# [Hydrogen Could Find More Uses, But Isn’t Practical as Our Primary Energy
Medium](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/30/hydrogen-could-find-more-us…
but-isn%e2%80%99t-practical-as-our-primary-energy-medium/)
[](…
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Shell Oil Co. has this REFHYNE facility in Germany to produce hydrogen.
**Is hydrogen a miracle solution for climate, or the new**
From an [Article by Ivy Main, Virginia
Mercury](https://www.virginiamercury.com/2023/04/25/is-hydrogen-a-miracle-
solution-for-climate-or-the-new-ethanol/), April 25, 2023
**The hydrogen gold rush is on. Spurred by the urgency of the climate crisis,
and attracted by generous incentives in last year’s Inflation Reduction Act,
companies ranging from oil majors to small start-ups are pouring money into
the Next Big Thing in energy: a fuel that is flexible, transportable and
carbon-free.**
Is hydrogen a critical piece of the decarbonization puzzle that needs floods
of new funding, or a[n over-hyped, not-ready-for-prime-time financial
boondoggle? At this point the answer seems to be
both](https://www.virginiamercury.com/2023/04/25/is-hydrogen-a-miracle-
solution-for-climate-or-the-new-ethanol/).
In his 2022 Energy Plan, Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin touted hydrogen as “a
once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to reimagine Virginia’s future and meet energy
needs through an abundant, dispatchable, and zero-emission fuel source where
water is the only required input.”
This statement has its problems, including the fact that water is actually not
the only required input. Making hydrogen from water requires a lot of energy,
which must come from some other fuel. Therein lies the rub.
[](…
content/uploads/2023/04/DAC105E4-0035-453F-82BC-43D3402EA734.png)
(Click on image to enlarge it)
**DIAGRAM ~ How the Department of Energy believes clean hydrogen could help
decarbonize the U.S. economy. (U.S. Department of Energy)**
One way to make hydrogen — and the method everyone is talking about — is using
electricity to split water (H2O) into its components, hydrogen and oxygen,
through electrolysis. Energy is lost in the process, so there is no point in
using hydrogen for anything that can plug into the grid. Hydrogen is also more
expensive and less efficient than battery storage, which explains why
automakers are focusing on electric vehicles rather than ones that run on
hydrogen fuel cells.
Yet some kinds of transportation (aviation, long-haul trucking) and many
industrial processes are hard or impossible to electrify, at least for now.
Hydrogen, ammonia and other products can often replace fossil fuels for these
uses, and perhaps also play a role in long-term energy storage for grid power.
**Recognizing this potential, last year’s Inflation Reduction Act included a
range of incentives to spur investment in so-called green hydrogen, defined as
hydrogen made from renewable energy. Growing the supply of green hydrogen will
require a massive buildout of wind and solar as well as years of technological
refinement, but airlines, steelmakers and other customers are already either
starting to use green hydrogen or say they want it for their operations.**
**Unfortunately, any time the government dangles a subsidy, some businesses
will look to exploit any opening to grab free money, even if the result is
contrary to the whole point of the subsidy. Those businesses do find champions
among politicians who are more interested in generating economic activity than
in making sound public policy (or maybe they just confuse the two). But
getting the rules right is critical for the climate, and for making sure
customers get the carbon-free product they sign up for.**
**Hydrogen is already used in many industrial processes and in the manufacture
of fertilizers but today it is mostly made from methane gas, at half the cost
of green hydrogen. Oil companies like Chevron have urged that to build the
market quickly, making hydrogen green is “secondary” to making it affordable.
This is all wrong. The great promise of hydrogen is the potential to make it
from renewable energy once wind and solar have scaled up so much that there is
a glut of cheap, emissions-free power.**
**That is not the situation today.** Nationally, fossil fuels make up 60% of
electricity generation, with all renewables together representing 21.5%. The
regional grid that serves Virginia includes less than 10% wind and solar in
the generation mix. Renewables are growing fast while coal shrinks, but few
states have so much renewable energy that some of it occasionally goes to
waste. California has experienced this under ideal conditions, and is likely
to be the first to have surplus renewable energy on a predictable basis.
**The challenge is that a company that invests in the capital costs of a
hydrogen production facility may not want to run it only when there is surplus
wind and solar. These companies will make the most money by running their
systems around the clock; profitability might even depend on it. Their choices
are to build new renewable energy and battery storage for their own purposes
and cut back production when they have to, or manipulate the rules.**
So as the U.S. Treasury Department writes the rules around eligibility for
green hydrogen incentives, corporate America is asking for loopholes. NextEra,
the world’s largest renewable power generator, wants to be allowed to use
fossil fuels to fill in whenever there isn’t enough wind or solar energy on
the grid, without losing the “green” designation and all the subsidies that
accompany it. The company proposes buying carbon credits as an offset.
The proposal makes climate advocates very uneasy. We have seen this movie
before. When the federal government first offered subsidies for ethanol made
from corn in the 1970s, the idea was that blending American-made ethanol into
gasoline would reduce our dependence on foreign oil and lower greenhouse gas
emissions.
Forty years later, the program still consumes some 30 million acres of corn
every year, and is estimated to have cost taxpayers billions of dollars, all
while actually harming the climate. But just try scaling back ethanol
subsidies today. Any politician who proposes such a thing gets their head
handed to them by the powerful farm lobby.
**That makes it really important that rules set into place today for hydrogen
and other “green” fuels do not compromise on the requirement that they be made
from carbon-free sources. Make an exception once, and we’ll never close the
loophole.**
###
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/30/hydrogen-could-find-more-uses-
but-isn%e2%80%99t-practical-as-our-primary-energy-medium/>
# [WVU Schedules Drilling for Geothermal Research Well in Morgantown
Industrial Park](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/29/wvu-schedules-
drilling-for-geothermal-research-well-in-morgantown-industrial-park/)
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**NNE Marcellus Well Pad @ Morgantown Industrial Park** ~ Drilling for the new
WVU geothermal data-collection well is set to begin during the second week of
May.
**WVU announces drill date for first geothermal & carbon dioxide storage
research well in West Virginia**
.
.
[From the WVU News Service,
Morgantown](https://wvutoday.wvu.edu/stories/2023/04/28/wvu-announces-drill-
date-for-first-geothermal-carbon-capture-and-storage-data-collection-well-in-
west-virginia), April 28, 2023
.
.
**Drilling will start on the West Virginia University geothermal and carbon
capture data-collection well during the second week of May, marking a
significant step forward in clean energy research in West Virginia.** The well
is located at an existing well pad operated by Northeast Natural Energy in the
Morgantown Industrial Park. Core samples at shallower depths will be collected
to study the potential for underground carbon dioxide storage.
[This will be the first-of-its-kind geothermal study in West Virginia and will
collect core samples and temperature data down to a depth of 15,000 feet,
critical to testing the potential of geothermal energy in the region. Data
also will be gathered on the potential for underground carbon storage in the
Appalachian basin — another scientific first in the
state.](https://wvutoday.wvu.edu/stories/2023/04/28/wvu-announces-drill-dat…
for-first-geothermal-carbon-capture-and-storage-data-collection-well-in-west-
virginia)
The project is a collaboration first spearheaded by the WVU Energy Institute
with WVU faculty and experts at Northeast Natural Energy LLC and the U.S.
Department of Energy, with support from the West Virginia Geological and
Economic Survey and Hewitt Energy Strategies.
**The DOE provided approximately $9.1 million in funding from the Geothermal
Technologies Office and the Office of Fossil Energy and Carbon Management.
Northeast Natural Energy, WVGES and WVU contributed $2.76 million in cost-
share funding.**
“The successful partnership between DOE, industry and academia to test the
potential of both geothermal and carbon sequestration in the state is a
significant step towards creating new economic opportunities in clean energy
diversification,” said Shikha Sharma, geology professor in the WVU Eberly
College of Arts and Sciences and the project’s principal investigator.
**Drilling will be located at an existing well pad at the Morgantown
Industrial Park operated by Northeast Natural Energy, a West Virginia-based
energy company.** “It’s exciting for Northeast Natural Energy to be able to
use its scientific and operational expertise to help better understand the
geothermal energy and carbon capture potential of our great state,” said B.J.
Carney, vice president of Geoscience and Innovation at Northeast Natural
Energy.
**This is the second drilling research project that Northeast Natural Energy
has partnered on with WVU. The first was the Marcellus Shale Energy and
Environment Laboratory for which WVU coordinated with academia, government and
industry partners that started in 2015. MSEEL scientists used multiple
Northeast Natural Energy wells near Morgantown to research new technologies to
improve well production and minimize environmental impacts during
unconventional natural gas development projects.**
“We look forward to partnering with the researchers at WVU and the DOE to lead
the way in the Appalachian Basin toward establishing additional clean energy
sources,” Carney said. “We are also eager to understand the feasibility of
capturing and storing CO2 in the subsurface to ensure a sustainable future for
our vast natural gas resources already in place. These types of projects fit
with Northeast Natural Energy’s focus on providing energy of all types to
serve our communities and improve their quality of life,” Carney added.
“To be clear, instead of producing energy, this well will produce data,” said
Sam Taylor, assistant director of Strategic Partnerships and Technology at the
WVU Energy Institute. “The goal is to gather enough data to decide if
geothermal reservoirs in the region can be a cleaner energy source for parts
of West Virginia and mid-Appalachia, along with collecting data on possible
carbon storage.”
“We’re excited that the test well will provide WVU students with hands-on
experience in the field, working with industry professionals while collecting
data, providing them with invaluable, real-world experience as a part of their
academic studies at WVU,” Sharma said.
House Bill 4098 was passed in 2022 and gave the Department of Environmental
Protection regulatory oversight on geothermal energy. Taylor was invited to
provide expert testimony to state delegates when the bill was reviewed.
“This project is a significant milestone in the testing of geothermal energy
potential, not only in the state, but also in 70% of the U.S. where lower
subsurface temperatures have prevented its use,” Sharma said.
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/29/wvu-schedules-drilling-for-
geothermal-research-well-in-morgantown-industrial-park/>
# [Mountain Valley Pipeline ~ A 303 Mile “Uniquely Risky” & Unnecessary
Experiment](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/28/mountain-valley-
pipeline-a-303-mile-%e2%80%9cuniquely-risky%e2%80%9d-unnecessary-experiment/)
[](…
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PHOTO ~ MVP pipe in water near a home in Franklin County, VA: according to a
local landowner, this pipe was left in a trench that sometimes filled with
water up to 2 feet high, for more than a year, until the trench was dewatered
~ Source: Preserve Bent Mountain
**Mountain Valley Pipeline: "Uniquely Risky" Due to Plastic Coating & Multiple
Other Reasons**
.
.
[Article by Amy Mall, Natural Resources Defense Council
(NRDC)](https://www.nrdc.org/bio/amy-mall/mountain-valley-pipeline-uniquely-
risky-0), November 3, 2022
.
.
**Steel pipelines used to transport fossil fuels are prone to corrosion.**
Contaminants in oil or gas, such as hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide, can
cause corrosion on the inside of the pipes. Rain and dew can cause corrosion
on the exterior of pipes when they are stored outdoors. Soil constituents and
groundwater can cause corrosion on the exterior of pipes when they are buried
beneath the surface, with wet areas more susceptible to corrosion than dry
areas.
**Corrosion in a pipeline is extremely dangerous, leading to catastrophic
explosions and death. Indeed, corrosion problems are the second greatest cause
of pipeline failures.**
Fortunately, coatings can be applied to pipes to help protect against
corrosion. Ideally, pipes are coated both internally and externally to protect
from both types of corrosion. Unfortunately, federal regulations only require
external coatings for oil and gas pipelines. And pipe coating is not permanent
or indestructible. It has to be carefully maintained to retain its protective
qualities. If coated pipes are stored outdoors and exposed to the elements,
the pipe coating can degrade due to rain, wind, and—especially—ultraviolet
(UV) rays from sunlight. As coating degrades, its protective function also
diminishes. Even a tiny imperfection in the coating can create a concentrated
area of accelerated corrosion.
The rate and extent of coating degradation will vary by the particular
circumstances at a site, but according to the National Association of Pipe
Coating Applicators: “Above ground storage of coated pipe in excess of 6
months without additional Ultraviolet protection is not recommended.” A 2020
study found that coated pipes that were not provided with additional
protection and were exposed to UV rays for many years beyond the recommended
six-month maximum “completely failed to retain their original properties and
attributes” and were “no longer fit for purpose." (Ref. 1)
**Mountain Valley Pipeline coatings not reliable**
Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP) is a partially completed pipeline that would
have high explosive risk if it is completed and enters operation. Its large
diameter and high pressure are enough to make it a higher risk pipeline than
most other gas transmission pipelines. This risk is further increased by the
steepness of the Appalachian mountain slopes it would traverse for long
distances. MVP is designed to traverse 75 miles of the steepest slopes in
Appalachia and more than 200 miles with “high landslide susceptibility,” which
places it at higher risk for explosions. This has never before been attempted
for a large gas pipeline.
**Taking all of this into consideration, MVP is perhaps the riskiest new
pipeline construction project in the country. Indeed, it’s been called
“uniquely risky” by an environmental hydrologist. This is not a hypothetical
risk. MVP has already caused dozens of “slips” where a slope has become
unstable, including slopes outside of the pipeline’s right-of-way. And, in
2019, MVP itself reported that a landslide along the pipeline route
“progressed to the point where a residence directly downslope is unsafe to be
occupied.”**
**PHOTO in Article** ~ MVP construction on a steep slope in the Adney Gap area
of Franklin County, VA, with a home below ~ SOURCE: Preserve Bent Mountain
**Pipes for the Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP) were purchased years ago. From
company testimony in a 2018 court hearing, it appears that they were ordered
before the project had even obtained a certificate of approval from the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (Ref. 2). The pipes are primarily coated
with 3M Scotchkote Fusion Bonded Epoxy (FBE) 6233 coating. Many are still
being stored outdoors throughout the pipeline route in Virginia and West
Virginia; some are sitting in trenches in the ground and some are stacked in
storage yards. Each separate pipe is stamped with the “date of coating.”**
**MVP pipe has coating date stamps from as long ago as December 2016 — six
years ago. Local citizens report they have not come across any pipe dated
later than 2017**.
**PHOTO in Article** ~ MVP pipe with 2016 date stamp in Franklin County,
Virginia ~ Source: Preserve Bent Mountain
**According to the Pipeline Safety Trust, “There are significant concerns
about the effectiveness of the FBE epoxy coatings on the pipeline segments
that have been exposed to sun and weathering for far longer than recommended
by the manufacturer.” MVP’s coated pipe has been exposed to the elements for
up to six years because of the pipeline owner’s bullish decision to purchase
and coat the pipes before resolving outstanding issues regarding the
unlawfulness of its design and permits issued by federal agencies during the
Trump Administration.**
MVP claims that they will inspect the pipe and repair any damaged coating or
thin spots on exposed pipe before installing it in the ground. But there
aren't any federal regulations that specify standards for repair. According to
the Pipeline Safety Trust, “The regulations are written to largely allow the
operator to determine if the coating is appropriate as opposed to prescribing
exactly what would make a coating safe or unsafe.”
When pipes for the proposed (and now cancelled) Keystone XL pipeline were
stored outdoors for approximately six years due to delay, a company
representative stated that any pipe determined to need recoating would have to
be transported back to a plant to be stripped and recoated. That requires time
— and money. Given that MVP is already more than $3 billion over budget and
more than five years behind schedule, the company has incentive to cut
corners.
**Leaving pipeline inspection and repair up to the pipeline company is simply
wrong.**
The communities along the route need to able to sleep at night with confidence
that their lives and those of their loved ones are being considered — perhaps
the most important purpose of the coatings. These pipes are sitting on private
property that belongs to real people who live in what is known as the “blast
zone”— the distance from an explosion where death or serious injury is likely.
And they won’t be able to sleep at night knowing that a pipeline company that
has been fined millions of dollars for hundreds of state alleged violations is
allowed to decide how to address the risks associated with deteriorating pipe
coating that has been exposed to the elements for far too long.
Reference #1. Keith Coulson, James Ferguson, and David Milmine, “Study of
stockpiled fusion bond epoxy coated pipe,” in Corrosion Management, Institute
of Corrosion, January/February 2020.
Reference #2. Mountain Valley Pipeline, LLC, Plaintiff, vs. Sharon Simmons, et
al, Defendants, Civil Action Number: 1:17CV211, Proceedings had in the Motion
Hearing on January 23, 2018.
###
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/28/mountain-valley-
pipeline-a-303-mile-%e2%80%9cuniquely-risky%e2%80%9d-unnecessary-experiment/>
# [U.S. Secretary of Energy is Misguided on Mountain Valley Pipeline
(MVP)](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/27/u-s-secretary-of-energy-is-
misguided-on-mountain-valley-pipeline-mvp/)
[](https:/…
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One of the rallies over the last eight years opposing the 42” MVP ….
