Friday, May 29, 2009

Highlands Council seeking planning consultants


New Jersey's Highlands Council is looking for a few good land-use planners.

The Council says it's seeking:

"Statements of Qualifications and supporting information ("Qualification Submittals") from consultants or consulting teams ("Firm") with expertise in all aspects of land use planning, including site development, site design and securing local approval."

The land-management agency will be hiring outside experts to help implement a regional transfer of development rights ("TDR") program as a component of its Regional Master Plan.

An important part of that effort, it says, is "the allocation of transferable development rights, termed Highlands Development Credits or HDCs, to eligible parcels within the Highlands Region. Allocation of HDCs is premised on the amount and type of development that could have occurred on a parcel prior to enactment of the Highlands Act considering the environmental laws and regulations and municipal zoning that were in place at that time."

The Council needs the assistance of firms with "significant experience in developing site plans for residential and non-residential development" in order to help it identify the type and amount of non-residential development that could have occurred on a parcel pre-Highlands Act.

Council staff notes that firms should have experience in assessing proposed project economic viability through use of pro formas for all types of development. It's also looking for firms with experience in redevelopment planning to help form redevelopment policies and programs. Here's a copy of the entire solicitation.

Related Post:

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Thursday, May 28, 2009

Environmental Business News for NJ, PA & NY


In addition to our daily, paid-subscription newsletter, EnviroPolitics, we publish three environmental information resources that are totally free but still filled with valuable content.

One of them is Enviro-Business News. It carries summaries and links to news stories and press releases about businesses and organizations that are involved in environmental industries and services. Think: environmental law firms, engineers, consultants, developers, utilities, industries, etc.

We think that signing up for our free Enviro-Business News email alerts is not only a good way to keep up on what's happening to other folks in environmental businesses, but also a good way to get the word out about your business, organization, project, etc. Yes, we accept and use relevant news releases and we won't charge you a penny for the service.

Some smart, marketing-minded folks have caught on and supply us with news releases on a regular basis. Others (surprisingly including some subscribers to our daily newsletter) still haven't gotten around to putting us (editor@enviropolitics.com) on their media distribution list or passing on our address to their PR firm or staffer.

We think they're missing a terrific opportunity since the folks who read Enviro-Business News are some of the most active and influential leaders in a variety of environmental endeavors. (We could drop some heavy names here, but you know who you are)

Yesterday, we sent out a teaser piece to a number of folks on our email list (if you're among them, we apologize for the duplication but maybe you still need a reminder to sign up).

It said:

Our latest Enviro-Business News includes these stories:

New Jersey and Pennsylvania law firms to merge
Reed Smith cutting associates' salaries by 10%
R. Timothy Weston re-elected to university board
Albany-area Home sales fall 23% in April
Transload America executive touts 'waste-by-rail"
Solar-powered wastewater treatment plant in NJ

To see all the above stories and receive free alerts when new items are added, sign up today and receive this valuable service without charge or obligation.

Just send a blank email to: enviro-business@aweber.com Then watch your email for a one-step confirmation message.

Bonus: Submit news about your company or organization. If it's suitable, we'll print it without charge. Send your release to: editor@enviropolitics.com

So, why are you still reading this? You should be signing up RIGHT NOW for this great, free service AND (after subscribing) finding out about the stories behind the headlines above, AND passing our email address onto your PR folks.

Get a move on now. It's Friday and before you know it you'll be slapping chicken parts on the barbecue and all this great advice will (poof) go up in smoke.

Oh, in case you're wondering what the other two free informational resources alluded to way back in paragraph #1, they are our:

Enviro-Events Calendar
(check it out for lots of interesting events coming up this weekend, during the month of June, and beyond)...and, of course....

the excellent, though occasionally self-serving (as in this post) EnviroPolitics Blog that you're currently reading.

Care to comment? Click on the tiny "comments" line below and have at it.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

A TDR plan for NJ Highlands property owners


Property owners and developers have
an opportunity to weigh in on the New Jersey Highlands Council's plans for a transfer of development rights (TDR) program based on one operating in the state's Pinelands region.

