http://triblive.com/state/marcellusshale/5133437-74/pollution-drillers-stat…
PA-DEP puts gas drillers under watchful eye | TribLIVE
Article by Tony LaRussa, Pittsburgh Tribune Review, February 22, 2014
In early August, state environmental regulators ended the long-standing practice of allowing Marcellus shale gas drillers to operate without a plan as to how they would control air pollution at well sites.
But rather than just issue rules for how to limit pollution, the state Department of Environmental Protection gave drillers a choice — submit an air-quality plan for approval, or use pollution control systems that keep emissions below standards set by the federal government.
Between Aug. 1 and Nov. 30, none of the 979 drilling applications issued across the state — including 355 in the Pittsburgh area — submitted air-quality plans to the PA-DEP, said Amanda Witman, a spokeswoman for the state's environmental agency.
“We consider this a win-win because it helps keep the air clean by requiring drillers to keep pollution emissions lower than the federal guidelines while at the same time eliminating some of the time and effort drillers have to spend preparing air-quality plans as well the time it takes for us to review and process them,” Witman said.
The change giving drillers the option ends the practice of granting blanket exemptions, which had been done since 1996, according to the PA-DEP.
Patrick Creighton, a spokesman for the Marcellus Shale Coalition, an industry trade group, said he is “not surprised” that drillers are opting to follow the Environmental Protection Agency guidelines set in April 2012.
“The industry recognizes that the new federal guidelines represent a robust effort to reduce air pollution,” Creighton said. “The folks who work in this industry expect to be around a long time, so there is an incentive for them to get it right the first time when it comes to safeguarding the environment, a spokesman for Range Resources, said the company began capturing emissions at well sites in 2011.
“ The materials contained in those emissions are exactly what we are in the business of selling,” he said. “So not only does it make good business sense not to release them, it benefits the environment and safety.”
While environmentalists support the state's effort to control air pollution at well sites by enacting rules for issuing drilling permits, they are calling for better monitoring.
“We always like to see stronger (air pollution) emission controls put in place, but one of our biggest concerns is the cumulative impact these well-sites can have,” said Lauren Burge, a staff attorney for the Group Against Smog and Pollution, or GASP.
“Even though the amount of air pollution released at an individual well might be very small, when you have a lot of them operating in an area, the total amount emitted can be a concern,” she said. “We'd like to see more done to determine what that cumulative impact is, as well as the potential health effects.”
GASP and the Environmental Defense Fund are calling on the DEP to make sure drillers verify that the air-pollution controls they use reduce emissions.
Lisa Kasianowitz of the state DEP said drillers are in fact required to demonstrate their compliance with EPA standards within 180 days after they start drilling.
“We have started both short- and long-term studies in the state, in which air testing devices at well sites regularly take readings that will be analyzed to determine whether additional regulations are needed to limit air pollution,” Kasianowitz said.
Duane Nichols, Cell- 304-216-5535.
www.FrackCheckWV.net
Check out “Fracking Our Future” by mediasanctuary on Vimeo.
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Duane Nichols, Cell- 304-216-5535.
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Longview Reaches Settlement With Foster Wheeler Over Repairs
Peg Brickley
February 10, 2014
2014 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
Longview Power LLC has struck a deal with one of three contractors that it has been battling over problems at its West Virginia power plant, winning the support of German engineering firm Foster Wheeler AG for its drive to get out of bankruptcy. ...
Document DJFDBR0020140210ea2al6s24
See this legal document . .. ...
https://dr201.s3.amazonaws.com/li/13-12211/dk000905-0000.pdf?AWSAccessKeyId…
Duane Nichols, Cell- 304-216-5535.
www.FrackCheckWV.net
http://www.ydr.com/state/ci_25111940/3-fire-companies-at-scene-sw-pa-gas
3 fire companies at scene of SW Pa. gas well fire
The Associated Press
UPDATED: 02/11/2014
Dillner, Pa.—Emergency dispatchers say at least three fire companies have responded to a report of a natural gas well explosion and fire in southwestern Pennsylvania, within miles of the West Virginia border.
A Greene County 911 supervisor says the fire was reported shortly before 8 a.m. Tuesday in Dunkard Township, near Bobtown. That's about 50 miles south of Pittsburgh.
The 911 supervisor says there have been no immediate reports of injuries, though an ambulance and emergency medical crews have been summoned to stand by at the scene.
It was not immediately clear who owns the well or what caused the well to catch fire.
Crews at the scene were reporting that intense flames have kept them from getting too close to the well.
Duane Nichols, Cell- 304-216-5535.
www.FrackCheckWV.net