Behan, a General Electric Co. spokesman. The total cost of the cleanup: $700 million.
The site
The Waste Control Specialists site in West Texas is one of only about 10 authorized to dispose of PCBs, said Kristen Skopeck, an EPA spokeswoman. The state also recently granted a draft permit to Waste Control Specialists to store tons of radioactive waste from a long-abandoned Ohio uranium-processing plant at the site.
Toxic cleanup
The contaminant
Polychlorinated biphenyls are industrial coolants and lubricants banned from manufacture in the U.S. in 1977. PCBs can damage the lungs and liver and are classified as probable human cancer-causing agents.
The plan
The toxic materials to be sent to Waste Control Specialists beginning in 2009 are the first from a two-phase Hudson River cleanup plan. The first phase involves the dredging and transport of 265,000 cubic yards of PCB-laden sediment -- the equivalent of more than 17,000 dump-truck loads. The contaminated sediments will be spread out in lined landfills and covered with compacted clay and a synthetic liner. The larger second phase, which involves dredging and transporting 2 million cubic yards of sediment, would begin in 2011, said Mark Behan, a General Electric Co. spokesman. The total cost of the cleanup: $700 million.
The site
The Waste Control Specialists site in West Texas is one of only about 10 authorized to dispose of PCBs, said Kristen Skopeck, an EPA spokeswoman. The state also recently granted a draft permit to Waste Control Specialists to store tons of radioactive waste from a long-abandoned Ohio uranium-processing plant at the site.
Read more in the Fort Worth Star Telegram
City of Fort Worth losing bucks by outsourcing gas-lease work
By Mitchell Schnurman - Star-Telegram Staff Writer - Sun, Nov. 18, 2007Fort Worth may be sitting atop a fortune in natural gas, but that's no excuse for not minding the money.
For more than two years, the city has been paying through the nose to outsource its dealings in the Barnett Shale. Instead of doing most of the work in-house, it hired JPMorgan Chase to handle gas leases and monitor royalty runs.
Here's the kicker: It's paying a management fee based on a percentage of revenue, rather than an hourly rate -- a costly mistake, given the run-up in local mineral rights.
In the past two years, the city has paid $1.9 million in fees to JPMorgan, with $1 million more likely due in a few months. If the contract remains in place over the long term, the city's tab could reach $30 million.
Meanwhile, other public entities with major gas reserves, such as Dallas/Fort Worth Airport, the Tarrant Regional Water District and the city of Arlington, are paying far smaller amounts to outsiders. Their employees do much of the work, and they hire experts on a project basis.
Like the state of Texas, which does a huge business in mineral rights, they've decided not to give away part of a revenue stream that could run for 30 years.
Fort Worth has brought in $31 million in natural gas revenue. Compare its revenue and spending with Arlington's: It signed gas leases worth $42 million and spent $386,000 in outside fees.
Fort Worth and JPMorgan both defend the high-dollar arrangement.
"You get what you pay for," says Paul Midkiff, managing director at JPMorgan and the point man for gas work for the city. "Arlington may end up with more problems than they understand. There's more to it than just getting a lease signed."
JPMorgan gets 5 percent of the signing bonus for the leases it arranges and 4 percent of the annual royalties from the gas itself. Fort Worth officials say they're pleased with the arrangement.
"The city could not have generated the same amount of revenue without JPMorgan Chase expertise, knowledge and the respect they command in the gas leasing industry," Engineering Director Doug Rademaker said in a statement.
The city's endorsement has helped the bank land other public clients. Tarrant County and the Fort Worth school district have agreed to the same commissions on bonuses and royalties. And Midkiff says that Euless, North Richland Hills and several nonprofit groups signed deals for bonuses alone.
Midkiff says he provides many services for a city. He coordinates the bid process, evaluates offers for their effects on the community and, perhaps most importantly, cuts through the "analysis paralysis" that often grips government.
"Fort Worth has been signing lease deals for two years now, because they hired me," he says. "Tarrant County didn't make a single deal, but I've already done five this year. The benefit of hiring me is, you get somebody to push through the bureaucracy and do it right."
By all reports, Midkiff is a competent guy, who has done a fine job in getting top dollar for Fort Worth. My beef is with JPMorgan's fees. Couldn't Fort Worth get expert help on gas leasing -- maybe even Midkiff's help -- for a fraction of the cost?
Midkiff says the work is too hard for him to accept an hourly rate: "I wouldn't do it," he says.
But he did agree to serve as a consultant to D/FW Airport for a one-time fee. And JPMorgan monitors D/FW's royalties for a flat $100,000 a year.
"It wouldn't be fair to expect 4 percent on the amount of gas that D/FW is generating," Midkiff says.
OK, but Fort Worth isn't exactly chopped liver. The city says its natural gas revenue will total $742 million over the next 20 years.
Midkiff says that managing Fort Worth's project is more complicated that D/FW's. The city has dozens of leases, several drillers and a wide range of properties, from small street corners to big acreage under water-treatment plants. That's more labor intensive.
Maybe, but is the work 10 times tougher -- or 20 times?
Fort Worth can drop the JPMorgan contract with 45 days' notice, and it's disheartening that the staff hasn't proposed that already.
Hiring JPMorgan may have made sense in March 2004, when the deal was struck. Payouts hadn't soared yet, and city leaders and staffers were worried about their lack of industry knowledge.
They still say they don't want to get into the oil and gas business, but that line sounds timid and tired today. We're not talking about wildcatting here. Being a royalty owner is not that daunting.
Neighborhood groups in Tarrant County are regularly winning great lease deals by simply using volunteers and a legal review. Perhaps Fort Worth should hire a gas administrator, a position that D/FW is advertising for right now.
But somebody at City Hall has to get a lot more thorough on the subject. In September 2003, the staff recommended hiring a private management firm for gas leasing, and Rademaker showed the City Council a chart comparing the costs of an outside firm versus using city staff.
The outsiders would cost 28 percent less, he said.
The decision looked like a no-brainer, and the presentation was finished in 10 minutes, with almost no discussion.
Unfortunately, the chart projected costs for only two years, which is akin to choosing an adjustable-rate mortgage based just on the teaser payments. The really big bucks -- on ARMs and this deal -- are on the back end.
The staff also underestimated the revenue by a huge amount. It assumed a signing bonus of $500 an acre, the prevailing rate at the time; the city's latest deal topped $17,000 an acre. Prices of natural gas have surged since then, too, and the wells have been more productive than expected.
Higher bonuses and more gas revenue translate into much higher fees and change the equation entirely.
Maybe the staff and elected leaders couldn't know all this then. But they can't miss it now.
Gene Powell, who's been in the oil and gas business for 42 years, has criticized the city's gas-management deal from the start. He writes the Powell Barnett Shale Newsletter and says his readers include about 50 financial analysts.
"They're always asking me, 'What's the best deal you've ever seen in the Barnett Shale?'" Powell says. "That's easy: JPMorgan's contract with the city of Fort Worth."
For more than two years, the city has been paying through the nose to outsource its dealings in the Barnett Shale. Instead of doing most of the work in-house, it hired JPMorgan Chase to handle gas leases and monitor royalty runs.
Here's the kicker: It's paying a management fee based on a percentage of revenue, rather than an hourly rate -- a costly mistake, given the run-up in local mineral rights.
In the past two years, the city has paid $1.9 million in fees to JPMorgan, with $1 million more likely due in a few months. If the contract remains in place over the long term, the city's tab could reach $30 million.
Meanwhile, other public entities with major gas reserves, such as Dallas/Fort Worth Airport, the Tarrant Regional Water District and the city of Arlington, are paying far smaller amounts to outsiders. Their employees do much of the work, and they hire experts on a project basis.
Like the state of Texas, which does a huge business in mineral rights, they've decided not to give away part of a revenue stream that could run for 30 years.
Fort Worth has brought in $31 million in natural gas revenue. Compare its revenue and spending with Arlington's: It signed gas leases worth $42 million and spent $386,000 in outside fees.
Fort Worth and JPMorgan both defend the high-dollar arrangement.
"You get what you pay for," says Paul Midkiff, managing director at JPMorgan and the point man for gas work for the city. "Arlington may end up with more problems than they understand. There's more to it than just getting a lease signed."
JPMorgan gets 5 percent of the signing bonus for the leases it arranges and 4 percent of the annual royalties from the gas itself. Fort Worth officials say they're pleased with the arrangement.
"The city could not have generated the same amount of revenue without JPMorgan Chase expertise, knowledge and the respect they command in the gas leasing industry," Engineering Director Doug Rademaker said in a statement.
The city's endorsement has helped the bank land other public clients. Tarrant County and the Fort Worth school district have agreed to the same commissions on bonuses and royalties. And Midkiff says that Euless, North Richland Hills and several nonprofit groups signed deals for bonuses alone.
Midkiff says he provides many services for a city. He coordinates the bid process, evaluates offers for their effects on the community and, perhaps most importantly, cuts through the "analysis paralysis" that often grips government.
"Fort Worth has been signing lease deals for two years now, because they hired me," he says. "Tarrant County didn't make a single deal, but I've already done five this year. The benefit of hiring me is, you get somebody to push through the bureaucracy and do it right."