The Highlands Council is soliciting (until June 26, 2009) informal public comment on draft procedures for the operation of its Highlands Development Credit (HDC) Bank.

The bank will be the official entity that oversees transactions involving the transfer of development rights.

What are they?

In simplified terms, these rights or "credits" are granted to property owners whose land values have been impaired by the Highlands Act's development restrictions. Landowners can sell the credits through the bank to developers who will use them to increase the density of projects they build in permitted areas.

The Highlands Council has provided a two-page cover letter summarizing the bank's operating procedures.

Or, you can read a copy of its 21-page Highlands Development Credit Bank Operating Procedures.

To learn more about the Pinelands Development Credit Bank, which is the model for the Highlands program, check out their 2008 Annual Report

Our most recent posts:
Rebate for home-grown New Jersey solar panels?
NJ Sierra Club says: Stimulate this, not that
Environmental Events in NJ & PA
Is carbon capture the political key to climate bill?
Feds' $2.4B to 'stimulate' carbon capture projects

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Friday, May 22, 2009

Rebate for home-grown New Jersey solar panels?



















New Jersey residents interested in installing solar-energy panels on their rooftops--and those in-state companies that manufacture the panels--would both benefit from a new rebate plan under consideration by the state Board of Public Utilities.

Scott Fallon reports in today's Bergen Record that:

"The New Jersey Renewable Energy Manufacturing Incentive would give homeowners an additional 25 cents per watt on top of the current $1.75-per-watt rebate. That means a house with a modest 2-kilowatt system could see a $4,000 rebate check to offset the often costly installation."
Providing impetus to the BPU program is S-2739, legislation sponsored by Bob Smith, chairman of the state Senate's Environment Committee. The Assembly version of the bill is A-3980 .

A number of other state legislators also have been doing their part to encourage solar energy's growth.

Solar-energy legislation currently under consideration :

A-2859/S-1538 Concerns biomass, solar, and wind energy generation on farms.

A-2994 Authorizes municipalities to require solar energy elements as condition of site plan or subdivision approval.

A-3062/S-1303 Defines "inherently beneficial use" for purposes of zoning variance and specifically includes facilities and structures that supply electrical energy produced from wind, solar, or photovoltaic technologies.

A-3208/S-2429 Requires the incorporation of solar panels in design and construction of new public school facilities.

A-3218/S-1096 Creates Solar and Wind Energy Commission.

A-3238/S-1065 Permits electric public utilities, electric power suppliers and basic generation service providers to enter into certain agreements with building owners for use of solar energy systems for such buildings.

A-3347 /S-2218 Authorizes DOT, NJ Turnpike Authority, and South Jersey Transportation Authority to permit BPU-certified persons to install and maintain solar photovoltaic panels on noise barriers erected on roads and highways

A-3520 /S-2441 "The Solar Energy Advancement and Fair Competition Act."

A-3616/S-2499 Encourages purchase of NJ solar panels and wind turbines for State projects and State-funded projects

A-3701/S-1953 Requires all new State buildings to have solar or geothermal energy systems, where feasible.

A-3845/S-2569 Establishes "Solar Equipment Purchase and Installation Assistance Program" in NJ EDA.

Solar-energy bills signed into law earlier this year:

A-1558 which requires developers to offer solar energy systems in certain new home construction, and

A-2550 which permits location of certain wind and solar facilities in industrial zones.

Related posts:
Long Island's solar grants frying up; PA's coming

Other recent posts:
Week's top environmental news in New Jersey,
Pennsylvania, New York and beyond: May 11-15


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Wednesday, May 20, 2009

NJ Sierra Club says: Stimulate this, not that

In another "we'll decide what's good for you" press release, the
Sierra Club today dictated what federal stimulus fund projects
it will accept in New Jersey and which it will "fight."

The first sentence of the release sets its overall snarky tone:

"As the Governor and politicians pat themselves on the back for stimulus money coming into the state, the NJ Sierra Club is watching closely to make sure those dollars are not spent on projects that will be detrimental to both the environment and the economy."

