This post was contributed by a community member. The views expressed here are the author's own.

Health & Fitness

California Fracking Regulatory Bill: Less Than Zero

If you find this article persuasive, please join us for a rally/petition drive on Monday where we deliver 18,000 signatures to Fran Pavley asking her to drop her bill and fight for a ban instead.

WHERE:  5016 N. Parkway Calabasas, Suite 222, Calabasas, CA 91302. 

WHEN:  Monday, August 12, 12:30 - 1:30 pm

Find out what's happening in Encino-Tarzanawith free, real-time updates from Patch.

California's Fracking Regulatory Bill: Less Than Zero

A year after buying his dream home in Los Angeles, Gary Gless started falling down and breaking bones.

Find out what's happening in Encino-Tarzanawith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Fourteen years and 1,000 doctors visits later, his neuromuscular disorder hasn’t been specifically diagnosed. He survives on painkillers and sleep aids.

Gless lives next door to the largest urban oil field in the nation -- the Inglewood Oil Field.  Adjacent to a community of 300,000 residents, Big Oil’s been secretly fracking for nine years.

Many of Gless’s neighbors also suffer from neurological, autoimmune and respiratory diseases and several types of cancers. Many have died. Peoples’ homes and pools are cracking.

None of these people will be helped by passage of the only fracking bill still alive in California’s legislature: Senate Bill 4. That’s because the regulations in SB 4 do nothing to actually make fracking safer.

It sets up a process for notification, disclosure, monitoring and permitting and calls for future regulations by other agencies and a scientific study.

Telling someone when you're going to frack, where you're going to frack and what chemicals you will use, is like a murderer telling you he's going to shoot you on your front porch at noon tomorrow using an AK-47. At the end of the day, you're still dead.

Worse than having no regulations, weak regulations provide political cover to legislators who could otherwise be pressured to vote for a moratorium on the practice.

58% of Californians want a moratorium on fracking. The state Democratic Party, the majority party, passed a resolution calling for a moratorium. Activists were able to get two strong moratorium bills introduced in the legislature.  Only one made it to the full Assembly, where the Democratic leadership killed it.

Had 18 Democrats voted yes instead of abstaining, the bill would have passed. When asked why they didn’t vote for a moratorium, many said they were planning to vote for SB 4 instead.

Passage of this bill will remove the regulatory uncertainty that currently surrounds fracking. It will give the green light to the oil industry to frack up the Monterey Shale, the largest oil play in the nation holding nearly 2/3rd of all US reserves.  This bill must be stopped.

A big fat compromise

SB 4 – just like Illinois’ fracking regulation bill passed in May -- will probably be hailed as the strongest fracking regulatory bill nationwide. But even the bill’s sponsor Fran Pavley calls this bill a compromise.

“We’re trying to put regulations in place that will address public concerns,” Pavley said in an April interview. “This bill does not place a moratorium on the process. It will go on. I consider this a compromise measure.”

Although industry representatives testified against the bill, they tempered their criticisms, an indication this bill is seen as generally preferable to others that would place a moratorium on fracking.

“I’ve told the oil companies that the public is going to go there if it thinks they have something to hide,” she said, suggesting that lack of legislative action could potentially lead to a ballot initiative to ban fracking in California.

“It is in our best interest that we have disclosure,” said Western States Petroleum Association’s spokesman Paul Deiro. “To calm the fears that are out there is in our interest, because we believe it’s a safe technology.”

Dissecting the Bill

Fran Pavley is known as an environmental hero for authoring the Global Warming Solutions Act and the Clean Car Regulations, models for the nation.

She accepts no money from the Big Oil, and is considered by many “the best friend environmentalists have in California.”

But this bill does no favor to the environment or to public health.

While proclaiming to provide full public disclosure of fracking chemicals, exceptions are provided for "proprietary trade secrets.”  

As Kathryn Phillips, legislative director of Sierra Club California states, this would be “the first overt statutory recognition in the nation that fracking fluids qualify for trade secret protections. This would set us back, not forward, in our efforts to make sure that fracking in this state does not harm public health and the environment.”

For this reason, Sierra Club opposes this bill, as do Food and Water Watch, Physicians for Social Responsibility and most of the other organizations in the newly formed coalition Californians Against Fracking.

Besides we already know the chemicals used in fracking. They were disclosed to the Pennsylvania Department of the Environment and the US House Energy and Commerce Committee. Of the 700 possibilities, 600 are known toxins or carcinogens.

In the Inglewood Oil Field, the operator released the list of 40 chemicals used. They include benzene, toluene, lead, mercury, hexavalent chromium, and formaldehyde, all known carcinogens.

As to the notification, giving someone 30 days notice before doing a frack job is not much comfort. Groundwater monitoring is to be conducted by the oil company in a classic case of the fox guarding the hen house.

A permit would be denied if it presents “an unreasonable risk.” We already know that fracking fluid includes multiple carcinogens and the re-injection of fracking wastewater causes and exacerbates earthquakes. Are these considered reasonable risks? If so, what risk would fracking have to pose before this bill would prohibit it?  

