US
House approves $5,000 fee for official drilling protests, less
federal authority over fracking
The
US House passed Wednesday two bills that would demand a $5,000 filing
fee for any individual that wanted to hold an official protest of a
drilling project, and that would give the feds less authority
nationwide over hydraulic fracking rules.
RT,
21
November, 2013
HR
1965, the Federal Lands Jobs and Energy Security Act, imposes a
$5,000 fee for anyone wishing to file for an official protest of a
proposed drilling project. An amendment to the bill offered by Rep.
Sheila Jackson Lee (D-TX) that would have clarified the fee to make
sure it was not in violation of First Amendment rights was defeated.
In
addition, the bill would allow for automatic approval of onshore
drilling permits should the US Department of Interior (DOI) take over
60 days to act on an application. DOI would also be required to begin
commercial leasing for development of oil shale - not to be confused
with “shale oil”
- which is rock that must be heated to about 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit
to yield crude oil.
The
controversial practice has been largely nonexistent in the US since
the days of President Herbert Hoover, who prohibited leasing federal
lands for oil shale, “the
dirtiest fuel on the planet,”
according to the Natural Resources Defense Council. The oil shale
process “takes a large
amount of energy and money, as well as 3-5 barrels of water per
barrel of oil produced, a dangerous issue in the parched West,”
according to Jessica Goad of the Center for American Progress’
Public Lands Project.
Large
tracts of land - especially in Colorado, Utah and Wyoming - hold
deposits of oil shale. The bill would require the federal government
to open up 10 leases of its land in 2014 for research and
demonstration projects, with further developments by 2016.
The
House passed the measure, sponsored by Rep. Doug Lamborn (R-CO), by a
vote of 228 to 192, with seven Democrats supporting it and only one
Republican in opposition.
The
other bill - HR 2728, the Protecting States’ Rights to Promote
American Energy Security Act - would put more authority of hydraulic
fracking in the hands of states that already have rules on the
practice. Unless a state has yet to set guidelines on fracking, DOI
would have no authority over whether companies disclose what
chemicals they use in fracking fluid, whether water from fracked
wells is polluted or whether anyone can request public hearings
regarding fracking permit applications.
The
bill passed the House by a vote of 235 to 187, as 12 Democrats
supported it and only two Republicans did not.
Hydraulic
fracking is the highly-controversial process of injecting water, sand
and various chemicals into layers of rock in hopes of releasing oil
and gas deep underground. The practice is opposed worldwide, as shown
by global protests
against fracking in October, for its damning environmental impacts.
Supporters
say it brings jobs and opportunities for energy independence, though
detractors have pointed to exaggerated employment claims. Multiple
reports have found any jobs created by fracking usually go to
established, already-employed oil industry workers from places like
Texas rather than local citizens.
Meanwhile,
more money is being thrown at the US political class to support
fracking, representing the rising popularity of it among energy
companies. Calculations released Wednesday by the Citizens for
Responsibility and Ethics Washington show fracking industry
contributions to congressional campaigns went up 231 percent from
2004 to 2012 in districts and states where fracking has occurred.
The
two bills have little chance of passing the Democratic-controlled
Senate. Even if it did, President Obama has stated he would veto the
legislation should it get that far.
House
Democrats opposed to the bills decried voting on such measures that
have no chance of becoming law. “The
galleries are empty, the floor is empty, because we’re not doing
anything,”
Rep. Steny Hoyer (D-MD) said Wednesday on the House floor. “And
it’s not because we don’t have a lot of things to do.”
“I
won’t apologize for any action that’s been taken by the majority
of this house to try to reign in the excesses of this
administration,”
Rep. Michael Burgess (R-TX) said in response.
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