By all reports, Midkiff is a competent guy, who has done a fine job in getting top dollar for Fort Worth. My beef is with JPMorgan's fees. Couldn't Fort Worth get expert help on gas leasing -- maybe even Midkiff's help -- for a fraction of the cost?
Midkiff says the work is too hard for him to accept an hourly rate: "I wouldn't do it," he says.
But he did agree to serve as a consultant to D/FW Airport for a one-time fee. And JPMorgan monitors D/FW's royalties for a flat $100,000 a year.
"It wouldn't be fair to expect 4 percent on the amount of gas that D/FW is generating," Midkiff says.
OK, but Fort Worth isn't exactly chopped liver. The city says its natural gas revenue will total $742 million over the next 20 years.
Midkiff says that managing Fort Worth's project is more complicated that D/FW's. The city has dozens of leases, several drillers and a wide range of properties, from small street corners to big acreage under water-treatment plants. That's more labor intensive.
Maybe, but is the work 10 times tougher -- or 20 times?
Fort Worth can drop the JPMorgan contract with 45 days' notice, and it's disheartening that the staff hasn't proposed that already.
Hiring JPMorgan may have made sense in March 2004, when the deal was struck. Payouts hadn't soared yet, and city leaders and staffers were worried about their lack of industry knowledge.
They still say they don't want to get into the oil and gas business, but that line sounds timid and tired today. We're not talking about wildcatting here. Being a royalty owner is not that daunting.
Neighborhood groups in Tarrant County are regularly winning great lease deals by simply using volunteers and a legal review. Perhaps Fort Worth should hire a gas administrator, a position that D/FW is advertising for right now.
But somebody at City Hall has to get a lot more thorough on the subject. In September 2003, the staff recommended hiring a private management firm for gas leasing, and Rademaker showed the City Council a chart comparing the costs of an outside firm versus using city staff.
The outsiders would cost 28 percent less, he said.
The decision looked like a no-brainer, and the presentation was finished in 10 minutes, with almost no discussion.
Unfortunately, the chart projected costs for only two years, which is akin to choosing an adjustable-rate mortgage based just on the teaser payments. The really big bucks -- on ARMs and this deal -- are on the back end.
The staff also underestimated the revenue by a huge amount. It assumed a signing bonus of $500 an acre, the prevailing rate at the time; the city's latest deal topped $17,000 an acre. Prices of natural gas have surged since then, too, and the wells have been more productive than expected.
Higher bonuses and more gas revenue translate into much higher fees and change the equation entirely.
Maybe the staff and elected leaders couldn't know all this then. But they can't miss it now.
Gene Powell, who's been in the oil and gas business for 42 years, has criticized the city's gas-management deal from the start. He writes the Powell Barnett Shale Newsletter and says his readers include about 50 financial analysts.
"They're always asking me, 'What's the best deal you've ever seen in the Barnett Shale?'" Powell says. "That's easy: JPMorgan's contract with the city of Fort Worth."
Labels:
Barnett Shale,
gas revenue,
gas-management,
JPMorgan Chase
Sunday, November 18, 2007
Development offers a lesson in low-impact drilling
By MIKE LEE - Star-Telegram staff writer - Sun., Nov. 18, 2007
There are 80 natural gas wells on the Walsh Ranch property, and not a rusty tank battery in sight. Malcolm Louden says that's a system the city of Fort Worth should consider copying as it decides how to deal with the wastewater from natural gas wells.
The ranch covers 7,000 acres, an area larger than the city of Benbrook, in Tarrant and Parker counties just west of Fort Worth. It was owned by the late oilman F. Howard Walsh and is being developed into a mixed-use community. The first homes are expected to be built by 2009, and the ranch will eventually become part of the city, said Louden, president of Walsh Ranches.
XTO Energy and Walsh Ranches have built the system for handling gas, salt water and other byproducts over the past two years.
Louden, who worked for F. Howard Walsh for decades, required XTO to space its wells closely, reducing the size of drilling pads, and to use "closed-loop" drilling rigs that don't need open pits to store drilling mud.
Each well is served by three pipes: one to remove natural gas, one to remove salt water and one to return natural gas to the well, where it is used for re-stimulation. Instead of the large tank batteries seen near most gas wells, the Walsh Ranch is dotted with horizontal separators, which are about the size of a household propane tank and blend in better with the terrain.
The gas and salt water are piped to a handling area at the far southwest corner of the ranch. The compressor stations, a necessity in the Barnett Shale, are in a warehouse-type building protected by a foot of sound insulation. A normal compressor station sounds like a locomotive, but two people can talk outside this building without raising their voices.
The saltwater piping eliminates the need for disposal trucks, Louden said.
"Without it, we'd have 80 trucks a day on the ranch," he said. "These trucks are dangerous as hell. The first time they have an accident, they're going to have a real problem with it running in the storm sewers."
Gas wells that serve adjacent land owned by the Aledo school district and Weatherford College will soon be hooked up to the system, Louden said.
Louden has things that many landowners don't: clout, a huge expanse of undeveloped land and a good relationship with his energy company.
"XTO has been great," he said.
But he said the system could be copied in Fort Worth: Water could be piped to a central disposal well, or taken to a railroad terminal and loaded on tanker cars.
It's common for gas companies to work together in situations when two of them have acquired mineral rights in the same area.
"If Chesapeake owns 80 percent of the mineral rights and XTO owns 20 percent, they split the costs. In essence, they're partners," he said. "I don't see why they can't go in together on something like this and cut down on all these trucks."
But is it feasible on a large scale?
"Why isn't it?" Louden asked.
Read more in the Fort Worth Star Telegram
There are 80 natural gas wells on the Walsh Ranch property, and not a rusty tank battery in sight. Malcolm Louden says that's a system the city of Fort Worth should consider copying as it decides how to deal with the wastewater from natural gas wells.
The ranch covers 7,000 acres, an area larger than the city of Benbrook, in Tarrant and Parker counties just west of Fort Worth. It was owned by the late oilman F. Howard Walsh and is being developed into a mixed-use community. The first homes are expected to be built by 2009, and the ranch will eventually become part of the city, said Louden, president of Walsh Ranches.
XTO Energy and Walsh Ranches have built the system for handling gas, salt water and other byproducts over the past two years.
Louden, who worked for F. Howard Walsh for decades, required XTO to space its wells closely, reducing the size of drilling pads, and to use "closed-loop" drilling rigs that don't need open pits to store drilling mud.
Each well is served by three pipes: one to remove natural gas, one to remove salt water and one to return natural gas to the well, where it is used for re-stimulation. Instead of the large tank batteries seen near most gas wells, the Walsh Ranch is dotted with horizontal separators, which are about the size of a household propane tank and blend in better with the terrain.
The gas and salt water are piped to a handling area at the far southwest corner of the ranch. The compressor stations, a necessity in the Barnett Shale, are in a warehouse-type building protected by a foot of sound insulation. A normal compressor station sounds like a locomotive, but two people can talk outside this building without raising their voices.
The saltwater piping eliminates the need for disposal trucks, Louden said.
"Without it, we'd have 80 trucks a day on the ranch," he said. "These trucks are dangerous as hell. The first time they have an accident, they're going to have a real problem with it running in the storm sewers."
Gas wells that serve adjacent land owned by the Aledo school district and Weatherford College will soon be hooked up to the system, Louden said.
Louden has things that many landowners don't: clout, a huge expanse of undeveloped land and a good relationship with his energy company.
"XTO has been great," he said.
But he said the system could be copied in Fort Worth: Water could be piped to a central disposal well, or taken to a railroad terminal and loaded on tanker cars.
It's common for gas companies to work together in situations when two of them have acquired mineral rights in the same area.
"If Chesapeake owns 80 percent of the mineral rights and XTO owns 20 percent, they split the costs. In essence, they're partners," he said. "I don't see why they can't go in together on something like this and cut down on all these trucks."
But is it feasible on a large scale?
"Why isn't it?" Louden asked.
Read more in the Fort Worth Star Telegram
Katrina, Rita Caused Forestry Disaster - Die-Off Will Add To Buildup of Greenhouse Gases
By Marc Kaufman - Washington Post Staff Writer - Friday, November 16, 2007
New satellite imaging has revealed that hurricanes Katrina and Rita produced the largest single forestry disaster on record in the nation -- an essentially unreported ecological catastrophe that killed or severely damaged about 320 million trees in Mississippi and Louisiana.
The die-off, caused initially by wind and later by weeks-long pooling of stagnant water, was so massive that researchers say it will add significantly to the global greenhouse gas buildup -- ultimately putting as much carbon from dying vegetation into the air as the rest of the nation's forest takes out in a year of photosynthesis.
In addition, the downing of so many trees has opened vast and sometimes fragile tracts to several aggressive and fast-growing exotic species that are already squeezing out far more environmentally productive native species.
Efforts to limit the damage have been handicapped by the ineffectiveness of a $504 million federal program to help Gulf Coast landowners replant and fight the invasive species. Congress appropriated the money in 2005 and added to it in 2007, but officials acknowledge that the program got off to a slow start and that only
about $70 million has been promised or dispensed so far. Local advocates said onerous bureaucratic hurdles and low compensation rates are major reasons.
"This is the worst environmental disaster in the United States since the Exxon Valdez accident . . . and the greatest forest destruction in modern times," said James Cummins, executive director of the conservation group Wildlife Mississippi and a board member of the Mississippi Forestry Commission. "It needs a really broad and
aggressive response, and so far that just hasn't happened."