The bill also directs other agencies to make regulations, failing to specify what those regulations should be. No regulations can prevent leaks. 6% of wells leak immediately; and 50% leak within 20 years. If the industry could make well casings leak proof, they'd do it. It's their own valuable product being lost.  

The bill calls for an independent scientific study on the effects of fracking to be completed by January 1, 2015. Originally the bill said that if the study were not completed, there would be a moratorium on all new fracking. But Pavley was pressured to remove that from the bill.

Learning from History

Although an independent study sounds better than one conducted by the industry, many "independent" studies are done by firms so entrenched in the oil industry they can't risk losing future business.

Such is the case with the last two State Department studies on the Keystone XL Pipeline.  

Many studies are victims of the political winds of the day. “Gasland Part II,” outlines three EPA studies that proved fracking was contaminating groundwater in Dimock, PA, Pavillion, WY and Parker County, TX.  

As soon as President Obama announced in his State of the Union Address that fracking – utilizing American Petroleum Institute talking points – was to be the centerpiece of his national energy policy, those studies were scuttled.

Plenty of independent studies already exist. Duke University’s 2011 study linked methane contamination of groundwater in Pennsylvania and New York to fracking. Another study from the University of Texas found elevated levels of lead and other heavy minerals close to natural gas extraction sites in Texas.

A Colorado School of Public Health study found fracking increases cancer risk, contributing to serious neurological and respiratory problems in people living near fracked wells.

Plus, do we really need to ramp up fracking so that we can study it? Just examine what’s already happened. The headlines heralding the horrors of fracking abound.

Regulations: Only as Good as the Regulators

In states where there are regulations on fracking, they aren’t enforced either by design or because the agencies are underfunded and understaffed.  

Also, when fracking violates existing regulations, many states simply change the regulations to the benefit of Big Oil. 

In Colorado, the Air Quality Control Board is being directed to increase the allowable air pollution because of the air pollution caused by the fracking boom.

If you say that can’t happen here in California, look what’s already happened.

Democratic Party Gov. Jerry Brown actually fired the head of Department of Conservation and the head of its Division of Oil, Gas and Geothermal Regulation (DOGGR) for pushing for tougher permitting requirements.

Brown said the firings were because DOGGR was “steadfastly blocking oil production permits,” citing the state’s need for “a healthy and vibrant oil and gas industry.”

The move was hailed by then State Senator Michael Rubio from Shafter, a community being devastated by fracking. "We have worked diligently with the governor's administration to reduce the roadblocks for the oil and gas industries to receive permits." Less than a year and a half later, Rubio resigned to take a position in government affairs with – wait for it – Chevron.

When regulations are enforced, fines are so low, they are written off as a cost of doing business. In Shafter, Vintage Oil, a subsidiary of Occidental Petroleum, flared off gas, a by-product of oil fracking, for two months creating constant noise as loud as a jet engine. Five tons of nitrous oxide and two tons of volatile organic compounds were released into a community with the worst air quality in the state. This clearly violated the Air Board’s regulations. Yet Vintage was fined a mere $750.

Occidental Petroleum (Oxy) is the largest holder of land/mineral rights in California -- over 1.6 million acres in the Monterey Shale. In a presentation to shareholders in 2010, officials stated, “In 10 years, California shale could become Oxy’s largest business unit.”

Don’t expect any stronger regulations or enforcement of existing ones to come from Governor Brown’s administration. He has already accepted the maximum donation allowed from Occidental Petroleum for his re-election campaign.

The oil industry is the biggest spender in California politics. The Western States Petroleum Association spent $1,286,000 on lobbying efforts in the last quarter alone.

Plus, Brown is salivating over the tax revenues he expects from this oil boom.  “One wonders whether there might be the ingredients of a grand bargain – the oil industry is given the green light to develop Monterey shale with some stringent but not crippling regulation, in return for which the state could impose a severance tax on new production that would benefit state and local governments,” Dan Walters pondered in a recent column in the Sacramento Bee

More scourges of fracking

Even if regulations could magically make fracking safe, it uses too much water in a drought prone state. It causes and exacerbates earthquakes, not good in an earthquake prone state and along a major fault line.  Hundreds of daily diesel truck trips cause extensive damage to local roads and increased incidences of asthma and other respiratory diseases.

Fracking causes the industrialization of bucolic landscapes and noise and light pollution. In other states, fracking’s “man camps” are rife with drugs, alcohol, gambling and prostitution.

Fracking would most likely  decimate the food and wine industries, which are far more important economically to the state than oil.

The oil will not even go toward energy independence, as it will be sold on the open market to the highest bidder, most likely Asia. The emphasis on producing more oil postpones the development of clean, renewable energy sources.

Finally, fracking all that oil out of the Monterey Shale will accelerate climate change. According to climate blogger RL Miller, the CO2 released from burning it will be almost as much as that released by the Keystone XL Pipeline.   

Ironically, this will prevent California from achieving the 20% reduction in CO2 called for in Pavley's signature bill, the Global Warming Solutions Act.

Ban It

Regulations can neither prevent nor mitigate the disastrous consequences associated with fracking. We need to keep the carbon in the ground.

Pavley should withdraw her regulatory bill and fight for a ban instead.

 

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

The views expressed in this post are the author's own. Want to post on Patch?

More from Encino-Tarzana