Oooohhhhh. I'll sleep a lot better at night knowing that the Sierra Club is standing between me and those horrible politicians. Imagine the nerve of that bunch, trying to foist upon us millions of dollars worth of environmental improvements that haven't been approved by the Mother Nature or her New Jersey stand-in, Sierra Club Executive Director Jeff Tittel.

Tittel's release dictates the terms. He's down with spending federal stimulus funds to fix leaky sewer systems in urban areas, but, as for those horrid suburbs, :

"Funds going to Rockaway Valley Sewage Authority and Jefferson will allow for new development to hook into sewers in the Highlands . Major expansions of the county utility in Gloucester will lead to sewers in the environmentally-sensitive Delaware Bayshore area. Monies for sewer expansion in Medford , Evesham, and Buena could allow for additional development in the Pinelands. Expanding sewers in East Greenwich Township will promote sprawl on environmentally sensitive farmland. "

Jeff also is not amused by the thought of using the funds for:

"Landfill redevelopment proposals in Gloucester County , Cumberland County , Woodbury, Belleville and Teterboro. " A redevelopment project in Harrison on a contaminated site also makes his no-no list.

As for the anticipated $469 million for transportation projects, he opposes:

"applying stimulus money towards extending Route 55, and widening 206 in the Highlands as well as the Atlantic City Expressway." Not urban, not good.

The Sierrans, however, will accept fixing the Pulaski Skyway or improving deficient bridges. Gee, thanks, guys.

Of the $420 million intended for NJ Transit projects, he notes that $130 million of it would be used for a new tunnel to New York City....one "which the Sierra Club opposes as currently designed." Hint: Change the design, boys, and maybe we'll change our opposition.

Is all of what the Sierra Club calls for (or opposes) in the release unreasonable?

Probably not. But it's sure hard to warm up to when its delivered in the style they use so frequently: high-handed, imperious, dictatorial.

Tree huggers are supposed to be warm and fuzzy. This bunch sounds more like Dick Cheney every day.

Our most recent posts:
Feds' $2.4B to 'stimulate' carbon capture projects
For carbon sequestration, it's test time
USGS report drills into Marcellus Shale concerns
Thousands of climate lobbyists besiege Congress
Alert: NJ's Licensed Site Professional bill signed

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Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Environmental Events in NJ & PA


How do you keep track of environmental events?

What kind?

All kinds...seminars, workshops, conferences, educational and training sessions--all the stuff that can help you get ahead.

And the fun kind, too --movies, socials, green-drinks, hikes and lots of networking events.

Do you poke around through a bunch of newspapers, newsletters, organizational websites?

Or do you just hope somehow the event will find you?

We'd like to propose a better way. It's comprehensive, easy and (you'll like this part) FREE.

It's the Enviro-Events Calendar published and updated 24/7.

Click on the link above to check it out.

Better still, get on our automatic update list.

We'll send you email alerts when new events are added.

Don't worry. We won't bombard you with them. A few times a week at
most. Just enough so that you don't miss any great opportunities.

Interested? Send a blank email to: enviro-calendar@aweber.com
Then check your email for a one-step confirmation message.
If it doesn't appear, take a peek in your junk file.

You're going to love this service because it makes your life so much easier.

If it's not for you, you can unsubscribe at any time.

Be sure to tell your friends, too. They need it, too.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Is carbon capture the political key to climate bill?






















"With Congress crafting energy and climate legislation, disparate lobbyists are urging lawmakers to think about China and other developing countries as reasons to develop power plants that capture coal's carbon emissions. If the United States succeeds in building commercially viable coal plants, lobbyists and some independent experts argue, it could export the technology to countries that are building traditional power plants at a rapid clip."

So reports Scientific American in an interesting article
you can read here

Our most recent posts:
Feds' $2.4B to 'stimulate' carbon capture projects
For carbon sequestration, it's test time
USGS report drills into Marcellus Shale concerns
Thousands of climate lobbyists besiege Congress
Alert: NJ's Licensed Site Professional bill signed

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Feds' $2.4B to 'stimulate' carbon capture projects


On Thursday, we reported in
For carbon sequestration, it's test time
on a major project designed to test the commercial viability of carbon sequestration technology (more popularly known as 'carbon capture and storage').