**Despite Environmental Justice Pledge, Pres. Biden Disrespects People Like Me
in Path of Fracked Gas Pipeline**
From the [Article by Maury Johnson (Monroe County, WV), Common
Dreams](https://www.commondreams.org/opinion/biden-administration-disrespec…
mountain-valley-pipeline-impacted-communities), 4/26/23
**Secretary Granholm 's letter cheerleading the Mountain Valley Pipeline came
the day after she promised to meet with me, a landowner impacted by Senator
Manchin's pet fossil fuel project.**
I am saddened by the depths that proponents of the Mountain Valley Pipeline
(MVP) will go to advance a false narrative and spread inaccuracies. This time
it is Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm who on Friday, April 21, 2023
wrote a cheerleader's letter rooting for the MVP, Joe Manchin's pet project.
It is very ironic and even a bit disturbing that she wrote this letter one day
after she appeared before the Senate Energy Committee and the very next day
after she told me personally that she (or her staff) would meet with me in the
next week or two.
I am currently in Washington, D.C. where I attended the Senate Energy
Committee meeting on Thursday, April 20. I spoke to the Secretary at the
conclusion of the hearing and asked her to meet with me. She indicated that a
meeting could be arranged this week or next. But in what appears to be a
hastily prepared letter — even possibly dictated by the fossil fuel lobby —
she expressed her desire to exert political pressure on the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission (FERC) and other federal agencies.
**The Secretary apparently decided that she did not need to talk to those most
affected by the project or even entertain an opposing viewpoint.** Like many
agencies, she did not talk with or listen to any affected landowner and
totally continued to perpetrate the social, racial, and environmental
injustice concerns that President Joe Biden had just a few hours before
expressed that his administration would take seriously.
**You can 't have it both ways**: You either listen to impacted communities or
you don't. This letter appears to be written to appease Senator Manchin and
others in the MVP camp. It is also strange that this letter was filed just
before Equitrans Midstream Corporation — the company behind the pipeline — had
its shareholder meeting on Monday morning, April 24.
You can't have it both ways: You either listen to impacted communities or you
don't.
**The MVP project is not necessary to support the nation 's energy security
and energy supply.** Just because they say it is so, doesn't make it true. It
actually would do just the opposite. It would lock us into decades of methane
and carbon pollution that the nation or the planet can ill afford. As the lead
federal agency for the project under the FAST-41 framework, I feel that the
FERC has failed in its regulatory duty to be an independent agency by
submitting to inappropriate industry-generated political pressure similar to
that which is reflected in Secretary Granholm's letter. It appears to me to be
an attempt to intimidate the commission.
**In a letter I just completed and sent to the FERC, I requested that they do
their job and follow their charter as an independent agency:** to evaluate all
projects on their merits and with regard to their impact on climate change and
to resist the political pressure placed on them by politicians like Senator
Manchin, who would build more pipelines, mine more coal, drill for more oil
and gas, despite the fact that it would put us on a fast track to total
environment destruction.
I do not believe that the MVP project would help ensure the "reliable delivery
of energy that heats homes and businesses, and powers electric generators that
support the reliability of the electric system," despite what Secretary
Granholm may state in her letter. **This is a 42-inch diameter interstate
transmission line which is most likely slated to transmit gas for export.**
Infrastructure such as MVP destroys communities, pollutes water, harms our
environment, and has no role to play in the clean energy transition. Unproven
technologies such as "carbon capture" facilitated by the Bipartisan
Infrastructure Law and Inflation Reduction Act are not something you should
rely on to fix our climate emergency. With the severe problems we are facing,
these proposals are too little, too late.
No new pipeline infrastructure is needed. The rapid growth of hydrogen as an
emissions-free fuel is also a misnomer, especially if the hydrogen is produced
as a byproduct of more drilling. The transport of carbon dioxide through a
pipeline might be the most dangerous thing we could ever do. I believe
Secretary Granholm herself knows better than what she stated in her April 21
letter.
As extreme weather events continue to put strain on the U.S. energy system, we
must quickly transition to green energy and continuing to build pipelines
cannot be part of that transition. The MVP project would, if completed, lock
us into decades of climate-busting greenhouse gas emissions as it destroys
communities and property across its entire route.
**The MVP project would, if completed, lock us into decades of climate-busting
greenhouse gas emissions as it destroys communities and property across its
entire route.**
**Now here is the hardly disguised, hard-hitting core message embedded in a
(not so funny part of) Granholm 's letter:** _" While the Department takes no
position regarding the outstanding agency actions required under federal or
state law related to the construction of the MVP project, nor on any pending
litigation, we submit the view that the MVP project will enhance the Nation's
critical infrastructure for energy and national security. We appreciate the
Commission's prompt actions to fulfill its regulatory responsibilities
regarding natural gas infrastructure under the Natural Gas Act, and the
interagency coordination it provides as the lead federal agency for the
project under FAST-41. We look forward to continuing to work with FERC to
ensure consumers have access to reliable, cost-effective, and clean energy."_
**That was a very strong armed tactic, if I ever saw one. I believe it is
totally inappropriate to write such a letter, especially when just one day
before she said she would meet with me and the president issued the Executive
Order Revitalizing Our Nation 's Commitment to Environmental Justice for All
on the morning before she wrote her letter to the FERC. The president said all
executive branch agencies have a duty to pursue environmental justice.
Apparently Secretary Granholm did not get the message.**
Meanwhile, I am still in Washington D.C. waiting to hear from Secretary
Granholm. Personally, I don't understand her rush to write her letter cheering
for the MVP. It is also typical of how most government leaders have treated
landowners and other citizens in the path of the Mountain Valley Pipeline.
[](…
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Maury Johnson inspected a section of the plastic coated pipe here
>>> Maury Johnson is a southern West Virginia landowner, whose organic farm
has been impacted by the Mountain Valley Pipeline. He is a member of Preserve
Monroe and the POWHR (Protect Our Water, Heritage, & Rights) Coalition, both
have been fighting the MVP and other harmful projects across WV/VA&NC for 8
years.
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/27/u-s-secretary-of-energy-is-
misguided-on-mountain-valley-pipeline-mvp/>
# [Our Methane Opportunity and Our Responsibility ~ Control Natural Gas ASAP —
Part 2](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/26/our-methane-opportunity-and-
our-responsibility-control-natural-gas-asap-%e2%80%94-part-2/)
[](https:/…
content/uploads/2023/04/568EFB2E-2EA6-4B62-907E-156AB8AFACE4.jpeg)
When fracking is done just for petroleum, the excess gas is flared
**Getting companies to cut methane emissions is the challenge**
Continued [Article by Jim Krane (Rice University), Yahoo!
News](https://news.yahoo.com/why-fixing-methane-leaks-oil-132702814.html),
11/17/22
**Motivating U.S. producers to act has been the big hurdle.** ~ The Biden
administration is aiming for an 87% reduction in methane emissions below 2005
levels by the end of the decade. To get there, it has reimposed and
strengthened U.S. methane rules that were dropped by the Trump administration.
**These include requiring drillers to find and repair leaks at more than 1
million U.S. well sites.**
**The U.S. Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 further incentivizes methane
mitigation, including by levying an emissions tax on large oil and gas
producers starting at $900 per ton in 2024, increasing to $1,500 in 2026.**
That fee, which can be waived by the Environmental Protection Agency and
doesn’t affect small producers or leaks below 0.2% of gas produced, is based
on the social cost to society from methane’s contribution to climate damage.
Customers are also putting pressure on the industry. Regulatory indifference
by the Trump administration to U.S. methane flaring and venting led to
cancellation of some European plans to import U.S. liquefied natural gas.
Reducing methane isn’t always straightforward, though, particularly in the
U.S., where thousands of oil companies operate with minimal oversight.
A company’s methane emissions aren’t necessarily proportional to its oil and
gas production, either. For example, a 2021 study using data from the EPA
found Texas-based Hilcorp Energy reporting nearly 50% more methane emissions
than ExxonMobil, despite producing less oil and gas. Hilcorp, which
specializes in acquiring “late life” assets, says it is working to reduce
emissions. Other little-known producers have also reported large emissions.
Investor pressure has pushed several publicly traded companies to reduce their
methane emissions, but in practice this sometimes leads them to sell off
“dirty” assets to smaller operators with less oversight. In such a situation,
the easiest way to encourage companies to clean up is via a tax. Done right,
companies would act before they had to pay.
**Using technology to keep emissions in check** ~ Unlike carbon dioxide, which
lingers in the atmosphere for a century or more, methane only sticks around
for about a dozen years. So, if humans stop replenishing methane stocks in the
atmosphere, those levels will decline.
**A review of methane leaks in the Permian Basin shows the big impact that
some regions can have.** ~ Researchers found that gas and oil operations in
the Permian, in west Texas and New Mexico, had a leakage rate estimated at
3.7% in 2018 and 2019, before the pandemic. A 2012 study found that leakage
rates above 3.2% make climate damage from using natural gas worse than that
from burning coal, which is normally considered the biggest climate threat.
Methane leaks used to escape detection because the gas is invisible. Now, the
proliferation of satellite-based sensors and infrared cameras makes detection
easy.
**Companies such as GTI Energy’s Veritas, Project Canary and MiQ have also
launched to assist natural gas producers in reducing emissions and then
verifying the reductions. At that point, if leaks are less than 0.2%,
producers can avoid the federal fee and also market their output as
“responsibly sourced” gas.**
>>> This article is republished from The Conversation, an independent
nonprofit news site dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts. It was
written by: Jim Krane, Jones Graduate School of Business at Rice University.
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/26/our-methane-opportunity-and-our-
responsibility-control-natural-gas-asap-%e2%80%94-part-2/>
# [Our Methane Opportunity and Our Responsibility ~ Control Natural Gas ASAP —
Part 1](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/25/our-methane-opportunity-and-
our-responsibility-control-natural-gas-asap-%e2%80%94-part-1/)
[](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/wp-
content/uploads/2023/04/7AF06D55-D86F-43EF-BF56-F54FA0C513B9.jpeg)
OMG! Flaring adds carbon dioxide directly to the earth’s atmosphere
**Why fixing methane leaks from the oil and gas industry can be a climate
game-changer – one that pays for itself**
From an [Article by Jim Krane (Rice University), Yahoo! News
Service](https://news.yahoo.com/why-fixing-methane-leaks-oil-132702814.html),
11/17/22
**What’s the cheapest, quickest way to reduce climate change without roiling
the economy? In the United States, it may be by reducing methane emissions
from the oil and gas industry.**
Methane is the main component of natural gas, and it can leak anywhere along
the supply chain, from the wellhead and processing plant, through pipelines
and distribution lines, all the way to the burner of your home’s stove or
furnace.
**Once it reaches the atmosphere, methane’s super heat-trapping properties
render it a major agent of warming. Over 20 years, methane causes 85 times
more warming than the same amount of carbon dioxide. But methane doesn’t stay
in the atmosphere for long, so stopping methane leaks today can have a fast
impact on lowering global temperatures.**
That’s one reason governments at the 2022 United Nations climate change
conference in Egypt focused on methane as an easy win in the climate battle.
So far, 150 countries, including the United States and most of the big oil
producers other than Russia, have pledged to reduce methane emissions from oil
and gas by at least 30%. China has not signed but has agreed to reduce
emissions. If those pledges are met, the result would be equivalent to
eliminating the greenhouse gas emissions from all of the world’s cars, trucks,
buses and all two- and three-wheeled vehicles, according to the International
Energy Agency.
**There’s also another reason for the methane focus, and it makes this
strategy more likely to succeed: Stopping methane leaks from the oil and gas
industry can largely pay for itself and boost the amount of fuel available.**
**Capturing methane can pay off** ~ Methane is produced by decaying organic
material. Natural sources, such as wetlands, account for roughly 40% of
today’s global methane emissions. But the majority comes from human
activities, such as farms, landfills and wastewater treatment plants – and
fuel production. Oil, gas and coal together make up about a third of global
methane emissions.
In all, methane is responsible for almost a third of the 1.2 degrees Celsius
(2.2 degrees Fahrenheit) that global temperatures have risen since the
industrial era. Unfortunately, methane emissions are still rising. In 2021,
atmospheric levels increased to 1,908 parts per billion, the highest levels in
at least 800,000 years. Last year’s increase of 18 parts per billion was the
biggest on record.
Among the sources, the oil and gas sector is best equipped to stop emitting
because it is already configured to sell any methane it can prevent from
leaking. Methane leaks and “venting” in the oil and gas sector have numerous
causes. Unintentional leaks can flow from pneumatic devices, valves,
compressors and storage tanks, which often are designed to vent methane when
pressures build.
Unlit or inefficient flares are another big source. Some companies routinely
burn off excess gas that they can’t easily capture or don’t have the pipeline
capacity to transport, but that still releases methane and carbon dioxide into
the atmosphere.
**Nearly all of these emissions can be stopped with new components or
regulations that prohibit routine flaring.**
**Making those repairs can pay off.** Global oil and gas operations emitted
more methane in 2021 than Canada consumed that entire year, according to IEA
estimates. If that gas were captured, at current U.S. prices – $4 per million
British thermal unit – that wasted methane would fetch around $17 billion. The
IEA determined that a one-time investment of $11 billion would eliminate
roughly 75% of methane leaks worldwide, along with an even larger amount of
gas that is wasted by “flaring” or burning it off at the wellhead.
**The repairs and infrastructure investments would not only reduce warming,
but they would also generate profits for producers and provide direly needed
natural gas to markets undergoing drastic shortages due to Russia’s invasion
of Ukraine.**
**See Part 2 tomorrow.**
>>> Jim Krane is a Fellow for Energy Studies, Baker Institute for Public
Policy & Lecturer, Jones Graduate School of Business at Rice University in
Houston, TX
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/25/our-methane-opportunity-and-our-
responsibility-control-natural-gas-asap-%e2%80%94-part-1/>
# [Pollution Incidents from Shell Cracker Plant are Recurring
Problems](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/24/pollution-incidents-from-
shell-cracker-plant-are-recurring-problems/)
[](…
content/uploads/2023/04/A755C990-9BD3-4296-9FD7-250806D916B1.jpeg)
The Ohio River valley in Pennsylvania continues its challenging ways (Click
image to expand)
**Pennsylvania investigating Odor Events at Shell ethane cracker & cited for 3
separate violations**
From an [Article by Reid Frazier, State Impact
Penn.](https://stateimpact.npr.org/pennsylvania/2023/04/14/state-
investigating-odor-event-at-shell-ethane-cracker/), April 14, 2023
The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection is investigating a
release of odors from Shell’s Beaver County ethane cracker this week.
Shell reported on Wednesday the odor came from its wastewater treatment
facility, and said the smell could be detected outside of the facility’s
boundaries. “Depending on wind direction, the odor was detected in certain
areas offsite as well. We are working to resolve this matter as quickly as
possible,” the company said.
**Under the facility’s state air permit, the plant is not allowed to release
“malodorous air contaminants” outside of the company’s property line.**
Curtis Thomas, a spokesman for the company, said this happened after the
company drained a tank for scheduled maintenance during a plant shutdown. As a
result, he said, “a watery oil mix” entered the facility’s wastewater
treatment plant, causing the release of odor. The company added water to the
oily mix “with the goal of minimizing the odor,” Thomas said.
The area nearby was closed off, he said, “and normal work that would have been
done in the area was paused.” Contrary to statements on social media, there
was no plant-wide evacuation, and no release of the carcinogen benzene, Thomas
said, in an email.
**Smells “like burning gas and maple syrup”** ~ Lexy Stawick of the nearby
town of Beaver said her 7-year-old daughter first smelled the odor when she
went outside before school on Wednesday morning.
“She just went out in the backyard to get her shoes and she came in and told
me it smells really bad outside,” Stawick said. “And she asked me to come
outside to smell it, and it smelled like someone had come into our backyard
and just like, doused it in gasoline. It reeked of gas.”
Rosemary Rush, of Brighton, said her 8-year-old son first alerted her to the
smell when she rolled the windows down while driving him to school in Beaver
Wednesday morning. “He was like, ‘Mom, what is that smell? It smells so bad.’
And I didn’t really think anything of it at first, but we literally could not
keep the window down,” she said. “I was like instantly nauseous, instantly had
a headache.”
Rush said she drove to different spots in Beaver to see if the smell, which
she described as “like burning gas and maple syrup mixed together” was still
present, and it was. “It was like this heavy, thick, almost like a cloud of
something that I was breathing in that I could feel in my throat,” she said.
**PA- DEP responds ~** DEP spokeswoman Lauren Camarda said agency personnel
were at the plant Wednesday and Thursday investigating after getting numerous
reports from the public and from Shell about the event. The DEP staff
documented “on-and-offsite odors, which Shell reports were caused by oil
entering its wastewater treatment plant,” Camarda said.
Camarda said Shell had reported higher than normal readings for volatile
organic compounds (VOCs) at the company’s fence line air monitors, and that
local ambient air pollution readings reported higher than normal levels of
particulate matter. But Camarda said these levels did not exceed federal
health-based air standards. Camarda said the agency “has no evidence to date
of any unpermitted materials being discharged to a waterway” from the plant.
