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Why Cuomo’s New York Fracking Ban Won’t Matter Much
National Review ^ | 12/20/2014 | Robert Bryce

Posted on 12/20/2014 5:14:58 PM PST by SeekAndFind

Amid the many explanations offered by New York governor Andrew Cuomo and his various lieutenants about their reasons for imposing a permanent ban on hydraulic fracturing in the state, one of them made me laugh out loud.

“We lack the necessary data,” said New York’s health commissioner, Howard Zucker. I’ll discuss why that claim made me chuckle in just a moment. Before turning to that, let’s be clear: Cuomo’s decision is not surprising, and it’s not very significant either.

It’s hardly surprising that a liberal Democratic governor in one of America’s most liberal states chose to ban fracturing. Indeed, in most liberal/left groups, hatred of the oil-and-gas sector isn’t just popular, it’s a membership requirement. On Thursday morning, Dan Henninger of the Wall Street Journal put it exactly right when he told Charles Payne on Fox Business that “the Democrats have been captured by the Greens.”

New York has had a moratorium on hydraulic fracturing for years. To change that policy now, after all the campaigning that has been done in the state by environmental groups, would have been a truly surprising move. That Cuomo formalized that moratorium and made it official is not surprising in any way.

As to the significance of the move, it has made environmental groups giddy and added a tiny dollop of political theater to the discussion about domestic oil and gas development. It’s also clear that the move is negative for the economy of upstate New York. In 2011, Timothy Considine and two colleagues were asked by the Manhattan Institute (where I’m a senior fellow) to estimate the economic opportunities of shale development. Considine’s report found that shale-gas drilling in New York would spur more than $11 billion in economic output and create as many as 18,000 jobs. Now, thanks to Cuomo’s move, the possibility of that economic development — along with those thousands of jobs — has vanished, probably for decades.

But in the big picture, the ban on fracturing in New York won’t matter much for domestic energy production. To understand why that’s true, we need only compare the attractiveness of New York as a place to get into the oil-and-gas sector with that of other states. Given the political risks of operating in New York, drillers have simply opted to take their rigs, workers, and capital and put them to work elsewhere. Sure, New York has lots of oil and gas in the Marcellus shale that could be extracted. But there are plenty of hydrocarbons in the Marcellus shale in Pennsylvania, too. Ohio has the Utica shale, North Dakota has the Bakken, Texas has the Eagle Ford, Louisiana has the Haynesville. Why would a driller consider locating in New York, given the political uncertainty? The answer is obvious: They haven’t, and now, thanks to Cuomo, they won’t.

Look at what has happened in New York’s neighbor to the south, Pennsylvania. Oil- and gas-related jobs in the Keystone State now outnumber steel-related jobs. More than 21,000 Pennsylvanians are currently working for oil and gas companies. And they are making good money — about $71,000 per year, on average.

Further, the amount of natural gas now being produced in Pennsylvania is staggering. Since about 2009, gas production from the Marcellus shale in Pennsylvania alone has grown by nearly 16 billion cubic feet per day. That volume of natural gas is roughly equal to the amount of gas being produced by Iran.

On the national level, the number of jobs that have been created in the drilling sector is similarly impressive. According to the energy consulting firm IHS, between 2008 and 2012, the natural-gas industry alone added 2.1 million jobs here in the U.S. And last fall, Wallace Tyner, an energy economist at Purdue University, estimated that the shale revolution was adding some $473 billion per year to the U.S. economy, or about 3 percent of GDP. That’s a huge stimulus, and all of it has happened without New York.

As for Zucker’s claim that there’s a lack of data about hydraulic fracturing, let me explain why it’s so ludicrous. The process has been used more than 1 million times on oil and gas wells here in the U.S. If fracturing is as dangerous as many environmental groups are claiming, then hundreds, perhaps thousands, of domestic water wells would have been contaminated by now. And surely the public would have been made aware of those many contaminated wells. That hasn’t happened.

In 2011 Lisa Jackson, who then headed the federal Environmental Protection Agency, testified before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. During that appearance Jackson said, “I’m not aware of any proven case where the fracking process itself has affected water.”

In 2011, the MIT Energy Initiative released a 170-page report on natural gas that addressed hydraulic fracturing directly. It said:

The fracturing process itself poses minimal risk to the shallow groundwater zones that may exist in the upper portion of the wellbore. . . . The physical realities of the fracturing process, combined with the lack of reports from the many wells to date of fracture fluid contamination of groundwater, supports the assertion that fracturing itself does not create environmental concerns.

What’s clear about Cuomo’s decision to permanently ban hydraulic fracturing in New York is that politics — and by that, I mean the politics of hard-left Greens – has triumphed over sensible energy policy and economic development.

The good news in this story is that New York’s ban won’t stop the shale revolution. Thanks to the ongoing development of shale oil and shale gas in other states, the U.S. has effectively broken OPEC. In addition, it now has an energy-price advantage over nearly every other country in the world.

So let’s agree to ignore the news out of New York. The ban on hydraulic fracturing is not at all surprising, and in the long run, it’s not going to be that significant to the U.S. economy.

— Robert Bryce is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute. His latest book, Smaller Faster Lighter Denser Cheaper: How Innovation Keeps Proving the Catastrophists Wrong, was published in May by PublicAffairs.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; News/Current Events; US: New York
KEYWORDS: andrewcuomo; fracking; newyork

1 posted on 12/20/2014 5:14:58 PM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: thackney

Ping.


2 posted on 12/20/2014 5:19:34 PM PST by Army Air Corps (Four Fried Chickens and a Coke)
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To: SeekAndFind

Libs in NY are scared of placing money and power to Upstaters.


