Claudette Konola
 
Sometimes I feel like I’m pushing a string uphill when I talk about protecting our local air, water, and soil. The oil and gas industry has the people of Happy Valley convinced that everything they do is safe. The also seem to have the Governor convinced. They are aided and abetted by the local media and even some national media.

Governor Hickenlooper has been catching heat from Colorado environmentalists about appearing in an ad paid for by the industry group that supports the oil and gas industry. In that ad, Hickenlooper leaves viewers believing that nothing bad ever happens as the result of oil and gas activities. So far 13 environmental groups have signed on to a letter informing the Governor of the spills and leaks that are posted at his own agency’s website.

There are thousands of spills reported at the COG CC website; they are searchable by various criteria including operator and lease. For your convenience, and to illustrate the point, I did a search of all, but limited the search to 10 reports. Look to see if groundwater was ever threatened, the results of my search are linked below.

Hickenlooper then went on the radio to double down on how safe fracking is. He claimed he drank some fracking fluid and lived to tell about it. He probably did. There are fracking fluids that are sourced from food products. The next time you think about how fluids sourced from food products couldn’t possibly be bad for Colorado’s water, think about drinking water that has had a cheeseburger floating in it for days.

The green fracking fluids have been mandated for use in off-shore wells for years. But they aren’t mandated for use in wells in Colorado. They are more expensive than the more traditional toxic chemicals that are being used on most Colorado wells. If it is voluntary, industry is going to maximize their profit by using the more toxic chemicals instead of the food sourced products.

Just to add insult to injury, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration just released a report that indicates that our air is being polluted more than previously thought by oil and gas activity. They were monitoring air as a matter of routine along the Front Range, when they started detecting “plumes of air rich with chemical pollutants including the potent greenhouse gas methane.”  There are eight testing programs across the U.S. and none of them were detecting anything close to the concentrations detected in Colorado.

An atmospheric scientist, Gabrielle Petron, said "So we set out to figure out where these chemicals were coming from, by going from the tower measurements 1,000 feet high up, down to the ground in a mobile laboratory. We found gas operations in the region leaked about twice as much methane into the atmosphere as previously estimated … And the oil and gas infrastructure was leaking other air pollutants, too, including benzene, which is regulated because of its toxicity."

During the testing period, there were 14, 000 wells operating in the area. To be fair, there were also automobiles and trucks operating in the vicinity. This study recorded  benzene emissions from oil and gas operations at levels significantly higher than expected, “between 385 and 2,055 metric tons in 2008, compared with earlier estimates ranging from about 60 to 145 per year.”  

I’m just like everyone else on this planet. I drive a car. I heat my home in winter and cool it in summer. But I’m not willing to stick my head in the sand about the damage it is causing our air and water. I’ve decided to install solar panels on my home in order to get more of the energy I use directly from the sun. And I will continue to push that string up a hill. If we want this planet to be livable for future generations, we need to do more to protect the air we breathe and the water we drink.

Homework

10 out of thousands of reported spills reported to COGCC

NOAA Story

Get the Published Study
 
 
A couple of things caught my eye this morning, and made me ask if common sense was finally taking over. One was a Politico story about Grover Norquist and Tom Coburn fighting over tax hikes. The other is Udall and Hatch in the Senate and Hickenlooper in Colorado trying to merge departments in order to reduce costs.

Norquist is famous for asking politicians to sign a pledge to never vote to raise taxes. Almost all Republicans have signed this pledge over the years. All politicians are asked to sign it. In my case I declined to sign it because TABOR already limits the ability to raise taxes without a vote of the people, so the only vote I would ever cast on raising taxes would be as a citizen, not as a politician. It seemed superfluous.

Coburn is a signor on the pledge, but he has come to the realization that the U.S. can’t retire $14-trillion in debt without increasing revenue. We can’t cut spending fast enough or grow the economy fast enough to raise the kind of money it takes to make payments on $14-trillion. And to add insult to injury, that expense is going to be increasing as interest rates go up. So Coburn, and two other Republican legislators are exchanging letters with Norquist suggesting that a tax increase should be on the table.

Hickenlooper and Udall are looking at other ways to find savings in government programs.

Hickenlooper has proposed that two departments merge. The idea is that if the state Division of Wildlife merges with the state parks system, duplicative efforts like planning, vehicle acquisition and maintenance, and accounting could reduce expenses. The benefit to a consumer is that they can get a camping permit and a fishing license at the same place under the merged entities.

Udall and Hatch have proposed a new committee to look for government waste. A Sentinel story today notes there are “80 economic development programs, 44 employment and training programs and five agencies within the Department of Transportation that operate 100 surface-transportation programs.” I know a little about the 80 economic development programs. People in the industry find reporting to be a nightmare because each of the 80 programs expects different information to be included in reports. Designing information tracking systems with so many different data points is a daunting task for not-for-profits who are always operating on a shoestring. Having one agency and one report would be a real savings on both sides of the transaction.

In each of these stories the politicians stepped outside of their stereotypes and into common sense driven leadership roles. Coburn is hardly a tax and spend liberal, but he sees the need to increase revenues in order to get the budget deficits and long term debt under control. Udall is an environmentalist who sees the need to cut waste in government. Hickenlooper is deploying business principles to reorganize government in a more efficient way. Common Sense is breaking out all over!

Homework

Coburn Norquist Fight

Hickenlooper Wants to Merge Agencies

Sentinel Report on Udall Hatch Proposal