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EPA regulations on power plant emissions could devastate Western Maryland coal mining, industry says

ROBBIE FEINBERGCapital News Service

WASHINGTON — The Environmental Protection Agency’s restrictions on new coal and natural gas power plants meant to reduce carbon emissions that contribute to climate change would be a disaster for Western Maryland’s coal mining business, industry representatives said.

The new regulations, announced Friday by EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy, would allow new coal-powered plants to emit up to 1,100 pounds of carbon per megawatt-hour. Natural gas plants would be allowed to emit between 1,000 and 1,100 pounds of carbon per megawatt-hour, depending on their size.

“They’ll have a devastating effect on us because they want to eliminate the coal-powered plants, and all of their actions will do just that,” said Adrienne Ottaviani, the executive director of the Maryland Coal Association. “It will be probably more of the coal companies in Maryland closing their doors. They just can’t continue with the regulations being placed upon them.”

According to the latest annual report from the Maryland Bureau of Mines, mining companies employed 373 workers in Allegany and Garrett counties in 2011, producing about 3 million tons of coal that year. That number put Maryland 18th in the nation in total coal production.

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House approves 7.5% natural gas tax, highest in the Marcellus Shale states

March 26, 2012

By Daniel Menefee
Dan@MarylandReporter.com

House lawmakers Monday night passed a 7.5% state severance tax on natural gas in a 82-51 vote, after the delegates on Saturday fended off an amendment from Del. Wendell Beitzel, R-Garrett, that would cap state and local taxes on natural gas extraction at 7.5% combined.

“The amendment would incorporate all severance taxes,” Beitzel said. “Local, county and state taxes together could not exceed 7.5%.”

Garrett County currently has a severance tax of 5.5%, which means the state could assess a severance tax of only 2% under Beitzel’s amendment. Allegany County’s severance tax of 7% would limit the state’s share to just 0.5%.

Read more: http://marylandreporter.com/2012/03/26/house-approves-7-5-natural-gas-tax-highest-in-the-marcellus-shale-states/#ixzz1qKPvRldz
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Petroleum council goes on shale PR offensive

Study finds economic benefits for Garrett, Allegany counties

Matthew Bieniek Cumberland Times-News

CUMBERLAND — In an apparent effort to sway public opinion on drilling in Marcellus shale for natural gas, a state industry group has paid for two polls in six months and funded a just-released study that proclaims the economic benefits of gas drilling.

“The utilization of Marcellus shale formation in Western Maryland in order to produce natural gas would have transformative economic and fiscal impacts,” the study by Sage Policy Group said.

Among those impacts would be jobs created by each well.

“Applied to the estimated amount of total extractible natural gas available within the play, the study team projects … approximately 365 wells would be operating over the period 2016-2045,” according to the study.

“According to the Marcellus Shale Education & Training Center, it requires approximately 420 individuals across 150 occupations to bring a single Marcellus well online (only refers to direct jobs).”

The benefit to the state and Allegany and Garrett counties would be enormous. “Over the course of developing the Marcellus shale play (2015-2045), the state of Maryland would collect $213.8 million in 2011 constant dollar revenues. Garrett County would collect $162.4 million and Allegany County $64.9 million in 2011 … dollars,” the study said.

The study took a conservative approach, Drew Cobbs, the executive director of the petroleum council, said.

The council footed the entire bill for the Sage study, Cobbs said.

He said that, without consulting Sage, he preferred not to disclose the amount paid for the study. Sage is a well-known economic consulting group based in Baltimore.

According to the study, drilling makes especially good economic sense for Western Maryland.

“Allegany County continues to be associated with among the state’s lowest incomes and highest unemployment rates. Marcellus shale development represents a way for both Allegany and Garrett counties to secure a key driver of business investment and future job creation,” according to the study.

Maryland could miss out on the economic benefits of natural gas production if it creates bureaucratic and financial hurdles for gas industry, the study states.

“Policymakers should note that though Maryland has an opportunity to participate in the Marcellus shale play, its allure to the natural gas industry is somewhat limited.

“Maryland is home to only about 1 percent of the Marcellus shale play and could therefore be easily overlooked. … Maryland is even more likely to miss the opportunity if it creates an exceedingly regulated and expensive environment,” a portion of the study states.

