Skip to content
Marcellus Drilling News
Account Login
  • Home
  • About
  • Article Index
  • Calendar
  • Advertising
  • User Guide
  • SUBSCRIBE
Marcellus Drilling News
  • Broome County | Delaware County | Energy Companies | Industrywide Issues | New York | Regulation | XTO

    DRBC Hearing in Deposit, NY Today – JLCNY Encourages Gas Drilling Supporters to Attend

    June 1, 2011June 1, 2011

    drbc_logoThe Delaware River Basin Commission (DRBC) will hold a hearing today in Deposit, NY to consider an application from XTO Energy to withdraw up to .25 million gallons of water per day from the Oquaga Creek in the Town of Sanford, NY. The water withdrawals are to support XTO’s drilling activities—both exploration and production—in Broome and Delaware Counties (NY). Bear in mind drilling has not yet begun in New York, and further, the DRBC has not yet released drilling guidelines for the area they oversee which includes parts of the Marcellus Shale region in both New York and Pennsylvania.

    If the DRBC approves the water withdrawal, that is a good first step for those who support drilling, and (perhaps) a signal that the DRBC will allow drilling to commence soon in Pennsylvania in those areas it controls. (The DRBC has not allowed any drilling in the Marcellus areas under its jurisdiction in PA.)

    For more details about today’s DRBC hearing in Deposit, visit this web page: //www.state.nj.us/drbc/XTOEnergy.htm. MDN has embedded the hearing docket below that contains the particulars of XTO’s application to the DRBC.

    The following email notification about today’s meeting was received by MDN last evening from the Joint Landowners Coalition of New York (JLCNY).

    Read More “DRBC Hearing in Deposit, NY Today – JLCNY Encourages Gas Drilling Supporters to Attend”

  • Hydraulic Fracturing | Industrywide Issues | Litigation | New York | Regulation | Statewide NY

    NY Attorney General Sues the Federal Government Over Fracking

    June 1, 2011June 1, 2011

    In an attempt to stop Marcellus Shale drilling in New York by using the court system, NY Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman announced on Tuesday that he is suing the federal government “to commit to a full environmental review of proposed regulations that would allow natural gas drilling – including the potentially harmful "fracking" technique – in the Delaware River Basin.” AG Schneiderman made his initial threat last month (see MDN’s coverage here). The AG’s announcement seems timed to coincide with a hearing set for today by the Delaware River Basin Commission to consider an application to withdraw water for drilling purposes.

    The press statement from the AG’s office (full text below) contains unsubstantiated allegations that fracking poses risks and threats to the environment—the same recitation of inaccurate claims we’ve heard time and again from those who seek an outright ban on gas drilling. It also presumes it is the federal government’s role to regulate drilling—which under current law, it is not. Those who oppose drilling seek to regulate it using the “back door” of the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA), the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and other federal laws. This lawsuit seeks to push a federal takeover of drilling by regulating and controlling it at the federal level.

    Read More “NY Attorney General Sues the Federal Government Over Fracking”

  • Hydraulic Fracturing | Industrywide Issues | Regulation

    EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson Likes Natural Gas, But Isn’t So Sure About Fracking

    June 1, 2011June 1, 2011

    Federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Lisa Jackson made a passing reference to natural gas and hydraulic fracturing at a Congressional hearing last week. Both anti- and pro-drilling supporters felt she leaned in their respective direction. Here is what has been reported about her comments:

    Read More “EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson Likes Natural Gas, But Isn’t So Sure About Fracking”

  • Hydraulic Fracturing | Industrywide Issues | New York | Statewide NY

    Daily News Columnist Tells New Yorkers to Get a Grip and Stop Freaking Out About Fracking

    June 1, 2011June 1, 2011

    Columnist Bill Hammond in the New York Daily News has some advice for his fellow New Yorkers: Stop freaking about fracking. In a column published Tuesday, Hammond says, among other things:

    Read More “Daily News Columnist Tells New Yorkers to Get a Grip and Stop Freaking Out About Fracking”

