Pennsylvania Fracking Law Opens Up Drilling On College Campuses 208
PolygamousRanchKid writes with this news from MotherJones: "Last year, when Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett suggested offsetting college tuition fees by leasing parts of state-owned college campuses to natural gas drillers, more than a few Pennsylvanians were left blinking and rubbing their eyes. But it was no idle threat: After quietly moving through the state Senate and House, this week the governor signed into law a bill that opens up 14 of the state's public universities to fracking, oil drilling, and coal mining on campus. Environmentalists and educators are concerned that fracking and other resource exploitation on campus could leave students directly exposed to harms like explosions, water contamination, and air pollution."
This is nothing new (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Coal mining? (Score:5, Informative)
Coal mining is completely different to seam gas extraction.
Coal mining removes the coal.
Seam gas extraction leaves the coal seam in-situ.
Seam gas extraction extracts water that is within the seam, this water contains gas, the gas is separated from the water.
The size of an exploration pad is nothing more than 30x30m, including all the equipment.
The size of a production drill pad for CSG extraction is nothing more than 2 basketball courts.
At least, this is how it works in my part of the world... and seriously, in Central Queensland (Australia) we have boat loads of the stuff.
Re:Isn't this the same state... (Score:2, Informative)
If I recall correctly isn't PA the state with the ever burning coal mine fire? I think it was called Centrailia or something
It's Centralia [wikipedia.org] (and there's a whole bunch of Centralias in other states. So much states, so few city names to go around...)
Re:LOL, welcome to united states of hurrdurr (Score:1, Informative)
usa is so pathetic...
Ok I'll explain this for you. Any land owned by the University system is part of the "campus". They are not talking about strip mining the front lawn, fracking under the dorms, or drilling in the student lounge. The Universities in this state happen to own some pretty large chunks of land which are completely removed from the school's building and dorm rooms. Under previous rules they were not allowed to do anything with natural resources, this law allows them to develop in certain cases. Any development still has to comply with environmental regulations, impact studies must be performed, etc.
tl;dr just another reactionary bullshit slashdot story designed to get the enviro-wacko's pissed off.
Re:LOL, welcome to united states of hurrdurr (Score:2, Informative)
No, son. "Any land owned by the University system" is not considered part of the "campus".
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
Re:LOL, welcome to united states of hurrdurr (Score:5, Informative)
No, son. "Any land owned by the University system" is not considered part of the "campus".
I won't argue what "campus" means but, the bill never mentions "campus". here' the text of the bill:
Senate Bill 367 (P.N. 2349) – This bill establishes the Indigenous Mineral Resource Development Act, allowing the Department of General Services to make and execute contracts or leases for the mining or removal of coal, oil, natural gas, coal bed methane and limestone found in or beneath land owned by the state or state system of higher education.
In other words, the article from Mother Jones was entirely misleading making people think of gas rigs next to dormitories when, in reality, the bill opened up all state lands pending government approval. Typical Mother Jones scare tactics.
Ignitable Tap Water (Score:4, Informative)
And just for fun: here's a fun video showing what can happen when you live too close to it. [youtube.com]
Deliberate Misreading of the Law (Score:4, Informative)
If you read the acutal law, SB 367 [state.pa.us], it does not authorize natural gas drilling on college campuses. In fact it specifically exempts them, as well as all state nature preserves:
It does, however, permit the state to make a right of way through a state college to reach natural gas wells located some place else, but I guess "Pennsylvania Fracking Law Opens Up Roads on College Campuses" doesn't sound nearly as sentational.