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	<title>The Colorado Independent &#187; Royal Dutch Shell</title>
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		<title>Shell&#8217;s natural gas play in Colorado raises issues of local versus state input, control</title>
		<link>http://coloradoindependent.com/101336/shells-natural-gas-play-in-colorado-raises-issues-of-local-versus-state-input-control</link>
		<comments>http://coloradoindependent.com/101336/shells-natural-gas-play-in-colorado-raises-issues-of-local-versus-state-input-control#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 03 Oct 2011 17:23:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>David O. Williams</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Arrangement]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Center Well]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://coloradoindependent.com/?p=101336</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<img width="499" height="171" src="http://images.coloradoindependent.com/shell-oil-shale-500.jpg" class="attachment-index-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="Shell oil shale testing on Colorado&#039;s Western Slope (USGS photo)." title="shell-oil-shale 500" margin-bottom="2px" />For decades, Royal Dutch Shell – Europe’s largest energy company – has been known in Colorado as the king of oil shale research, spending an estimated $200 million on an experimental and controversial extraction process that has yet to be proven commercially viable. But Shell and its American subsidiaries have increasingly been moving into natural gas drilling in the United States, including a well permit pulled in southern Colorado that has touched off a firestorm of debate over state versus local control of drilling operations and just how much public input should be allowed.
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<img width="499" height="171" src="http://images.coloradoindependent.com/shell-oil-shale-500.jpg" class="attachment-index-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="Shell oil shale testing on Colorado&#039;s Western Slope (USGS photo)." title="shell-oil-shale 500" margin-bottom="2px" /><p>For decades, Royal Dutch Shell – Europe’s largest energy company – has been known in Colorado as the king of oil shale research, spending an estimated $200 million on an experimental and controversial extraction process that has yet to be proven commercially viable.</p>
<p>But Shell and its American subsidiaries have increasingly been moving into natural gas drilling in the United States, including a well permit pulled in southern Colorado that has touched off a firestorm of debate over state versus local control of drilling operations and just how much public input should be allowed.</p>
<p>The company also acquired natural gas leases in northwestern Colorado when it purchased Pennsylvania-based East Resources for $4.7 billion last year – a move Shell CEO Peter Voser said fit with company plans to <a href="http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D9G02S500.htm">“grow and upgrade” its shale gas holdings</a> in North America. Because while oil shale remains <a href="http://coloradoindependent.com/83934/despite-spiking-gas-prices-colorado-oil-shale-years-from-production-if-ever">years if not decades away from viability</a>, shale gas is quite lucrative right now.</p>
<p>“We do have additional leasehold in northwest Colorado – Moffat and Routt counties, specifically,” Shell’s Kelly op de Weegh told the Colorado Independent. “We’re still in an early phase of development and have not yet begun drilling operations. We are currently upgrading the existing field facilities to <a href="http://www.shell.us/home/content/usa/aboutshell/shell_businesses/onshore/">Shell’s stringent safety and operational standards</a>.”</p>
<p>Those standards are precisely what citizen advocates in Colorado’s Huerfano County (CHC) are concerned about. A group called <a href="http://huerfanofrack.blogspot.com/">Citizens for Huerfano County</a> filed a lawsuit in July seeking to vacate a state permit issued to Shell Western Exploration and Production to drill and hydraulically fracture a natural gas well in the area.</p>
<p>The group argues both the county commissioners and the state did not properly inform them of the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission <a href="http://cogcc.state.co.us/cogis/FacilityDetail.asp?facid=05506307&#038;type=WELL">(COGCC) permit</a> or allow public input.</p>
<p>“CHC members are infuriated that neither the COGCC nor the county commissioners think they have any obligation to inform the public or to allow them any meaningful role in the permitting process &#8212; even though it is the residents of Huerfano County who will be dealing with well impacts,” CHC attorney Julie Kreutzer said in a press release.</p>
<p>Shell’s op de Weegh did not directly address the litigation in southern Colorado, but did acknowledge the company’s operations there.</p>
<p>“We do have leasehold in Huerfano County for future natural gas operations,” op de Weegh said. “Much like our project in the northwest, it is also in a very early stage. We are not currently drilling in Huerfano County.”</p>
<p>The COGCC, which has ultimate regulatory authority over oil and gas drilling in Colorado, informed both Huerfano County and CHC members that, “based upon this review, we determined that the permitted well and location will not result in significant adverse impacts to public health, safety, or welfare or the environment.”</p>