**Problems at the plant not new ~** The event follows a rocky few months of
operations at the plant, which began in November, and includes a state notice
of violation in December for high levels of flaring during startup operations.
Three other recent violations in April were for visible emissions from flaring
in February; exceeding its 12-month limit of nitrogen oxide emissions in
January; and exceeding its 12-month emissions limits of both nitrogen oxide
and carbon monoxide emissions in February. In March, a compressor failure led
to another bright flaring event at the plant.
Stawick said she is worried about the overall impact of the plant’s emissions
on her children, 5 and 7. “It seems like Shell is having an issue almost
monthly. So I worry about what that’s doing to our air, what our kids are
being exposed to,” she said.
The plant, which makes plastic out of ethane, a component of natural gas
abundant in the Utica and Marcellus shale, opened in November and received a
$1.65 billion Pennsylvania tax credit, the largest in state history.
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/24/pollution-incidents-from-shell-
cracker-plant-are-recurring-problems/>
# [Air Pollution Fines from Natural Gas Processing @ $9 Million
Dollars](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/23/air-pollution-fines-from-
natural-gas-processing-9-million-dollars/)
[](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/wp-
content/uploads/2023/04/4E46125A-2321-41CA-BAE8-ACC1B21E46F21.jpeg)
(Click to expand image) ~ Meet the Author ~ Michael Barrick to present book
entitled ‘Fractured Sanctuary’
**Regional natural gas companies agree to more than $9 million in air quality
fines**
.
.
From an [Article by Logan Smith, Newsbreak, CBS
Denver](https://www.newsbreak.com/news/3001608774822-regional-natural-gas-
companies-agree-to-more-than-9-million-in-air-quality-fines), April 22, 2023
.
.
**Environmental Protection Agency announced Thursday settlements with three
natural gas processing companies for their alleged violations of the federal
Clean Air Act.**
**The settlements total $9.25 million that will be shared among the federal
agency, six states (Alabama, Colorado, Louisiana, North Dakota, West Virginia,
and Wyoming), and the Southern Ute Indian Tribe. This includes $346,500 for
Williams Companies facilities in Marshall County, WV.**
**The agreements also require improvements to be made by the companies at 25
gas processing plants and 91 compressor stations across 12 states and two
Tribal communities.**
The settlement with one company is notable for its plants' proximity to the
Denver metro area. WES DJ Gathering LLC, formerly known as Kerr McGee
Gathering, LLC, operates three adjacent processing plants comprising the Fort
Lupton Complex located 35 northeast of Denver.
To resolve the allegations of state and federal clean air requirements at
those facilities, WES DJ Gathering is paying the state and the EPA $1.75
million each.
"The area where the Fort Lupton Complex is located does not meet EPA's 8-hour
National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS) for ground-level ozone and is
designated as 'severe' nonattainment," the EPA stated in its press release.
Ground-level ozone has adverse affects on human health, according to the EPA.
Methane, one of the primary components of natural gas, "substantially"
contributes to greenhouse gases and climate change, the agency claims.
The EPA and the Colorado Department Public Health and Environment filed a
complaint about the Fort Lupton Complex violations on July 1, 2020. As part of
the settlement, WES DJ Gathering agreed to replace older equipment with low-
emission valves and connectors; repair leaking equipment; implement a leak
detection and repair quality control program; use newer gas imaging technology
to improve monitoring and detection of leaks; and improve equipment at a
nearby Frederick Compressor Station, including the removal or replacement of
two pre-1981 engines.
"When fully implemented," the EPA's press release claimed, "the settlement
will reduce ozone-producing air pollution in northern Colorado by an estimated
162 tons per year and greenhouse gases by 17,433 tons per year of carbon
dioxide equivalent (CO2e), including methane."
A second settlement agreement was made with Williams and Harvest Four Corners
(The Williams Companies, Inc.), the EPA announced Thursday. Williams is
required to pay $3.75 million civil penalty due to alleged failures to control
volatile organic compound (VOC) emissions from natural gas processing plants.
The penalty will be divided between the EPA ($2,227,500), the Southern Ute
Indian Tribe in southwestern Colorado ($307,500) and the states of Colorado
($298,875) and Wyoming ($142,500).
Williams is also required to strengthen its leak detection and repair (LDAR)
practices at 15 natural gas processing plants, including those near Parachute,
Rifle and Ignacio, Colorado, and Wamsutter and Opal, Wyoming. Williams must
also perform leak monitoring and repair at 80 natural gas compressor stations
across the U.S., including 10 throughout Wyoming.
A third settlement agreement was announced with MPLX LP addressing
noncompliance and strengthening air pollution controls at seven natural gas
processing plants and three compressor stations in North Dakota, Wyoming, and
the Uintah and Ouray Reservation in Utah.
**The consent decrees for the WES DJ, Williams, and MPLX settlements are
available at U.S. Department of Justice websites. The public has 30 days to
comment.**
Congress passed the Clean Air Act in 1970. Major revisions were made to it in
1977 and 1990.
#######+++++++#######+++++++########
**See Also:** [Book ‘Fractured Sanctuary,’ about the Grassroots Response to
the Fracking Industry](https://appalachianchronicle.com/2023/02/28/book-
fractured-sanctuary-a-chronicle-of-the-destructive-fracking-industry-in-
appalachia-now-available/), **Now Available** – [The Appalachian
Chronicle](https://appalachianchronicle.com/2023/02/28/book-fractured-
sanctuary-a-chronicle-of-the-destructive-fracking-industry-in-appalachia-now-
available/)
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/23/air-pollution-fines-from-
natural-gas-processing-9-million-dollars/>
# [West Virginia Ranks #8 in Drilling & Fracking
Nationwide](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/22/west-virginia-ranks-8-i…
drilling-fracking-nationwide/)
[](…
content/uploads/2023/04/BAFC6764-CF61-4D9E-91C6-38AB86E2DD21.jpeg)
(Click to enlarge)
Open meeting on West Virginia community struggles with drilling & fracking
**How prevalent is fracking in West Virginia?**
[Update from the Stacker Service, Apr 10,
2022](https://www.wowktv.com/news/west-virginia/how-prevalent-is-fracking-i…
west-virginia/)
**Hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” is a means of gas extraction that
requires blasting large volumes of water, sand and chemicals into subterranean
rock to drive out and capture natural gas. The first fracking occurred in the
U.S. in the 1860s, followed almost a century later by what we recognize today
as modern fracking.**
Natural gas is significantly more productive than other fossil fuels, with a
92% efficiency rate between wellhead to home compared to 32% for coal. But
opponents of fracking cite numerous environmental and health threats, from
poisoned groundwater and the destruction of habitats to heightened ground-
level ozone that can increase the risk of asthma and other respiratory issues.
Stacker analyzed data from FracFocus, a national hydraulic fracturing chemical
registry, to rank states with the most fracking wells.
States are ranked by 2020 data, the most recent complete year available.
Additional data on natural gas withdrawals from the Energy Information
Administration is also provided, however, data on gas production exclusively
from fracking is not available.
On average, a fracking well can produce for 20 to 30 years, with some wells
producing for far longer.
During a fracked well’s lifetime, output often drops in the first few years
from more than 1,000 barrels a day to 100 barrels. That dropoff means new
wells have to be dug regularly to maintain supply.
This constant demand can lead to boom towns left with rampant unemployment,
wells running dry, and potential health and environmental hazards. Water
contamination and air pollution, and even heart attacks and reduced fertility,
have all been linked to fracking, studies have shown.
**Between 2000 and 2015, the number of hydraulically fractured wells in the
United States leaped from 23,000 to 300,000, according to data from the U.S.
Energy Information Administration. These fracking wells represented about 67%
of natural gas production and 51% of crude oil production across the nation.**
**#10. Wyoming** – Number of wells, 2020: 4,701
– Number of wells, Jan.- Aug. 2021: 1,655
– Change in natural gas gross withdrawals, 2000-2020 (from both fracking and
other extraction methods): 3.6%
Two of Wyoming’s biggest regions for fracking are the gas sand reservoirs in
the Greater Green River and Powder River basins. Since 2010, the state has
required disclosure of fracking chemicals by companies. Statewide polling data
from the Petroleum Association of Wyoming in 2020 found a full 86% of Wyoming
voters approve of oil and natural gas production there.
Wyoming’s gas boom has provided plenty of power—over 2 million cubic feet of
natural gas by 2013—but at the cost of its air quality. The state’s smog in
2011 was rated worse than Los Angeles.
**#9. Ohio** – Number of wells, 2020: 6,741
– Number of wells, Jan.- Aug. 2021: 2,245
– Change in natural gas gross withdrawals, 2000-2020 (from both fracking and
other extraction methods): 2,190.9%
Natural gas was extracted via fracking from more than 80,000 oil and gas wells
in Ohio between the years 1952 and 2014, with natural gas production there
ballooning more than 2,200% between 2012 and 2019. Much of the fracking in
Ohio occurs along the central-eastern portion of the state over the Marcellus
Shale and Point Pleasant-Utica Shale regions.
A report released in February 2021 found that investments into the Ohio River
valley to support the oil and gas industry instead resulted in 22 counties
throughout Ohio, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia experiencing documented job
losses. Seven of those counties are located in Ohio; they collectively saw a
net job loss in excess of 8% and a more than 3% drop in population.
**#8. West Virginia** – Number of wells, 2020: 6,741
– Number of wells, Jan.- Aug. 2021: 3,098
– Change in natural gas gross withdrawals, 2000-2020 (from both fracking and
other extraction methods): 882.3%
As coal mining loses steam in West Virginia, fracking has spread throughout
the state. The natural gas boom began in 2011, with the state experiencing a
50% increase in extraction every year since. The Energy Information
Administration reported that in the first half of 2021, 34% of dry natural gas
production in the United States came from the Marcellus and Utica shale
formations in Ohio, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia.
When mining operations were done with steam or even horses, the use of “split
estates”—when landowners agree to relinquish their rights to the minerals
below ground while maintaining ownership of everything at ground level—was
widespread. As technology advanced, these old contracts have come to light as
energy companies constructed wells and infrastructure for fracking sites in
the otherwise remote countryside and towns.
#7. Louisiana – Number of wells, 2020: 8,515
– Number of wells, Jan.- Aug. 2021: 4,771
– Change in natural gas gross withdrawals, 2000-2020 (from both fracking and
other extraction methods): 114.8%
Oil and gas companies have long been drawn to Louisiana for its expansive tax
incentives, with fracking primarily concentrated in the Haynesville Shale
region in the northwestern part of the state. Natural gas is also extracted
from the Tuscaloosa Marine Shale in central Louisiana.
In 2014, St. Tammany Parish voted to ban fracking; in 2015, a state judge
ruled that the town could not use zoning regulations to block fracking. In
March 2017, new regulations in Louisiana stipulated that fracking operators
must provide a chemicals list for their fracking processes—however, like in
other states, those chemicals considered to be “trade secrets” do not have to
be disclosed.
#6. Oklahoma – Number of wells, 2020: 15,787
– Number of wells, Jan.- Aug. 2021: 7,788
– Change in natural gas gross withdrawals, 2000-2020 (from both fracking and
other extraction methods): 72.8%
Oklahoma has seen a sharp rise in earthquake frequency—most of which are due
to “wastewater disposal,” in which liquid waste from gas and oil production is
shot deep underground. Roughly 90% of this injection in Oklahoma is to get rid
of waste from oil extraction, not fracking.
The oil and gas division within the Oklahoma Corporation Commission requires
that fracking companies report any potential seismic effects of injecting
fluids into wells. Oklahoma’s largest-known fracking-induced earthquake was a
magnitude 3.6 in 2019.
**#5. Pennsylvania** – Number of wells, 2020: 17,441
– Number of wells, Jan.- Aug. 2021: 7,828
– Change in natural gas gross withdrawals, 2000-2020 (from both fracking and
other extraction methods): 4,759.9%
A historic measure was passed in February 2021 by the Delaware River Basin
Commission as all four basin states (Delaware, New Jersey, New York, and
Pennsylvania) voted to permanently ban fracking in northeastern Pennsylvania
and southern New York, citing evidence of polluted surface, ground, and
drinking water. The vote affected two counties in northeastern Pennsylvania
that comprise part of the Marcellus Shale.
#4. New Mexico – Number of wells, 2020: 20,015
– Number of wells, Jan.- Aug. 2021: 9,749
– Change in natural gas gross withdrawals, 2000-2020 (from both fracking and
other extraction methods): 19.6%
Oil and gas extraction has been touted as essential to the New Mexico economy,
with proponents arguing that fracking has been conducted in the state for half
a century without a single incident of groundwater contamination. Opponents to
fracking made headway in 2021 with a bill that would put a four-year
moratorium on new fracking contracts, claiming oil and gas extraction could
cause irreparable damage to ecosystems and human health.
#3. North Dakota – Number of wells, 2020: 20,364
– Number of wells, Jan.- Aug. 2021: 9,533
– Change in natural gas gross withdrawals, 2000-2020 (from both fracking and
other extraction methods): 1,663.3%
Much of North Dakota’s oil and natural gas production occurs in the western
part of the state, in the Bakken and Three Forks formations. In 2012, the
state surpassed Alaska and became the #2 oil-producing state in the U.S., a
rise in status widely attributed to its fracking operations.
Many landowners got big payouts by signing property over to natural gas
extraction, but they now face a sobering reality of potential water
contamination that could affect farms, livestock, and residents.
#2. Colorado – Number of wells, 2020: 20,955
– Number of wells, Jan.- Aug. 2021: 14,509
– Change in natural gas gross withdrawals, 2000-2020 (from both fracking and
other extraction methods): 164.5%
One of the first large-scale American fracking operations began in 1973 in
Colorado’s Wattenberg Gas Field. That field, located between Denver and
Greeley and discovered in 1970, is the Colorado site where the most oil and
gas extraction to date has occurred to date.
Over the last half-century, wells have dried up and more have been dug,
creating a patchwork of drill sites across rural Colorado that creeps ever
closer to higher-density residential areas. Today, drillers have their sights
set on populated areas north of Denver, queueing up heightened anxiety toward
fracking regulations.
**#1. Texas** – Number of wells, 2020: 136,342
– Number of wells, Jan.- Aug. 2021: 82,763
– Change in natural gas gross withdrawals, 2000-2020 (from both fracking and
other extraction methods): 79.8%
Texas is situated over parts of numerous basins (Anadarko, Palo Duro, and
Permian) and shales (Barnett, Eagle Ford, and Haynesville-Bossier). At the end
of the 20th century, when natural gas was giving Texas its second oil boom,
Anadarko Basin provided the largest output of natural gas anywhere in the U.S.
**Today, fracking is primarily done around Eagle Ford Shale. The first
fracking ban in Texas was passed in 2014 in Denton, located along the northern
edge of the Barnett Shale. The largest fracking-related earthquake in U.S.
history took place in 2018 in Texas and was a magnitude 4.0.**
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/22/west-virginia-ranks-8-in-
drilling-fracking-nationwide/>
# [The West Virginia Hills & Valleys have Become ‘Fractured
Sanctury’](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/21/the-west-virginia-hills-
valleys-have-become-%e2%80%98fractured-sanctury%e2%80%99/)
[](…
content/uploads/2023/04/3017A998-CE42-44AE-B5BC-C78E883163A9.jpeg)
Drilling and fracking on large Marcellus well pads continues in WV
**Public lecture on grassroots activism in West Virginia**
From the [Announcement by Betsy Lawson, Sierra
Club](https://appalachianchronicle.com/), April 17, 2023
_Join us for this open presentation and discussion: “Fractured Sanctuary”_
**What** : Michael Barrick will discuss his new book; ‘Fractured Sanctuary’
**Where** : The public meeting room, Church of the Brethren, 464 Virginia
Avenue (Wiles Hill), Morgantown. (COVID-19 masks are optional.)
**When** : 3 pm, Sunday, April 23rd
Our speaker Michael Barrick will describe reluctant citizen activists
providing grassroots resistance against fracking, pipeline construction etc…
in WV and beyond. Telling our stories helps encourage, empower and heal one
another. Community preparedness and emergency management will be described to
meet the threats to our communities from fracking, flooding or a major spill
of hazardous chemicals, as recently happened in East Palestine, Ohio.
Michael Barrick holds a postgraduate Certificate in Community Preparedness and
Emergency Management from the UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health. He
has extensive experience in these areas. He was born in Clarksburg and is a
graduate of Glenville State.
The co-sponsors of this event are the WV Sierra Club, WV Interfaith Power &
Light, Morgantown Church of the Brethren, Morgantown Friends (Quaker) Meeting
and the local Unitarian Universalist Fellowship.
Refreshments will be provided. Celebrate Earth Day by joining us.
We hope to see you there, on Wiles Hill in Morgantown.