The technology, which removes CO2, a major greenhouse gas, from coal-burning power plants and injects it into deep underground rock sediments, holds great promise for the economies of coal-producing states like Pennsylvania and for utilities with coal plants that could be retrofitted with the technology to meet tougher greenhouse emission standards.


On Friday, U.S. Secretary of Energy Steven Chu, speaking before
the National Coal Council, announced that $2.4 billion from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act will be used to expand and accelerate the commercial deployment of carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology.

Here's a news release from the Energy Department on the stimulus-project announcement:

"The funding is part of the Obama Administration’s ongoing effort to develop technologies to reduce the emission of carbon dioxide, a major greenhouse gas and contributor to global climate change, into the atmosphere while creating new jobs.

"To prevent the worst effects of climate change, we must accelerate our efforts to capture and store carbon in a safe and cost-effective way. This funding will both create jobs now and help position the United States to lead the world in CCS technologies, which will be in increasing demand in the years ahead," said Secretary Steven Chu.

"The Department is posting Notices of Intent to issue this funding, supporting the following initiatives:

"Clean Coal Power Initiative: $800 million will be used to expand DOE’s Clean Coal Power Initiative, which provides government co-financing for new coal technologies that can help utilities cut sulfur, nitrogen and mercury pollutants from power plants. The new funding will allow researchers broader CCS commercial-scale experience by expanding the range of technologies, applications, fuels, and geologic formations that are tested.

"Industrial Carbon Capture and Storage: $1.52 billion will be used for a two-part competitive solicitation for large-scale CCS from industrial sources. The industrial sources include, but are not limited to, cement plants, chemical plants, refineries, steel and aluminum plants, manufacturing facilities, and petroleum coke-fired and other power plants.

"The second part of the solicitation will include innovative concepts for beneficial CO2 reuse (CO2 mineralization, algae production, etc.) and CO2 capture from the atmosphere. In addition, two existing industrial and innovative reuse projects, previously selected via competitive solicitations, will be expanded to accelerate scale-up and field testing:

"Ramgen Modification ($20 million): funding will allow the industrial-sized scale-up and testing of an existing advanced CO2 compression project with the objective of reducing time to commercialization, technology risk, and cost. Work on this project will be done in Bellevue, WA.

"Arizona Public Services Modification ($70.6 million): funding will permit the existing algae-based carbon mitigation project to expand testing with a coal-based gasification system. The goal is to produce fuels from domestic resources while reducing atmospheric CO2 emissions. The overall process will minimize production of carbon dioxide in the gasification process to produce a substitute natural gas (SNG) from coal. The host facility for this project is the Cholla Power Plant located in Holbrook, AZ.

"Geologic Sequestration Site Characterization: $50 million will fund a competitive solicitation to characterize a minimum of 10 geologic formations throughout the United States. Projects will be required to complement and build upon the existing characterization base created by DOE’s Regional Carbon Sequestration Partnerships, looking at broadening the range and extent of geologic basins that have been studied to date. The goal of this effort is to accelerate the determination of potential geologic storage sites.

"Geologic Sequestration Training and Research: $20 million will be used to educate and train a future generation of geologists, scientists, and engineers with skills and competencies in geology, geophysics, geomechanics, geochemistry and reservoir engineering disciplines needed to staff a broad national CCS program. This program will emphasize advancing educational opportunities across a broad range of minority colleges and universities and will use DOE’s University Coal Research Program as the model for implementing the program. "

Our most recent posts:
For carbon sequestration, it's test time
USGS report drills into Marcellus Shale concerns
Thousands of climate lobbyists besiege Congress
Alert: NJ's Licensed Site Professional bill signed
Suburbs still growing but region's cities are too

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Sunday, May 17, 2009

Week's top environmental news in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York and beyond: May 11-15


Below are just a few of the environmental and political news stories for New Jersey, Pennsylvania and beyond that appeared in
EnviroPolitics during the week of May 11-15, 2009.