The U.S. Forest Service and Farm Service Agency have made estimates of the forest damage from the two 2005 hurricanes, but they have generally focused on economic losses -- $2 billion, or 5.5 billion board feet, worth of timber.
The new assessment of tree damage comes from a study being published today in the journal Science, written primarily by researchers at Tulane University who studied images from two NASA satellites.
Lead author Jeffrey Q. Chambers said that to assess the damage, which occurred to a greater or lesser extent over an area the size of Maine, the team used a before-and-after method perfected by researchers who study logging in the Amazon River basin. The satellite images identified green vegetation before the storm, and wood, dead
vegetation and surface litter after it. The team then visited the areas of greatest damage to make their overall assessment.
"I was amazed at the quantitative impact of the storm," Chambers said. Of the 320 million trees harmed, he said, about two-thirds soon died. "I certainly didn't expect that big an impact."
Chambers was even more surprised when his team calculated how much carbon will be released as the storm-damaged vegetation decomposes. The total came to about 100 million tons, equal to the amount that all the trees in the United States take out of the atmosphere in a year.
A large portion of the forest devastated by Katrina and Rita belongs to relatively small landowners, who use their property as an investment to be logged when they need some cash. The federal program designed in 2005 to address the destruction was an emergency add-on to the popular federal Conservation Reserve Program, which pays
landowners "rent" for returning marginal or environmentally sensitive land to more natural conditions.
Larry Payne, director of cooperative forestry for the U.S. Forest Service, said that "Congress wanted to get money back into the hands of these people, and that was the top priority." But generally it has not worked out.
Judd Brooke, for instance, owns 4,000 acres of timberland in Mississippi' s Hancock County, one of the hardest-hit areas. He had wanted to use the emergency funding on 35 to 40 damaged acres to plant longleaf pine, which is native to the area but quickly disappearing. But to qualify, his entire property would have to be off-limits to logging for 10 years.
"It was just crazy," Brooke said. "Around here, the program was a total disaster, as far as I can tell."
In contrast, he said, a smaller but better adapted program to clear hurricane-damaged land was well received, as was the Mississippi state tax credit program for affected forest-land owners.
Payne and Bengt "Skip" Hyberg, a U.S. Farm Service Agency economist and policy analyst, said the Gulf Coast landowners were subject to most of the same restrictions and compensation rates as Conservation Reserve participants around the nation, where circumstances and needs are different. For instance, the "rental" rates are based on the quality of the soil, which in the affected area is generally sandy and not considered agriculturally valuable. In addition, landowners had to
promise not to log any of their land if they accepted funding for even a small portion of it.
Hyberg said changes were made in the program this year to make it more attractive to landowners.
Hurricane Katrina came ashore along the Pearl River, which divides Mississippi and Louisiana and is ecologically very rich and diverse. The Chambers study, as well as the work of local conservationists including Cummins, found that such native species as longleaf pine, live oak and cypress survived the hurricane much better than species planted primarily for logging, such as loblolly and slash pine.
But some of the native deciduous forests were severely damaged, and the young, slow-growing oaks and maples are being squeezed out by Chinese tallow trees -- an ornamental plant imported more than a century ago. It thrives on disturbed land and is running wild in the damaged area, foresters said. The tree produces a milky, toxic sap that keeps insects away and makes an inhospitable habitat for birds
and small mammals.
In pine forests, the suddenly open spaces are being taken over by
other invasive species, especially cogon. The aggressive Japanese
grass was initially imported as packing material for oranges, but it
has gotten into the environment and pushes out more productive native
species.
"People are very concerned about the invasives -- you hear that everywhere Katrina went," said Richard Martin, director of conservation services at the Nature Conservancy in Louisiana. "As the Chinese tallow and other invasives take over, they form a dense canopy that makes it hard for the oak and maple to grow well. Those trees will win out in the end, but it will take hundreds of years rather than a much quicker response if the invasives weren't there."
The slow pace of the reforestation has disappointed many conservationists, as has the government's failure to encourage the planting of longleaf pine -- which once dominated 40 million acres in the Southeast but is now down to 1 million acres.
Urban "forests" often fared even worse than timber plots. According to Edward Macie, regional urban forester for the Forest Service's Southern Region, about 75 percent of the trees in New Orleans died because of the storm. In some towns along the Mississippi coast, he said, not a tree remained standing.
New satellite imaging has revealed that hurricanes Katrina and Rita produced the largest single forestry disaster on record in the nation -- an essentially unreported ecological catastrophe that killed or severely damaged about 320 million trees in Mississippi and Louisiana.
The die-off, caused initially by wind and later by weeks-long pooling of stagnant water, was so massive that researchers say it will add significantly to the global greenhouse gas buildup -- ultimately putting as much carbon from dying vegetation into the air as the rest of the nation's forest takes out in a year of photosynthesis.
In addition, the downing of so many trees has opened vast and sometimes fragile tracts to several aggressive and fast-growing exotic species that are already squeezing out far more environmentally productive native species.
Efforts to limit the damage have been handicapped by the ineffectiveness of a $504 million federal program to help Gulf Coast landowners replant and fight the invasive species. Congress appropriated the money in 2005 and added to it in 2007, but officials acknowledge that the program got off to a slow start and that only
about $70 million has been promised or dispensed so far. Local advocates said onerous bureaucratic hurdles and low compensation rates are major reasons.
"This is the worst environmental disaster in the United States since the Exxon Valdez accident . . . and the greatest forest destruction in modern times," said James Cummins, executive director of the conservation group Wildlife Mississippi and a board member of the Mississippi Forestry Commission. "It needs a really broad and
aggressive response, and so far that just hasn't happened."
The U.S. Forest Service and Farm Service Agency have made estimates of the forest damage from the two 2005 hurricanes, but they have generally focused on economic losses -- $2 billion, or 5.5 billion board feet, worth of timber.
The new assessment of tree damage comes from a study being published today in the journal Science, written primarily by researchers at Tulane University who studied images from two NASA satellites.
Lead author Jeffrey Q. Chambers said that to assess the damage, which occurred to a greater or lesser extent over an area the size of Maine, the team used a before-and-after method perfected by researchers who study logging in the Amazon River basin. The satellite images identified green vegetation before the storm, and wood, dead
vegetation and surface litter after it. The team then visited the areas of greatest damage to make their overall assessment.
"I was amazed at the quantitative impact of the storm," Chambers said. Of the 320 million trees harmed, he said, about two-thirds soon died. "I certainly didn't expect that big an impact."
Chambers was even more surprised when his team calculated how much carbon will be released as the storm-damaged vegetation decomposes. The total came to about 100 million tons, equal to the amount that all the trees in the United States take out of the atmosphere in a year.
A large portion of the forest devastated by Katrina and Rita belongs to relatively small landowners, who use their property as an investment to be logged when they need some cash. The federal program designed in 2005 to address the destruction was an emergency add-on to the popular federal Conservation Reserve Program, which pays
landowners "rent" for returning marginal or environmentally sensitive land to more natural conditions.
Larry Payne, director of cooperative forestry for the U.S. Forest Service, said that "Congress wanted to get money back into the hands of these people, and that was the top priority." But generally it has not worked out.
Judd Brooke, for instance, owns 4,000 acres of timberland in Mississippi' s Hancock County, one of the hardest-hit areas. He had wanted to use the emergency funding on 35 to 40 damaged acres to plant longleaf pine, which is native to the area but quickly disappearing. But to qualify, his entire property would have to be off-limits to logging for 10 years.
"It was just crazy," Brooke said. "Around here, the program was a total disaster, as far as I can tell."
In contrast, he said, a smaller but better adapted program to clear hurricane-damaged land was well received, as was the Mississippi state tax credit program for affected forest-land owners.
Payne and Bengt "Skip" Hyberg, a U.S. Farm Service Agency economist and policy analyst, said the Gulf Coast landowners were subject to most of the same restrictions and compensation rates as Conservation Reserve participants around the nation, where circumstances and needs are different. For instance, the "rental" rates are based on the quality of the soil, which in the affected area is generally sandy and not considered agriculturally valuable. In addition, landowners had to
promise not to log any of their land if they accepted funding for even a small portion of it.
Hyberg said changes were made in the program this year to make it more attractive to landowners.
Hurricane Katrina came ashore along the Pearl River, which divides Mississippi and Louisiana and is ecologically very rich and diverse. The Chambers study, as well as the work of local conservationists including Cummins, found that such native species as longleaf pine, live oak and cypress survived the hurricane much better than species planted primarily for logging, such as loblolly and slash pine.
But some of the native deciduous forests were severely damaged, and the young, slow-growing oaks and maples are being squeezed out by Chinese tallow trees -- an ornamental plant imported more than a century ago. It thrives on disturbed land and is running wild in the damaged area, foresters said. The tree produces a milky, toxic sap that keeps insects away and makes an inhospitable habitat for birds
and small mammals.
In pine forests, the suddenly open spaces are being taken over by
other invasive species, especially cogon. The aggressive Japanese
grass was initially imported as packing material for oranges, but it
has gotten into the environment and pushes out more productive native
species.