>>> _Betsy Lawson, Secretary, Monongahela Group, Sierra Club_
**See also:** [The Appalachian Chronicle](https://appalachianchronicle.com/) ~
[appalachianchronicle.com](https://appalachianchronicle.com/)
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/21/the-west-virginia-hills-valleys-
have-become-%e2%80%98fractured-sanctury%e2%80%99/>
# [First Responders Challenged by Chemicals at Train
Derailment(s)](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/20/first-responders-
challenged-by-chemicals-at-train-derailments/)
[]…
content/uploads/2023/04/10EFBD76-2B33-4D8A-BBE1-219BF4B004B81.jpeg)
Tank car chemicals intentionally set on fire to speed the “cleanup” process
**East Palestine First Responders Faced Communications Gap With Railroad**
Article by [Curtis Tate, West Virginia Public
Broadcasting](https://wvpublic.org/east-palestine-first-responders-faced-
communications-gap-with-railroad/), March 23, 2023
**Fire departments from Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia responded to the
Feb. 3 Norfolk Southern derailment in East Palestine, Ohio. At first, they
didn’t have a lot of information to work with.**
**Jennifer Homendy, chairwoman of the National Transportation Safety Board,
told the Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee that none of the first
responders on the scene had access to an app that was created by the rail
industry precisely for that kind of situation.**
The AskRail app was created in 2014 to help first responders amid a series of
derailments and fires involving trains carrying crude oil and ethanol.
Ian Jeffries, CEO of the Association of American Railroads, the industry’s
principal lobbying group, said the app needs to be in more hands. “There are a
lot of first responders in this country,” he said, “and having 35,000 with the
app is absolutely not sufficient, not where we need to be.”
U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia, a member of the Commerce
Committee, said the railroad also needed to improve its communication. “They
were pledging safety and funds to help train, and things of this nature,” she
said, “but they still have missed the ball in terms of communications.”
**The NTSB is investigating the East Palestine derailment and separately
probing Norfolk Southern’s safety culture. Since the Feb. 3 derailment, other
crashes have occurred in Michigan, Ohio and Alabama**.
Homendy said advance notification of hazardous materials moving through
communities is key. “Because they need to be prepared,” she said. “They need
to be adequately trained, they need the right gear, and they need to have
emergency response planning done in coordination with the railroads.”
Capito said a bipartisan bill to improve rail safety was likely coming in the
next several months.
**Meanwhile, East Palestine first responders were among the first to enroll in
a hazardous materials training class in Bellevue, Ohio, paid for by Norfolk
Southern.
The training class is (now) available to first responders in Ohio,
Pennsylvania and West Virginia. The first class began the week of March 23rd
(too late).**
#######+++++++#######+++++++#########
**See Also:** [The Appalachian Chronicle – Fiercely Independent Reporting &
Analysis](https://appalachianchronicle.com/)
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/20/first-responders-challenged-by-
chemicals-at-train-derailments/>
# [The West Virginia Hills ~ How Majestic & How
Grand!](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/19/the-west-virginia-hills-how-
majestic-how-grand/)
[](…
content/uploads/2023/04/6C4916F2-4795-4777-82C2-6AF747B3A631.jpeg)
Click on this image to expand it. Hillsboro, Marlinton & Green Bank are in
Pocahontas County, WV
**Earth Day Open Forum: A Discussion of Emergency Preparedness to be held at
Hillsboro Library**
From [Michael M. Barrick, The Appalachian
Chronicle](https://appalachianchronicle.com/), April 18, 2023
**Howdy Folks! Greetings to West Virginians in All 55 Counties!**
This is a brief reminder that the Hillsboro Library Friends are hosting an
Open Forum that I will be facilitating, based in part on by book, Fractured
Sanctuary: A Chronicle of Grassroots Activists Fighting Pipelines of
Destruction in Appalachia. [Details
follow](https://appalachianchronicle.com/). Join us if you can and please
share the word!
Thanks, Pocahontas County is a great place to visit. I hope to see you there
or in Morgantown on Sunday @ 3 PM. MMB
#######+++++++#######+++++++########
**Hillsboro is Historic in the West Virginia Hills & Mountains**
Brigadier General William W. Averell and his Federal troops encountered
Confederate troops led by Brigadier General John Echols at Droop Mountain on
November 6, 1863. The federal army had encountered Echols while on their
second attempt to the Virginia-Tennessee Railroad located at Salem, Virginian.
Echols and his troops positioned themselves on the high ground of Droop
Mountain, a tactical advantage to the smaller army. However, despite using
artillery to block the road, the Confederate troops were overwhelmed by
Averell’s men. The Battle of Droop Mountain served as the final significant
Civil War battle for the newly formed West Virginia. The site of the battle
was declared West Virginia’s first state park on July 4, 1928.
In 1892, famous author Pearl S. Buck was born in a large white two-story house
at the northern end of Hillsboro. Shortly thereafter, her family, Presbyterian
missionaries, returned to China, but her West Virginia roots nevertheless had
a significant impact on Pearl through her mother Carrie.
The Dutch-style "city house," now on the National Register of Historic Places,
has been restored into a museum, The Pearl S. Buck Birthplace. It displays an
array of antiques from the 1892 period, including many family originals. Also
on the National Register of Historic Places are the Richard Beard House and
Locust Creek Covered Bridge.
Hillsboro is also featured in the movie Patch Adams, where Dr. Patch Adams
purchased land to build a medical clinic based on his philosophy of doctor-
patient interaction. A medical clinic is planned but has not yet been
constructed, as fund-raising is still underway. Currently, the Gesundheit
Institute host people at the facility to engage in learning and volunteering.
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/19/the-west-virginia-hills-how-
majestic-how-grand/>
# [Michael Barrick will Speak on the Book titled “Fractured Sanctuary” on
Sunday 4/23/23 @ 3 PM](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/18/michael-
barrick-will-speak-on-the-book-titled-%e2%80%9cfractured-
sanctuary%e2%80%9d-on-sunday-42323-3-pm/)
[](…
content/uploads/2023/04/50C62608-2BD2-4413-9E9C-C6F70E1244AF.png)
Co-sponsors are the Morgantown Friends (Quaker) Meeting, the Church of the
Brethren, the WV Sierra Club and the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of
Morgantown
**PUBLIC MEETING: “Fractured Sanctuary” by Micheal Barrick, 3 PM on April
23rd**
[ANNOUNCEMENT, Morgantown Dominion Post, Sunday, April 16,
2023](https://appalachianchronicle.com/2023/04/13/barrick-to-discuss-book-
fractured-sanctuary-at-public-meeting-on-april-23-in-morgantown/)
At 3 pm on Sunday, April 23rd our speaker will be Michael Barrick on his new
book titled 'Fractured Sanctuary'. This open meeting is being held in the
public meeting room of the Church of the Brethren, 464 Virginia Avenue, Wiles
Hill Neighborhood, Morgantown. (COVID-19 masks are optional.)
Our speaker Michael Barrick will describe reluctant, citizen activists
providing grassroots resistance against fracking, pipeline construction and
other activities in West Virginia and beyond. Telling our stories helps
encourage, empower and heal one another, so an open exchange of experiences
and ideas will take place. Also, community preparedness and emergency
management will be described to meet the many threats residents face in their
communities, whether it be fracking, flooding or a major spill of hazardous
chemicals as recently happened in East Palestine, Ohio.
Michael Barrick was born in Clarksburg and graduated from Glenville State. He
holds a postgraduate Certificate in Community Preparedness and Emergency
Management from the UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health. He has
extensive experience in these areas.
The co-sponsors of this event are the WV Interfaith Power & Light, Morgantown
Church of the Brethren, WV Sierra Club, Morgantown Friends (Quaker) Meeting
and the local Unitarian Universalist Fellowship.
**See also:** [The Appalachian Chronicle ~
appalachianchronicle.com](https://appalachianchronicle.com/2023/04/13/barri…
to-discuss-book-fractured-sanctuary-at-public-meeting-on-april-23-in-
morgantown/)
#######+++++++#######+++++++########
**NOTE: SPECIAL SERIES** ~ [HOW CLIMATE-DRIVEN ICE LOSS THREATENS
EVERYONE](https://www.npr.org/series/1168056854/beyond-the-poles-ice-melt) ~
Beyond the Poles: The far-reaching dangers of melting ice, National Public
Radio, Week of April 17, 2023
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/18/michael-barrick-will-speak-on-
the-book-titled-%e2%80%9cfractured-sanctuary%e2%80%9d-on-sunday-42323-3-pm/>
# [Chemical Pollutants from Norfolk Southern Train
Wreck](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/17/chemical-pollutants-from-
norfolk-southern-train-wreck/)
[](https://…
content/uploads/2023/04/B98233A8-7521-4003-AE0E-B605D98BF552.png)
Dioxins are dangerous even in very low concentrations
**[Dioxin: The deadly legacy of a toxic
compound](https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/mar/17/norfolk-southern-
derailment-east-palestine-ohio-carcinogenic-chemical-levels)**
Article contributed by Randi Pokladnik (PhD), Tappan Lake, Ohio, April 15,
2023
On February 3, a Norfolk Southern train carrying 51 cars had an [accident
where 38 cars derailed](https://www.cbsnews.com/news/timeline-east-palestine-
ohio-train-derailment-chemicals-evacuations/). Eleven of those that derailed
were tanker cars carrying hazardous materials such as benzene residue, butyl
acrylate and vinyl chloride. Five of the eleven cars carried vinyl chloride
which is used to make PVC. Some estimates say 1.1 million pounds of vinyl
chloride were in those five rail cars. The accident happened in the small
community of East Palestine, Ohio; population around 4,000.
**[Vinyl Chloride is a well-established animal and human
carcinogen](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3327051/) and is
associated with liver cancer as well as brain and lung malignancies. It is
polymerized into polyvinyl chloride, a plastic that is used to make pipes and
packaging. Globally, 16 billion pounds are produced annually.**
Since the derailment, the citizens of East Palestine and the rest of the world
have been getting an education on how easily one industrial accident can
change your life forever. One fact is obvious, no one, including local, state
and federal officials and agencies, or the employees of Norfolk Southern, was
really aware or prepared for the long-term consequences of accidents involving
hazardous materials.
“The [National Transportation Safety Board issued its preliminary
report](https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2023/02/27/rail-f27.html) on the
derailment which, even in its abbreviated form, made clear that the “accident”
which has devastated the town was completely preventable and that through its
actions Norfolk Southern ignored warnings for nearly an hour that one of the
axles was overheating and would fail.”
Alan Shaw, CEO of Norfolk Southern said, “[the ‘vent and burn’ decision
emerged from a unified command group led by a local fire
chief](https://www.post-gazette.com/news/politics-state/2023/03/20/east-
palestine-norfolk-southern-pa-senate-chemical-release/stories/202303200077).”
He added that local, state and federal officials including both Ohio and
Pennsylvania Governors agreed on the decision that it was better to burn the
vinyl chloride than risk an explosion. **On Feb. 6, vinyl chloride was
intentionally released and burned. This resulted in a massive cloud of black
smoke, resembling a mushroom cloud from a nuclear detonation, to rise above
the surrounding area. It could be seen for miles as it blanketed the Ohio
River valley.**
This decision left the residents of the area with a much larger toxic mess
because the combustion of this chlorinated organic compound (PVC) creates a
group of some 400 compounds called “dioxins.”
The first time I heard the term “dioxin” was in college during an
environmental engineering class. Our instructor explained that no one
intentionally makes dioxin, it is an unintended by-product of incomplete
combustion. It also has the reputation of being one of the most toxic
compounds known.
**The[International Agency for Research on Cancer classifies dioxin as a human
carcinogen](https://www.cancer.org/healthy/cancer-causes/chemicals/agent-
orange-and-cancer.html). Dioxin was a contaminant in Agent Orange, the
herbicide used as a defoliant during the Vietnam War. It was also found in
contaminated oil that was sprayed over the roads to suppress dust in the now
uninhabited town of Times Beach, Missouri. In 1976, an explosion at a chemical
facility in Seveso, Italy resulted in the release of a cloud of dioxin. At the
time, humans had never been exposed to this high a concentration of dioxin.**
Most of human exposure to the compound is through foods, mainly meat and dairy
products, as dioxins are very fat soluble. The half-life of dioxins once they
enter the body is 7 to 10 years. Because they are present throughout the
environment in small quantities, they accumulate in the food chain like DDT.
Dioxins are classified as persistent organic pollutants or POPs because they
persist in the environment, resisting breakdown. “Dioxin buried or leached
under the surface or deep in the sediment of rivers and other bodies of water
can have a half-life of more than 100 years.”
**In 2001, The International Forum on Chemical Safety along with the United
Nations Environmental Program developed a treaty, the Stockholm Convention on
Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs). This treaty is aimed at reducing POPs.**
**Dioxins were in the first 12 listed POPs addressed by the Stockholm
Convention in the category of “by-products” from incomplete combustion,
especially the combustion of chlorine-containing carbon compounds. This type
of combustion happens when hospitals burn wastes, when municipalities
incinerate their wastes and when hazardous wastes are burned in kilns like
those at the Thermal Heritage Incinerator in East Liverpool, Ohio.**
When I first learned about this incinerator in 1993 (it was then the WTI
Incinerator), I was shocked as to the amount and types of toxic compounds it
was being allowed to accept. The facility’s permit allowed it to emit over
four tons of lead a year. At the time the facility was being permitted,
citizens exposures to dioxin via the food chain were ignored. It was said that
the incinerator would produce the most deadliest form of dioxin, 2,3,7,8
tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (2,3,7,8 TCDD).
**The Ohio River Sanitary Commission or ORSANCO, monitors dioxin levels in the
Ohio River.** Their data shows that incinerators, especially WTI, are a
significant source of dioxin. In 2010, the Ohio Department of Health said that
East Liverpool has a “strikingly high incidence rate of cancers (especially
bladder, colon and rectum, esophagus, lung and bronchus, multiple myeloma, and
prostate cancer) when compared to Ohio and the U.S.” Sadly, the facility was
allowed to go online even though it failed to pass its test burn. “Its
efficiency rating for removing mercury from emissions was only 7 percent, as
opposed to the required 99.99 percent.”
The United States lawmakers and agencies continue to cater to the
petrochemical industry. Although the USA has signed the Stockholm Treaty, it
has never officially ratified it or placed appropriate regulations in place
that would require industries in the USA to adhere to it. So, companies in
this country still produce POPs.
PVC has a significant impact on human health and the environment from cradle
to grave. Dioxin is not only released when PVC is burned but also when it is
produced. [PVC is 60 percent chlorine by weight.](https://noharm-
europe.org/sites/default/files/documents-files/6807/2021-06-23-PVC-briefing-
FINAL.pdf) In years past, chlorine, a very toxic gas, was made via a process
that used mercury to split salt into sodium and chlorine. Newer processes used
today are just as dangerous and require membranes coated with the forever PFAS
compounds.
In Lake Charles, [Louisiana, a jury found one of the United States’ leading
PVC manufacturers liable for “wanton and reckless disregard of public
safety”](https://chej.org/wp-
content/uploads/PVC%20&%20Environmental%20Justice%20-%20REP%20026.pdf), as it
was responsible for one of the largest chemical spills in the nation’s
history. The spill contaminated the groundwater underneath the surrounding
community.
Consumers are exposed to PVC via food contact containers and water pipes in
their homes. Leaching of organic toxic compounds (carbon tetrachloride,
toluene, chloroform, styrene, o-xylene, bromoform, dibromomethane,
cis-1,3-dichloropropane, and trans-1,3-dichloropropane) from PVC water pipes
has been reported. Sadly, some can coatings have replaced the bisphenol-A
(BPA) with another toxic coating: PVC.
Even at the end of its life, PVC continues to pollute because it releases
vapors like dioxin when in landfills. If PVC is incinerated, dioxin is
produced. Because PVC often has additives like the heavy metal cadmium, the
waste ash from incineration is also toxic. Using plastics like PVC for a fuel
source in cement kilns and incinerators is never a good way to dispose of the
substance because of the emissions released.
The **[recent fire at a recycling
facility](https://www.cnn.com/2023/04/11/us/richmond-indiana-recycling-plan…
fire/index.html)** near the Indiana-Ohio border is an example of what happens
when plastics are burned. The emissions are causing concerns for the residents
and experts and recent tests show they contain benzene, chlorine, hydrogen
cyanide, volatile organic compounds and carbon monoxide.
Our dependence on so many petrochemicals places us in a precarious position.
We need to embrace safer alternatives. This is especially true in health
applications where patients can be exposed to high levels of toxins from
plastics items like IV tubing and IV bags. Safer alternatives include ethylene
vinyl acetate for IV bags, silicone or polyurethane for tubing, and PVC free
nitrile gloves, which are stronger than PVC gloves. In construction, PEX or
cross-linked polyethylene pipes are comparable to copper but cheaper. They can
bend a bit more than PVC and will last up to 50 years. PVC coated fabric which
is used for tents, tarps and protective clothing for fire-fighters can be
replaced with Rivercyclon’s fabric called Rivertex which is UV resistant as
well as waterproof and PVC free.