New Jersey Politics

Corzine cuts $150 million more from budget The governor plans several additional steps to close the rest of the $1.2 billion budget gap for the fiscal year Inquirer Bergen Record

Little Delaware suddenly a threat to Atlantic City Delaware’s modest casino industry is about to become a lot more like Atlantic City’s by introducing table games AC Press

GOP candidates for governor debate Republican gubernatorial candidates Christopher J. Christie and Steve Lonegan clashed yesterday over taxes, property-tax rebates, and the question of who would truly rein in state spending in the first formal debate of their party's primary Inquirer Star-Ledger

Christie remembered for bitter conflicts In 1994, the GOP freeholder primary was so negative that Chris Christie's rivals filed defamation lawsuits against him. Now, seeking the Republican nomination for governor, he says he's older and wiser Bergen Record

Funding for defunct food-in-space program questioned Records show much of program’s money paid the salaries of two people -- one with political connections and the other a woman who has been dead two years Star-Ledger Bergen Record

New Jersey Environment

PSE&G agrees to pay part of Highlands' legal costs The energy company agrees to pay some of the legal costs for towns opposing the utility’s massive upgrade of power lines known as the Susquehanna-Roseland project Bergen Record

Utility looks to run gas pipeline through Highlands Another big utility has come to the state with a proposed project that would tear through part of the state's Highlands region. Tennessee Gas Pipeline wants to dig a 16-mile underground extension through Vernon, W. Milford and Ringwood Star-Ledger

Enviro group sues to overturn housing approval The New Jersey Highlands Coalition says it is suing the state Department of Environmental Protection to block sewer service for the proposed, 185-unit Huntington Knolls housing development in Holland Township, Sussex County Express-Times

$600 million open space bond may go to voters NJ voters may again have the chance to vote on a bond that could help preserve historic sites and open space throughout Bergen and Passaic counties as well as the rest of the state Bergen Record

Seven minutes to judgment’ stirs controversy The proposal has caused an unusual split among New Jersey environmental activists NJ Newsroom

Pennsylvania Environment

PUC approves use of chloramines Pennsylvania American Water received approval from the state Public Utility Commission on Thursday to use the disinfectant chloramine at its West Shore water treatment plants The Sentinel

State rejects TVA coal ash Coal ash recovered from a major spill last December at a Tennessee power plant is too contaminated for use in reclaimed coal mines, PA officials say Centre Daily Times

PPL picks route for West End power line A new power line will snake its way through Chestnut hill Township after PPL settled on the route Pocono Record
> PUC: Omission of PPL figures was an oversight
Pocono Record

Marcellus Shale plant opens A plant built to process natural gas drawn from the Marcellus Shale formation in southwestern Pennsylvania and northern West Virginia is up and running Times-Tribune

Rendell plan to tax Marcellus shale gas in doubt The red-hot drilling boom set off two years ago by the discovery of a massive natural-gas field more than a mile below Pennsylvania soil has clicked back to a low simmer Inquirer

Leasing a path to solar power Pennsylvania will start issuing rebate checks in July to help homeowners offset the cost of installing solar-powered energy systems, but don't expect an immediate stampede to plug into the sun Inquirer

Pennsylvania Politics

Convicted former Sen. Fumo allowed to keep property Convicted former state Sen. Vincent Fumo won't have to forfeit his Philadelphia mansion to the government in the wake of his sweeping corruption case Patriot News

Stupidity is Philly judge’s defense Philadelphia Common Pleas Court Judge Willis W. Berry demonstrated "stupidity" by running a real estate business out of his chambers, but it did not rise to the level that the state should strip him of his robe, his attorney argues Inquirer

Outsider no more, Toomey shoring up status in GOP Bob Asher has spent the past five days telling fellow Republicans what you'd expect from a GOP national committeeman: The state party has good candidates for statewide office in 2010. What's surprising, though, is who he includes in the mix Morning Call

Philadelphia Mayor and Council reach an accord on tax rise Dropping his push for a steep but temporary two-year increase in property taxes, Mayor Nutter yesterday agreed to back City Council's proposal for a five-year sales-tax increase to help close Philadelphia's $1.4 billion budget deficit Inquirer

New York/Nation/World

Gov. Paterson's solar power plan envisions 50,000 jobs Gov. David A. Paterson will announce today that the state’s two power authorities will purchase up to 150 megawatts of solar power through a program aiming to make the state the nation’s second-biggest solar power producer Buffalo News