"People are very concerned about the invasives -- you hear that everywhere Katrina went," said Richard Martin, director of conservation services at the Nature Conservancy in Louisiana. "As the Chinese tallow and other invasives take over, they form a dense canopy that makes it hard for the oak and maple to grow well. Those trees will win out in the end, but it will take hundreds of years rather than a much quicker response if the invasives weren't there."
The slow pace of the reforestation has disappointed many conservationists, as has the government's failure to encourage the planting of longleaf pine -- which once dominated 40 million acres in the Southeast but is now down to 1 million acres.
Urban "forests" often fared even worse than timber plots. According to Edward Macie, regional urban forester for the Forest Service's Southern Region, about 75 percent of the trees in New Orleans died because of the storm. In some towns along the Mississippi coast, he said, not a tree remained standing.
Monday, November 5, 2007
City of Arlington meets Nov. 7 to consider leasing Arlington Cemetery and inner city parks for gas drilling
By Susan Schrock - Fort Worth Star Telegram - Monday, Nov. 5, 2007
The Arlington City Council will vote Tuesday night to open up bidding to companies that want to lease gas and oil rights on 95 acres of city-owned land in north Arlington. The mineral lease would include Johnson Creek Linear Park, Doug Russell Park, College Hills Park, Senter Park, Fielder Park and Arlington Cemetery.
The Arlington City Council will receive updates Tuesday on the Dallas Cowboys stadium, the planned Viridian project in north Arlington near Bird's Fort and proposed design standards for the entertainment district.
The Arlington City Council plans a work session at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday and a regular meeting at 6:30 p.m. at City Hall, 101 W. Abram St.
Telecast: Channel 16 on Arlington Time Warner Cable
Sunday, November 4, 2007
Residents question gas leak 'fixes'
By BRETT SHIPP - WFAA-TV NEWS 8 INVESTIGATES - Nov. 2, 2007
Part V in a continuing series
WYLIE — Atmos Energy remains busy responding to concerns about the safety of its natural gas delivery system.
Customers have been flooding the Atmos call center following a News 8 investigation into potentially dangerous pipeline couplings still being used in North Texas. Now new questions are being raised about the company's safety commitment throughout its system.
Jay Marcom walks through a Wylie neighborhood with a natural gas detector—and an acute curiosity. He's seen the News 8 Investigates reports on defective couplings and wants to know how bad the leaks really are.
It didn't take him long to find one on Wednesday, apparently coming from a rusty gas meter.
A quick squirt of liquid soap on the source of the gas revealed the leak. "You can see the bubbles right here," Marcom said. "It tells me that piece of riser is leaking, right there where it hits that valve."
Just moments after alerting authorities, firefighters arrived with their own detection gear, confirming Marcom's discovery.
It's not really a surprise, considering all of the yellow Atmos "activity flags" littering the neighborhood that's just half a block away from where Benny and Martha Cryer died in a natural gas explosion one year ago.
Following that fatal blast, Atmos discovered 24 active leaks within just a few blocks.
Atmos repair crews responded to Marcom's leak report on Wednesday afternoon, but Wylie fire investigators were back on Thursday after Marcom discovered that the leaking pipe had simply been painted over.
Repairs were finally made after a second visit by Atmos workers.
Neighbor Coral Watkins said the gas company continues to repair leaks, while insisting that the area is safe. "Smelled gas the other day, called them out, they told me there was nothing out here," she said. "Then the other day, we caught them out here; they were fixing a neighbor's leak right behind my house."
Cindy Graham of Richardson feels the same way. She says she reported a neighborhood gas leak to Atmos last June. "They said they would do something. Nothing ever happened," Graham said.
Atmos took action only after News 8 reported Graham's story last week. The company told her the leak should have immediately been placed on a repair list.
Atmos says it has responded in person to more than 1,500 concerned customers following our reports. The company maintains that its gas delivery system is safe and reliable for all customers.
At the same time, however, Atmos boasts to potential investors that it has the "lowest utility operation and maintenance expenses per customer among its peers." Atmos spends $112 per customer; competitors spend $218 per customer.
A desire to keep maintenance costs low might explain why Atmos lets an estimated 100,000 potentially deadly pipeline couplings to remain in the constantly shifting North Texas soil. Replacing them could cost tens of millions of dollars.
Two times in the past week, News 8 has responded to natural gas leaks faster than Atmos repair crews.
State Rep. Jody Laubenberg (R-Murphy), whose district includes the Wylie neighborhood where the Cryers died, believes it's time for Atmos to put safety first. "We've already had, what? Eight, nine deaths, already? We know ground is going to shift, we know things are going to happen, let's not wait for more deaths," she said.
Read more on WFAA
Part V in a continuing series
WYLIE — Atmos Energy remains busy responding to concerns about the safety of its natural gas delivery system.
Customers have been flooding the Atmos call center following a News 8 investigation into potentially dangerous pipeline couplings still being used in North Texas. Now new questions are being raised about the company's safety commitment throughout its system.
Jay Marcom walks through a Wylie neighborhood with a natural gas detector—and an acute curiosity. He's seen the News 8 Investigates reports on defective couplings and wants to know how bad the leaks really are.
It didn't take him long to find one on Wednesday, apparently coming from a rusty gas meter.
A quick squirt of liquid soap on the source of the gas revealed the leak. "You can see the bubbles right here," Marcom said. "It tells me that piece of riser is leaking, right there where it hits that valve."
Just moments after alerting authorities, firefighters arrived with their own detection gear, confirming Marcom's discovery.
It's not really a surprise, considering all of the yellow Atmos "activity flags" littering the neighborhood that's just half a block away from where Benny and Martha Cryer died in a natural gas explosion one year ago.
Following that fatal blast, Atmos discovered 24 active leaks within just a few blocks.
Atmos repair crews responded to Marcom's leak report on Wednesday afternoon, but Wylie fire investigators were back on Thursday after Marcom discovered that the leaking pipe had simply been painted over.
Repairs were finally made after a second visit by Atmos workers.
Neighbor Coral Watkins said the gas company continues to repair leaks, while insisting that the area is safe. "Smelled gas the other day, called them out, they told me there was nothing out here," she said. "Then the other day, we caught them out here; they were fixing a neighbor's leak right behind my house."
Cindy Graham of Richardson feels the same way. She says she reported a neighborhood gas leak to Atmos last June. "They said they would do something. Nothing ever happened," Graham said.
Atmos took action only after News 8 reported Graham's story last week. The company told her the leak should have immediately been placed on a repair list.
Atmos says it has responded in person to more than 1,500 concerned customers following our reports. The company maintains that its gas delivery system is safe and reliable for all customers.
At the same time, however, Atmos boasts to potential investors that it has the "lowest utility operation and maintenance expenses per customer among its peers." Atmos spends $112 per customer; competitors spend $218 per customer.
A desire to keep maintenance costs low might explain why Atmos lets an estimated 100,000 potentially deadly pipeline couplings to remain in the constantly shifting North Texas soil. Replacing them could cost tens of millions of dollars.
Two times in the past week, News 8 has responded to natural gas leaks faster than Atmos repair crews.
State Rep. Jody Laubenberg (R-Murphy), whose district includes the Wylie neighborhood where the Cryers died, believes it's time for Atmos to put safety first. "We've already had, what? Eight, nine deaths, already? We know ground is going to shift, we know things are going to happen, let's not wait for more deaths," she said.
Read more on WFAA
Labels:
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Atmos Gas,
compression coupling,
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Wylie
State's decision on gas blast questioned
By BRETT SHIPP - WFAA-TV NEWS 8 INVESTIGATES - Oct. 22, 2007
The safety of many North Texans was called into question last week during a News 8 investigation into a deadly natural gas explosion in Wylie last year.
As a result, the state agency that oversees pipeline safety in Texas is under increasing scrutiny for allowing 100,000 potentially deadly pipe fittings to remain in the ground.
One year after a natural gas explosion killed Benny and Martha Cryer of Wylie, the Texas Railroad Commission is taking some action to ensure that some of the potentially deadly couplings are removed.
Now there is new evidence that the Texas Railroad Commissioners may have suddenly backed off a proposal last spring to force Atmos to remove the dangerous couplings.
In Ramsey, Minnesota, three people were killed and one injured on December 28, 2004, which was when a natural gas pipe pulled out of its coupling, leaked gas and sparked an explosion. It was the same style of coupling that federal regulators and industry experts had warned for two decades posed a deadly potential for pullout.
The Minnesota Office of Pipeline Safety conducted an exhaustive and detailed investigation including a forensic examination of the failed coupling and determined the pipe "pull-out occurred" because of "thermal contraction of the soil."
The response was swift. The fittings were deemed dangerous and state pipeline officials ordered nearly 30,000 of them immediately pulled from the ground, which cost the gas company nearly $40 million.
Fast forward to October 16, 2006 in Wylie. Benny and Martha Cryer were killed when an Atmos pipe pulled out of its compression coupling, leaked gas and caused an explosion.
The Texas Railroad Commission, which regulates the pipeline industry, conducted the investigation.
Its preliminary finding stated that a line that separated from a compression coupling "possibly due to shifting of soil" and "natural ground movement."
Just as was the case in Minnesota, a recommendation was drafted, which was dated April 25, 2007, from Safety Director Mary McDaniel directing gas companies in Texas to establish a "replacement program to phase out" the questionable couplings.