**The bottom line is we, as consumers, need to demand safer products and
alternatives to toxic materials. Every day we are being exposed to toxins from
petrochemicals in our lives. The communities living around the toxic
facilities as well as those who work in these facilities are suffering and
dying from exposures that can be eliminated. Just say no to toxic
petrochemicals and products made from them.**
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/17/chemical-pollutants-from-
norfolk-southern-train-wreck/>
# [Message for You and West Virginia and our
Earth!](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/16/message-for-you-and-west-
virginia-and-our-earth/)
[](…
content/uploads/2023/04/A0D7115F-73E1-4C52-82BC-D99479FF5CC7.jpeg)
The authors continue to add meaning, advice and warnings!
**Words Sometimes Provide Tremendous Meaning for the Future**
From the [Announcement by Mary Anne Hitt, Author & Activist,
Shepherdstown](https://www.nottoolateclimate.com), April 5, 2023
It’s publication day! I have an essay in this book edited by Rebecca Solnit
and Thelma Young-Lutunatabua, and the title sums up everything I’ve ever tried
to say about climate change in three words – “Not Too Late.”
I practically fell out of my chair when Rebecca reached out and asked me to
contribute an essay to this new climate anthology. The full title of the book
is “Not Too Late: Changing the Climate Conversation from Despair to
Possibility,” and Rebecca is one of my favorite writers because she’s
constantly changing important conversations from despair to possibility. In
her work she reminds us the future has not yet been written, and persuasively
makes the case that each one of us can be its author, inspiring us with the
stories of those before us who built a better world against the odds, who are
doing so alongside us even today.
My essay is a love letter from our clean energy future, imagining a day in the
all-important year of 2030 when we’re looking back at the better world we’ve
created, because we actually stepped up and tackled the climate crisis. I
think this is possible down in my bones, with every fiber of my being, and
every morning I wake up trying to live and love and work from that place.
We’re the last generation of people with the power and opportunity to turn
this crisis around, if we can block out the cynical voices telling us nothing
can be done.
I’m astounded by the amazing company I’m in here, writers and leaders I love
and admire including Leah Stokes, Adrienne Maree Brown, Mary Annaïse Heglar,
Nikayla Jefferson, Jacquelyn Gill, and many more. Thank you Rebecca and Thelma
for bringing this vision to life, and for including me as part of it. I think
it’s just what the world needs right now.
[](…
content/uploads/2023/04/F782FD4F-1D00-44A0-905A-EECC1D299111.jpeg)
Mary Anne Hitt
**You can pick up a copy at your local bookstore – it’s on the shelf in
Shepherdstown at Four Seasons Books – or online.** More here:
[www.nottoolateclimate.com](https://www.nottoolateclimate.com)
#######+++++++#######+++++++########
**See Also:** [Thirty (30) Best Spring Flowers to Plant in Your Garden ~ Weary
of winter? Check out these spring
bloomers](https://www.countryliving.com/gardening/garden-
ideas/g31102712/early-spring-flowers/). Article by Arricca Sansone & Janece
Maze, Country Living, March 23, 2023
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/16/message-for-you-and-west-
virginia-and-our-earth/>
# [Fracking In and Around Ohio State Parks Goes to
Court](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/15/fracking-in-and-around-ohio-
state-parks-goes-to-court/)
[](https:/…
content/uploads/2023/04/21FB202E-BF1B-4164-A426-0284FC5D8900.jpeg)
Hocking Hills State Park is unusually popular for hiking in Ohio
**Environmental groups sue to stop fracking in Ohio State parks**
From an [Article by Julie Grant, The Allegheny
Front](https://www.alleghenyfront.org/environmental-groups-sue-to-stop-
fracking-in-ohio-state-parks/), April 14, 2023
**While Pennsylvania has a moratorium on new drilling leases in state parks
and forests, a controversial new law in Ohio requires state agencies to lease
land for gas drilling. The law went into effect on April 7 and is designed to
accelerate gas drilling under state-owned lands, like state parks.
State agencies have had the authority to do this since a 2011 law allowed for
it, but the difference with this new law is the language. The previous law
stated that agencies “may” lease state lands for gas production; the new law
says they “shall” lease it.**
Sponsors of the bill say they changed the language in response to requests by
the gas industry because energy companies were frustrated by the lack of
movement on their drilling requests.
**Environmental groups sue to prevent “wild west” drilling permits** ~ Four
environmental groups filed a lawsuit in the Franklin County Court of Common
Pleas, trying to stop the law from going into effect until the state creates
rules to regulate drilling on state lands. Those rules were not created after
the 2011 law was passed. The Oil and Gas Land Management Commission recently
started that process.
According to attorney **Megan Hunter of EarthJustice** , the rules could cover
how parcels would be put forward for leasing, how the state would decide which
leases to grant, and which parcels and bidders to move forward with.
Currently, she said, the law is in effect without rules to govern how drilling
applications will be decided.
“And that… process includes a certain number of protections… the commission
would have to consider environmental issues, economic issues, impacts to
tourism, the current uses of the public lands before they would make a
decision on what lease is going to move forward,” **Megan Hunter** said.
“There’s also a requirement that the leases would go to the highest and best
bid.”
Without rules in place, **Megan Hunter** doesn’t think that will necessarily
happen. She described it as a “wild west” moment, meaning a time for the worst
and most dangerous bids to come forward.
According to the **Cleveland Plain Dealer** , even before the law was signed
by Governor DeWine in January, Encino Energy offered the state the potential
of nearly $2 billion to be the first to frack Salt Fork, Ohio’s largest state
park. That offer was ultimately rejected.
**The Environmental Groups’ Legal Argument** ~ While the environmental groups
would like to prevent fracking in state parks altogether, concerned about the
environmental impacts it could have, their lawsuit only seeks to stop the
state from leasing state-owned lands until rules are in place to regulate it.
When the Ohio House passed this bill, HB 507, last spring, it looked
completely different. It was focused on poultry. The Senate added amendments
last December, including the provision about gas drilling on state lands, and
another that redefines natural gas as green energy.
The lawsuit claims that this violates the Ohio constitution, which only allows
one subject per bill. Each bill also is required to have three hearings in
both the state Senate and the House.
“Both of those rules are there in the Constitution to ensure a fair
legislative process that people can understand so that people can really
participate in the legislative process and have their voices heard,” **Megan
Hunter** said. “And that just didn’t happen here.”
She said citizens didn’t get a chance to speak to lawmakers about their
concerns before the bill was passed.
“The only provisions that the public gave comment on were the agricultural
provisions of the bill,” **Megan Hunter** said. “There was never a public
hearing once the additional language had been added to include the mandatory
leasing provision and the green energy provision.”
So far, the environmental groups lost their request for a temporary, immediate
halt on the law. A Franklin County judge said there was no evidence to
indicate risk of imminent and irreparable harm if the law stands while the
court decides on the issues, and noted **Governor DeWine** said that no leases
would be signed in the immediate future.
The court will next consider the constitutional issues in the lawsuit, and
whether to put the brakes on this law until rules are in place.
[](https:/…
content/uploads/2023/04/3114D1A9-8898-4F2B-8D87-CA42DA466643.jpeg)
Hocking Hills State Park
[LISTEN to Julie Grant discuss her reporting with The Allegheny Front’s Kara
Holsopple](https://www.alleghenyfront.org/environmental-groups-sue-to-stop-
fracking-in-ohio-state-parks/)
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/15/fracking-in-and-around-ohio-
state-parks-goes-to-court/>
# [Truck Accident Closes Marshall County Roads ~ Slippery Oily Sludge
Spilled](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/14/truck-accident-closes-
marshall-county-roads-slippery-oily-sludge-spilled/)
[](…
content/uploads/2023/04/04AA91C9-8A69-4E37-9073-302F58545F8E.jpeg)
Clay-based absorbent material applied to miles of highway
**SPILL CLOSES PORTION OF ROBERT 'S RIDGE IN MOUNDSVILLE**
From an [Article by Gianna Dapra, WCHS News 8 (WTOV News
9)](https://wchstv.com/news/local/spill-closes-portion-of-roberts-ridge-in-
moundsville), March 13, 2023
**MARSHALL COUNTY, W.Va. —Multiple roads in Marshall County were closed
throughout the day because of an oil spill. Around 10 o 'clock on Sunday
night, a Tug Hill truck was transporting materials that included fracking, or
drilling sludge.**
Roberts Ridge Road from Lindsay Lane to Snedeker Drive are all closed for
cleanup. The West Virginia Department of Highways is urging commuters to use
alternate routes.
"Nature's broom, or floor dry, is kind of the brand name for what it is
material that we put down to provide traction and to absorb the oil," DOH
District 6 Engineer Tony Clark said.
But that is not all being done, as Tug Hill has committed to an environmental
cleanup. Clark says its important a proper cleanup is completed before the
roadways can be re-opened, as oil is more dangerous than you might think.
([Video clip is in the Article](https://wchstv.com/news/local/spill-closes-
portion-of-roberts-ridge-in-moundsville).)
"It’s extremely slick, so it's no different than driving on black ice, for
instance, for where you don’t necessarily think it's going to be slick until
you're sliding off the road," Clark said.
#######+++++++#######+++++++########
**Several roads in Marshall County remain closed following truck oil leak**
From the [Article of WV Transportation
News](https://transportation.wv.gov/communications/PressRelease/Pages/Sever…,
March 13, 2023
The West Virginia Division of Highways (WVDOH) is assisting with the cleanup
of several roadways in Marshall County following an oil mud leakage from an
oil and gas truck on Sunday, March 12, 2023.
**The truck traveled more than 14 miles, on WV 2 and county routes, while
leaking drilling fluid.**
The following roadways are closed on Monday, March 13, 2023, as a result of
the spillage: Roberts Ridge Road (CR 21) from Fallen Timber Lane to Lindsay
Lane Road (CR 88/5), all of Lindsay Lane Road and Round Bottom Hill Road (WV 2
ALT).
WV 2 just south of Moundsville was impacted by the spill but crews have that
2.5-mile portion reopened. A clay and sand-based absorbent material was placed
on that roadway to assist in drying it.
The oil and gas company responsible for the spill is hiring a professional
contractor to clean the closed roadways. The spill along with weather
conditions has caused slippery roadways. WVDOH is monitoring the cleanup and
advises motorists to avoid the areas.
The West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection has staff on site and
no environmental impacts have been observed. The roads impacted are expected
to be closed for the remainder of Monday, March 13, 2023.
#######+++++++++#######+++++++++#########
**See Also:** [Truck carrying toxic soil from East Palestine overturns in
Ohio](https://www.wtrf.com/ohio/truck-carrying-toxic-soil-from-east-palesti…
overturns-in-ohio/), Chelsea Simeon, WTRF News 7, April 11, 2023
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/14/truck-accident-closes-marshall-
county-roads-slippery-oily-sludge-spilled/>
# [The Icefin Instrument Goes Under Glaciers for Research on
Melting](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/13/the-icefin-instrument-goes-
under-glaciers-for-research-on-melting/)
[](…
content/uploads/2023/04/2E51FF92-C9A2-45CE-9A99-A956CCE80CAA.jpeg)
Prof. Britney Schmidt studies planets including Earth in detail
**Prof. Britney Schmidt named one of Time’s 100 most influential people**
From an [Article by Linda B. Glaser, Cornell
Chronicle](https://news.cornell.edu/stories/2023/04/britney-schmidt-named-o…
times-100-most-influential-people), April 13, 2023
**Time Magazine has named Britney Schmidt, associate professor of astronomy in
the College of Arts and Sciences and Earth and atmospheric sciences in Cornell
Engineering, to the 2023 list of the world’s 100 most influential people.**
Each year, the Time100 features people who have changed the world, scientific
pioneers along with innovators, artists, leaders, titans and icons. Schmidt
was recognized for her contributions to climate science, following the recent
publication of surprise results about the melting of the imperiled Thwaites
Glacier in West Antarctica. The lead author of the companion paper from the
project, Peter Davis of the British Antarctic Survey, was also named.
**The Thwaites Glacier is roughly the size of Great Britain or Florida and is
particularly susceptible to climate and ocean changes. The total collapse of
the glacier would contribute an additional 65 centimeters to sea-level rise,
whilst also destabilizing surrounding snow and ice.**
Schmidt and her team develop robotic tools and instruments and use spacecraft
to study planets. By exploring Earth’s ice shelves and glaciers and the oceans
beneath them, Schmidt’s team helps to capture the impacts of changing climate
on the cryosphere, while understanding analogs for Ocean Worlds like Jupiter’s
moon Europa.
**Icefin, the underwater, under-ice robotic oceanographer she and her team
developed, allowed the team from the International Thwaites Glacier
Collaboration to access to environments under ice shelves that had never been
directly observed. Shaped like a torpedo, 13 feet long and 10 inches wide,
Icefin carries cameras, sonar equipment, speed sensors, water column measuring
tools and other devices. The team slips it into open water through a hole.**
“Using Icefin, we could see for the first time how and where significant melt
under the ice shelf is happening,” Schmidt said. “These new views show us how
change is happening under the ice, revealing complex and intricate systems
that are responding to climate change and driving sea level rise. Antarctica
may feel distant and rugged, but the truth is that it is incredibly
vulnerable, and that changes there affect every one of us. Understanding how
the planet responds to our actions is critical for stemming the tide of
climate change.”
“If crisis is going to unite us, we must find within ourselves that same
empathy,” TIME editor in chief and CEO Edward Felsenthal wrote in 2022. “The
spectrum of leaders on this list, wielding influence in so many ways, is a
reminder that we all have the option to use our power for good.”
Schmidt received a B.S. in physics from the University of Arizona and a Ph.D.
in geophysics and space physics from the University of California, Los
Angeles. She’s worked on numerous NASA projects, including the Dawn and Europa
Clipper missions and the Europa Lander and LUVOIR Space Telescope mission
concepts.
>>>>>>>>……………………>>>>>>>>……………………………>>>>>>>>>
**See also:** ”[The Female Scientist Who Discovered the Basics of Climate
Science — and Was Forgotten By History](https://www.audubon.org/news/the-
female-scientist-who-discovered-basics-climate-science-and-was-forgotten)” ~
By Tyler Santora, Reporter, Audubon Magazine, July 17, 2019
Celebrate Eunice Foote’s 200th birthday ++++ by learning how she predicted the
effect of greenhouse gases before the man who gets the credit. Over two
hundred years ago, on July 17, 1819, Eunice Foote was born. Thirty-some years
later, the amateur climate scientist made the remarkable discovery that when
sunlight shines on carbon dioxide in a closed container — our atmosphere, for
example — heat builds up inside. [She was onto the ”greenhouse effect” of the
Earth’s atmosphere.](https://www.audubon.org/news/the-female-scientist-who-
discovered-basics-climate-science-and-was-forgotten)
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/13/the-icefin-instrument-goes-
under-glaciers-for-research-on-melting/>
# [Chemical Analysis of East Palestine Railroad Derailment
Contamination](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/12/chemical-analysis-of-
east-palestine-railroad-derailment-contamination/)
[](…
content/uploads/2023/04/87DACBF6-45E5-4880-9373-3FAB34A7853C.jpeg)
Pollution came mainly from decision to burn off contents of tank cars
**East Palestine Derailment Prompts Independent Testing**
From the [Staff Report, Chemical Engineering Progress](https://www.aiche-
cep.com/cepmagazine/april_2023/MobilePagedArticle.action?articleId=1869680&…),
April 10, 2023
**In the wake of the Norfolk Southern train derailment that released hazardous
chemicals into the environment in East Palestine, OH, citizens are seeking out
independent testing to determine what kind of contamination the town may be
facing.**
Both individuals and university teams have been conducting their own sampling
of the area near the chemical release. These results are still being analyzed,
but initial reports suggest that there are chemicals in streams and wells in
East Palestine that state and federal agencies are not looking for.
"One of the biggest issues with this response has been transparency," says
Andrew Whelton, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at Purdue
Univ. who is leading some of the independent testing. "As things have become
more visible, we’ve found out that officials haven’t been testing for the
right chemicals."
**For instance, governmental officials had not conducted indoor surface
testing of homes near the spill site as of early March.** A contractor for
Norfolk Southern did one-time air monitoring in some homes, but residents told
reporters that they were not informed that the testers were hired by the rail
operator, according to The Guardian. Experts also say that these one-time,
short-term air sampling tests are not sufficient to show that indoor air is
safe. The tests conducted can detect certain volatile organic compounds, but
do not measure other potential pollutants from the spill, such as benzene.
**Experts have also raised concerns about dioxins, which are carcinogenic and
highly persistent in the environment. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) is requiring Norfolk Southern to test for dioxins within two miles of
the spill site, although details of the testing plan are unclear.**
**The derailment occurred on Feb. 3, 2023, when dozens of freight train cars
carrying hazardous materials, including vinyl chloride, isobutylene, and butyl
acrylate went off the tracks and caught fire near the Ohio-Pennsylvania
border. Several days later, officials made the decision to flare off the vinyl
chloride for fear of an explosion should the flammable chemical ignite.
