A PennEnvironment Re-search & Policy Center 
report has identified more than a dozen categories of hidden costs -- 
including aquifer contamination, human health problems and damage to 
roadways, home values and natural resources -- linked to Marcellus Shale
 gas development in Pennsylvania.
    
    
The report, released Thursday in
 Pittsburgh as Gov. Tom Corbett was welcoming the industry at the 
Marcellus Shale Coalition's second annual conference in Philadelphia, 
also stated that bonding amounts required by the state will be 
inadequate to cover long-term future costs of plugging abandoned wells.
    
    
"There
 are a staggering array of threats to the environment posed by Marcellus
 Shale gas development and myriad costs," said Erika Staaf of 
PennEnvironment, a statewide advocacy organization. "We're advocating a 
moratorium on drilling until additional safeguards and appropriate 
bonding is put in place."
    
    
PennEnvironment is one of a half-dozen 
organizations advocating a halt to drilling at a demonstration, 
scheduled for 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., today, on Flagstaff Hill in Schenley 
Park, Oakland.
    
    
Travis Windle, a Marcellus Shale Coalition 
spokesman, said the report was an attempt by PennEnvironment to stoke 
anti-drilling publicity.
    
    
"In truth, tightly regulated natural gas 
development is done responsibly, while helping to create tens of 
thousands of jobs and much-needed energy savings for consumers," Mr. 
Windle said. "The air quality benefits tied to expanded natural gas use 
are also undeniable."
    
    
According to the report, drilling 
activities, including hydraulic fracturing or "fracking," have damaged 
drinking water supplies, roads and bridges, increased the need for 
police, education and social services, fragmented state forests, 
impacted human health and released methane gas that contributes to 
global warming.
    
    
The state announced last week that Pennsylvania 
drillers paid $197.6 million in the first round of Marcellus Shale 
impact fees, exceeding legislative estimates, but the report said those 
fees fall far short of covering all costs.
    
    
"There are economic 
benefits from shale drilling but not when the external costs are 
factored in," said Bridget Coyne, an attorney from Ligonier. "Those 
economic impacts are being felt by people like my neighbors who were 
sickened by toxic fumes from a nearby drilling operation that seeped 
into their basement. They're bearing the true cost of drilling."
The
 report also says that the state's well bonding program is inadequate to
 cover long-term costs of plugging shale gas wells once they stop 
producing. It cites a report that Cabot Oil & Gas spent $730,000 to 
cap three shale gas wells in Susquehanna County.
    
    
The state 
requires drillers to post a $10,000 bond per well and recently increased
 the "blanket bond" amount, covering all wells a company drills in the 
state, to $625,000 from $25,000.
    
    
Patrick Henderson, the Corbett 
administration's energy executive, said the state bond amounts are 
"among the highest in the nation for on-shore drilling" and, under the 
state mining law, Act 13, well operators are required to pay all costs 
associated with properly plugging a well, including those above the bond
 amount.
    
    
"While [the Department of Environmental Protection] has 
never had to require the forfeiture of an unconventional well bond, 
should the occasion arise, it is important to understand that any and 
all assets of an operator may also be forfeited -- in addition to the 
bond -- to ensure that the well is plugged, the environment is 
protected, and taxpayers do not foot the bill," he said.
on the web
    
    
For more on Marcellus Shale, visit post-gazette.com/pipeline
    
      
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