We, the undersigned, write respectfully to request that your Department of Environmental Conservation issue a Supplemental Findings Statement to revise its definition of high-volume hydraulic fracturing (HVHF) to prohibit all forms of shale fracking in New York, not just HVHF based on "300,000 or more gallons of water."
Our request is critically important because DEC received a gas well permit application on April 24, 2015 to frack Marcellus shale using gelled propane instead of water in Tioga County. Since then, there have been many exchanges between DEC and the applicant.
Your administration clearly knew that its HVHF definition was inadequate to implement the No-Action decision in the Findings Statement issued on June 29, 2015.
Given that shortcoming, we request that you take immediate action to fulfill the shale fracking prohibition specified in the Findings Statement:
"Based on unavoidable adverse environmental impacts and uncertainty regarding the science surrounding high-volume hydraulic fracturing and its potential impacts to public health and the environment, the Department finds that the best course of action is to select the No Action alternative. Selection of the No Action alternative means that the Department will not establish a high-volume hydraulic fracturing permitting program; that no individual or site-specific permit applications for wells using high-volume hydraulic fracturing will be processed; and that high-volume hydraulic fracturing will be prohibited in New York State (emphasis added)."
See PDF page 42 at: http://www.dec.ny.gov/docs/materials_minerals_pdf/findingstatehvhf62015.pdf
DEC's No-Action decision reflects a determination that non-water HVHF associated with the “environmentally-friendly chemical approach," including "Liquid CO2," "Nitrogen-based foam" and " Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG)," "all fail to limit unavoidable adverse environmental impacts and fail to address the risks and uncertainties of high-volume hydraulic fracturing."
Yet, the Findings Statement's HVHF definition excludes those fracking methods because it is limited to:
"the stimulation of a well using 300,000 or more gallons of water (emphasis added) as the base fluid for hydraulic fracturing for all stages in a well completion, regardless of whether the well is vertical or directional, including horizontal."
We request that the definition of HVHF prohibit the use of gelled propane proposed in Tioga County by specifically barring the use of "water or any other substances" as the base fluid for hydraulic fracking proposed for Marcellus Shale in New York.
We also request that the definition of "high-volume" hydraulic fracking be revised from 300,000 or more gallons for all stages of a well completion to 5,000 or more gallons for any stage of a well completion.
Given those concerns, New York's definition of HVHF should be:
"High-volume hydraulic fracturing is defined as the stimulation of a well using 5,000 [300,000] or more gallons of water or any other substances as the base fluid for hydraulic fracturing for any [all] stage[s]in a well completion, regardless of whether the well is vertical or directional, including horizontal, in Marcellus Shale and other low-permeability gas reservoirs. The 5,000 [300,000]-gallon threshold is the sum of all water or any other substances, fresh and recycled, used for any [all] stage[s] in a well completion. Well stimulation requiring less than 5,000 [300,000] gallons of water or any other substances as the base fluid for hydraulic fracturing for any [all] stage[s] in a well completion is not considered high-volume, and will continue to be reviewed and permitted pursuant to the 1992 GEIS, and 1992 and 1993 Findings Statements, but not for Marcellus Shale and other low-permeability gas reservoirs."
Adopting this revised definition is critical to implementing your administration's final conclusion regarding HVHF:
"Consistent with the social, economic and other essential considerations from among the reasonable alternatives available, the No-Action alternative avoids adverse environmental impacts to the maximum extent practicable; including impacts disclosed in the supplemental environmental impact statement..."
We trust that you will find our request self-explanatory, but please do not hesitate to contact us if you have any questions that we might be able to answer.
Thank you very much for your consideration.
Very respectfully yours,
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Kora von Wittelsbach
Dr.