The two polls, which produced almost the same results in response to a similar group of questions, were released in September and in January by Gonzales Research & Marketing Strategies Inc.

Neither of the polls asked respondents about the use of hydraulic fracturing to release the gas trapped in shale.

Cobbs said Gonzales offers to add questions to the poll for a fee, but that they use the same scientific methodology used in the poll questions they generate in-house.

Cobbs said he asked to have his questions added to a second poll because of the large number of bills in the General Assembly this session dealing with Marcellus Shale natural gas development.

Critics of the September poll, like Delegate Heather Mizeur, D-Montgomery, wouldn’t be any more pleased with the new poll.

In response to the September poll, Mizeur pointed out that the poll addressed the issue of natural gas instead of hydraulic fracturing.

In order to get the gas trapped in Marcellus shale to the surface, chemicals, water and sand are pumped underground to break apart rock formations and free the gas.

The process is called hydraulic fracturing.

The poll didn’t ask people if they supported the use of the process, or the environmental problems associated with hydraulic fracturing, she said at the time.

The January poll asked questions including language such as, “Should we wait for at least three years or begin safe development sooner?”

The January poll found strong support for drilling now rather than in three years when the governor’s Marcellus Shale Advisory Committee issues a final report including environmental impacts of drilling.

The poll found 69 percent of the more than 800 respondents wanted to drill sooner, while 28 percent said to wait.

The total value of the natural gas in Allegany County’s Marcellus shale could be close to $15.72 billion, with the average well earning $65,000 to $524,000 yearly, University of Maryland Extension staff has said.

Contact Matthew Bieniek at mbieniek@times-news.com

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Study: Natural gas could mean big bucks for state

Friday, March 02, 2012

Study: Natural gas could mean big bucks for state
Evaluation of potential health impact still on table
by Margie Hyslop, Staff Writer

Maryland would reap about $441 million over 30 years in severance taxes if natural gas is extracted from the Marcellus shale formation under the state’s two westernmost counties, according to a study released Thursday by the Maryland Petroleum Council.

“It should be noted that our estimates are pretty conservative,” said Anirban Basu, an economist whose Sage Policy Group conducted the study.

That estimate — which includes about $214 million in revenue for the state, $162 million for Garrett County and $65 million for Allegany County — assumes that Maryland approves drilling and that the industry decides it is worth tapping about 710.1 billion cubic feet of reserves estimated to be available thousands of feet below the two counties.

Depending on whether low or high production is allowed, the state and two counties stand to gain $242.1 million to $642 million from severance taxes. The taxes are based on a 2 percent state levy and a 5.5 percent local levy.

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Shale gas in Maryland impacts two counties enormously: study

Washington (Platts)–1Mar2012/506 pm EST/2206 GMT

An industry-funded study of the economic impact of drilling for shale gas in Maryland’s westernmost two counties found that production would create 1,814 permanent jobs by 2025 and contribute $441 million in tax revenues to the state and Garrett and Allegany counties.

“The fiscal impact will be enormous, particularly at the county level,” Sage Policy Group CEO Anirban Basu said in a conference call Thursday.

Garrett and Allegany counties collect 5.5% severance taxes on gas production. Basu estimated that the state of Maryland would enact a 2% severance tax.

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Industry study says Maryland could be home to 365 natural gas wells, employ more than 1,800

ALEX DOMINGUEZ Associated Press
First Posted: March 01, 2012 – 4:45 pm
Last Updated: March 01, 2012 – 4:46 pm

BALTIMORE — Western Maryland could be home to 365 natural gas wells that employ more than 1,800 people, according to a study an industry group released Thursday.

The study released by the Maryland Petroleum Council estimates the wells would produce gas for 30 years, and more than $200 million in revenue for the state, about $160 million for Garrett County and $65 million for Allegany County over that period.

“The fiscal impact from this will be simply enormous, particularly at the local government level,” said Anirban Basu, chairman and CEO of the Sage Policy Group, a Baltimore economic and policy consulting firm that prepared the study.

However, Basu noted the figures were estimates based on gas prices that can vary. Drilling is also expected to create a wide variety of jobs, noting about 420 people in 150 occupations are needed to bring a single well online.

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Md. AG looks to protect landowners from natural gas speculators

BY JESSICA M. KARMASEK

ANNAPOLIS, Md. (Legal Newsline) — Maryland Attorney General Douglas Gansler announced this week a campaign aimed at protecting landowners in western Maryland from what he calls “high-pressure sales tactics” by natural gas drilling speculators.