Expansion of New York bottle-deposit law faces delay Gov. David Paterson and state lawmakers are seeking to delay the expansion of the state-s bottle-de posit law by at least a month over concerns that bottlers can’t quickly implement the new changes Ithaca Journal

Senator: Study water for drugs U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand called Tuesday for a study to assess potential risks of trace levels of medications that have been found in drinking water supplies across the country Times Union

Lobbyists push for emissions credits Utilities, steelmakers and oil industry lobbyists have tried to ease the pain of President Obama's push to curb global warming, and they've gotten an early return on the millions spent influencing Congress AP

Costly Superfund dredging set for Hudson River People look funny at David Mathis when he takes a dip off his dock in the Hudson River. Health officials have long warned people not to eat fish caught from this stretch south of the Adirondacks and swimming is unthinkable to many Poughkeepsie Journal

Our most recent posts:
For carbon sequestration, it's test time
USGS report drills into Marcellus Shale concerns
Thousands of climate lobbyists besiege Congress
Alert: NJ's Licensed Site Professional bill signed
Suburbs still growing but region's cities are too

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Saturday, May 16, 2009

EPA's Lisa Jackson on Jon Stewart's Daily Show

Check out EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson's short but sweet
May 14 interview with Jon Stewart on The Daily Show.

[Thanks to Jason Springer of Blue Jersey for bringing it to the attention of his readers and now, you, too]

The Daily Show With Jon StewartM - Th 11p / 10c
Lisa P. Jackson
thedailyshow.com
Daily Show
Full Episodes
Economic CrisisPolitical Humor

Our most recent posts:
For carbon sequestration, it's test time
USGS report drills into Marcellus Shale concerns
Thousands of climate lobbyists besiege Congress
Alert: NJ's Licensed Site Professional bill signed
Suburbs still growing but region's cities are too

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Thursday, May 14, 2009

For carbon sequestration, it's test time


It works in laboratory bench-scale tests, but the viability of capturing carbon emissions on a large, commercial scale and storing them underground is still unproven.

American Electric Power hopes to prove that it an be done with a test that could last three years at its Mountaineer Plant in New Haven,
West Virginia.

The project expects to capture 200,000 metric tons of CO2 per year and inject it for geological storage in deep saline aquifers at the site. If the 20-mega watt trial proves successful, the company will implement the same technology, in 2010, in a ramped-up 200-megawatt project at another plant in Oklahoma.

The ultimate outcome of the tests holds great significance for the coal industry in Pennsylvania and elsewhere. Carbon dioxide (CO2), a major greenhouse gas, is generated in the process of burning coal to produce electricity. It is the prime reason why environmentalists nationwide oppose permit renewals for existing coal-fueled power plants and oppose the construction of new plants which rely on coal as their fuel source.

In a recent report, the state of Pennsylvania identified four "potential geologic sequestration reservoirs in western and north-central Pennsylvania." Each of the locations, the report says, meets the U.S. Department of Energy's 2,500-foot depth criteria for permanent sequestration of CO2.

In New Jersey, a company recently announced plans to seek approval for 500 megawatt, coal-fueled facility using a 100-mile, underground pipeline to push as much as 10 million tons of CO2 annually -- emissions from the new plant and eventually neighboring industrial operations -- to a point 70 miles off the coast and about 2,200 yards beneath the Atlantic Ocean.

Like to share your views on the subject? Use the comment box below or click on the tiny 'comments' line. You can remain anonymous, if you prefer. We publish all reader opinions offered
in good taste.


Related environmental news:
Carbon Capture Test
RWE to join AEP in validation of carbon capture technology

'Carbon Sequestration' coming to NJ & PA?
A good old New Jersey environmental controversy

Our most recent posts:
USGS report drills into Marcellus Shale concerns

Thousands of climate lobbyists besiege Congress
Alert: NJ's Licensed Site Professional bill signed
Suburbs still growing but region's cities are too

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Wednesday, May 13, 2009

USGS report drills into Marcellus Shale concerns





















The "gold-rush" pace set by energy companies purchasing property rights and drilling for natural gas in areas of Pennsylvania New York atop the Marcellus Shale formation slowed when the economy hit the brakes.

