Ohio: U.S. District Judge Michael Watson blocks new oil & gas leasing & frac’ing in Wayne National Forest, prohibits new surface disturbances on existing leases, and prohibits water withdrawals from Little Muskingum River for already approved drilling, saying the Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management had “demonstrated a disregard for the different types of impacts caused by fracking in the Forest. The agencies made decisions premised on a faulty foundation.”

Federal judge blocks new fracking in Wayne National Forest by The Lawrence Herald, March 12, 2021

COLUMBUS — A federal judge on Monday blocked new oil and gas leasing and fracking in Ohio’s Wayne National Forest, according to a news release from the Center for Biological Diversity.

Part of the forest lies in Lawrence County, home to the Ironton Ranger District.

Pending completion of new environmental reviews, Monday’s order blocks new leases on the Wayne, prohibits new drilling permits and surface disturbance on existing leases, and prohibits water withdrawals from the Little Muskingum River for already-approved drilling.

“This is great news for the future of Ohio’s only national forest,” Taylor McKinnon, a senior campaigner at the Center for Biological Diversity, said in the news release. “We’re grateful the judge recognized the damage fracking could do to this spectacular forest. The order will protect our climate, endangered wildlife and drinking water for millions of people.”

U.S. District Judge Michael Watson said the Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management had “demonstrated a disregard for the different types of impacts caused by fracking in the Forest. The agencies made decisions premised on a faulty foundation.”

“This is a victory for public health, for outdoor recreation, and for our climate. The court’s ruling means that, at least for the foreseeable future, a significant portion of the Wayne National Forest will be safe from oil and gas development. And this victory may ultimately be permanent given the Biden administration’s recent moratorium on new oil and gas leasing on federal public lands,” said Nathan Johnson, public lands director for the Ohio Environmental Council. “The Wayne is a public forest that we all own. Keeping its air and water clean, as well as its views intact, is a win that we can all celebrate.”

In May 2017, conservation groups sued the agencies over plans to permit fracking in the Wayne, saying federal officials had relied on an outdated plan and ignored significant environmental threats before approving the fracking.

“This victory, like the Wayne National Forest, belongs to all of us,” said Becca Pollard with the Sierra Club.

“Permitting fracking anywhere is a threat to our health and clean air and water, and we’re relieved to see the judge rule in favor of protecting the forest. We look forward to working together to ensure that this decision is made permanent and we may continue to enjoy and explore Wayne National Forest.”

Monday’s order comes as the Biden administration has paused federal oil and gas leasing, both onshore and offshore, pending a climate review of the federal fossil fuel programs.

Federal Judge Deals Another Setback to Oil, Natural Gas Development in Ohio National Forest by Jamison Cocklin, March 11, 2021, Natural Gas Intel

A federal judge has halted oil and gas development in Ohio’s Wayne National Forest (WNF) after a ruling last year found the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and the U.S. Forest Service (USFS) failed to adequately consider the impact of unconventional development when they opened the land for drilling.

WNF

The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio ordered the agencies to further review their authorizations under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). Pending review, this week’s order blocks new leases in the WNF, prohibits new drilling permits and surface disturbance on existing leases, and prohibits water withdrawals from the Little Muskingum River.

Judge Michael Watson said the USFS and BLM “demonstrated a disregard for the different types of impacts” caused by unconventional development in the forest. He added that “the agencies made decisions premised on a faulty foundation.” 

The court found last year that federal regulators specifically failed to consider surface area disturbance, impacts on the Indiana Bat, the Little Muskingum River and regional air quality related to horizontal wells completed with hydraulic fracturing.

The decision was another flash point in a long-running battle over whether exploration and production companies should be allowed to operate in the WNF, the state’s only national forest. Last year’s decision threw the future of WNF leasing into doubt when the case proceeded to determine if lease sales should be voided.

Four environmental groups, led by the Center for Biological Diversity, filed a lawsuit against BLM and USFS in 2017 to void oil and gas leases and stop unconventional development in the forest.

The BLM in 2015 proposed to lease parcels across 40,000 acres in the forest’s Marietta Unit in Monroe, Noble and Washington counties that were nominated by the industry for unconventional development. The Eastern States Office began auctioning parcels shortly thereafter, and more than 2,000 acres in the forest have since been leased for Utica Shale development.

The court acknowledged this week, however, that the federal agencies did not completely abandon their duties under NEPA and indicated that remanding the environmental review would likely remedy the case.

The court also noted that it has given particular consideration to the economic implications of its decisions. Intervenor Eclipse Resources Corp., which holds the bulk of WNF leases, has said it would take a loss of more than $41 million in exploration investments if lease sales were voided. Eclipse merged with Blue Ridge Mountain Resources Inc. in 2019 to form Montage Resources Corp., which was ultimately acquired by Southwestern Energy Co. last year.

“Eclipse avers that it has taken steps, including partially drilling two wells and commenced well-site construction activities for eight other wells, such that a mere refund of its lease purchase would be insufficient,” Watson wrote in his opinion this week. 

Eclipse argued that the court must consider potential losses of private landowners near WNF too. The company also noted that vacating lease sales, returning funds and rescinding permit applications would require it to go through a lengthy and complicated administrative process.

This week’s order comes as the Biden administration has paused federal oil and gas leasing on federal lands and offshore waters pending a climate review of federal fossil fuel programs.

“This is a victory for public health, for outdoor recreation and for our climate. The court’s ruling means that, at least for the foreseeable future, a significant portion of the Wayne National Forest will be safe from oil and gas development,” said Ohio Environmental Council’s Nathan Johnson, public lands director.

Ohio Oil and Gas Association spokesperson Mike Chadsey said the case, combined with the Biden administration’s move to pause leasing on federal lands, has created an uphill battle for development on the WNF properties, particularly given opportunities on private land elsewhere in southeastern Ohio. 

There are about 1,200 conventional wells in the forest, but little unconventional development given the legal and regulatory uncertainty that has overshadowed the assets, Chadsey told NGI’s Shale Daily

At “first blush,” Chadsey said the court’s order this week remanding the agencies’ drilling authorizations for further environmental review could ultimately resolve the case. He added that private landowners with properties bordering federal land in the forest that are in favor of oil and gas development could ultimately move ahead with legal challenges if activity is halted. I think the private landowners (if they did a bit of honest math) are much further ahead without frac’ing on their private land or nearby. In Alberta and elsewhere, frac’ers are making a terrible mess, refusing to pay their leases, taxes or utility bills (hanging them on landowners), and intentionally walking from clean up, with blessings from “regulators,” leaving a toxic mess that no authority wants to clean up and landowners cannot afford to clean up (in Alberta, past Premier Ralph Klein changed the Surface Rights Act to hang private landowners with the oil and gas industry’s liabilities if companies walk.

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