Residents complained of chemical smells, rashes, and headaches in the days
following the crash and the controlled release.**
A lack of interagency communication and communication with the public created
a sense of mistrust among residents from the early days after the accident.
The state and county environmental and health agencies did not immediately
release their testing data, nor were they forthcoming about what chemicals
they were testing for, Whelton says. As a result, residents who could afford
it began to seek testing through independent laboratories, and volunteers from
around the country have started working to build tools to help coordinate the
sharing of the results.
**Devon Oship, a neuroscientist in Buffalo, NY who has a platform on TikTok,
began creating forms for residents to report health symptoms, an effort that
has grown into a database for citizens to report their own independent testing
data under a nascent organization called United for East Palestine**.
"We have been racing against the clock to make a database that can keep up
with all of the new influx of information and has a good data structure to
allow for a really robust analysis," Oship says. The goal is to compare the
citizen-science results with official testing results from the state and
federal EPA, county health department, and other responding agencies.
**Independent results are still rolling in, Oship says. Whelton and other
researchers at Purdue Univ., Carnegie Mellon, and Texas A &M have also
traveled to East Palestine to take air and water samples and screen them
broadly. So far, Whelton and his team have found that two creeks near the
derailment site, Sulfur Run and Lesley Run, are contaminated with acrolein,
butyl acrylate, 1,2-butadiene, ethylene glycol, naphthalene, butyl acrylate,
n-butyl ether, 2-butoxy ethanol, and 2-ethyl hexanol.**
Upon the team’s first visit in late February, only data about surface water in
the creeks had been released, showing low contamination, Whelton says. But
locals weren’t warned about possible contamination in the streambeds.
"We found that people were walking their dogs near the creek and the kids were
playing near the creek because they were not told about the acute, immediate
health risks the creeks posed to them," Whelton says.
The testing revealed gaps in the official surveillance. For example, the
federal EPA had found acrolein in the air after the chemical release but had
not tested surface water or drinking water wells for the chemical, Whelton
says. He and his team are now doing further analysis to determine whether the
levels of these contaminants are dangerous.
Whelton has conducted environmental testing in the wake of other disasters,
including the 2022 Marshall Fire in Colorado, and says that communities and
local agencies differ in their support of bringing in outside experts and
providing transparency. The situation in East Palestine has been "markedly
different" than the norm, he says, with agencies being slow to publicize what
chemicals they were testing for and where.
The usefulness of business and property owners testing their own soil, water,
and air will likely depend on what testing is available from whichever
commercial lab they choose, Whelton says. Comprehensive environmental
monitoring is financially out of reach for most, he says. Even Whelton and his
team are unsure if they will be able to afford to return to East Palestine for
additional sampling, given that they are self-funding the effort. But citizens
can continue to pressure politicians and environmental agencies to expand the
testing agenda, he says.
**" The only way [residents] can really support the response is by requiring
and demanding that the officials that are supposed to be acting in their best
interest do so," Whelton says.**
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/12/chemical-analysis-of-east-
palestine-railroad-derailment-contamination/>
# [COMMENTS DUE ~ Should the PLEASANT$ POWER $TATION be Bailed Out at This
Time, in This Way?](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/11/comments-due-
should-the-pleasant-power-tation-be-bailed-out-at-this-time-in-this-way/)
[](…
content/uploads/2023/04/60445583-0800-4D10-B23E-0D5402EDB465.jpeg)
The cooling tower accident happened here in April 1978, 51 worker killed. It’s
on the Ohio River near St. Mary’s in Pleasants County.
**DON 'T LET FIRST ENERGY SELL US OUT! ~~~ TAKE ACTION BY APRIL 14TH **
From the [West Virginians for Energy
Freedom](https://www.energyfreedomwv.org/) & Others, April 7, 2023
**If you are a Mon Power or Potomac Edison customer, we need your voice now!**
[Submit your comments to the West Virginia Public Service Commission opposing
the Pleasants Power Station bailout before April
14th.](https://www.energyfreedomwv.org/pleasants-power-station-bailout-acti…
First Energy is scheming to keep Pleasants Power Station open by forcing it on
ratepayers like you. Not only is it an out-of-date, coal-fired power station
that was actually scheduled to close in 2019, but even First Energy
acknowledges that the plant is expensive to operate. The worst part is that we
don’t even need the plant – we have enough power being generated in-state
already to meet our needs!
First Energy has proposed that Mon Power and Potomac Edison customers pay more
to keep the plant open another year while government officials decide whether
the plant is to be permanently subsidized by ratepayers. If the plant doesn't
operate during that year, most families' bills will go up by about $36 a year
– but if the plant operates, bills will go up even more.
The Pleasants plant can already sell power into a regional power market, where
it has to compete with other power plants. But the plant is no longer
competitive, and the plant is facing serious environmental liabilities. First
Energy wants ratepayers to subsidize the plant even though customers don't
need the plant, and even though First Energy’s own analysis acknowledges the
plant's many problems.
Worse, First Energy’s proposal would protect its own shareholders, while
forcing West Virginia customers to bear all of the costs and risks. If First
Energy’s scheme is successful, customers would be saddled with potentially
massive costs and liabilities.
We've been here before. In 2017, Mon Power requested to buy the plant from
another First Energy subsidiary. The PSC and the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission both recognized the proposal as a risky deal for West Virginians.
And as before, this current Pleasants bailout proposal would raise customer
bills.
[TAKE ACTION](https://www.energyfreedomwv.org/pleasants-power-station-bailout-
action) ~ _**Please sign the petition below and add some personal information*
about how increased electric bills would affect your family or business.**_
[Personalize your letter: tell the Commissioners how increased rates will harm
you and the people and businesses you
love.](https://www.energyfreedomwv.org/pleasants-power-station-bailout-acti…
Tell them why this is important to you.
*Data collected will be shared with the [West Virginians for Energy Freedom](https://www.energyfreedomwv.org/) coalition.
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/11/comments-due-should-the-
pleasant-power-tation-be-bailed-out-at-this-time-in-this-way/>
# [East Texas Getting New $8.5 Billion Ethane Cracker Plastics
Facility](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/10/east-texas-getting-
new-8-5-billion-ethane-cracker-plastics-facility/)
[](https:/…
content/uploads/2023/03/3636BAD3-0CFA-4F0D-90AE-A341380013CA.jpeg)
These ethylene production operations consume fracked ethane and also generate
huge tonnages of carbon dioxide (GHG)
**Chevron Phillips Chemical & QatarEnergy begin construction of $8.5 billion
East Texas integrated cracker complex**
From an [Article by Pearl Bantillo, ICIS
News](https://www.icis.com/explore/resources/news/2023/03/10/10863117/qatar…
cp-chem-begin-construction-of-8-5bn-us-integrated-cracker-complex/), March 10,
2023
**SINGAPORE (ICIS)– Chevron Phillips Chemical Co (CP Chem) and QatarEnergy
have started building their joint $8.5bn integrated cracker complex called
Golden Triangle Polymers Plant in the US.** A groundbreaking ceremony was held
for the project located in Orange County, Texas, QatarEnergy said in a
statement on 8 March.
“We are investing $8.5 billion to build this world-scale facility, which is
QatarEnergy’s second largest investment in the US after the more than $11
billion investment in the Golden Pass LNG [liquefied natural gas] production
and export facility, which is currently under construction about 35 miles from
here in Sabine Pass, Texas,” said Ahmad Saeed Al-Amoodi, executive vice
president for surface development & sustainability at QatarEnergy.
The project includes an ethane cracker with a 2.08m tonne/year ethylene
capacity, with two downstream high density polyethylene (HDPE) units with a
combined capacity of 2m tonnes/year, it said.
Scheduled for start-up in 2026, the project will be owned by Golden Triangle
Polymers Company LLC, a 51:49 joint venture between CP Chem and QatarEnergy.
The project and the joint venture firm were named after Texas’s Golden
Triangle region that encompasses the community of Orange. “This plant will
also be, by far, the most significant economic investment in the Orange
community in decades, creating jobs and supporting economic growth,” Al-Amoodi
added.
Based on information available on CP Chem’s website, the Golden Triangle
Polymer Plant is expected to create more than 500 full-time jobs and about
4,500 construction jobs and generate an estimated $50bn for the community in
residual economic impacts over 20 years. QatarEnergy and CP Chem made a final
investment decision on the project on 16 November 2022, with plans to export
the majority of its HDPE output to key markets in Asia, Europe and Latin
America.
**ALSO: RAS LAFFAN PROJECT IN QATAR**
**The two companies have a similar project worth $6bn in the works in Ras
Laffan, Qatar, which is also expected to begin production in 2026.** The Ras
Laffan petrochemicals complex, Qatar’s biggest investment in the sector to
date, will consist of an ethane cracker with a capacity of 2.1m tonnes/year of
ethylene, and two HDPE trains with a combined 1.7m tonnes/year of capacity.
Most HDPE output is targeted for exports.
QatarEnergy will own 70% of the joint venture firm Ras Laffan Petrochemicals,
which will implement the project, with CP Chem holding the remaining 30%.
The project will double QatarEnergy’s ethylene production capacity, and
increase its local polymer production to more than 4m tonnes/year from the
current 2.6m tonnes/year.
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/10/east-texas-getting-
new-8-5-billion-ethane-cracker-plastics-facility/>
# [Wind Turbines in the Mountains Provide Sustainable
Electricity](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/09/wind-turbines-in-the-
mountains-provide-sustainable-electricity/)
**WINDExchange: West Virginia Land-Based Wind Speed at 100 Meters**
From the U. S. [Department of Energy, Office of Energy Efficiency & Renewable
Energy](https://windexchange.energy.gov/maps-data/344)
[]…
content/uploads/2023/04/3A2142F0-3BC1-4DAE-97A5-46DC3A5FA2141.jpeg)
Numerous Wind Turbines are Already Installed on the Allegheny Front Range ~
(Click on the map to expand it.)
**WIND TURBINES ARE ALREADY BEING DEPLOYED IN THE PLAINS, MOUNTAINS AND
COASTAL WATERS ~**
This map was produced by the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE's) National
Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) using modeled wind resource estimates
developed by NREL via the Wind Integration National Dataset (WIND) Toolkit and
is intended for general educational purposes only. While these 100-meter wind
speed maps can provide a general indication of good or poor wind resources,
they do not provide a resolution high enough to identify local site features
such as complex terrain, ground cover, and data needed prior to siting a wind
project.
[Watch a video tutorial for understanding land-based and offshore wind
resource maps. See more wind resource maps, download wind datasets from NREL,
and learn more about wind resource assessment and characterization on DOE’s
website.](https://windexchange.energy.gov/maps-data/344)
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/09/wind-turbines-in-the-mountains-
provide-sustainable-electricity/>
# [William & Mary College TO CLOSE Virginia Coastal Policy
Center](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/08/william-mary-college-to-clo…
virginia-coastal-policy-center/)
[](…
content/uploads/2023/04/B980CF87-F82B-4C2F-8640-0C217823ABC6.jpeg)
Water rising in neighborhoods of coastal Virginia
**William & Mary unveils details of plan to replace Virginia Coastal Policy
Center**
From an [Article by Charlie Paullin, Virginia
Mercury](https://www.virginiamercury.com/2023/04/07/william-mary-unveils-
details-of-plan-to-replace-virginia-coastal-policy-center/), March 7, 2023
Following William & Mary’s announcement it plans to close its widely respected
Virginia Coastal Policy Center this summer, the university has unveiled a new
initiative to address sea level rise and stormwater flooding.
The school has touted the new Virginia Coastal Resilience Collaborative as
being part of a university-wide approach that is in line with its Vision 2026
plan to establish a greater presence in Virginia’s efforts to deal with water
issues.
“We’re excited about the potential of this new university-wide collaborative
to expand, evolve and streamline the scholarship, educational, and advisory
work that W&M and [the Virginia Institute of Marine Sciences] have been
engaged in across campus,” said Brian Whitson, the university’s chief
communications officer. “This will be a multi-disciplinary approach, bringing
together expertise across campus to produce a broader range of research,
education and advisory work for policy makers and stakeholders.”
The new collaborative will be organized under an assistant provost, who will
coordinate work across William and Mary’s five schools of marine science, law,
business, education and arts and sciences, as well as with other universities
and state agencies.
That coordination will allow the school and VIMS the ability to “develop and
implement timely, real-world solutions — and legal scholarship and policy
advice,” a description on William & Mary’s website reads.
“With a broader, multidisciplinary university-wide approach, the Virginia
Coastal Resilience Collaborative will also have the ability to address
economic, social, business and/or private sector issues, whereas VCPC was
focused more directly on legal and policy questions,” Whitson said. “The
Provost, in coordination with the steering committee, will develop an
implementation plan including recruiting personnel for the new collaborative.”
Other staff at the collaborative will include a policy analyst and clerical
support roles. The former VCPC had a director and three staff members, whose
positions will be terminated June 30 when the center is dissolved.
The steering committee, chaired by the dean of the School of Marine Science
and director of VIMS, will first meet April 15 to develop the plan for the new
collaborative, with help from Virginia Sea Grant, other school leaders,
legislators, municipalities, policymakers and industry representatives.
The current timeline calls for the plan to be submitted to the school’s
president and provost in June. Recruitment of personnel will begin in July,
and the collaborative will formally launch in September.
The former VCPC had become a go-to resource in the state and Mid-Atlantic
region for science-backed policy recommendations on evolving issues linked to
climate change. Environmental nonprofits, local governments and regional
commissions lauded the center for its contributions, with many members saying
they are keeping an eye on the new collaborative to see if it lives up to its
predecessor.
“VCPC evolved into an institute of excellence, providing three critical
functions for Virginia,” including the convening of resilience professionals,
workforce training and policy guidance, said Mary-Carson Stiff, deputy
director of environmental nonprofit Wetlands Watch. “We will see if this new
entity will serve these three important functions for the betterment of
Virginia.”
Anna Killius, executive director of the Chesapeake Bay Commission, said she
hopes the new collaborative continues VCPC’s track record of science-based
policy recommendations. “I hope the conversation about the Virginia Coastal
Policy Center has made clear the many important relationships that have been
built by the center and its directors over the years with administration
leaders, state lawmakers and many other public and private organizations,”
Killius said. “To make sure that the collaborative is primed to deliver value
for both the university and the community, it will be very important to see
these stakeholders at the table as the collaborative takes shape.
**Immediate impacts ~ The loss of the center has had ramifications in the
legislative world**.
Gov. Glenn Youngkin has already recommended an amendment to House Bill 2393
from Del. Keith Hodges, R-Middlesex, to strike a reference to the Virginia
Coastal Policy Center that would otherwise have appeared in state code.
Hodges’ bill, which passed both chambers unanimously, expands the range of
universities the state can confer with when crafting resilience policy from
solely VIMS to include VCPC, Virginia Sea Grant, the Virginia Cooperative
Extension and the recently unveiled Institute for Coastal Adaptation and
Resilience at Old Dominion University.
The Virginia Cooperative Extension offers agricultural research services
through a partnership between Virginia Tech, Virginia State University, the
U.S. Department of Agriculture and local governments. Virginia Sea Grant is
the state’s program within a federal network established by Congress in 1966
to facilitate research opportunities across the state’s university network.
Another amendment to Hodges’ bill from Youngkin could be more significant. The
governor is suggesting a change that would add the word “led by” in front of
Virginia Sea Grant.
Some environmental nonprofits and universities have privately voiced worries
the change will allow Virginia Sea Grant to determine which entities could
provide input and which couldn’t. Virginia Sea Grant Executive Director Troy
Hartley said his agency did not ask for the amendment. However, he said the
amendment wouldn’t preclude state agencies from seeking advice from other
universities if they so desired.
“Prior to [VCPC’s] existence, we were leveraging interns and the National Sea
Grant Law Center. No question that’s at a lower capacity than [what] existed
with VCPC,” Hartley said. “We tap on the expertise of our member institutions
and throughout the commonwealth, so we don’t make contact decisions. We’re
helping collaborate and communicate across the institutions.”
Hodges said he worked on the amendments with the Youngkin administration.
Macaulay Porter, a spokesperson for Youngkin, said the amendments were
requested by the Hodges and eliminated redundancies by also removing reference
to the Institute for Coastal Adaptation and Resilience, which falls under the
purview of Virginia Sea Grant already.
“The issues that we have are very, very complex, so you need to bring in all
of the universities to solve the problem,” Hodges said. “[Virginia] Sea Grant
makes perfect sense to be the one to lead that effort.”
The inclusion of other collaborators doesn’t diminish the role of VIMS,
Whitson said, pointing to state code specifically outlining its role.
Lewie Lawrence, executive director of the Middle Peninsula Planning District
Commission, highlighted the collection of scientists, engineers, public
outreach experts, educators and students brought together by Virginia Sea
Grant to tackle coastal issues. “I don’t know of a more established public
entity with a national statutory responsibility administered at the state
level better equipped with a solid foundation to help lead and coordinate,”
Lawrence said.