Since the drilling fever broke, more attention has been paid to the potential environmental consequences of the high-pressure drilling methods used to extract natural gas from underground layers of shale.

A new fact sheet published by The United States Geological Survey addresses what many consider to be the number one environmental challenge facing the development of the Marcellus Shale - water supply protection.

It identifies the three important concerns related to Marcellus Shale gas production as:

• supplying water for well construction without impacting local water resources,

• avoiding degradation of small watersheds and streams as substantial amounts of heavy equipment and supplies are moved around on rural roads, and

• determining the proper methods for the safe disposal of the large quantities of potentially contaminated fluids recovered from the wells.

The document discusses each of the three concerns in some detail and concludes:

"While the technology of drilling directional boreholes, and the use of sophisticated hydraulic fracturing processes to extract gas resources from tight rock have improved over the past few decades, the knowledge of how this extraction might affect water resources has not kept pace. Agencies that manage and protect water resources could benefit from a better understanding of the impacts that drilling and stimulating Marcellus Shale wells might have on water supplies, and a clearer idea of the options for wastewater disposal.

You'll find a copy of the fact sheet at: Marcellus Shale Water Resources and Natural Gas Production


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Monday, May 11, 2009

Thousands of climate lobbyists besiege Congress























Just six years ago, 70 percent of the interests weighing in on climate issues in the nations capital were energy companies and manufacturers. But by 2008, those sectors made up only 45 percent of the total, despite their strong growth, because so many new interests had joined in the fray.

Today, more than 770 companies and organizations utilize some 2,340 lobbyists to work on climate change and spent at least $90 million lobbying in 2008.

The American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity — a group of 48 companies — topped the list of those solely focused on the issue, spending $9.95 million.

These are just a few of the highlights in an illuminating new report, The Climate Change Lobby, published by the Center for Public Integrity.

The Obama Administration's desire to shift the nation's energy economy from one dominated by fossil-fuel interests to one accommodating energy alternatives like, wind, wave solar and biomass, has resulted in an interesting shift in lobbying alliances.

The Center reports that while:

" The nation's largest and most powerful industry groups--the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers--are now leading voices against climate action, "other industry coalitions, such as the U.S. Climate Action Partnership, want to see Congress act on greenhouse gases--as long as lawmakers take care to minimize their costs.
"Others, like the numerous alternative energy companies, are pursuing opportunities that would be available as a result of a new commitment to reduce reliance on fossil fuels. And then there are the Wall Street banks like Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan Chase, as well as private equity firms and new financial players, which would buy and sell emissions "permits' under a proposed "cap-and-trade" system favored by most pro-climate politicians, including Obama. Finally, there are the cities, public transit agencies, universities, and others sleeking piece of the pie--the revenue that a climate program would generate when power plants, oil companies, and others have to buy federal permits to continue emitting carbon dioxide."
We recommend that you read the report and then use the comment block or "comments" line below to share your thoughts with your fellow EnviroPolitics Blog readers.

Related:
The 'Clean-Coal' Lobbying Blitz
They've brought coal above ground. They've put the black rock on billboards and featured it in full-page ads. They seem to be everywhere in Washington. Who are those guys?

The Climate Lobbyists
A sampling of climate 'power players'

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Thursday, May 7, 2009

Alert: NJ's Licensed Site Professional bill signed


Governor Jon Corzine today signed into law controversial legislation authorizing the state Department of Environmental Protection to license environmental engineers and others as Licensed Site Professionals who would be empowered to oversee the cleanup of contaminated properties.

The governor concurrently issued an Executive Order designed to address some of the concerns raised by environmental groups who have vigorously opposed the legislation .

Prior to the signing, Acting DEP Commissioner Mark Mauriello told members of the Assembly Budget Committee this morning that his department was preparing for the LSP bill's enactment. He predicted that an interim program would be up and operating within three months of the bill's signing.

We'll have the details in tomorrow's edition of or daily newsletter, EnviroPolitics. For a free, 30-day trial click here.

