Current:Home > StocksPennsylvania to partner with natural gas driller on in-depth study of air emissions, water quality-VaTradeCoin
Pennsylvania to partner with natural gas driller on in-depth study of air emissions, water quality
View Date:2025-01-19 10:20:00
The state of Pennsylvania will work with a major natural gas producer to collect in-depth data on air emissions and water quality at well sites, enhance public disclosure of drilling chemicals and expand buffer zones, officials announced Thursday, touting the collaboration as the first of its kind.
CNX Resources Corp., based in Canonsburg, will partner with the state Department of Environmental Protection on environmental monitoring at two future well sites throughout all stages of the drilling and fracking process — an intensive data-collection exercise that could be used to drive future policy changes.
CNX will also report air quality data on a new website, beginning with one of its existing wells in Washington County, in the state’s southwest corner, and eventually expanding to its entire Pennsylvania operation. The company has drilled more than 500 wells in the vast Marcellus Shale natural gas field.
The announcement comes amid ongoing concerns about the potential environmental and health effects of fracking, and more than three years after a grand jury concluded that state regulators had failed to properly oversee the state’s huge gas-drilling industry.
Gov. Josh Shapiro was set to appear with Nick Deiuliis, CNX’s president and CEO, at a news conference in Washington County later Thursday. State officials say they expect the program to “definitively measure” emissions at well sites.
Deiuliis told The Associated Press he expects the data to show that natural gas extraction is safe when done right.
At the same time, Deiuliis said in a phone interview, “I’m expecting to learn things through this radical transparency and the data that are going to come from it, and I expect many of those learnings are going to result in tweaks and refinements and improvements to the way we go about manufacturing natural gas responsibly.”
Shapiro, a Democrat in his first term as governor, was the state’s attorney general in 2020 when a grand jury concluded after a two-year investigation that state regulators had failed to prevent Pennsylvania’s natural gas drilling industry from sickening people and poisoning air and water. The panel issued eight recommendations, including the expansion of buffer zones, the public disclosure of drilling chemicals, and more accurate measurements of air quality.
None of the recommendations has been enacted legislatively.
Shapiro’s administration spent months in talks with CNX on the data-collection program unveiled Thursday, and hopes to persuade other gas drillers to follow.
Under its agreement with the state, CNX will also disclose the chemicals to be used at a well site before the start of drilling and fracking. It will also expand setbacks from the state-required 500 feet (152 meters) to 600 feet (183 meters) at all drilling sites, and increase them to 2500 feet (762 meters) for schools, hospitals and other sensitive sites during the data-collection period.
Pennsylvania is the nation’s No. 2 gas-producing state after Texas.
Energy companies like CNX combine horizontal drilling with hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, a technique that injects vast amounts of water, along with sand and chemicals, underground to break up the gas-bearing shale. The drilling methods spurred a U.S. production boom in shale gas and oil, while raising concerns about air and water quality as well as potential health effects.
Children who lived closer to natural gas wells in heavily drilled western Pennsylvania were more likely to develop a relatively rare form of cancer, and nearby residents of all ages had an increased chance of severe asthma reactions, researchers at the University of Pittsburgh said in a pair of reports released in August. The researchers were unable to say whether the drilling caused the health problems.
veryGood! (56594)
Related
- Louisiana man kills himself and his 1-year-old daughter after a pursuit
- The missing submersible was run by a video game controller. Is that normal?
- Rules allow transgender woman at Wyoming chapter, and a court can't interfere, sorority says
- As the Culture Wars Flare Amid the Pandemic, a Call to Speak ‘Science to Power’
- Avril Lavigne’s Ex Mod Sun Is Dating Love Is Blind Star Brittany Wisniewski, Debuts Romance With a Kiss
- What we know about the tourist sub that disappeared on an expedition to the Titanic
- Keystone XL Pipeline Has Enough Oil Suppliers, Will Be Built, TransCanada Says
- College Baseball Player Angel Mercado-Ocasio Dead at 19 After Field Accident
- AP Top 25: Oregon remains No. 1 as Big Ten grabs 4 of top 5 spots; Georgia, Miami out of top 10
- With Tactics Honed on Climate Change, Ken Cuccinelli Turned to the Portland Streets
Ranking
- South Carolina lab recaptures 5 more escaped monkeys but 13 are still loose
- Kim Kardashian Reacts to Kanye West Accusing Her of Cheating With Drake
- Heidi Klum Handles Nip Slip Like a Pro During Cannes Film Festival 2023
- The Texas Legislature approves a ban on gender-affirming care for minors
- MLS playoff teams set: Road to MLS Cup continues with conference semifinals
- Kim Kardashian Reveals the Surprising Feature in a Man That's One of Her Biggest Turn Ons
- Sagebrush Rebel Picked for Public Lands Post Sparks Controversy in Mountain West Elections
- Your First Look at E!'s Black Pop: Celebrating the Power of Black Culture
Recommendation
-
Missing Ole Miss student declared legally dead as trial for man accused in his death looms
-
How Drag Queen Icon Divine Inspired The Little Mermaid's Ursula
-
Avoid mailing your checks, experts warn. Here's what's going on with the USPS.
-
We asked, you answered: How do you feel about the end of the COVID-19 'emergency'
-
COINIXIAI Introduce
-
How Federal Giveaways to Big Coal Leave Ranchers and Taxpayers Out in the Cold
-
Post Roe V. Wade, A Senator Wants to Make Birth Control Access Easier — and Affordable
-
Scientists zap sleeping humans' brains with electricity to improve their memory