  • Antero Resources | Energy Companies

    Antero Resources Investing an Extra $126 Million in 2011 – Most of it for Marcellus Shale Drilling

    June 1, 2011June 1, 2011

    The Antero Resources board of directors approved a $126 million increase in the company’s capital budget for 2011. Antero’s revised capital budget for 2011 is $685 million and includes $519 million for drilling and completion, $86 million for the construction of gathering pipelines and facilities and $80 million for leasehold acquisitions. The budget was revised to fund increased drilling in core areas in the Marcellus and Piceance, the expansion of gathering infrastructure in the Marcellus and the acquisition of additional leasehold opportunities in Antero’s core area in the Marcellus. The $126 million increase was allocated 53% to drilling, 35% to gathering pipeline expansion and 12% to leasehold.

    Read More “Antero Resources Investing an Extra $126 Million in 2011 – Most of it for Marcellus Shale Drilling”

  • Coterra Energy (Cabot O&G) | Energy Companies | Pennsylvania | Statewide PA

    Cabot Oil & Gas Boosts Marcellus Gas Output 35% in a Single Day with Compressor Plant Upgrades

    May 31, 2011May 31, 2011

    Cabot Oil & Gas recently boosted it’s daily output of natural gas from the Marcellus in Northeastern PA by a full 35 percent in just 24 hours when new sections of a compressor station went online. Cabot is now producing 420 million cubic feet (Mmcf) of natural gas per day from the Marcellus—up from 310 Mmcf. They also have two new wells producing nearly 30 Mmcf per day each—a new daily high in output for single wells for Cabot.

    Read More “Cabot Oil & Gas Boosts Marcellus Gas Output 35% in a Single Day with Compressor Plant Upgrades”

  • Energy Companies | Pennsylvania | Southwestern Energy | Susquehanna County

    Southwestern Energy Plans to Drill Marcellus Shale Wells on Property Bordering Former Hazardous Waste Dump in N.E. PA

    May 31, 2011May 31, 2011

    Southwestern Energy plans to construct a well pad and drill six to eight Marcellus Shale wells on the border of a former hazardous waste landfill in New Milford (Susquehanna County), PA. A local group has started a letter-writing campaign to stop the project.

    Read More “Southwestern Energy Plans to Drill Marcellus Shale Wells on Property Bordering Former Hazardous Waste Dump in N.E. PA”

  • Pennsylvania | Statewide PA

    Is PA Sitting on the Largest Natural Gas Reserves in the World?

    May 31, 2011May 31, 2011

    Interesting comments about the scope of natural gas reserves in both the Marcellus and Utica Shales under Pennsylvania, from a state DEP official:

    Read More “Is PA Sitting on the Largest Natural Gas Reserves in the World?”

  • Brooke County | Industrywide Issues | Ohio County | Roads | Statewide WV | West Virginia

    Road Damage from Gas Drilling in WV Overwhelms Highway Department

    May 31, 2011May 31, 2011

    Road damage from truck traffic to Marcellus Shale drilling sites has overwhelmed the West Virginia Department of Highways (DOH) ability to respond, according to one DOH official.

    Read More “Road Damage from Gas Drilling in WV Overwhelms Highway Department”

  • Industrywide Issues | New York | Regulation | Statewide NY

    NY Gov. Cuomo Orders DEC Commissioner Joe Martens to Get New Drilling Guidelines Done by July 1

    May 30, 2011May 30, 2011

    kick-in-rearIn an interesting development, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has sent along marching orders to the Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) to complete the next version of the draft Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement (dSGEIS)—the new guidelines to be used in drilling in the Marcellus Shale in New York—by July 1st. The previous deadline was a soft deadline issued by former Gov. David Paterson of “on or about June 1st.” The new deadline issued by Cuomo is July 1st—no waffling. Cuomo has also instructed the DEC to visit a well blowout site in Bradford County, PA to see what can be learned and incorporated into the final document from that accident.