However, that memo was never sent.
Another memo, also dated April 25 from Mary McDaniel, was greatly modified. The demand for a "coupling phase out" was gone and replaced with a request for information regarding the "installation, maintenance and leak history" of the compression couplings.
McDaniel denied a "phase out" was ever considered.
So, the potentially deadly couplings, an estimated 100,000 of them, remain in the soil while the Railroad Commission conducts a survey.
At a recent meeting in Austin, Commissioner Elizabeth A. Jones congratulated McDaniel for her fine work.
"You all are doing such a great job in getting so deep into this study," she said. "I really appreciate it."
Then amid mounting questions from News 8, Commissioners ordered gas companies to "repair or replace" the dangerous couplings if they are leaking or discovered during routine excavations.
Instead of ordering the couplings removed as in Minnesota, Railroad Commissioners have opted to study them and revisit the issue in January.
"We are taking every effort we can to make sure that we can provide to people in this state the safest natural gas transporting system in the country," said Commission Chairman Michael L. Williams when asked if he thought it would be possible someone could die before the compression coupling leaks are discovered.
"This order would not have saved Benny and Martha Cryer's lives," said Bruce Scrafford, an Austin attorney who represents the Cryer family in a lawsuit against Atmos Energy.
He called the Railroad Commission directive meaningless, mainly because federal safety regulations already say "each segment of pipeline that becomes unsafe must be replaced or removed from service."
Scrafford said Railroad Commissioners are, in effect, doing nothing.
"The Railroad Commission has not done anything to follow up, to make sure that they take those couplings out of the ground in applications where they are not appropriate and where they are unsafe and where more people are going to die if they don't do something to fix this problem," he said.
So, why isn't Atmos aggressively removing the 100,000 non-restraint couplings still in their system? That question was recently posed to an Atmos engineer in a videotaped deposition.
"I don't know," said the engineer when asked if he thought there was any other reason besides cost that Atmos would not replace the fittings.
Atmos Energy's official position is another utility disrupted their gas pipes causing the Wylie explosion. Atmos officials also said that they are complying with the Railroad Commission's directive and insist their pipeline system is safe.
Atmos officials also once assured Wylie residents who reported smelling gas hat everything was fine.
"In some cases, there was no leak found," said Rand Lavon, an Atmos spokesperson. "In other cases, it might have been something inside the home like a hot water heater."
But everything in that Wylie neighborhood was not fine. A compression coupling with s deadly reputation failed, killing Benny and Martha Cryer. It was a style of coupling too dangerous for Minnesota, but not the state of Texas.
In response to News 8 reports, Atmos officials have released a statement. They said safety and reliability are their highest priorities and that they welcome any discussion about safety and maintaining their natural gas system.
More importantly, they ask anyone who may smell gas to contact Atmos.
And for those who live in an older home and have a meter that looks unattended to, contact Atmos and tell them you want your system checked for bad couplings.
Read more on WFAA
The safety of many North Texans was called into question last week during a News 8 investigation into a deadly natural gas explosion in Wylie last year.
As a result, the state agency that oversees pipeline safety in Texas is under increasing scrutiny for allowing 100,000 potentially deadly pipe fittings to remain in the ground.
One year after a natural gas explosion killed Benny and Martha Cryer of Wylie, the Texas Railroad Commission is taking some action to ensure that some of the potentially deadly couplings are removed.
Now there is new evidence that the Texas Railroad Commissioners may have suddenly backed off a proposal last spring to force Atmos to remove the dangerous couplings.
In Ramsey, Minnesota, three people were killed and one injured on December 28, 2004, which was when a natural gas pipe pulled out of its coupling, leaked gas and sparked an explosion. It was the same style of coupling that federal regulators and industry experts had warned for two decades posed a deadly potential for pullout.
The Minnesota Office of Pipeline Safety conducted an exhaustive and detailed investigation including a forensic examination of the failed coupling and determined the pipe "pull-out occurred" because of "thermal contraction of the soil."
The response was swift. The fittings were deemed dangerous and state pipeline officials ordered nearly 30,000 of them immediately pulled from the ground, which cost the gas company nearly $40 million.
Fast forward to October 16, 2006 in Wylie. Benny and Martha Cryer were killed when an Atmos pipe pulled out of its compression coupling, leaked gas and caused an explosion.
The Texas Railroad Commission, which regulates the pipeline industry, conducted the investigation.
Its preliminary finding stated that a line that separated from a compression coupling "possibly due to shifting of soil" and "natural ground movement."
Just as was the case in Minnesota, a recommendation was drafted, which was dated April 25, 2007, from Safety Director Mary McDaniel directing gas companies in Texas to establish a "replacement program to phase out" the questionable couplings.
However, that memo was never sent.
Another memo, also dated April 25 from Mary McDaniel, was greatly modified. The demand for a "coupling phase out" was gone and replaced with a request for information regarding the "installation, maintenance and leak history" of the compression couplings.
McDaniel denied a "phase out" was ever considered.
So, the potentially deadly couplings, an estimated 100,000 of them, remain in the soil while the Railroad Commission conducts a survey.
At a recent meeting in Austin, Commissioner Elizabeth A. Jones congratulated McDaniel for her fine work.
"You all are doing such a great job in getting so deep into this study," she said. "I really appreciate it."
Then amid mounting questions from News 8, Commissioners ordered gas companies to "repair or replace" the dangerous couplings if they are leaking or discovered during routine excavations.
Instead of ordering the couplings removed as in Minnesota, Railroad Commissioners have opted to study them and revisit the issue in January.
"We are taking every effort we can to make sure that we can provide to people in this state the safest natural gas transporting system in the country," said Commission Chairman Michael L. Williams when asked if he thought it would be possible someone could die before the compression coupling leaks are discovered.
"This order would not have saved Benny and Martha Cryer's lives," said Bruce Scrafford, an Austin attorney who represents the Cryer family in a lawsuit against Atmos Energy.
He called the Railroad Commission directive meaningless, mainly because federal safety regulations already say "each segment of pipeline that becomes unsafe must be replaced or removed from service."
Scrafford said Railroad Commissioners are, in effect, doing nothing.
"The Railroad Commission has not done anything to follow up, to make sure that they take those couplings out of the ground in applications where they are not appropriate and where they are unsafe and where more people are going to die if they don't do something to fix this problem," he said.
So, why isn't Atmos aggressively removing the 100,000 non-restraint couplings still in their system? That question was recently posed to an Atmos engineer in a videotaped deposition.
"I don't know," said the engineer when asked if he thought there was any other reason besides cost that Atmos would not replace the fittings.
Atmos Energy's official position is another utility disrupted their gas pipes causing the Wylie explosion. Atmos officials also said that they are complying with the Railroad Commission's directive and insist their pipeline system is safe.
Atmos officials also once assured Wylie residents who reported smelling gas hat everything was fine.
"In some cases, there was no leak found," said Rand Lavon, an Atmos spokesperson. "In other cases, it might have been something inside the home like a hot water heater."
But everything in that Wylie neighborhood was not fine. A compression coupling with s deadly reputation failed, killing Benny and Martha Cryer. It was a style of coupling too dangerous for Minnesota, but not the state of Texas.
In response to News 8 reports, Atmos officials have released a statement. They said safety and reliability are their highest priorities and that they welcome any discussion about safety and maintaining their natural gas system.
More importantly, they ask anyone who may smell gas to contact Atmos.
And for those who live in an older home and have a meter that looks unattended to, contact Atmos and tell them you want your system checked for bad couplings.
Read more on WFAA
Gas leak discrepancies spark concern - Atmos has thousands more identified gas leaks than it repairs
By BRETT SHIPP - WFAA-TV NEWS 8 INVESTIGATES - Oct. 26, 2007
Part IV
A top official from Atmos Energy is on the record saying that all natural gas leaks are serious and possibly deadly; but at the same time, Atmos Energy says the vast majority of their leaks can go months or longer without being repaired.
That policy has Cindy Graham of Richardson concerned. She described the experience of smelling leaking natural gas just outside of her home this summer.
"It was like walking into a wall of natural gas," she said. "It made me ill."
Graham said her immediate response was to call Atmos. When Atmos came out and found the leak next door, she said, they told her it would not be repaired because it was not a threat.
"He said he found the leak but it's just going up into the air, but that it was not going to harm anyone," she said.
Coral Watkins, of Wylie, said she and her neighbors were also told for years not to worry about gas they smelled in their older neighborhood.
"We had called and called and called about gas leaks, gas smells and bubbling everywhere and [Atmos said] there's nothing wrong," she said.
But one of those leaks turned deadly when gas found its way under the Wylie home of Benny and Martha Cryer, who were both killed when the gas exploded last October.
In the days following that explosion, Atmos discovered 24 active leaks within a few blocks in the same neighborhood. The leaks may have been something they knew already existed. Any one of which, according to one top Atmos official, who while being deposed recently for a lawsuit, said all leaks are dangerous.
"I believe anytime you have an escape of natural gas you have the potential of a serious situation that could cause serious damage or even death," said Scott Powell, Atmos Vice President.
What's the danger to North Texans? Atmos reported having more than 16,000 leaks in its North and Mid-Texas system in 2006. They said on any given day, they have roughly 6,700 active leaks.