120 Uris Hall, CIES, Cornell University
Ithaca, NY |
Edythe Ann Quinn
903 County Hwy 3
Unadilla, NY |
Scott MacDonald
Professor
Hamilton College
5 Sherman St.
New Hartford, NY |
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Jo Clayson
842 PHILLIP RD
FORT PLAIN, New York |
Kathy Luz Herrera
116 Utica St
ITHACA, NY New York |
Randolph Hurst
Chairman, Sierra Club Atlantic Chapter Ramapo/Catskill Conservation Group Committee
Sierra Club Atlantic Chapter, Protect Orange County
83 Post Road
Slate Hill, NY |
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Heide Stuebel-Horowitz
820 w king rd
Ithaca, NY |
Rosemary Taylor
811 Bon Air Rd
Lansing, MI |
David Sibley
2 Dove Dr.
Ithaca, NY |
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Leyana Dessauer
1 Mead Way
Bronxville, NY |
Suzanne Massa
306 Wood Street
Ithaca, NY |
Brock Gibian
1014 State Route 34B
KING FERRY, New York |
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Lydian Green
8202 Rte 96
Interlaken, New York 14847 |
Candice Dunn
PO BOX 1058
Margaretville, NY |
Sue Heavenrich
115 Hubbard Hill Rd
Candor, NY |
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John Rees
3058 slaterville road
Brooktondale, Ny |
Travis Knapp
209 park hill rd
Erin, Ny |
Matty Termotto
130 East Court St.
Ithaca, NY |
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Cornelia Wathen
24 Woodland Road
Stone Ridge, NY |
Melanie Steinberg
302 Clinton Street
Penn Yan, NY |
Carol Rathbun
Nunda, NY |
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Susan Sarabasha
PAUSE
311 Tupper Rd
W Danby, NY |
Rita Calvo
110 Cobb St.
Ithaca, New York |
Nancy and Conrad Istock
41 Horizon Dr.
Ithaca, New York |
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Judith Johnson
po box 624
croton on hudson, NY 10520 |
Susann Argetsinger
556 KIMBALL HILL RD
WHITEFIELD, NH |
Satah Knowles
8 river lane
Brookhaven, Ny |
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Don Klein
National speleological society
4826 Richardson road
Skaneateles , Ny |
Treva Levine
8 Hunters Lane
Ithaca, NY |
Lisa Bhattacharji
Ms.
57 Park Terrace East B16
New York, New Yoek |
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Elizabeth Adam
127 West 82nd Street #7A
NYC, NY |
Miriam Greenbrger
205 east 77th street
new york, ny |
hayya mintz
740 comfort rd
spencer, ny |
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William McKnight
President & Chief Building Science Professional
Energy Conservation Specialists, LLC
188 Broadway
Port Ewen, New York |
Priscilla Herbik
5029 Wyffels Rd
Canandaigua, NY |
Ann Woodroe
4188 Tommy's Trail
Liverpool, NY |
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Ruth Hardinger
Damascsus Citizens for Sustainability
20 N Moore St
New York, NY |
T. Gorman
Stop the Pipeline
180 Vernon Ave
Middletown, RI |
Kara Falcone
537 Oquaga Lake Rd.
Deposit, New York |
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James-Henry Holland
65 Jay Street
Geneva, NY |
Graciela Abelin
MD
300 Central Park West
New York, NY- NEW YORK |
john schickler
22 twin circle drive
rochester, new york |
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carol tansey
115 krumkill rd.
albany, ny |
Edith Spaulding
2099 Ellis Hollow Rd
Ithaca, NY |
Leslie Jenney
132 Northview Rd.
Ithaca, New York |
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Edward A. Ehinger
1117 Lake Como Road
Cortland, New York 13045 |
Trina Bruno
153 east king rd
ithaca, ny |
Charles Gibson
President
Friends of the Montezuma Wetlands Complex
162 Canal St.
Lyons, NY |
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Dominique Bischoff-Brown
444 Roosevelt Rd
Centre Island, NY |
Mary Donch
45 May Street #6A
New Rochelle, NY |