Congressional report supports fracking
Senator Jim Inhofe
U.S. Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.), senior member of the Senate Environment and Public Works (EPW) Committee, praised the EPW Committee Republicans’ report released today titled, “Setting the Record Straight: Hydraulic Fracturing and America’s Energy Revolution.”
“Through the dedication of Ranking Member David Vitter and the hard work of committee staff, this report dispels the falsehoods perpetuated by the Obama Administration and environmental extremists about hydraulic fracturing,” said Inhofe.
"As I have long said, hydraulic fracturing is a time-tested, safe technology that is absolutely essential to the energy independence of the United States. This method has made way for the oil and natural gas boom in my state of Oklahoma, and as recent reports have shown, states like Oklahoma have led for more than 60 years in ensuring this method is well-monitored and regulated. Unfortunately, despite the President touting his support of natural gas, the Administration’s disdain for the method to extract this clean, cheap energy resource shows little interest in actually supporting the growth of this industry. This timely committee report sets the record straight and serves to remind us that the development of domestic energy provides enormous potential for our nation’s economic growth and energy security," Inhofe added.
A copy of the report can be read by clicking here. Below are key points from the report:
Key points from the report:
• The United States is in the midst of an energy renaissance, as a result of the combination of two key techniques in oil and natural gas development: hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling.
• From 2009 to 2013, there was a 6% fall in oil production and 28% fall in natural gas production on federal lands, while at the same time production on private lands increased dramatically. Most recent Bureau of Land Management (BLM) estimates show 90% of natural gas and 92% of oil on federal lands is either inaccessible or restricted.
• Environmental activists insist that hydraulic fracturing itself has a devastating impact on the environment, but decades of studies and empirical evidence have debunked these claims and proved otherwise.
• Hydraulic fracturing is extensively regulated by the states and has been for over sixty years. When it comes to regulating hydraulic fracturing and the oil and gas industry as a whole, states, not the federal government, are in the best position to create effective policies that address each state’s distinct regulatory needs.
• The Obama Administration and their far-left environmental allies are constantly attacking hydraulic fracturing in an attempt to blur the line between what is and what is not hydraulic fracturing, and to manufacture risks and associate them with the practice.
• More than all other federal agencies, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is the most active against domestic fossil fuel production through hydraulic fracturing. Since in many instances the Agency does not have the direct authority to regulate hydraulic fracturing, it is creatively using other avenues such as broad studies, baseless investigations, and associated regulations to make the practice so costly and burdensome, the process and development of the resources will no longer be viable.
• Over the last four years, EPA has exceedingly abused its power in premeditated and concerted attacks on hydraulic fracturing highlighted in three specific cases: Dimock, Pennsylvania, Pavillion, Wyoming, and Parker County, Texas.
• Despite the Agency’s efforts and political agenda in all three cases, the facts led EPA to reverse course and end their investigations without the smoking gun they so hoped to manufacture.
• EPA and Obama Administration also gained the support of a new ally, the EPA Office of Inspector General’s office, who issued a report setting a dangerous precedent for EPA enforcement actions stating that the Agency can now halt any actions – by private citizens, businesses, and industries like oil and gas operations – based solely on their own made-up assumptions and contrived facts.
• Many of the Administration’s policies targeting hydraulic fracturing were laid out in a 2007 report by the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), which outlined the group’s favored regulatory agenda to attack domestic oil and natural gas development. The EPA and its far-left allies are accomplishing many of NRDC’s stated policy goals, often in response to sue-and-settle arrangements or through a similar friendly petition process.
• Deep pocket donors are among the most prominent activists with ties to the Administration’s efforts to phase out hydraulic fracturing. Major environmental organizations, such as the Sierra Club and the NRDC are at the forefront, coordinating with the EPA, initiating legal challenges to prompt federal action, and blurring the scientific literature with spurious studies.
• Over the course of environmentalists’ misinformation campaign, many groups have taken hypocritical positions. One key example is the Sierra Club, who after years of embracing natural gas, suddenly rejected it only when the Club got a generous financial deal from partnering with solar company Sungevity, Inc. Notably, Sungevity has received millions in subsidies from the U.S. Department of Treasury and the company gives Sierra Club a hefty donation for every solar panel purchased.
• Among the most visible far-left activists carrying out the anti-fossil fuel agenda is billionaire Tom Steyer who has pledged over $100 million in campaign funds this year alone to leftist Democrats who support his agenda. Steyer was rumored to be in the running as President Obama’s Secretary of Energy and was supported for that position by Center for American Progress co-founder and current White House climate and energy counselor, John Podesta.
• One of the most recent illustrations of Hollywood anti-fracking activists’ hypocritical nature involved two film producers eager to accept Middle Eastern oil money to create an American anti-fracking film. Another is highlighted by anti-fossil fuel activist Leonardo DiCaprio who advocates for killing the fossil fuel industry, while riding around the world on yachts with an estimated fuel economy of one mile per gallon and paid for by oil rich Middle Eastern regimes.