Previous posts on the LSP legislation:
Where's NJ's Licensed Site Professional bill?
NJ Gov. gets Licensed Site Professional bill
Licensed Site Professional vote Monday in NJ
NJ Licensed Site Professional bills advance
NJ Licensed Site Professional bill's encore
Will New Jersey see Licensed Site Professionals?

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Wednesday, May 6, 2009

'Carbon Sequestration' coming to NJ & PA?

Carbon sequestration--an ungainly phrase that some environmentalists hope we never need to master--has made its debut, at least conceptually, in both New Jersey and Pennsylvania.

Carbon sequestration itself has been used successfully in limited applications by oil drillers who inject carbon dioxide into wells to help force oil to the surface.

These days, however, the big plan for carbon sequestration involves the capture and injection of carbon dioxide (CO2) from coal-burning power plants into deep underground voids, like abandoned coal or salt mines or even deep under the ocean floor where it presumably would be 'stored' forever.

The payoff is that energy companies would be able to continue burning plentiful American coal without being criticized for contributing to global warming by releasing CO2, one of the major greenhouse gases, up their smokestacks.

In New Jersey, the concept of carbon sequestration was floated last week in a proposal for a new coal-fired energy plant in the industrial city of Linden. The plan calls for piping the CO2 to a deep grave at sea. Several noted environmental organizations, within days, announced plans for a coalition to oppose the project.

The term has been discussed more frequently in recent years in Pennsylvania, a state which stands to benefit from carbon sequestration because it has both plentiful amounts of coal to be mined and a plentiful supply of abandoned mines to be filled.

A recent report by the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources says that the Keystone State has an estimated geologic capacity to store hundreds of years’ worth of carbon emissions at present rates.

The report identified four "potential geologic sequestration reservoirs in western and north-central Pennsylvania, each of which meet the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)’s criteria for consideration as a target for permanent sequestration of CO2, that is, occurring at a minimum depth of 2,500 feet."

While cautioning that numerous questions and concerns about the technology remain and need to be explored, the report notes that carbon sequestration offers Pennsylvania the opportunity to "substantially reduce... global warming emissions and protect our environment, our economy, and public health" while preserving Pennsylvania's "position as a net energy exporter and creating jobs in the process."

Obviously, carbon sequestration, is something we're going to be hearing a lot more about.

MORE:
A good old New Jersey environmental controversy
Geologic Carbon Sequestration Opportunities in Pennsylvania
INSIGHTS: Carbon Sequestration

Recent posts:
Where's NJ's Licensed Site Professional bill?
Sierra Club's Earth Day New Jersey Report Card
PSEG offers enviros a paid forum...they accept
An Earth Day Q&A with EPA's Lisa Jackson
Stimulus funds use for NJ Turnpike illegal?

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New Jersey, Pennsylvania and New York every business day.
PLUS: Proposed environmental regulation alerts.
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Monday, May 4, 2009

Suburbs still growing but region's cities are too

A report today from New Jersey Future informs us that Cumberland County's population growth was nearly triple that of the NJ statewide average between 2007 and 2008.

No surprise? Well, did you know that Staten Island grew faster than all but five New Jersey counties?

The smart-growth organization's Future Facts publication cites a number of trends behind the census numbers, including:

"... aging Baby Boomers seeking to downsize and relocate to more walkable environments; more single people delaying or forgoing marriage and seeking urban amenities in the meantime; and more couples choosing not to have children, thus inoculating themselves against the usual deterrent effect of low-quality urban schools."

It's interesting reading. You'll find the full article here.

Our most recent posts:
A good old New Jersey environmental controversy
Where's NJ's Licensed Site Professional bill?
Sierra Club's Earth Day New Jersey Report Card
PSEG offers enviros a paid forum...they accept
An Earth Day Q&A with EPA's Lisa Jackson
Stimulus funds use for NJ Turnpike illegal?

Subscribe to EnviroPolitics for top environmental and political news
in New Jersey, Pennsylvania and New York every business day.
PLUS: Proposed environmental regulation alerts.
PLUS: Full tracking of environmental legislation
Get your no-obligation, 30-day subscription at Free Trial