Alamogordo, NM – La semana pasada el gobierno federal aprobó un permiso a una compañía de Roswell para poder excavar de forma exploratoria por un pozo de gas natural en Otero Mesa en la parte Suroeste de Nuevo México. Grupos civiles y por la conservación dicen que les preocupa el impacto que este permiso tendrá en la flora y fauna de esta área de praderas del Desierto de Chihuahua.
Dicen que están decepcionados de que Otero Mesa sigue en el diálogo de discusión para perforar por petróleo y gas natural. Kevin Bixby del Centro Medioambiental del Suroeste (Southwest Environmental Center) en Las Cruces dice que los impactos permanentes de excavar en esta área ni valdrán la pena ya que según los números estimados del Departamento de Administración de Tierras (Bureau of Land Management) encontrarán muy poco gas natural.
"El mejor cálculo estimado que he escuchado es el de que el gas que se encuentra debajo de Otero Mesa es el equivalente a más o menos dos semanas de lo que utilizaríamos en los Estados Unidos."
Dice Bixby que cuando tiene que ver con salvaguardar nuestra agua y recursos naturales, es bastante difícil justificar los riesgos que vienen con excavaciones.
"Siempre hay un record del pasado que tenemos que comparar. Digo uno sabe que en verdad, el agua va a ser el recurso más valuable en el futuro, no el gas natural."
El Departamento de Administración de Tierras dice que el permiso propuesto por HEYCO de Roswell para el pozo incluye restricciones adecuadas para proteger la fauna, flora y agua del lugar. Pero Bixby dice que otorgar este permiso es como darle una cachetada a la propuesta estatal que daría protección adicional a varias áreas de Otero Mesa.
El caso entre el estado y el Departamento de Administración de Tierras se encuentra pendiente y en espera de la decisión en una corte de apelación en Denver. La Ciudad de las Cruces y El Paso, Texas, recientemente pasaron resoluciones que hacen un llamado para la protección del área de la Mesa.
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A round of public testimony wrapped up this week as part of renewed efforts by a company seeking permit approval in North Dakota for an underground pipeline carrying carbon emissions. Economic benefits were again touted but the plan still has opponents.
Last year, North Dakota's Public Service Commission denied a permit request from Summit Carbon Solutions, which wants to build a maze of pipelines in several Midwestern states. Emissions from ethanol plants would be captured for underground storage in North Dakota.
Skott Skokos, executive director of the Dakota Resource Council, said they remain unconvinced it would be a worthwhile project.
"It felt like déjà vu," Skokos observed. "I don't think Summit did anything to relax the concerns of the public."
Company officials have submitted a new application with a revised route as they try to ease concerns about safety and landowner rights. During comment periods, Summit leaders and other speakers discussed how the project would provide economic boosts, including corn prices. However, skeptics restated their concerns about potential ruptures and lasting negative effects on the landscape.
Skokos pointed out large carbon-capture projects like these have yet to prove themselves, noting smaller initiatives are not as likely to rile up opponents. He pointed to the Red Trail ethanol plant in North Dakota.
"They're storing it, basically, almost on-site, next to the facility and they're not affecting a bunch of landowners in the process," Skokos emphasized.
The Summit regulatory case has two upcoming public hearings in North Dakota, one scheduled for May 24 and the other on June 4. The company has run into similar opposition and permitting headwinds in other states, including South Dakota.
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Leaders concerned about pollution and climate change are raising awareness about a ballot measure this fall on whether the state should mandate buffer zones around new oil and gas wells.
Voters will be asked to uphold or revoke Senate Bill 1173, which would require a 3,200 setback around any new well near schools, neighborhoods and hospitals.
Meghan Sahli-Wells, former mayor of Culver City and a leader with the group Elected Officials to Protect America, fought to phase out the Inglewood oil field and said no community should be a sacrifice zone.
"A study from Harvard found that in California 34,000 people have died in 2018, prematurely from fossil fuel air pollution," Sahli-Wells pointed out. "These figures are three times higher than other studies."
The Stop the Energy Shutdown campaign, supported by the California Independent Petroleum Association, opposes the setback rule, arguing it could constrict local supply and cost jobs in the industry. A court put the bill on hold pending the outcome of the November election. A "yes" vote would keep the setbacks. A "no" vote would rescind them.
Clean energy advocates are also speaking out against companies operating older low-producing wells rather than pay to shut them down and seal them up properly.
Ahmad Zahra, a city council member in Fullerton, said Assembly Bill 2716 would incentivize their closure by charging companies $10,000 a day to operate so-called "stripper wells."
"We have over 40,000 oil wells currently sitting orphaned or idle, leaking methane and volatile organic compounds into the air, water and soil," Zahra emphasized.
Other states are following California's lead. Rep. Debbie Sariñana, D-Albuquerque, New Mexico, is sponsoring a bill to require setbacks near sensitive locations since more than 32,000 children in the state attend school within a mile of an oil and gas extraction site.
"Over 80 schools in northwestern New Mexico, where the San Juan Basin and the southeastern New Mexico the Permian Basin, are within one mile of an oil and gas well," Sariñana noted. "Some schools are surrounded by dozens and even hundreds of wells within a single mile."
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The construction of more solar farms in the U.S. has been contentious but a new survey shows their size makes a difference in whether solar projects are favored by neighbors.
South Dakota's largest solar installation, the Wild Springs project in New Underwood, began operations in March and covers more than 1.5 square miles. The survey showed projects under 100 megawatts are generally favored by neighbors, while larger ones like Wild Springs are unpopular.
Kristi Pritzkau, finance officer for the City of New Underwood, said the construction traffic was tough on the town of just over 600 but the project's builder, National Grid Renewables, is giving back to the community.
"They had to use our well, so they paid for the water, and they paid for a new pump for it, too," Pritzkau pointed out. "They've been really great with the city."
Prtizkau noted the company donated to the town's pool and Lions Club and has created a school scholarship program, all part of the more than $500,000 of charitable giving it has promised in the project's first 20 years of operation. It is also expected to bring in $12 million of tax revenue to the county in the same time frame.
Sioux Falls-based Missouri River Energy Services has plans to build a new solar project near Brookings and build a transmission line from South Dakota into Minnesota.
Tim Blodgett, vice president of member services and communications for the company, said federal grant programs and tax credits provide incentives and South Dakota produces more energy than it can use.
"With the development of more wind, the development of solar, there's a lot planned right now to get these resources out of this area," Blodgett explained. "Into Minneapolis and other places where there's larger demand for the energy."
Currently, more than half the state's power generation comes from wind, followed by hydropower.
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