According to Atmos, only five percent or their leaks, the really bad ones, are repaired immediately. Those are called grade one leaks. Grade two leaks, about 33 percent, are medium priority and get monitored monthly until they're repaired. Grade three and four leaks, about 61 percent, are low priority and may not get repaired for months.
Graham's fear is that right next door is one of those grade three or four leaks, which according to Atmos, is both potentially dangerous, yet not a threat to public safety.
"I don't know what these people are thinking," she said. "I don't know how they can come to your door and look you straight in the face and tell you it's not an issue when obviously it's an issue."
Read more on WFAA
Part IV
A top official from Atmos Energy is on the record saying that all natural gas leaks are serious and possibly deadly; but at the same time, Atmos Energy says the vast majority of their leaks can go months or longer without being repaired.
That policy has Cindy Graham of Richardson concerned. She described the experience of smelling leaking natural gas just outside of her home this summer.
"It was like walking into a wall of natural gas," she said. "It made me ill."
Graham said her immediate response was to call Atmos. When Atmos came out and found the leak next door, she said, they told her it would not be repaired because it was not a threat.
"He said he found the leak but it's just going up into the air, but that it was not going to harm anyone," she said.
Coral Watkins, of Wylie, said she and her neighbors were also told for years not to worry about gas they smelled in their older neighborhood.
"We had called and called and called about gas leaks, gas smells and bubbling everywhere and [Atmos said] there's nothing wrong," she said.
But one of those leaks turned deadly when gas found its way under the Wylie home of Benny and Martha Cryer, who were both killed when the gas exploded last October.
In the days following that explosion, Atmos discovered 24 active leaks within a few blocks in the same neighborhood. The leaks may have been something they knew already existed. Any one of which, according to one top Atmos official, who while being deposed recently for a lawsuit, said all leaks are dangerous.
"I believe anytime you have an escape of natural gas you have the potential of a serious situation that could cause serious damage or even death," said Scott Powell, Atmos Vice President.
What's the danger to North Texans? Atmos reported having more than 16,000 leaks in its North and Mid-Texas system in 2006. They said on any given day, they have roughly 6,700 active leaks.
According to Atmos, only five percent or their leaks, the really bad ones, are repaired immediately. Those are called grade one leaks. Grade two leaks, about 33 percent, are medium priority and get monitored monthly until they're repaired. Grade three and four leaks, about 61 percent, are low priority and may not get repaired for months.
Graham's fear is that right next door is one of those grade three or four leaks, which according to Atmos, is both potentially dangerous, yet not a threat to public safety.
"I don't know what these people are thinking," she said. "I don't know how they can come to your door and look you straight in the face and tell you it's not an issue when obviously it's an issue."
Read more on WFAA
Bonnie Raitt on Nuclear Energy
By NPR - Oct. 23, 2007
Listen to AUDIO on NPR
Senate Energy Bill contains an amendment to remove limit on loan guarantees for Nuclear Power Plant. This amendment which grants UNLIMTED LOAN GUARANTEES by the Federal Government for Nuclear Power Plants was not debated.
Listen to AUDIO on NPR
Senate Energy Bill contains an amendment to remove limit on loan guarantees for Nuclear Power Plant. This amendment which grants UNLIMTED LOAN GUARANTEES by the Federal Government for Nuclear Power Plants was not debated.
Nuclear Industry Seeks $50 Billion Safety Net
By The Bryant Park Project NPR - October 23, 2007
Amid rising concern over climate change and the greenhouse gases caused by burning carbon-based fuels, lawmakers in Washington, D.C., are taking a new look at nuclear power.
A provision in the energy bill now before the Senate would help finance a boom in the construction of new nuclear reactors. The one-line amendment, entered without debate, lifts the limit on federal loan guarantees for nuclear plants.
Efforts to create nuclear power facilities in the 1970s and '80s often went bankrupt before the plants ever opened. They were expensive projects designed to meet demands for electricity that sometimes failed to materialize, reports Steve Mufson, energy correspondent for the Washington Post. Some, ready to start operations, couldn't get regulatory approval.
Mufson explains that under the proposed law, utilities would have a safety net. "If the utility company can't pay the loan back, then the government will," he says. "Or taxpayers, [that] would be another way of looking at it."
The nuclear industry is asking that a total of $50 billion be available in guarantees over two years, 2008 and 2009.
Meanwhile, opponents of nuclear power are gearing up for a lobbying campaign to stop the provision. Singer Bonnie Raitt is leading a group of anti-nuclear musicians to Capitol Hill, and they've launched a video on YouTube to carry their message. Proponents championing atomic energy as a relatively clean source of fuel have launched a countercampaign, rebutting Raitt and company point-by-point.
Listen to AUDIO and read more on NPR
Amid rising concern over climate change and the greenhouse gases caused by burning carbon-based fuels, lawmakers in Washington, D.C., are taking a new look at nuclear power.
A provision in the energy bill now before the Senate would help finance a boom in the construction of new nuclear reactors. The one-line amendment, entered without debate, lifts the limit on federal loan guarantees for nuclear plants.
Efforts to create nuclear power facilities in the 1970s and '80s often went bankrupt before the plants ever opened. They were expensive projects designed to meet demands for electricity that sometimes failed to materialize, reports Steve Mufson, energy correspondent for the Washington Post. Some, ready to start operations, couldn't get regulatory approval.
Mufson explains that under the proposed law, utilities would have a safety net. "If the utility company can't pay the loan back, then the government will," he says. "Or taxpayers, [that] would be another way of looking at it."
The nuclear industry is asking that a total of $50 billion be available in guarantees over two years, 2008 and 2009.
Meanwhile, opponents of nuclear power are gearing up for a lobbying campaign to stop the provision. Singer Bonnie Raitt is leading a group of anti-nuclear musicians to Capitol Hill, and they've launched a video on YouTube to carry their message. Proponents championing atomic energy as a relatively clean source of fuel have launched a countercampaign, rebutting Raitt and company point-by-point.
Listen to AUDIO and read more on NPR
Senate Bill Targets Coal-Power Greenhouse Gases
by Elizabeth Shogren - NPR - All Things Considered - Nov. 3, 2007
This past week, a Senate subcommittee passed a bill that would be a major step toward controlling greenhouse gases. The legislation would target places like Maryland's Brandon Shores, a large coal-fired power plant that emits 10 million tons of carbon dioxide a year.
Coal-fired power plants like Brandon Shores, located outside Baltimore, are the United States' biggest contributors to global warming. But they also supply about half of the country's electricity.
On a recent tour of the plant, Paul Allen, senior vice president of Constellation Energy — which owns Brandon Shores — discussed the plant's future.
"This power plant serves the electrical needs of perhaps a million customers. It's a very significant portion of the generation supply for the Baltimore metropolitan area," Allen said. Asked how long he expects the plant to operate, his response is optimistic. "Oh decades," he said.
That could mean Brandon Shores will also be pumping out carbon dioxide for decades. Right now, that doesn't cost the company anything. But that will change if one of the bills making their way through Congress becomes law.
The two measures would cover power plants, refineries and factories in a cap and trade system, in which they would need allowances for every ton of carbon dioxide they emit.
At first, the government would probably give Brandon Shores and other polluters some of those allowances. But over time, the company will have to buy them.
The price will be dynamic," Allen said. It could go up it could go down. But if we are serious about meeting the kind of targets that climatologists tell us need to be met, it's possible to think the price of carbon control could be pretty high."
Allen says Constellation will have no choice but to buy the allowances from other companies or the government.
"We recognize that ultimately this is going to be an additional cost of doing business."
Over time, as the cap gets tighter, that could lead to customers paying more expensive electricity bills.
Allen says Constellation can't just install a pollution control device for carbon dioxide, the way it's doing to strip out other pollutants like the ones that create smog and acid rain. The difference is that carbon dioxide is an unavoidable byproduct of burning coal.
Some engineers are working on ways to capture carbon dioxide from coal-fired power plants and then inject it underground. But Allen doesn't expect those technologies to be available any time soon.
Allen says the prospect of carbon dioxide regulation is already having a huge impact on his business. For instance, Constellation is planning to build new nuclear plants, mostly because they don't emit carbon dioxide.
"If you believe as we do, that carbon policy is both good and inevitable, and that it's going to have to be pretty significant to make a difference ecologically speaking," Allen said, "then you begin to believe that it has to be at the center of all your business planning — and for us, it is."
Economist Billy Pizer, from the Washington think tank Resources for the Future, says that Allen's statement reflects exactly the kind of thinking supporters of climate change policies are hoping to inspire by making it expensive to emit greenhouse gases.
"Suddenly this activity that had no consequence before has a consequence, a financial consequence," Pizer said.
"So, it's going to change the way people think. It's going to change the way they use the fuels they currently have and it's going to change the way people invest in research and development to try to find cleaner technologies."
Pizer says the hope is that over the long run, the changes will be enough to stabilize concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere at a level that will protect the environment.
But in the mean time, measures like the one passed this week by a Senate subcommittee will have to work their way through the political process. The bill, America's Climate Security Act, was sponsored by Sens. Joe Lieberman (I-CT) and John Warner (R-VA).
After being approved, 4-3, the bill moves on to the Environment and Public Works Committee, which is headed by Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA).