<p>But in July the <a href="https://docs.google.com/a/realvail.com/viewer?a=v&#038;pid=gmail&#038;attid=0.1&#038;thid=132748ad13af5ee9&#038;mt=application/pdf&#038;url=https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui%3D2%26ik%3D8939af1f83%26view%3Datt%26th%3D132748ad13af5ee9%26attid%3D0.1%26disp%3Dsafe%26zw&#038;sig=AHIEtbSEf5AR96fgFZJqifh-O6LkHuuHsw&#038;pli=1">COGCC admitted that it “regrettably” failed</a> to properly inform county officials (pdf) of Shell’s application or the state review in May. COGCC in July suspended Shell’s permit for 20 days to allow the county to comment, but the county commissioners opted not to do so, making the permit once again valid in August.</p>
<p>The dispute again raises the thorny issue of local control over oil and gas drilling, which typically is almost exclusively under the purview of state regulatory officials. However, Garfield County in the past has <a href="http://coloradoindependent.com/56120/battlement-mesa-seeks-to-use-county-power-to-fight-antero-drilling-plan">looked into exercising county 1041 powers</a>, which have previously been reserved for regulating large infrastructure projects such as utility lines or water storage or diversion facilities.</p>
<p>CHC recently hosted a talk by Josh Joswick, a former three-term La Plata County commissioner who’s now the oil and gas issues organizer with <a href="http://www.sanjuancitizens.org/index.shtml">San Juan Citizens Alliance</a> in southwestern Colorado.</p>
<p>Joswick previously told the Colorado Independent that La Plata County in the early 1990s also explored using 1041 powers to locally regulate oil and gas drilling but instead opted to write and <a href="http://coloradoindependent.com/55612/reeling-bp-looks-to-resume-colorado-drilling-alt-energy-projects">approve its own set of oil and gas regulations</a>. Those rules were challenged by the state and the industry but ultimately upheld by the Colorado Supreme Court.</p>
<p>Also in heavily drilled Garfield County, citizen groups have asked the county to use land-use powers to increase setbacks so that gas rigs can’t be erected too close to homes, schools and other public buildings. Such a move could <a href="http://coloradoindependent.com/35782/oil-and-gas-director-says-state-ag-may-decide-drilling-setback-flap">ultimately land in court</a> if state officials don’t feel greater setbacks are necessary.</p>
<p>Leslie Robinson, a citizen activist in Garfield County who for years has followed the local-versus-state control and public input issue, says the entire system is badly broken.</p>
<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a travesty that citizens have to sue to get equal representation before a government entity like the COGCC &#8212; isn&#8217;t there something like the Declaration of Independence that gives citizens equal rights?” Robinson said. “However, when it comes to oil-and-gas issues and the state of Colorado, citizens are less than second-class because we get no voice at all at these hearings and there is no recourse.”</p>
<p><a href="http://huerfanofrack.blogspot.com/2011/09/citizens-protest-blm-oil-and-gas-lease.html">CHC also is protesting</a> a Nov. 10 U.S. Bureau of Land Management lease sale in Denver, which would offer up 8,000 acres of federal lands in Huerfano County for oil and gas drilling.</p>
<p>Follow <a href=" https://twitter.com/#!/davidowilliams">David O. Williams on Twitter</a>. </em></h4>
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		<title>Salazar calls for investigation of Bush oil shale rules</title>
		<link>http://coloradoindependent.com/40490/salazar-calls-for-investigation-of-bush-oil-shale-rules</link>
		<comments>http://coloradoindependent.com/40490/salazar-calls-for-investigation-of-bush-oil-shale-rules#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 20 Oct 2009 19:08:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>David O. Williams</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Center Well]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Gale Norton]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ken Salazar]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kerogen]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Oil Shale]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Royal Dutch Shell]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shell]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[U.S. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar on Tuesday called on his department’s inspector general to investigate so-called midnight oil shale leasing regulations issued in the waning days of the Bush administration. “We want to avoid the booms and busts of the past,” said Salazar, a former U.S. senator from Colorado, referring to a devastating oil shale bust on the Western Slope in the 1980s. “We want to ensure the potential development is done in a way that is environmentally appropriate."]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>U.S. Interior Secretary <a href="http://www.doi.gov/welcome.html">Ken Salazar</a> on Tuesday called on his department’s inspector general to investigate so-called midnight oil shale leasing regulations issued in the waning days of the Bush administration.</p>