3 posted on 12/20/2014 5:21:52 PM PST by bestintxas (Every time a RINO is defeated a Founding Father gets his wings.)
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To: bestintxas
bestintxas:" Libs in NY are scared of placing money and power to Upstaters."

CORRECTION : The LIBs in NYC are scared of placing money and power to Upstaters .
Cuomo already believes that anything North of Croton should be a State Park.
Why else would he break with tradition for "oath of office" to be taken in New York City ,
instead of at Albany (State Capitol), where all previously installed Governors took their oath ?
Or,..maybe he heard that the SAFE ACT wasn't popular 30 miles out of NYC ?!!

4 posted on 12/20/2014 5:32:05 PM PST by Tilted Irish Kilt
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To: SeekAndFind

Sorta runs counter to all of the “New York is open for business” the state’s been airing.


5 posted on 12/20/2014 5:32:23 PM PST by Arm_Bears (Rope. Tree. Politician. Some assembly required.)
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To: bestintxas
Libs in NY are scared of placing money and power to Upstaters.
Beg to differ.

Libs in NYC are barely aware of the existence of Upstaters.

6 posted on 12/20/2014 5:36:01 PM PST by Salman
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To: SeekAndFind
Look at what has happened in New York’s neighbor to the south, Pennsylvania. Oil- and gas-related jobs in the Keystone State now outnumber steel-related jobs.

I read earlier this year that the steel mills in Pennsylvania are working 24/7 cranking out oil drilling pipes.

Meanwhile in roads north of Houston docks...truck loads of drill pipe from Russia, East Europe, India and China are making their way north.

7 posted on 12/20/2014 5:41:33 PM PST by spokeshave (He has erected a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harass our people,)
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To: SeekAndFind

Hope they all freeze.


8 posted on 12/20/2014 5:42:36 PM PST by dfwgator
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To: SeekAndFind

For a Democrat this is the perfect time to ban. Prices are low due to oversupply. Drilling activity is plunging anyway. The get the political mileage from the base for free.

The ban will be repealed someday, they will need the money too badly.


9 posted on 12/20/2014 6:04:28 PM PST by SaxxonWoods (Life is good.)
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To: Arm_Bears; SeekAndFind
Arm_Bears :" Sorta runs counter to all of the “New York is open for business” the state’s been airing."

That “New York is open for business” was $52 million Dollars that was supposed to go to "Hurricane Sandy" rebuild and relief.
The “New York is open for business” was an attempt to remind the rest of the country that Cuomo was available for Presidential nomination in 2016 .
It was money spent on Cuomo's ego trip .
Actually, “New York is open for TAXES” , and everybody knows it.

10 posted on 12/20/2014 6:16:11 PM PST by Tilted Irish Kilt
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To: SeekAndFind

PA should drill right up to its northern border and drink NY’s milkshake.


11 posted on 12/20/2014 6:32:40 PM PST by mikey_hates_everything
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To: bestintxas

“Libs in NY are scared of placing money and power to Upstaters.”

BINGO!!!


12 posted on 12/20/2014 7:14:04 PM PST by panaxanax
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To: SeekAndFind

This is federalism in action. Let NY liberals suffer.


13 posted on 12/20/2014 7:17:48 PM PST by 1010RD (First, Do No Harm)
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To: Tilted Irish Kilt; dfwgator

“..maybe he heard that the SAFE ACT wasn’t popular 30 miles out of NYC”

As an ‘upstater’ I can honestly say that you can’t drive more than a quarter mile with out seeing a “REPEAL THE SAFE ACT” sign.

In some of the smaller villages nearly every house is displaying “The Sign” as well as an American flag.

No, dfwgator, we don’t “deserve to freeze”. Why wish that on good patriotic folks fighting behind enemy lines?


14 posted on 12/20/2014 7:29:47 PM PST by panaxanax
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To: SeekAndFind

Won’t matter much? Tell that to the land holders that have Marcellus / York under their property in Upper NY State. They have the potentiality to turn their lives around financially only to be thwarted by the Green Apparatchiks..


15 posted on 12/20/2014 7:43:08 PM PST by taildragger (Not my Circus, Not my Monkey ( Boy does that apply to DC...))
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To: panaxanax; dfwgator
panaxanax:" No, dfwgator, we don’t “deserve to freeze”.
Why wish that on good patriotic folks fighting behind enemy lines?"

Cuomo won reelection by little more than 5% of the vote. Asterino was self-financed, all of it "in State", no national Rebublican financial help.
If the Republican Chair, N.J. Chris Cristie, hadn't stated that "We don't give money to lost causes" , and held back election money
New York State would have have a new Governor today, and not have to deal with Cuomo's ego, or the SAFE ACT.
I have already been advised that 'NYS has no room for my Conservative values' by Gov. Cuomo , and am making arraingements to move elsewhere.

16 posted on 12/20/2014 7:43:47 PM PST by Tilted Irish Kilt
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To: dfwgator
dfwgator:" Hope they all freeze."

When I worked in the Southern Tier of NYS decades ago , friends of mine rented a house near the Penna. border.
The location was Appalachian poverty hidden in the hills, and it exists all the way down to Georgia . The friends turned on the water , and then stuck a match under the kitchen faucet, and in addition to water ,
there was a three inch light blue flame coming out the faucet.
Natural gas is that close to the surface in some locations.
However, my friends were too broke to capitalize on it.

17 posted on 12/20/2014 7:53:53 PM PST by Tilted Irish Kilt
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