Hear audio and read more on NPR
This past week, a Senate subcommittee passed a bill that would be a major step toward controlling greenhouse gases. The legislation would target places like Maryland's Brandon Shores, a large coal-fired power plant that emits 10 million tons of carbon dioxide a year.
Coal-fired power plants like Brandon Shores, located outside Baltimore, are the United States' biggest contributors to global warming. But they also supply about half of the country's electricity.
On a recent tour of the plant, Paul Allen, senior vice president of Constellation Energy — which owns Brandon Shores — discussed the plant's future.
"This power plant serves the electrical needs of perhaps a million customers. It's a very significant portion of the generation supply for the Baltimore metropolitan area," Allen said. Asked how long he expects the plant to operate, his response is optimistic. "Oh decades," he said.
That could mean Brandon Shores will also be pumping out carbon dioxide for decades. Right now, that doesn't cost the company anything. But that will change if one of the bills making their way through Congress becomes law.
The two measures would cover power plants, refineries and factories in a cap and trade system, in which they would need allowances for every ton of carbon dioxide they emit.
At first, the government would probably give Brandon Shores and other polluters some of those allowances. But over time, the company will have to buy them.
The price will be dynamic," Allen said. It could go up it could go down. But if we are serious about meeting the kind of targets that climatologists tell us need to be met, it's possible to think the price of carbon control could be pretty high."
Allen says Constellation will have no choice but to buy the allowances from other companies or the government.
"We recognize that ultimately this is going to be an additional cost of doing business."
Over time, as the cap gets tighter, that could lead to customers paying more expensive electricity bills.
Allen says Constellation can't just install a pollution control device for carbon dioxide, the way it's doing to strip out other pollutants like the ones that create smog and acid rain. The difference is that carbon dioxide is an unavoidable byproduct of burning coal.
Some engineers are working on ways to capture carbon dioxide from coal-fired power plants and then inject it underground. But Allen doesn't expect those technologies to be available any time soon.
Allen says the prospect of carbon dioxide regulation is already having a huge impact on his business. For instance, Constellation is planning to build new nuclear plants, mostly because they don't emit carbon dioxide.
"If you believe as we do, that carbon policy is both good and inevitable, and that it's going to have to be pretty significant to make a difference ecologically speaking," Allen said, "then you begin to believe that it has to be at the center of all your business planning — and for us, it is."
Economist Billy Pizer, from the Washington think tank Resources for the Future, says that Allen's statement reflects exactly the kind of thinking supporters of climate change policies are hoping to inspire by making it expensive to emit greenhouse gases.
"Suddenly this activity that had no consequence before has a consequence, a financial consequence," Pizer said.
"So, it's going to change the way people think. It's going to change the way they use the fuels they currently have and it's going to change the way people invest in research and development to try to find cleaner technologies."
Pizer says the hope is that over the long run, the changes will be enough to stabilize concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere at a level that will protect the environment.
But in the mean time, measures like the one passed this week by a Senate subcommittee will have to work their way through the political process. The bill, America's Climate Security Act, was sponsored by Sens. Joe Lieberman (I-CT) and John Warner (R-VA).
After being approved, 4-3, the bill moves on to the Environment and Public Works Committee, which is headed by Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA).
Hear audio and read more on NPR
Friday, November 2, 2007
Denton County man files to run for Railroad Commission
By Dan McGraw - Staff Writer - Denton Record-Chronicle - Nov. 1, 2007
Denton County resident Jesus Carrillo announced recently that he is running as a Democrat for a seat on the Texas Railroad Commission.
Carrillo, 45, of Ponder, is the first Denton County resident to announce that he is running for a seat on the three-member commission, but he has entered into a crowded primary race that includes two other Democrats.
Former San Antonio City Council member Art Hall and retired petroleum engineer Dale Henry of Lampasas have already announced their intentions to run. Texas Railroad Commissioner Michael Williams, a Republican, is also seeking re-election.
The term for a seat on the Railroad Commission is six years.
Carrillo, who is not related to Texas Railroad Commissioner Victor Carrillo, works for American Airlines as an aircraft technician. He has previously served on the Ponder Planning and Zoning Commission as a commissioner and as chairman.
Along with his work with the city of Ponder, Jesus Carrillo has worked in the petroleum and utility industries, which he said offers him a unique perspective on the fuel industry.
“It is beneficial to know what the employees are going through,” Carrillo said. “Safety is my No. 1 concern for citizens, their employees and the company. Safety should be in everyone’s head.”
Along with pushing safety, Carrillo said oil and gas companies need to explore other viable options for fuel, and those options should be promoted to citizens. Carrillo uses the alternative fuel E85, containing 85 percent ethanol, and said he has to drive miles to find a station that provides it. He believes it should be available at more locations.
“I understand that we have a need for them [fuel companies], because they are our energy producers and one of biggest sources of income,” he said. “However, I think they need to work more closely with their community. They need to ask, ‘How it is going to fit in with the neighborhood?’”
Carrillo said companies can do that by looking for ways to blend in with the community or helping repair bridges and roads that have begun to deteriorate faster because of heavy loads.
“All that excess weight is burning out roads and wearing down our bridges,” he said. “When they need to be renovated, who is going to take care of them? Are we, as taxpayers, going to have to?”
Like many Texas residents, Carrillo has experienced gas wells springing up in his neighborhood. He said that constant interaction with gas wells was one of the reasons he became interested in running for the Railroad Commission post.
Carrillo is married and has three children. He was born in Corpus Christi and has lived in Texas nearly all his life. He graduated from the Hallmark Institute of Aeronautics in San Antonio with a technical degree in aviation science.
The Railroad Commission’s primary duties are preventing waste of oil and gas, protecting surface and subsurface water and protecting the mineral rights of landowners.
The commission does not have jurisdiction over roads, traffic, noise, odors, leases, pipeline easements or royalty payments.
Read more in the Denton Record-Chronicle
Denton County resident Jesus Carrillo announced recently that he is running as a Democrat for a seat on the Texas Railroad Commission.
Carrillo, 45, of Ponder, is the first Denton County resident to announce that he is running for a seat on the three-member commission, but he has entered into a crowded primary race that includes two other Democrats.
Former San Antonio City Council member Art Hall and retired petroleum engineer Dale Henry of Lampasas have already announced their intentions to run. Texas Railroad Commissioner Michael Williams, a Republican, is also seeking re-election.
The term for a seat on the Railroad Commission is six years.
Carrillo, who is not related to Texas Railroad Commissioner Victor Carrillo, works for American Airlines as an aircraft technician. He has previously served on the Ponder Planning and Zoning Commission as a commissioner and as chairman.
Along with his work with the city of Ponder, Jesus Carrillo has worked in the petroleum and utility industries, which he said offers him a unique perspective on the fuel industry.
“It is beneficial to know what the employees are going through,” Carrillo said. “Safety is my No. 1 concern for citizens, their employees and the company. Safety should be in everyone’s head.”
Along with pushing safety, Carrillo said oil and gas companies need to explore other viable options for fuel, and those options should be promoted to citizens. Carrillo uses the alternative fuel E85, containing 85 percent ethanol, and said he has to drive miles to find a station that provides it. He believes it should be available at more locations.
“I understand that we have a need for them [fuel companies], because they are our energy producers and one of biggest sources of income,” he said. “However, I think they need to work more closely with their community. They need to ask, ‘How it is going to fit in with the neighborhood?’”
Carrillo said companies can do that by looking for ways to blend in with the community or helping repair bridges and roads that have begun to deteriorate faster because of heavy loads.
“All that excess weight is burning out roads and wearing down our bridges,” he said. “When they need to be renovated, who is going to take care of them? Are we, as taxpayers, going to have to?”
Like many Texas residents, Carrillo has experienced gas wells springing up in his neighborhood. He said that constant interaction with gas wells was one of the reasons he became interested in running for the Railroad Commission post.
Carrillo is married and has three children. He was born in Corpus Christi and has lived in Texas nearly all his life. He graduated from the Hallmark Institute of Aeronautics in San Antonio with a technical degree in aviation science.
The Railroad Commission’s primary duties are preventing waste of oil and gas, protecting surface and subsurface water and protecting the mineral rights of landowners.
The commission does not have jurisdiction over roads, traffic, noise, odors, leases, pipeline easements or royalty payments.
Read more in the Denton Record-Chronicle
Labels:
Carillo,
Dale Henry,
Election 2008,
Railroad Commissioner,
Texas
Thursday, November 1, 2007
Environmental Texas urges Texans to protest sale of Christmas Mountain to Texas Land Commission Nov. 6th
Next Tuesday, Nov. 6, at 10 AM, the School Land Board will meet in Austin to consider whether to sell the Christmas Mountains to private interests. Over the last two months Environment Texas supporters have sent in e-mails, signed petitions, written letters to the editor and generally pulled their hair out in frustration over Commissioner Patterson's scheme. Now it's time for us to, in terminology Patterson (a former Marine) would understand, put "boots on the ground" and turn out en masse for this hearing.
Please attend the hearing and demand that Patterson stop the sale and let the Christmas Mountains become part of Big Bend National Park.
WHERE: Stephen F. Austin Building
1700 North Congress Ave. Room #170
Austin, Texas 78701
WHEN: Tuesday, Nov. 6 (yes, election day)
Meeting starts at 10:00 A.M. (Christmas
Mountains is item 10 on the agenda).