    Read More “NY Gov. Cuomo Orders DEC Commissioner Joe Martens to Get New Drilling Guidelines Done by July 1”

  • Economic Impact | Industrywide Issues | Jobs | Pennsylvania | Statewide PA

    PA Hires 48,000 People in Past 12 Months to Work in Marcellus Shale Drilling Industry

    May 30, 2011May 30, 2011

    The  Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry has just released new employment data and with it, the number of people hired in the past 12 months to work in the Marcellus Shale drilling industry. And the numbers are startling:

    Read More “PA Hires 48,000 People in Past 12 Months to Work in Marcellus Shale Drilling Industry”

  • Industrywide Issues | Lease & Royalty Payments | Wealth Management

    Money Problems for Landowners with Marcellus Shale Lease & Royalty Payments

    May 30, 2011May 30, 2011

    The new wealth that leasing and drilling in the Marcellus Shale brings on, can also bring on a new set of challenges for landowners, many of whom are farmers who have struggled to pay the bills for years.

    A case in point are the issues faced when there are multiple owners of a family farm, as told by Stuart “Buzz” Hutchison, an estate and trust attorney:

    Read More “Money Problems for Landowners with Marcellus Shale Lease & Royalty Payments”

  • MDN Weekly Update

    MDN Weekly Update – May 29, 2011

    May 29, 2011May 29, 2011

    poll resultsThank you to those who voted in last week’s online poll. Here are the results:

    Should Marcellus Shale pipeline companies be granted public utility status (i.e. eminent domain)?

    No (74%, 151 Votes)
    Yes (23%, 47 Votes)
    Not sure (3%, 6 Votes)

    Total Voters: 204

    This Week’s Poll

    This week I wade into waters few dare to go: the global warming (or climate change or whatever you want to call it) debate. I do so because of the interest in the story I posted this past week about the Cornell study recently published by Profs. Howarth, Ingraffea and Santoro. That study says, among other things, that using shale gas—not only burning it, but also the process of drilling it and transporting it—is a bigger contributor to greenhouse gases in the atmosphere than mining and burning coal. A writer on the Council on Foreign Relations website pointed out new findings from the Department of Energy that refutes the methodology and resulting conclusions from the Howarth study.

    Many who oppose drilling for Marcellus Shale gas do so because of their philosophical viewpoint, a viewpoint that believes (oversimplification here) that burning fossil fuels are bad because they cause an increase in greenhouse gases in the atmosphere resulting in an increase in the average temperature on the earth with potentially catastrophic effects. That line of thinking or viewpoint is represented in the work by Howarth et al. Those who hold that viewpoint generally support alternative sources of energy like wind and solar and believe that humans should, more or less, be forced to change to those sources of energy.

    There are others, MDN among them, who do not believe man is contributing in any meaningful way to an increase in global warming—at least not to the extent that it endangers anyone or anything on planet earth. Can and does air pollution exist? Of course. Do carbon-based fuels contribute to said pollution? Yes. But is mankind’s burning of carbon-based fossil fuels leading to doomsday for life on earth because of greenhouse gases? No. Not in my opinion. And not in the opinion of many scientists and experts.

    Maybe you think man does contribute to the “problem” of global warming, but man’s contribution is not dangerous. Maybe you think all fossil fuel use should end asap. Maybe you think using natural gas, because of lower carbon emissions than oil and coal is the best solution for now, but not for the long-term. People come down on all sides of the debate. I’ve tried to word the poll this week to get at the root philosophy or belief that may or may not lead people to support or oppose drilling. It’s not a perfect question, but hopefully will do the trick.

    Do you think burning fossil fuels like natural gas causes dangerously high levels of global warming?

    If you believe there is a direct connection between burning fossil fuels and dangerously high global warming, my guess is that you oppose drilling for shale gas. You may have other reasons to oppose drilling (impact on water supplies, etc.). But fundamentally, if you believe the planet is endangered by carbon, my guess is you don’t want drilling. Am I right?

    Go to any page on the website and click to vote on the right-hand side of the page in this week’s poll. I’ll report the results next week.

    Below you’ll find the “top 5” lists and this week’s calendar listings.