Speculators are seeking to obtain mineral rights in the Maryland portion of the Marcellus Shale, a large underground rock formation stretching from upstate New York to southwestern Virginia.

The region is rich in natural gas deposits — estimated to contain 250 to 500 trillion cubic feet of the valuable energy resource.

Landowners whose properties sit above the Marcellus Shale should know their legal rights and potential risks from leasing their land to energy companies interested in drilling for natural gas using the process known as hydraulic fracturing or “fracking,” Gansler said Tuesday.

More here.

If you or someone you know is considering buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues! As member of the Garrett County Board of Realtors, I can assist you with ANY listed property, regardless of the listing broker.

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>Appropriate controls needed for gas drilling

>Gazette.net

Twice in a month, columnists from The Gazette promoted natural gas drilling in western Maryland at the expense of the facts (“Fracking gives O’Malley gas,” April 8, and “Narrow thinking limits energy options,” April 22), so here are a few.

Both authors inaccurately characterized the Marcellus Shale Safe Drilling Act as a ban on natural gas fracking. In fact, this innovative common-sense legislation would have done three things: committed the state to a robust two-year study on the safety of drilling in our state; secured funding for this study from the same industry that stands to profit enormously, and created a nonpartisan advisory commission composed of scientists, industry, local governments and residents to make recommendations on the scope of the study, permitting process, and regulatory changes.

State agencies, which have said they currently have neither the expertise nor the resources to move forward with permitting, would have had time to ensure they could protect homes, businesses and farms in our communities before any drilling began.

Our concern is not abstract. Recently, a company lost control of a well in Pennsylvania for days, spilling thousands of gallons of chemically treated water into a tributary of the Susquehanna River and prompting the evacuations of several families. Gas companies in our northern neighboring state average nearly three safety and environmental violations per day.

Read the full article here.

If you or someone you know is considering buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues! As member of the Garrett County Board of Realtors, I can assist you with ANY listed property, regardless of the listing broker.

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>Cardin Pushes For Oversight Of Gas Fracking

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Apr. 14, 2011

by Laura E. Lee

Capital News Service

WASHINGTON – Sen. Ben Cardin, D-Md., on Tuesday called for a change to federal law to allow the Environmental Protection Agency to regulate the natural gas drilling process of hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking.”

Cardin, chairman of the Subcommittee on Water and Wildlife, and Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., chairwoman of the Committee on Environment and Public Works, held a hearing on Capitol Hill to examine the advantages and challenges of fracking.

“We want to be able to tap into the natural gas reserves of this nation,” Cardin said, “and we want to do it in a safe and environmentally sound manner.”

Gas companies could use the hydraulic fracturing process to extract natural gas from the Marcellus shale formation, which runs under Pennsylvania, Ohio, New York, West Virginia, and western Maryland.

Read the full article here.

If you or someone you know is considering buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues! As member of the Garrett County Board of Realtors, I can assist you with ANY listed property, regardless of the listing broker.

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>Bill To Stop Natural Gas Drilling Fails, Along With Other Environmental Legislation

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Apr. 14, 2011

by Kerry Davis

Capital News Service

ANNAPOLIS – A bill that would have imposed a two-year moratorium on natural gas drilling in the Marcellus shale formation while an environmental impact study was completed stalled in the Senate this legislative session after easily passing the House.

It is unclear how heavily the bill’s failure will actually affect drilling into the Marcellus shale formation via hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” since a hold has already been unofficially placed on drilling there.

The Maryland Department of the Environment has been holding permit applications for drilling since October 2009, citing potential environmental effects. Those applications for fracking were the first ever filed in the state.

The Department of the Environment is not expected to approve the applications without Gov. Martin O’Malley’s approval. O’Malley has said he wants a thorough study done before fracking begins.

Read the full article here.

If you or someone you know is considering buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues! As member of the Garrett County Board of Realtors, I can assist you with ANY listed property, regardless of the listing broker.

877-563-5350 Questions about ANY listed property? I can help! Call me!
Visit the ‘I Love Deep Creek & Garrett County group’ on Facebook! News, events, photos, real estate, community, info, more! 1,750+ members & growing!