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/08/william-mary-college-to-close-
virginia-coastal-policy-center/>
# [NEW GREEN PROJECTS at Coal Mine Sites Under Development in
USA](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/07/new-green-projects-at-coal-min…
sites-under-development-in-usa/)
[](https:/…
content/uploads/2023/04/32CA6090-CD86-44A9-99D7-D2AEEBAC6D90.jpeg)
Roth Rock wind farm and Mettiki Coal processing plant near Oakland, Maryland
**U.S. DOE Offers $450 Million for Green Energy Projects at Coal Mining
Sites**
From an [Article by Cristen Jaynes, EcoWatch
News](https://www.ecowatch.com/green-energy-project-grants-mining-sites.htm…,
April 5, 2023
The U.S. Department of Energy has announced the availability of $450 million
through the **2021 Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (BIL) for clean energy
projects — like solar farms — on current and former mining sites** , a White
House press release said. There are about 17,750 mine land sites in the U.S.
covering 1.5 million acres. These sites contaminate land, water and air
quality, as well as expose local communities to toxic pollutants.
The repurposing of the sites for renewable energy projects would generate up
to an estimated 90 gigawatts of green energy — enough power for almost 30
million homes. These projects will “provid[e] new economic opportunities for
historic coal and mining communities,” the press release said.
**President Joe Biden has set a target of cutting greenhouse gas emissions in
half by 2030 and reaching net zero emissions by 2050.**
**Up to five of the projects will be funded through the 2021 Infrastructure
Investment and Jobs Act, including at least two solar farms.** “[T]hese
projects could spur new economic development in these communities,” Energy
Secretary Jennifer Granholm said, as The Hill reported. “As with all BIL-
funded projects, we’ll be prioritizing those that partner directly with
communities.”
**According to the White House, renewable energy project developers will also
be able to access billions of dollars in bonus credits on top of Inflation
Reduction Act investment and production tax credits. “These bonuses will
incentivize more clean energy investment in energy communities, particularly
coal communities,” the press release said.**
A former coal power plant site in Massachusetts in the process of
transitioning to offshore wind that Biden visited last summer was the model
for the new projects, reported The Associated Press. “It’s very clear that…
the workers who powered the last century of industry and innovation can power
the next one,” Granholm said, as The Associated Press reported.
**According to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, in order to reap all the
advantages of the bonus, developers are required to pay workers current wages
and hire an adequate number of apprentices. “These provisions will ensure that
workers in energy communities reap the benefits of the clean energy economy
they are helping to build,” Yellen said, as reported by The Associated
Press.**
A searchable mapping tool to help locate areas potentially eligible for the
energy community bonus has been provided by the U.S. Treasury Department, the
Internal Revenue Service and the Interagency Working Group on Energy
Communities, the press release said.
A Coal Power Plant Redevelopment Visualization Tool is also available for
stakeholders to be able to find opportunities for the redevelopment of closed
coal power plants, as well as community reinvestment.
Grant applications are due by the end of August of this year, with decisions
expected in early 2024.
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/07/new-green-projects-at-coal-mine-
sites-under-development-in-usa/>
# [Permafrost Releases Methane Gas Directly to the
Atmosphere](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/06/permafrost-releases-
methane-gas-directly-to-the-atmosphere/)
[](…
content/uploads/2023/04/1C6BA459-46A1-402D-9FA0-7B4BBAA7F784.jpeg)
Permafrost quite extensive in Arctic Polar Regions
**Climate change: Thawing permafrost is a triple-threat**
From an [Article by Marlowe Hood, Science X
News](https://phys.org/news/2022-01-climate-permafrost-triple-threat.html),
01/12/22
Wellhead equipment is located at the Utrenneye field, the resource base for
Novatek's Arctic LNG 2 project, located in the Gydan Peninsula. Thawing Arctic
permafrost laden with billions of tonnes of greenhouse gases not only
threatens the region's critical infrastructure but life across the planet,
according a comprehensive scientific review.
Nearly 70 percent of the roads, pipelines, cities and industry — mostly in
Russia — built on the region's softening ground are highly vulnerable to acute
damage by mid-century, according to one of half-a-dozen studies on permafrost
published this week by Nature.
Another study warns that methane and CO2 escaping from long-frozen soil could
accelerate warming and overwhelm global efforts to cap the rise in Earth's
temperature at livable levels. Exposure of highly combustible organic matter
no longer locked away by ice is also fuelling unprecedented wildfires, making
permafrost a triple threat, the studies report.
Blanketing a quarter of the northern hemisphere's land mass, permafrost
contains twice the carbon currently in the atmosphere, and triple the amount
emitted by human activity since 1850. By definition, it is ground that has
been at temperatures colder than zero degrees Celsius (32F) for more than two
years, though much permafrost is thousands of years old.
Temperatures in the Arctic region have risen two to three times more quickly
over the last half-century than for the world as a whole—two to three degrees
Celsius above pre-industrial levels. The region has also seen a series of
freakish weather anomalies, with temperatures in winter flaring up to 40C
above previous averages.
Permafrost itself has, on average, warmed nearly 0.4C from 2007 to 2016,
"raising concerns about the rapid rate of thaw and potential old carbon
release," note researchers led by Kimberley Miner, a scientist at the
California Institute of Technology's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
**Zombie fires do occur ~** Their study projects a loss of some four million
square kilometres of permafrost by 2100 even under a scenario in which
greenhouse gas emissions are significantly reduced in the coming decades.
Rising temperatures are not the only driver of accelerated melting. Arctic
wildfires rapidly expand the layer of permafrost subject to thawing, the
researchers point out. As the climate warms, these remote, uncontrolled blazes
are projected to increase 130% to 350% by mid-century, releasing more and more
permafrost carbon.
Indeed, thawing renders buried organic carbon more flammable, giving rise to
"zombie fires" that smoulder throughout frigid winters before igniting again
in Spring and Summer. "These below-ground fires could release legacy carbon
from environments previously thought to be fire-resistant," Miner and
colleagues warn.
**The most immediate threat is to the region 's infrastructure.** Northern
hemisphere permafrost supports some 120,000 buildings, 40,000 kilometres
(25,000 miles) of roads and 9,500 kilometres of pipelines, according to
another study led by Jan Hjort, a scientist at Finland's University of Oulu.
"The strength of soil drops substantially as temperatures rise above the
melting point and ground ice melts," the study noted.
No country is more vulnerable than Russia, where several large cities and
substantial industrial plant sit atop frozen soil. Some 80 percent of
buildings in the city of Vorkuta are already showing deformations caused by
shifting permafrost. Nearly half of oil and gas extraction fields in the
Russian Arctic are in areas with permafrost hazards threatening current
infrastructure and future developments.
Clean-up operation followed a massive fuel spill in the Ambarnaya River
outside Norilsk on June 10, 2020. A fuel tank ruptured after its supports
suddenly sank into the ground near the Siberian city of Norilsk, spilling
21,000 tonnes of diesel into nearby rivers.
Thawing permafrost was blamed for weakening the plant's foundation. North
America does not have large industrial centres built on permafrost, but tens
of thousands of kilometres of roads and pipelines are increasingly vulnerable
too. While scientists know far more than a decade ago, basic questions remain
unanswered as to how much carbon may be released as Arctic soil warms.
As a result, "permafrost dynamics are often not included in Earth system
models," which means their potential impact of Earth's rising temperature are
not adequately taken into account, Miner and colleagues note. This is
especially true, they warn, for the sudden structural collapse of permafrost,
a process known as thermokarst.
It is also still an open question as to whether climate shifts will cause the
Arctic region to become drier or wetter. The answer has huge implications. "In
a greener, wetter Arctic, plants will offset some or all permafrost carbon
emissions," the authors not. In a browner, drier Arctic, however, CO2
emissions from decomposing soils and the amount of ever-more flammable fuels
for wildfires will increase.
Permafrost covers 30 million square kilometres, roughly half of it in the
Arctic, and a million km2 across the Tibetan Plateau. Most of the rest was
covered when seas rose at the end of the last ice age.
More information: Miner, K.R., Turetsky, M.R., Malina, E. et al. Permafrost
carbon emissions in a changing Arctic. Nat Rev Earth Environ 3, 55–67 (2022).
doi.org/10.1038/s43017-021-00230-3, www.nature.com/articles/s43017-021-00230-3
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/06/permafrost-releases-methane-gas-
directly-to-the-atmosphere/>
# [Our Planet Under Examination, But Few Want to See or
Understand](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/05/our-planet-under-
examination-but-few-want-to-see-or-understand/)
[](https:/…
content/uploads/2023/04/E4061BF5-20B6-4EA0-A2B1-E01A16669438.jpeg)
Fungal diseases are under the influence of climate change …
**‘The Last of Us’ Is Right. Our Warming Planet Is a Petri Dish**
.
.
From an [Article by Neil Vora, New York
Times](https://www.nytimes.com/2023/04/02/opinion/the-last-of-us-fungus-
climate-change.html?action=click&module=Well&pgtype=Homepage§ion=Opinion),
April 2, 2023
.
.
**“The Last of Us,” a postapocalyptic television thriller, recently concluded
its first season with a stunning finale. However, as a physician and horror
superfan, I found the show’s beginning more striking: A 1960s talk-show host
asks two epidemiologists what keeps them up at night. “Fungus,” one replies.**
He’s worried about a real-world species of Ophiocordyceps known to hijack the
body and behavior of ants. Fast forward to the show’s central, fictional
drama: a pandemic caused by a type of that fungus, which mutated as the world
grew warmer. The new version infects humans and turns them into ravenous,
zombielike beings whose bodies are overtaken by mushrooms.
**Fungal epidemics in humans are infrequent, in part because human-to-human
transmission of fungi is rare, and I am not aware of any involving zombielike
creatures. It’s far more likely that the next pandemic will come from a virus.
But the idea that climate change is making the emergence of new health threats
more likely is solid. Could it cause a fungus ubiquitous in the environment to
morph into a lethal pathogen in humans? It’s possible.**
Scientists like me worry that climate change and ecosystem destruction may be
creating opportunities for fungal pathogens to grow more infectious, spread
over larger distances and reach more people. For example, Candida auris, a
drug-resistant yeast that can be deadly in hospitalized patients, may have
gained the ability to infect people thanks to warmer temperatures, according
to some scientists. On March 20, the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention said Candida auris has spread at “an alarming rate” in health care
facilities and is “concerning.”
But international efforts to strengthen global health security rarely consider
fungal pathogens. Given that the risks are growing, that leaves us unprepared
and failing to take adequate steps for their prevention. No fungal vaccines
exist, diagnosis is complicated and costly, and there are not enough drugs to
combat the fungus. Unless governments fund research to better address fungal
disease and reverse the environmental factors that fuel their emergence, we
will remain vulnerable.
**For many plants and animals, fungi are a scourge. Fusarium wilt, which
devastates banana plants and for which there are limited treatments, is
spreading globally and is a major threat to the multibillion-dollar banana
industry. An infection known as white-nose syndrome has killed millions of
bats across North America. Ninety amphibian species have gone extinct from
chytridiomycosis, a dreadful disease that causes a frog’s skin to fall off.**
Humans have largely been exempt from fungal outbreaks because of our warm
blood — 98 degrees Fahrenheit, too hot for many fungi to survive. That could
be changing. A January study in the journal Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences found that heat kicked a fungus called Cryptococcus
deneoformans — which can infect humans — into evolutionary overdrive,
increasing certain genetic mutations fivefold. This means more opportunities
to develop dangerous adaptations, such as heat tolerance and drug resistance.
In another lab study, a research team grew and heated a type of fungus known
to kill insects. Within four months, two strains could reproduce at 98 degrees
Fahrenheit, up from a previous limit of about 90 degrees.
**Some microbiologists believe climate change is already accelerating fungal
evolution in nature.** Their theory is that global warming may have selected
for strains of Candida auris in the environment that could survive at higher
temperatures. This allowed the yeast to break a thermal barrier that
previously limited spread, such that it gained the ability to infect warm-
blooded birds — and humans exposed to those birds.
A changing climate may also increase the transmission of fungal disease. These
microorganisms are everywhere: kitchen counters, backyard soil and the air we
breathe. Typically, systemic fungal infections occur in immunocompromised
individuals — cancer patients, organ recipients and others — who have inhaled
spores from their environment. But regional outbreaks among healthy people are
of increasing concern since flooding, cyclonic winds and wildfire smoke can
create conditions for fungi to flourish and spread.
Counterintuitively, so can drought. In the American Southwest, long periods
without rain have dried out the earth, leading to dust storms. Reported cases
of Valley fever, a once-rare respiratory illness caused by soil-borne fungal
spores, have soared nearly tenfold since 1998; the fungus has also spread to
new regions, including Washington State.
A warming planet is creating more vulnerability in humans, too. Reduced crop
yields, for example, lead to malnutrition, while heat stress causes kidney
disease. At the same time, deforestation, inadequate safety measures on farms
and commercial wildlife trade increase the risk of so-called spillovers, where
viruses like Ebola jump from animals to people.
Fungi, nature’s savviest opportunists, will use these disturbances to their
advantage. We saw this in the 1980s as fungal infections surged alongside
H.I.V., a virus that emerged from spillover. We also saw it more recently when
a unique fungal disease affected thousands of people in India who had received
immune-suppressing steroids as part of their treatment for Covid-19.
**Last October, the World Health Organization created a list of “fungal
priority pathogens” for the first time. “Fungal pathogens are a major threat
to public health,” the group wrote.** This was an important symbolic gesture,
but it does not give doctors what they need: better tools to fight these
infections. There are no approved vaccines. Globally, many countries lack the
capacity to diagnose certain common fungal diseases. Even in New York City,
where I treat patients, it can take weeks for some to receive a diagnosis for
fungal infections. Worse yet, many fungal pathogens already are resistant to
the few antifungal drugs we do have available.
In part, this is a technical challenge: It’s difficult to develop antifungals
that don’t also destroy our cells. But we cannot develop cures if we don’t try
— and right now, fungal research output is abysmal. For example, cryptococcal
meningitis, a fungal infection, kills more people than bacterial meningitis
caused by Neisseria meningitidis, yet the latter receives over three times as
much research funding.
Fungal pathogens simply haven’t been on government funders’ radar — they
receive just 1.5 percent of all research funding for infectious disease
research. Likewise, pharmaceutical companies have little incentive to invest
in research and development, because the potential profit is limited.
To help fill this void, the National Institutes of Health must increase
support for the study of fungal diseases, as it recently did for Valley fever.
The U.S. Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority, which helps
develop vaccines and drugs for public health emergencies through public-
private partnership, must also make them a priority. Currently, none of the 83
initiatives listed on the B.A.R.D.A. medical countermeasures portfolio website
are for fungal pathogens, though it has announced its support for the
development of novel antifungals.
**This moment also calls for humility. In the 1960s, some prominent experts
erroneously believed infectious diseases were a diminishing threat. But nature
is full of surprises.**
From 2012 to 2021, I investigated outbreaks with the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention. As my colleagues and I responded to Ebola, rabies,
poxviruses and coronaviruses, we saw firsthand how the ways people interact
with the environment and animals can surface disease in horrific and
unexpected ways. Often, we don’t learn how devastating these diseases are
until we are in the midst of a full-blown emergency. With only 5 percent of an
estimated 1.5 million fungal species identified to date, fungi are perhaps the
great blind spot in public health.
Our health depends on a delicate ecological equilibrium. Maintaining that
balance — by weaning ourselves off of fossil fuels to slow climate change and
halting the loss of nature to prevent viral spillovers — is perhaps our best
hope for avoiding a fungal horror show.
**>>> Dr. Neil Vora is the pandemic prevention fellow at Conservation
International and led New York City’s Covid-19 contact tracing program from
2020 to 2021.**
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/05/our-planet-under-examination-
but-few-want-to-see-or-understand/>
# [Mountain Valley Frack Gas Pipeline ~ Unnecessary Risk for Residents, Farms,
Streams & Mountains](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/04/mountain-valley-
frack-gas-pipeline-unnecessary-risk-for-residents-farms-streams-mountains/)
[](https:/…
content/uploads/2023/04/ED8FCDB3-53A1-4ACE-9D62-F02C6821C305.jpeg)
MVP 42 inch coated pipeline actually too large for rough terrain and varied
conditions
**M.V.P. Plans ~ Pipeline’s pros can’t outweigh its cons**
From the Letter to Editor of [Betsy
Lawson](https://www.sierraclub.org/sites/www.sierraclub.org/files/2022-11/M…,
Sunday Edition, Morgantown Dominion Post, April 2, 2023
.
.
