Spilman
News Alert: Gov. Tomblin to Call Special Session
to Address W.Va. Shale Gas Legislation
Governor
Tomblin has
announced that he will issue a
proclamation to call
a Special Session of the
West Virginia Legislature, beginning at 5
p.m. on December 11, 2011, which coincides with
the scheduled legislative interim committee
meetings. The sole item on the agenda will be
legislation to govern and regulate the exploration
and development of shale gas formations through
wells drilled using horizontal drilling
technologies and completed using hydraulic
stimulation techniques.
The
special session will be asked to consider a bill
developed by the Governor's office with input from
legislators, surface owners' interests,
environmental representatives and the natural gas
industry. Governor Tomblin is hopeful that
adequate support exists to pass the proposed
legislation, which will provide benefits to all
West Virginians through protection of our state's
water resources, surface owners' interests and
environmental interests, while encouraging
responsible development of our state's natural gas
resources with the resulting economic benefits in
the form of employment and tax revenues.
The
primary provisions of the bill include:
- increased funding for inspectors and related
regulatory oversight of horizontal wells through
increased permit fees of $10,000 for the first
horizontal well and $5,000 for subsequent
horizontal wells drilled on a single well pad;
- new requirements for obtaining permits for
horizontal wells, such as a water management
plan, site construction plan certified by a
registered professional engineer, well site
safety plan, and identifying additives to be
used in fracturing a well;
- application and approval by the Department
of Environmental Protection for large freshwater
and wastewater impoundments and for regular
inspection of large impoundments;
- notice of horizontal well permit
applications to owners of water wells within
1,500 feet of a well site;
- requiring horizontal wells to be located as
least 625 feet from an occupied dwelling or
large cattle or poultry barn, and 100 feet from
a perennial stream, lake, pond, reservoir or
wetland;
- increasing bond requirements to $50,000 for
a single well and $250,000 for statewide bonds;
- requiring reimbursement of real property
taxes to surface owners of disturbed land in a
one time amount of $2,500;
- creating a presumption of liability of a gas
well operator for contamination or deprivation
of water supply located within 1,500 feet of a
well site and providing for replacement of any
such water supply;
- assuring that gas well operators comply with
road use regulations of the Division of
Highways;
- requiring DEP to develop a website to make
available to the public information about well
permit applications;
- requiring DEP to evaluate the need for air
quality and impoundment and pit safety
regulations;
- establishing certain horizontal well casing
and cementing minimum standards and requiring
DEP to develop regulations; and
- establishing horizontal well production
damage compensation for surface owners and
procedures for determining such
damages.
Passage of legislation could
help energize growth of the natural gas industry
in West Virginia as well as make West Virginia
more competitive in terms of a potential ethane
cracker site location. At the same time, it could
create important protections for the citizens of
West Virginia and preservation of its other
natural resources. However, further amendments may
quickly turn the bill into a detriment to all
interested in economic growth in West Virginia.