On Saturday, February 11, several Moscow area conservation organizations are hosting a series of events that describe and deliberate proposed natural gas drilling in Idaho using the hydraulic fracturing (“fracking”) method that has poisoned hundreds of water wells across the U.S. Everyone is welcome at a 5 pm screening of the Emmy award winning movie Gasland, followed by a 6:30 pm community potluck and presentation by hydrogeologist Jerry Fairley, at the Unitarian Universalist Church of the Palouse, 420 East Second Street in Moscow. The Palouse Environmental Sustainability Coalition (PESC), Wild Idaho Rising Tide (WIRT), and the Palouse Group of the Sierra Club (PGSC) are co-sponsoring these gatherings. Continue reading
Category Archives: Idaho Fracking
Natural Gas Industry Bill Compromises Local Regulation of Development
As some of you are aware, the industry has created legislation to limit the ability of local governments to regulate oil and gas (HO464). While there are aspects of this that make sense (i.e. the county has neither the expertise or resources to regulate well casing, mechanical integrity testing, etc.), this legislation goes much further.
Local governments would not have the ability to require the gas industry to follow the traditional special use permitting process (a process that has been in place for over 35 years that involves an applicant going before a planning and zoning commission and participating in a public hearing). Instead, the gas industry would now be subject to an administrative permitting process for all aspects of oil and gas prior to ‘processing.’ So, in essence, this would include siting of well pads and pits, setbacks, etc. The Idaho Association of Counties claims that this would essentially involve the planning and zoning manager going through a predetermined checklist of conditions (conditions set in the ordinance). Currently, when an application is brought forward in this process, the planning and zoning commission has the authority to create site-specific conditions. Under this potential new legislation, all conditions would be pre-determined. So, the county would have to envision every possible site for a well pad or pit or road use, etc. and write all of these scenarios with their likely conditions into an ordinance. The county’s ordinance must contain “reasonable” provisions that are not “repugnant to law.” According to the IAC, it would be up to the courts to define as reasonable. Continue reading
Climate Justice Forum: Amanda Buchanan & Kai Huschke 2-6-11
Listen to Wild Idaho Rising Tide’s Climate Justice Forum on Monday night, February 6, between 7:30 and 9 pm PST on KRFP Radio Free Moscow. Washington County anti-fracking activist Amanda Buchanan and Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund organizer Kai Huschke will update us on developments in state and county oil and natural gas rules, bills, and ordinances. Joann Muneta will discuss Moscow Farmers Market tabling changes, and show host Helen Yost will address the costs of Idaho megaloads and upcoming Moscow protests and fracking documentaries, forums, and petitions.
Idaho Counties, Gas Drillers Reach Agreement on Legislation
A group representing Idaho counties and a group representing companies interested in tapping natural gas in the state announced an agreement on Sunday on legislation they plan to introduce into the Idaho Legislature next month, the Associated Press reports. The Idaho Association of Counties and the Idaho Petroleum Council said the guidelines will allow counties some control over natural gas development, while natural gas wildcatters will have a clearer path to tapping fields; but a conservation group said the agreement appears to reduce local control over industries by allowing state lawmakers to create rules that counties and cities wouldn’t be able to exceed with their own ordinances. Click Gas Drillers, Idaho Counties Reach Agreement for the full story from Associated Press reporter Keith Ridler.
(By Betsy Russell, Eye on Boise, The Spokesman-Review)
Natural Gas Industry Seeks Local Support in Idaho

The natural gas industry claims that Idaho has unique geology that won't need intense fracking and describes its proposed drilling as similar to domestic water well drilling (Idaho Petroleum Council diagram).
BOISE, Idaho — When the Idaho Legislature meets in 2012, it will be asked to approve new regulations for the natural gas industry. Bridge Resources and now Snake River Oil and Gas believe there is a significant amount of natural gas in Idaho.
The natural gas industry in Idaho renewed efforts this month to gain support for drilling. It hopes to start drilling soon, once the state approves regulations and local governments give the go-ahead.
Read more and view a video of Governor Butch Otter, president of the Idaho Oil and Gas Conservation Commission, responsible for recent administrative approval of the new Rules Governing Conservation of Crude Oil and Natural Gas in the State of Idaho:
Natural Gas Industry Seeks Local Support in Idaho
(By Boise State Public Radio/Idaho Public Television)
Feds Link Water Contamination to Fracking for the First Time
In a first, federal environment officials today scientifically linked underground water pollution with hydraulic fracturing, concluding that contaminants found in central Wyoming were likely caused by the gas drilling process.
The findings by the Environmental Protection Agency come partway through a separate national study by the agency to determine whether fracking presents a risk to water resources.
In the 121-page draft report released today, EPA officials said that the contamination near the town of Pavillion, Wyo., had most likely seeped up from gas wells and contained at least 10 compounds known to be used in frack fluids.
Access the entire story with graphics, video, photos, and links at:
Feds Link Water Contamination to Fracking for the First Time
(By Abrahm Lustgarten and Nicholas Kusnetz, ProPublica)
EPA Connects ‘Fracking’ to Water Contamination
For the first time, a government study has tied contamination in drinking water to an advanced drilling technique commonly known as “fracking.”
The Environmental Protection Agency released a draft study Thursday tying the technique, formally called hydraulic fracturing, to high levels of chemicals found in ground water in the small town of Pavillion, Wyoming. EPA scientists found high levels of benzene, a known carcinogen, and synthetic glycol and alcohol, commonly found in hydraulic fracturing fluid.
Read/listen to more: EPA Connects ‘Fracking’ to Water Contamination
(By Elizabeth Shogren, National Public Radio)
Natural Gas Drillers Eye the Northwest
Reports of burning tap water and contaminated aquifers have followed the natural gas industry to the Pacific Northwest, where some drilling could involve the controversial practice of “hydraulic fracturing.”
For millions of years, vast deposits of natural gas have been trapped beneath much of the continental United States. Only in the past decade have energy companies possessed an extraction technique that allows them to free a good deal of the previously untapped reserves. This gas rush has sent federal, state and local lawmakers scrambling to reassess their drilling regulations.
Access the entire story with a map, photos, and audio/video files: Natural Gas Drillers Eye the Northwest
(By Bonnie Stewart and Aaron Kunz, Oregon Public Broadcasting EarthFix)
Idaho Gas Drilling: New Activity Raises Community Concerns
Bridge Energy is the first company to drill in Idaho during the current wave of gas exploration. It is concentrating its efforts in Payette County.
This is high desert land covered in corn, wheat and barley that rolls along as far as the eye can see. This is also where seven of Bridge Energy’s wells are ready to produce once a pipeline and processing facility come on line.
Access the entire story with a map, photos, and audio/video files: Idaho Gas Drilling: New Activity Raises Community Concerns
(By Aaron Kunz, Boise State Public Radio/Idaho Public Television)
(Link provided by Pat Rathmann)
Natural Gas from Fracking Could Be ‘Dirtier’ than Coal, Cornell Professors Find
Extracting natural gas from the Marcellus Shale could do more to aggravate global warming than mining coal, according to a Cornell study published in the May issue of Climatic Change Letters (105:5).
While natural gas has been touted as a clean-burning fuel that produces less carbon dioxide than coal, ecologist Robert Howarth warns that we should be more concerned about methane leaking into the atmosphere during hydraulic fracturing.
Read more: Natural Gas from Fracking Could Be ‘Dirtier’ than Coal, Cornell Professors Find
(By Stacey Shackford, Cornell Chronicle Online)