    Happy reading,
    Jim Willis, Editor

    Read More “MDN Weekly Update – May 29, 2011”

  • Atlas Energy | Chesapeake Energy | Coterra Energy (Cabot O&G) | Energy Companies | Industrywide Issues | Pennsylvania | Range Resources Corp | Regulation | Statewide PA | SWEPI | Talisman Energy | Wastewater

    PA Drillers Comply with Federal EPA’s Request for Information on Wastewater Disposal

    May 27, 2011May 27, 2011

    When the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) recently told Marcellus Shale drillers in the state to stop hauling wastewater from fracking to municipal sewage treatment plants that are not equipped to fully treat the wastewater by May 19 (see MDN story here), they all committed to comply and indeed did comply. But the federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) jumped in and demanded detailed plans from six drillers as to just how they planned on treating and disposing of the wastewater once the they stopped using the municipal plants.

    The EPA’s deadline for the six drillers to file plans was Wednesday, May 25. Five of the six complied by the deadline:

    Read More “PA Drillers Comply with Federal EPA’s Request for Information on Wastewater Disposal”

  • Hydraulic Fracturing | Industrywide Issues | Pennsylvania | Statewide PA

    Wilkes Marcellus Shale Drilling Forum Brings to Light Just How Many Active Gas Wells There are in PA

    May 27, 2011May 27, 2011

    Wilkes University held a Marcellus Shale drilling forum on Wednesday. According to press reports, the upshot of the meeting was that it will not be impossible, but will certainly be difficult, to get a consensus on natural gas drilling that uses horizontal hydraulic fracturing. Read an excellent roundup of the meeting by clicking the link below.

    One bit of information offered during the meeting is interesting to note:

    Read More “Wilkes Marcellus Shale Drilling Forum Brings to Light Just How Many Active Gas Wells There are in PA”

  • Dominion Energy | Energy Services | Industrywide Issues | Litigation | Preston County | West Virginia

    Dominion Transmission Sued in WV Over 56 Year-Old Lease – Landowners Want Marcellus Drilling to Begin

    May 27, 2011May 27, 2011

    Dominion Transmission, the pipeline transport subsidiary of energy giant Dominion, is being sued over a lease deal in Preston County, West Virginia signed in 1955. Dominion drilled a single well in 1959 which let it retain rights to develop more wells in the future in perpetuity. According to the lawsuit, Dominion assigned the lease rights to its subsidiary Dominion Transmission with plans to someday use the geological formations of the land as a natural gas storage field. Such activity would yield no royalties for the landowners who want to nullify the lease and find someone who will actually drill gas wells on the property, specifically tapping the Marcellus Shale.

    Read More “Dominion Transmission Sued in WV Over 56 Year-Old Lease – Landowners Want Marcellus Drilling to Begin”

Page navigation

Previous PagePrevious 1 … 1,911 1,912 1,913 1,914 1,915 … 1,954 Next PageNext
Search

Get Daily Headlines

Newsletter Optin

Recent MDN Issues

  • June 24, 2026
  • June 23, 2026
  • June 22, 2026
  • June 19, 2026
  • June 18, 2026

List of All Daily Issues

Most Recent Articles

  • Marcellus/Utica Pipelines to Flow More Molecules to Other Markets
  • New England Power Generators Won’t Support Expanded Algonquin Pipe
  • Antis Give Up Trying to Block Permit for Transco SESE Pipeline
  • Brilliant: Convert PA Coal-Fired Sites to Gas-Fired AI Data Centers
  • PA Antis Rally in Harrisburg to Destroy Data Center Opportunities
  • TVA Forecasts Needing Another 26 GW of Gas-Fired Power by 2040
  • MDN’s Energy Stories of Interest: Wed, Jun 24, 2026
  • Seneca Resources Changes e-Fracking Vendor to Evolution Well
  • Boardwalk Offers Temporary Capacity Along Pipeline to Southeast
  • Homer City Economic Boom Now Under Way from Data Center Project

© 2009-2026 Marcellus Drilling News

  • Disclaimer
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Home
  • About
  • Article Index
  • Calendar
  • Advertising
  • User Guide
  • Subscribe
  • Log In