<p><a href="http://coloradoindependent.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/Picture-192.png"><img src="http://coloradoindependent.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/Picture-192.png" alt="ken salazar" title="ken salazar" width="202" height="160" class="alignleft size-full wp-image-40507" /></a></p>
<p>Issued as amendments to six existing research and development leases on public lands (five in Colorado and one in Utah), the 11th-hour Bush regulations set the ground rules for moving forward with commercial oil shale production if and when oil and gas companies arrive at viable technologies capable of affordably squeezing kerogen from shale rock and sand in western Colorado, eastern Utah and southwestern Wyoming.</p>
<p>Some estimates place oil shale reserves in the region’s <a href="http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/tertiary/eoc/greenriver.html">Green River Formation</a> at up to 1 trillion barrels of oil that could then be refined into petroleum. Kerogen is the organic material trapped in the shale that can be extracted at extremely high temperatures.</p>
<p>But the process remains highly speculative, and environmentalists who have<a href="http://coloradoindependent.com/38856/judge-gives-feds-more-time-to-settle-lawsuits-over-11th-hour-oil-shale-rules"> legally challenged</a> the Bush rules say the current technology requires far too much water for arid western lands to support, too much electricity that would further exacerbate global warming and that the process degrades sensitive Rocky Mountain landscapes with adverse impacts on wildlife and tourism.</p>
<p> “We want to avoid the booms and busts of the past,” said Salazar, a former U.S. senator from Colorado, referring to a devastating oil shale bust on the Western Slope in the 1980s. “We want to ensure the potential development is done in a way that is environmentally appropriate, and we want to assure that the American taxpayers get a fair return for the potential development of America’s public lands.”</p>
<p>The Bush rules called for a royalty rate starting at 5 percent to be paid by oil and gas companies to the federal government for the use of public lands. Critics claim that rate is far too low.</p>
<p>“There is a question about how those royalty rates could actually be set when these very important fundamental questions [about technology, water and<a href="http://coloradoindependent.com/27451/western-slope-officials-see-promise-in-a-nuclear-powered-oil-shale-industry"> power</a>] have not been answered,” Salazar said, adding the 11th-hour process was done without public scrutiny and was too favorable to a handful of companies currently holding leases.</p>
<p>“These lease addenda conveyed lucrative benefits to the leaseholders to the exclusion of others,” he said, reading from a letter he sent to the inspector general today. “Further, the addenda were executed at the very end of the last administration and were issued in contrast to the underlying leases without any opportunity for public review or comment.”</p>
<p>Royal Dutch Shell holds three of the Colorado R&#038;D leases and is currently part of an <a href="http://coloradoindependent.com/40273/times-follows-e-mail-trail-in-11th-hour-oil-shale-leasing-probe-of-norton">ongoing investigation </a>by the Justice Department of former Bush Interior Secretary Gale Norton, who <a href="http://www.denverpost.com/business/ci_4910177">later accepted a job with Shell</a>. The DOJ is investigating whether Norton, a former Colorado attorney general, gave favorable treatment to Shell in exchange for a position with the company.</p>
<p>“There are serious questions about whether those lease addenda are legal or whether they should be rescinded,” Salazar said, although he said he’ll reserve judgment until the inspector general’s report is completed. At that point he said Interior will either defend the rules, modify them or rescind them.</p>
<p>Salazar also announced the <a href="http://www.blm.gov/wo/st/en.html">Bureau of Land Management</a> will begin accepting an unlimited number of applications for a new round of R&#038;D leases of up to 640 acres, or approximately one square mile. Energy companies have up to 60 days to apply for those leases, which will be managed under a new set of guidelines.</p>
<p>Besides being smaller than the existing leases, which are for more than 5,000 acres each, companies issued a new lease would have to submit a plan of development within nine months, and once approved by the BLM, would then have to get all state and local permits for development within 16 months.</p>
<p>The development plans, Salazar said, will have to address key concerns about water and power consumption and environmental impacts on wildlife, air and water quality and local communities. Water, he stressed, <a href="http://coloradoindependent.com/24758/shell-official-confirms-thirsty-nature-of-oil-shale-denies-push-to-corner-water-market">especially in the Colorado River Basin</a>, is a key concern.</p>
<p> “This is an obviously important question in Colorado and Utah, which are arid states with limited water supplies where commercial oil shale development would have major impacts on agriculture and other uses,” Salazar said.</p>
<h6>Got a tip? Freelance story pitch? <a href="mailto:tips@coloradoindependent.com">Send us an e-mail</a>. Follow <a href="http://twitter.com/COindependent">The Colorado Independent on Twitter</a>. </h6>
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