PITTSBURGH (AP) — As a natural gas drilling boom sweeps
Pennsylvania and other states, conservation groups are debating whether
it makes sense to work with the industry to minimize impacts to the
environment — and whether to accept industry donations.
The big
question is "how to deal with this overwhelming impact," said Phil
Wallis, executive director of the Pennsylvania chapter of the Audubon
Society, adding that the industry "in general, is interested in
resolving these issues."
The drilling technique known as hydraulic
fracturing, or fracking, has made it possible to tap into deep reserves
of oil and gas but has also raised concerns about pollution. Large
volumes of water, along with sand and hazardous chemicals, are injected
underground to break rock apart and free the oil and gas.
Over the
past five years thousands of new wells have been drilled across
Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Ohio, and hundreds of miles of pipeline
have been laid to transport the gas to market. And that's just a
snapshot of a similar boom in Texas, Colorado and other states.
Wallis
and the Pennsylvania Audubon chapter discovered that even casual
conversations with the drilling industry can generate controversy.
In
August, Audubon partnered with the Marcellus Shale Coalition, an
industry group, and the Ruffed Grouse Society to hold a series of
gatherings for birdwatchers, anglers, hunters and hikers to ask
questions about drilling. The meetings didn't attract much notice until
it emerged that some had discussed whether the industry might donate $30
million to set up an endowment to fund research on drilling impacts.
The idea of donations "came up several times," said Don Williams, a Harleysville, Pa. resident.
"It
caught me completely off guard. I see that as somehow basically
latching on and riding the coattails of the industry," Williams said.
"The message itself bothered me."
After Williams wrote a blog post
about the meeting, Audubon quickly responded that there had been no
decision to seek gas drilling donations. Wallis said the $30 million was
just a hypothetical number about funding a research project on drilling
that a number of conservation groups might provide staff for.
Williams
said a representative of Chesapeake Energy was at the meeting, acting
as more of a general industry representative. Chesapeake spokesman Rory
Sweeny declined to comment on whether the company is donating to any
environmental groups.
Two more public meetings with outdoor groups
are scheduled for December, said Steve Forde, a spokesman for the
Marcellus Shale Coalition.
"The sportsmen and conservation
communities are an important part of Pennsylvania's heritage and key
partners in responsible shale gas development," Forde wrote in an email.
But he added that the coalition hasn't discussed donations with any of
the outdoor groups that helped set up the sessions.
It's a
sensitive issue. Earlier this year, the Sierra Club acknowledged that
from 2007 to 2010 it had secretly accepted more than $26 million from
individuals or subsidies connected to Chesapeake. After deciding it
would no longer take such donations, the group launched a campaign that
is critical of the gas drilling industry.
Environmental groups and
some scientists say there hasn't been enough research on water and air
pollution issues that stem from drilling. The industry and many federal
and state officials say the practice is safe when done properly, and
that many rules on air pollution and disclosure of the chemicals used in
fracking are being strengthened.
Sitting down with people in the
gas drilling industry makes sense, said Mark Brownstein, the chief
counsel for the energy program at the Environmental Defense Fund.
"If
environmental groups who are both passionate and knowledgeable fail to
engage the natural gas industry, who will?" Brownstein asked. "If we
simply sit and protest, we're missing an opportunity" to create stronger
regulations.
Some conservation groups are finding that they can't avoid the industry.
The
Audubon Society of Western Pennsylvania owns or has easements to about
500 acres of land in the region, and drilling company representatives
have approached them numerous times, according to executive director Jim
Bonner.
Bonner said the chapter decided that current regulations
aren't strong enough to meet their standards for environmental
protection, so they haven't signed any gas leases. But they're not
rejecting the idea.
"We kind of put up the mirror, and said, we
are consumers of gas," and that it would be hypocritical to not try to
understand all the pros and cons around drilling, and Audubon's place in
the debate.
"If a company came to us and said we've developed a
process that does not use any chemicals, we would probably almost feel
obliged to consider that, if only to help demonstrate a best practice
could be developed," Bonner said. "We all agree that energy is needed.
I'd love to think that we can extract it better here than somewhere else
around the world."
John Eichinger, president of the Ruffed Grouse
Society, hopes the discussions with the drilling industry lead to some
changes. He thinks the Marcellus Shale Coalition may support some of the
suggestions that conservation groups made for stricter regulations.