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Marcellus Shale: the mother of all gas deposits Largest in North America

Marcellus Shale: the mother of all gas deposits Largest in North America Close to lucrative northeastern markets First Pennsylvania Marcellus well drilled in 2003 100% success rate Highly productive Profitable at $2.59 per thousand cubic feet (price last week @$6.43).

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Marcellus Shale: the mother of all gas deposits Largest in North America

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  1. Marcellus Shale: • the mother of all gas deposits • Largest in North America • Close to lucrative northeastern markets • First Pennsylvania Marcellus well drilled in 2003 • 100% success rate • Highly productive • Profitable at $2.59 per thousand cubic feet (price last week @$6.43)

  2. Potential Scale of Drilling in Marcellus • One company projects drilling 17,000 wells • Two companies project more than 7,500 in southwestern PA alone • DCNR projects 5,000 to 6,000 on state land

  3. Marcellus Shale Gas Benefits • Private wealth – leases as high as $5,000/acre, royalties as high as 20% • Generates revenues for the state • Regional economic development in depressed areas • Clean burning fuel – low carbon dioxide emissions

  4. Environmental Impacts of Shale Gas Drilling • Water withdraws • Wastewater disposal • Exposure to toxics • Spills and leaks • Ground and surface water contamination • Erosion and sedimentation – CBF lawsuit • Forest fragmentation

  5. OOPS!

  6. Community/Economic Impacts of Shale Gas Drilling • Damage to local infrastructure • Emergency preparedness • Itinerant workforce • Policing • Incompatible with eco-tourism, hunting, fishing

  7. Policy Debates • Water quality standard – Total Dissolved Solids • Regulatory oversight – HB 2155 • Severance tax • Drilling on public land – 690,000 acres now available for drilling • Oil and Gas Lease Fund

  8. Severance tax could be used to augment declining environmental funding

  9. Changing severance tax rates has had little impact on production or drilling Data Source. West Virginia Geological and Economic Survey West Virginia added the $0.047 per MCF component of their tax on December 1, 2005. Both drilling and production appear unaffected by the change.

  10. Severance and Business Taxes in Leading Natural Gas Producing States * - State uses combined reporting for corporate taxes

  11. 35 states collected $16.7 billion in severance taxes in 2007-08 Source. U.S. Census

  12. Severance taxes are common States in red have at least one severance tax – 35 in total

  13. About half of the cost paid by consumers for natural gas is for transportation – a HUGE advantage for Marcellus Shale gas Source: U.S. Department of Energy, Energy Information Administration

  14. Gas Price Wednesday 4/28 $4.18

  15. Drilling Activity in Last 2 Years Source: Baker Hughes Rig Report (1/22/10)

  16. Gas Leasing on State Forest Land • More than 700,000 acres currently available for gas drilling, ½ the acres overlying deposit • DCNR estimates 5,000 to 6,000 wells will be developed on leased acres • HB 2235 – 5-year moratorium, study • Oil and Gas Lease Fund

  17. Marcellus drill site, Tioga State Forest, 10/01/09; photo courtesy of Dick Martin, PA Forest Coalition

  18. Marcellus drill site, Tioga State Forest, 10/01/09; photo courtesy of Dick Martin, PA Forest Coalition

  19. Regulating Wastewater Discharges • Proposed regulations on total dissolved solids set water quality standard, set discharge limits • Before the Environmental Quality Board May 19 • Goes to Independent Regulatory Review Commission mid-June • Environmental Committees can pass resolutions to disapprove

  20. What You Can Do • This week – contact your representative in the State House and ask him or her to support HB 2235 which would put a moratorium on further leasing of state forest land for gas drilling • Contact your state representatives and senators to ask them to support a severance tax. • Contact members of the House and Senate Environmental Resources and Energy Committees and ask them to support the TDS standards.

  21. Contact PennFuture • www.pennfuture.org • Info@pennfuture.org • knapp@pennfuture.org

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