**A guest essay in Sunday’s Dominion Post (3-26-23) extolling the benefits of
finishing the Mountain Valley Pipeline is so glaringly misleading that a
response is required.**
The remaining unbuilt section would cross the Blue Ridge Mountains and the
Appalachian Trail — one of the most pristine areas in Appalachia. People who
live there have seen whole sections of already built pipeline slide down the
steep hillsides, an unstable terrain where a pipeline eruption and possible
explosion seem inevitable. The construction of pipelines to carry natural gas
at high pressures of 1,200 psi, some to ports on the coast where it will be
sold overseas, risks the safety of many residents for the profit of a few
elsewhere.
This pipeline will not benefit the common good. Landowners will lose some of
their land through eminent domain and see a decrease in their property values,
while profits go to the corporate shareholders. Fewer tourists, hunters and
fishermen will visit an area that looks industrialized. Soil erosion from
these massive scars on the land will destroy trout streams and water quality.
Tax revenue will decrease in this area and ratepayers may be stuck paying off
this boondoggle as renewable energy makes fossil fuels less economic.
**Further, fracking for natural gas mostly benefits the few people who sell
it. The pollution and noise from fracking lower the quality of life for
everyone who lives in proximity. We are experiencing 24/7 noise now from
construction of a new fracking pad in our neighborhood. When the drilling
starts, it will be far worse.**
West Virginia has been under the thumb of the fossil fuel industry for much
too long, making us one of the least healthy and least prosperous states in
the country. We must vote for leaders who look to the future and promote the
economic prosperity of clean energy.
>>> [Betsy Lawson, Morgantown Area of Monongalia County,
WV](https://www.sierraclub.org/sites/www.sierraclub.org/files/2022-11/MSS_2…
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/04/mountain-valley-frack-gas-
pipeline-unnecessary-risk-for-residents-farms-streams-mountains/>
# [US Court of Appeals Rejects M.V.P. Water Quality Permit From WV-
DEP](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/03/us-court-of-appeals-rejects-m-…
p-water-quality-permit-from-wv-dep/)
[](https:/…
content/uploads/2023/04/21B425A9-D4DD-4673-A510-A3D2D904FFC2.jpeg)
US Court of Appeals Issues Unanimous Decision to Protect Streams
**Court vacates critical West Virginia water permit for Mountain Valley
Pipeline**
[Press Release from Jessica Sims, Appalachian
Voices](https://appvoices.org/2023/04/03/mvp-wv-401/), April 3, 2023
RICHMOND, Va. — Today, a unanimous panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
4th Circuit vacated the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection’s
Clean Water Act § 401 certification for the Mountain Valley Pipeline, finding
that the agency’s justification behind its conclusion that the pipeline would
not violate the state’s water quality standards was deficient.
The 401 certification is a critical permit that MVP needs in order to resume
construction through rivers and wetlands in West Virginia, including 193
remaining water crossings in the state. This decision comes days after the
same court upheld a § 401 water quality certification granted in Virginia.
Mountain Valley Pipeline has devastated water resources in West Virginia,
receiving citations for scores of violations of water quality standards and
racking up at least $550,000 in fines for failing to timely and adequately
control runoff along the construction route.
The court identified multiple failures by West Virginia in issuing the
certificate. Specifically, the West Virginia Department of Environmental
Protection did not sufficiently address the history of MVP’s water quality
violations, did not include a condition requiring MVP to comply with the
construction stormwater protection permit, and did not adequately explain why
they waived review of location-specific antidegradation policy.
Without a § 401 water quality certification from West Virginia, the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers cannot issue the related Clean Water Act § 404 water
quality permit that MVP needs for its stream and wetland crossings. In
addition, MVP still has not received authorization to cross the Jefferson
National Forest. Now that the developers behind the MVP will have to reapply
for a 401 water quality certification in West Virginia, the timetable for the
project is even more uncertain.
In this case, Appalachian Mountain Advocates represented Sierra Club, West
Virginia Rivers Coalition, West Virginia Highlands Conservancy, Indian Creek
Watershed Association, Appalachian Voices and Chesapeake Climate Action
Network.
“Today’s ruling uplifts the tireless efforts of every single coalition member
and volunteer fighting to protect land, water and people,” said Russell
Chisholm, managing director for the Protect Our Water, Heritage, Rights
Coalition. “Mountain Valley Pipeline’s assurances don’t match the facts as
documented in violation after violation. MVP should abandon their ill-fated
project because we will defend every stream and river crossing that can still
be saved from permanent harm.”
“West Virginia communities have endured Mountain Valley Pipeline’s damage to
their water resources and environment for far too long,” said Jessica Sims,
Virginia field coordinator for Appalachian Voices. “The WVDEP’s insufficient
safeguards have been exposed, and this ruinous project must be canceled.”
“West Virginia has been ground zero for the MVP and this ruling today makes
clear that communities from West Virginia to North Carolina have worked
together to protect the water,” said Dr. Crystal Cavalier-Keck, co-founder of
7 Directions of Service. “People need investment in clean, fossil-fuel free,
non-extractive energy — not the MVP — and developers should cancel the
project.”
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/03/us-court-of-appeals-rejects-m-v-
p-water-quality-permit-from-wv-dep/>
# [Green Hydrogen Can Find Diverse Applications, Some More
Logical](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/02/green-hydrogen-can-find-
diverse-applications-some-more-logical/)
[](https:/…
content/uploads/2023/04/92FEBD7D-56A4-4B27-B381-0775F99876C9.jpeg)
An electrolyser stack in the research and development area of the Plug Power
facility in Concord, Massachusetts
**Green hydrogen is having a breakthrough moment, can we make the most of
it?**
From an [Article by Oleksiy Tatarenko & Natalie Janzow, Energy
Monitor](https://www.energymonitor.ai/tech/hydrogen/opinion-green-hydrogen-is-
having-a-breakthrough-moment-how-do-we-make-the-most-of-it/), March 31, 2023
.
.
**Developers and policymakers should set their sights on projects catering to
sectors most acutely in need of green hydrogen, like steelmaking, fertilizers
and shipping.**
Landmark federal legislation is now mobilising billions of dollars to energise
a fledgling industry around green hydrogen, a carbon-free fuel and chemical
feedstock that is produced with renewable energy. The good news is that green
hydrogen is a versatile tool that can decarbonise industries ranging from
marine shipping to steelmaking to fertilizer production. The caveat? The
generous federal subsidies that are critical to rapidly scaling green hydrogen
don’t yet dictate what the hydrogen is used for, which could result in
projects that are financially viable for companies but aren’t in the best
interest of the climate or consumers.
State and federal agencies have the power to ensure that public funding for
green hydrogen doesn’t go towards building an energy bridge to nowhere.
Instead, public agencies and regulators can guide green hydrogen towards the
sectors where its use is both financially viable and where better alternatives
aren’t already available. Staffers at the **US Department of Energy** (DOE),
for example, can allocate funding from the **Loan Programs Office and the
Office of Clean Energy Demonstrations** towards projects that decarbonise
heavy industry and energy-intensive transport. State policymakers can develop
road maps with a clear vision for where hydrogen will be used, then implement
funding programmes and deployment targets to incentivise hydrogen fuel-
switching in priority sectors.
**Building a green hydrogen economy for today and tomorrow**
Under last year’s **Inflation Reduction Act (IRA)** , producers of green
hydrogen can claim tax credits for the hydrogen they make, as well as for any
new clean electricity that they generate to make that hydrogen. In some
scenarios, the generous subsidies can make even inefficient uses of green
hydrogen profitable. One prominent example is using power to produce hydrogen,
then burning that hydrogen in a power plant to produce power again – wasting
most of the energy along the way. While hydrogen may eventually play a role in
decarbonising electricity, it will be as a store of energy for backup power to
manage the variability of renewables, not as a primary source of baseload
power.
Importantly, the federal subsidies are time-limited, so use cases that are
marginally profitable today may be woefully uncompetitive down the line.
Misguided investments in hydrogen uses like baseload power generation or home
heating could leave utility customers on the hook for inefficient and
expensive infrastructure that has only a short window of financial viability.
Even with optimistic assumptions, for example, using hydrogen to heat homes
will require at least three-times as much electricity as using a heat pump,
and will be more expensive for consumers in the long run.
**Getting our priorities straight with clean energy**
**Fortunately, there are several priority industries that promise to be far
better long-term customers for clean hydrogen producers. Sectors such as
steelmaking and fertiliser production provide a more stable and lucrative
market for green hydrogen, which offers a carbon-free alternative to coal,
diesel and other polluting fossil fuels. Not only can green hydrogen fetch
higher prices in those sectors, but it would also make a much bigger dent in
global carbon emissions.**
**For example, analysis from the non-profit RMI finds that every kilogram (kg)
of green hydrogen that displaces traditional fuels in the coal-heavy steel
sector would prevent 33.6kg of CO2 from being emitted — more than five times
the carbon savings of using hydrogen to generate power or heat buildings,
where better decarbonisation technologies already exist.**
Producing fertiliser from hydrogen instead of fossil gas would also provide
substantial climate benefits, while boosting food security and insulating
farmers from the volatility of fossil fuel prices. Similarly, deploying
hydrogen-derived fuels such as ammonia and e-methanol in shipping and
e-kerosene in aviation would enable widespread emissions reductions without
limiting the scalability of these vital transport sectors.
**Fuelling the US 's clean Industrial Revolution**
The US now has a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to turbocharge the hydrogen
economy – and ensure it is headed in the right direction. As part of the 2021
Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, the federal government is allocating $8bn to
develop regional hydrogen hubs across the nation. These hubs will comprise
clusters of interconnected hydrogen producers, consumers and transport
infrastructure.
**Regional coalitions looking to develop clean hydrogen hubs will submit their
final applications to the DOE in April.** The state agencies and private-
sector players in these coalitions are eager to get in on the ground floor of
this nascent industry, and their cost-sharing contributions will bring tens of
billions of dollars to these regions. The hubs that are selected – and the
industries within those hubs – will help determine whether green hydrogen
reaches its economic and climate potential. Forthcoming guidance from the
Treasury Department and the IRS that clarifies how the new IRA tax credits are
implemented will also help shape the early hydrogen economy, given that these
tax credits will spur potentially hundreds of billions of dollars in
investment.
The boom in funding from IRA incentives, hydrogen hub investments and other
initiatives gives the US a real opportunity to establish vibrant regional
hydrogen hubs and clusters of clean industry. Alliances such as the **Mission
Possible Partnership** , which helps align heavy industries and their
customers behind decarbonisation solutions, can help grow these seeds into a
nationwide hydrogen economy that transforms and modernises some of our
highest-emitting industries. US policymakers have successfully summoned an
unprecedented surge of interest and activity in carbon-free hydrogen. If they
can channel it to the right sectors, they can help revitalise and decarbonise
the nation’s industrial base at the same time.
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/02/green-hydrogen-can-find-diverse-
applications-some-more-logical/>
# [U. S. Government Promotes Large-Scale HYDROGEN HUBS for Regional Energy
Supply?](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/01/u-s-government-promotes-
large-scale-hydrogen-hubs-for-regional-energy-supply/)
[](…
content/uploads/2023/03/2384ECD4-E266-4A38-A73D-A915C4459212.jpeg)
Hydrogen Hub intended to generate green hydrogen as an alternative fuel
**The Outlook for U.S. Hydrogen Hubs: What Can They Achieve?**
From an [Article by Anna Mende & Emily Kent, Clean Air Task
Force](https://www.catf.us/2023/03/outlook-us-hydrogen-hubs/), March 29, 2023
As efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and address the impacts of
climate change ramp up around the world, public and private sources of capital
have turned their attention to hydrogen—an energy carrier that does not
produce carbon emissions when utilized in fuel cells or combusted. This zero-
carbon fuel has garnered attention for its potential to play a key role in
achieving full, global, economy-wide decarbonization.
In 2022 alone, private equity and venture firms spent over $5 billion on
hydrogen-related companies on the tailwinds of the 2021 Infrastructure
Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA). Beyond authorizing $1.2 trillion of investment
in infrastructure upgrades to help the United States transition to a zero-
carbon economy, the legislation allocated $8 billion for the Department of
Energy (DOE) to fund four Regional Clean Hydrogen Hubs—or H2Hubs—across the
U.S., and DOE has indicated that it may use the funding to support the
development of as many as ten H2Hubs. The hubs will be localized centers for
the production, transportation, storage, and end-use of hydrogen. This first-
of-a-kind demonstration program intends to catalyze domestic clean hydrogen
production in the United States and can serve as a platform and framework for
operationalizing the technological and commercial advances developed through
DOE’s Hydrogen Shot program, which aims to bring the cost of production down
by 80% to $1 per kilogram in one decade.
Given the massive investment by the federal government and the promising
benefits hydrogen hubs can provide, it is important that these hubs are
developed thoughtfully and designed in a way that maximizes climate and
community benefits.
The IIJA directs the DOE to fund hubs that:
1\. Demonstrably aid the achievement of the clean hydrogen production
standard;
2\. Demonstrate the production, processing, delivery, storage, and end-use of
clean hydrogen; and
3\. Can be developed into a national clean hydrogen network to facilitate the
production and use of low-emissions hydrogen in sectors of the economy that
will be difficult or impossible to electrify.
DOE will evaluate applicants on a variety of factors, including:
Production methods and feedstock diversity: The IIJA requires at least one
H2Hub to demonstrate production of clean hydrogen from fossil fuels, one from
renewable energy, and one from nuclear energy.
End-use diversity: At least one H2Hub will demonstrate the end-use of hydrogen
in the electric power generation sector, one in the industrial sector, one in
the residential and commercial heating sector, and one in the transportation
sector.
Cost share: The hubs program requires a minimum of 50% non-federal cost share.
Cost share must come from non-federal sources such as private project
participants, state or local governments, or other third-party financing.
Community benefits: In alignment with the federal Justice40 Initiative, DOE
will require hub applicants to include community benefits plans (CBPs) as part
of their full applications to DOE. These plans are crucial aspects of the
application and will be weighted at 20% of the technical and merit review of
the proposals. DOE will give priority to regional hydrogen hubs that are
likely to create opportunities for skills training and long-term employment to
the greatest number of residents in the region.
In the lead up to the full application deadline on April 7th, CATF has mapped
and identified leading stakeholders and regions that have responded to the DOE
funding notice and intend to submit a full application. You can further
explore state and regional application efforts in our new map here.
**What benefits do we expect hydrogen hubs to create?**
The establishment of a hydrogen hubs program is historic. It signals
significant governmental commitment to scaling the innovative technologies and
industries we need to ensure deep decarbonization in the decades to come. We
expect the program to deliver the following impacts:
Decarbonization of hard-to-electrify end-use sectors: The hydrogen hubs
program has the potential to catalyze the decarbonization of industries such
as marine shipping, heavy-duty trucking, aviation, steel making, and
industrial process heating – sectors that were responsible for nearly 16% of
U.S. emissions in 2018. These sectors would greatly benefit from the
availability of low-carbon hydrogen. We expect some of these industries to be
firmly planted within a hub—for example, industrial facilities that use
hydrogen instead of natural gas to fuel their high temperature processes.
Other end-users like marine shipping, heavy-duty trucking, and aviation will
flow between hubs – stopping in regions across the U.S. to refuel with low-
carbon hydrogen or hydrogen derivatives.
Connective infrastructure and export potential: For in-hub users like
industrial facilities, hydrogen will often be supplied directly from the
producer to the end-user by short pipelines. For other end-use
sectors—particularly transportation—the distribution of hydrogen will be much
more dispersed. CATF expects the hydrogen hubs program to foster the creation
of hydrogen and ammonia-fueled transportation corridors that stretch between
the hubs. This will create stronger economics for individual hubs, accelerate
their development, and foster the build-out of a global hydrogen network,
potentially positioning the U.S. to become a hydrogen exporter via our ports.
Lowering costs and driving investment: Coupled with the hydrogen production
credit from the Inflation Reduction Act (Section 45V), which gives hydrogen
projects that begin construction before 2033 a tax credit of up to $3.00 per
kilogram of clean hydrogen produced based on its carbon intensity, the
hydrogen hubs program should help lower the cost of hydrogen production and
creates significant incentive for project developers. The required 50% non-
federal cost share will also attract private and state pools of capital to
enter the hydrogen market.
Job creation and community benefits: There is significant potential for the
hubs program to drive localized clean technology job creation and workforce
development opportunities. Additionally, when clean hydrogen is utilized in
the transportation sector, it has the potential to improve local air quality,
especially around ports and heavy-duty-trucking corridors. Additionally, the
requirement that 40% of benefits from federal funding flow to historically
disadvantaged communities means that the hubs chosen will need to have robust
community benefits plans.
Stay tuned to learn more from CATF on what comes next for the hydrogen hubs
program, exploring some of what we have seen from hub applicants and the
timelines and expectations from DOE over the coming year.
>>> Anna Menke (amenke(a)catf.us), Senior Hydrogen Hubs Manager, and Emily Kent
(ekent(a)catf.us), U.S. Director for Zero-Carbon Fuels, are important members of
our CLEAN AIR TASK FORCE team.
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/04/01/u-s-government-promotes-large-
scale-hydrogen-hubs-for-regional-energy-supply/>