If you can attend the meeting, please RSVP at:
https://www.environmenttexas.org/action/preserving-texas/cm-hearing?id4=ES
For more information, listen to a recent NPR story at:
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=15528700
Or see this Houston Chronicle article below:
Proposal to sell West Texas property sparks opposition
By GARY SCHARRER
About 4,000 Texans have signed an online petition protesting the state's proposed sale of the Christmas Mountains Ranch near Big Bend National Park property that the National Park Service now says it is interested in acquiring.
"People are suspicious of our government and state leaders, given the track record of selling off other public lands or attempting to sell off other land," Luke Metzger, director of Environment Texas, said Friday.
"People are proud of our state and recognize there is not enough land owned by all of us. They get rightfully angry at attempts to auction it off."
His group's Web site (www.environmenttexas.org) is hosting the petition drive.
Difficult to manage
Bids for the 9,270-acre Christmas Mountains property are due Wednesday. Texas received the rugged land 16 years ago as a gift from the Conservation Fund and Richard King Mellon Foundation.
Texas Land Commissioner Jerry Patterson wants to sell the property because severe restrictions on its use or development make it difficult to manage.
State Rep. Pete Gallego, D-Alpine, and Rep. Donna Howard, D-Austin, have asked him to delay the sale to allow the National Park Service time to close a deal.
Patterson, a gun-rights supporter and hunting enthusiast, said he is unwilling to sell the land to the park service if doing so would ban hunting.
That condition is problematic, said David Elkowitz, chief of interpretation at Big Bend National Park.
"All national parks don't allow hunting," he said.
The park service was not interested in the property 16 years ago because of other priorities. It is now "certainly interested if it becomes available," Elkowitz said.
Congressional action would be required to expand the Big Bend National Park's existing boundaries, he said.
A gift deed with the land donation in 1991 stipulates it can only be transferred to the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department or the park service. Any other transaction would require the Conservation Fund's approval. Patterson said that provision can't be legally enforced.
Patterson's hunting stance for the property is pretty firm, spokesman Jim Suydam said.
"The proposed land deal upsets Texans because there's a lot of misinformation," Suydam said. "People believe that we're somehow selling park land for private development, and that just couldn't be further from the truth."
Just a cabin
The property near Terlingua does not have any legal access to it. And the conservation easement that the Conservation Fund placed on the property when it gave the land to the state prohibits new road construction. The only building allowed is a caretaker's cabin.
The School Land Board, which controls the property, asked for new bids last month after a procedural defect in the first round.
Gallego, whose district includes the property, said the proposed sale bothers him.
"The donation was made to the state under certain conditions, and I think it would have a real chilling effect on other donors. Nobody's ever going to want to give the state of Texas another gift of land if the state finds it easy to take your gift and then dispose of it," Gallego said.
**************************end of article******************
Please attend the hearing and demand that Patterson stop the sale and let the Christmas Mountains become part of Big Bend National Park.
WHERE: Stephen F. Austin Building
1700 North Congress Ave. Room #170
Austin, Texas 78701
WHEN: Tuesday, Nov. 6 (yes, election day)
Meeting starts at 10:00 A.M. (Christmas
Mountains is item 10 on the agenda).
Please attend the hearing and demand that Patterson stop the sale and let the Christmas Mountains become part of Big Bend National Park.
WHERE: Stephen F. Austin Building
1700 North Congress Ave. Room #170
Austin, Texas 78701
WHEN: Tuesday, Nov. 6 (yes, election day)
Meeting starts at 10:00 A.M. (Christmas
Mountains is item 10 on the agenda).
If you can attend the meeting, please RSVP at:
https://www.environmenttexas.org/action/preserving-texas/cm-hearing?id4=ES
For more information, listen to a recent NPR story at:
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=15528700
Or see this Houston Chronicle article below:
Proposal to sell West Texas property sparks opposition
By GARY SCHARRER
About 4,000 Texans have signed an online petition protesting the state's proposed sale of the Christmas Mountains Ranch near Big Bend National Park property that the National Park Service now says it is interested in acquiring.
"People are suspicious of our government and state leaders, given the track record of selling off other public lands or attempting to sell off other land," Luke Metzger, director of Environment Texas, said Friday.
"People are proud of our state and recognize there is not enough land owned by all of us. They get rightfully angry at attempts to auction it off."
His group's Web site (www.environmenttexas.org) is hosting the petition drive.
Difficult to manage
Bids for the 9,270-acre Christmas Mountains property are due Wednesday. Texas received the rugged land 16 years ago as a gift from the Conservation Fund and Richard King Mellon Foundation.
Texas Land Commissioner Jerry Patterson wants to sell the property because severe restrictions on its use or development make it difficult to manage.
State Rep. Pete Gallego, D-Alpine, and Rep. Donna Howard, D-Austin, have asked him to delay the sale to allow the National Park Service time to close a deal.
Patterson, a gun-rights supporter and hunting enthusiast, said he is unwilling to sell the land to the park service if doing so would ban hunting.
That condition is problematic, said David Elkowitz, chief of interpretation at Big Bend National Park.
"All national parks don't allow hunting," he said.
The park service was not interested in the property 16 years ago because of other priorities. It is now "certainly interested if it becomes available," Elkowitz said.
Congressional action would be required to expand the Big Bend National Park's existing boundaries, he said.
A gift deed with the land donation in 1991 stipulates it can only be transferred to the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department or the park service. Any other transaction would require the Conservation Fund's approval. Patterson said that provision can't be legally enforced.
Patterson's hunting stance for the property is pretty firm, spokesman Jim Suydam said.
"The proposed land deal upsets Texans because there's a lot of misinformation," Suydam said. "People believe that we're somehow selling park land for private development, and that just couldn't be further from the truth."
Just a cabin
The property near Terlingua does not have any legal access to it. And the conservation easement that the Conservation Fund placed on the property when it gave the land to the state prohibits new road construction. The only building allowed is a caretaker's cabin.
The School Land Board, which controls the property, asked for new bids last month after a procedural defect in the first round.
Gallego, whose district includes the property, said the proposed sale bothers him.
"The donation was made to the state under certain conditions, and I think it would have a real chilling effect on other donors. Nobody's ever going to want to give the state of Texas another gift of land if the state finds it easy to take your gift and then dispose of it," Gallego said.
**************************end of article******************
Please attend the hearing and demand that Patterson stop the sale and let the Christmas Mountains become part of Big Bend National Park.
WHERE: Stephen F. Austin Building
1700 North Congress Ave. Room #170
Austin, Texas 78701
WHEN: Tuesday, Nov. 6 (yes, election day)
Meeting starts at 10:00 A.M. (Christmas
Mountains is item 10 on the agenda).
Labels:
Action Alert,
bid,
Christmas Mountain
Bluedaze.: The fumes are so bad they wake us up. Barnett Shale
Bluedaze.: The fumes are so bad they wake us up. Barnett Shale: "The fumes are so bad they wake us up. Barnett Shale"
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Travel to other worlds ... UTA Planetarium
Immersive full-dome 3-D Digital planetarium show narrated by Ewan McGregor (Obi wan Kepobi from Star Wars) - Astronaut takes you exporing the worlds of inner and outer space. The movie is projected all around you. You recline in specially constructed chairs which enables you to comfortably view the immersive full-dome planetarium show. Astronaut! (produced from the National Space Centre in England) goes beyond the stereotypical space movie. Experience a rocket launch from inside the body of the astronaut. Float around the international Space Station moving thorugh the microscopic regions of the human body! Discover the beauty and perils as "Chad", the test astronaut experiences everything thrown at him.
Summer Schedule (June 2-August 26):
Astronaut!
shows at the UTA Planetarium.
Wed. through Saturdays at 11 a.m.
and Thursday at 7:00 p.m.
Cosmic CSI
shows at the UTA Planetarium 3-D Digital Dome.
Wed. through Saturdays at 2 p.m.
Rock Hall of Fame 1 (The Original)
shows at the UTA Planetarium.
Thursday at 8:00 p.m.
Read more (Warning their flat dull website doesn't give much of a glimmer of the multi-dimensional experience you'll have once you enter the dome of the UTA Planetarium!)
Admission: Adults: $5.00
Seniors, Students, Children: $4.00
UTA Faculty, Staff & Alumni (with ID): $3.00
UTA Studens (with ID): $2.00
Groups of 10 or more with reservation: $3.00
Call 817 272-1183 or e-mail planetarium@uta.edu
Astronaut!
shows at the UTA Planetarium.
Wed. through Saturdays at 11 a.m.
and Thursday at 7:00 p.m.
Cosmic CSI
shows at the UTA Planetarium 3-D Digital Dome.
Wed. through Saturdays at 2 p.m.
Rock Hall of Fame 1 (The Original)
shows at the UTA Planetarium.
Thursday at 8:00 p.m.
Read more (Warning their flat dull website doesn't give much of a glimmer of the multi-dimensional experience you'll have once you enter the dome of the UTA Planetarium!)
Admission: Adults: $5.00
Seniors, Students, Children: $4.00
UTA Faculty, Staff & Alumni (with ID): $3.00
UTA Studens (with ID): $2.00
Groups of 10 or more with reservation: $3.00
Call 817 272-1183 or e-mail planetarium@uta.edu