Showing posts with label Carolina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carolina. Show all posts

Monday, March 25, 2013

North Carolina Bill Aims to Send Signal on Future Shale Development

North Carolina Bill Aims to Send Signal on Future Shale Development

North Carolina hopes recent legislation introduced into its general assembly will send a "very clear signal" to oil and gas companies that the state wants shale gas exploration in the state, a state representative told Rigzone in an interview Monday.

State Sen. E.S. "Buck" Newton, the sponsor of Senate Bill (SB) 76, the Domestic Energy Jobs Act, told Rigzone that, while the ban on horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing has been lifted, the state hopes to provide certainty to the energy industry by fixing a specific date in which permits for shale gas drilling can be pulled.

Newton, who represents Johnston, Nash and Wilson counties in eastern North Carolina, introduced the bill last week. SB 76, which would authorize the state's Department of Environment and Natural Resources to issue permits for oil and gas exploration and production, including horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing, on or after March 1, 2015.

North Carolina officials hope to send a signal in two ways – one, that the legislature is very serious about pursuing shale exploration, and two, that the state is working "with all deliberate and purposeful speed" to get itself ready to issue permits.

Early indicators show North Carolina to have shale gas reserves that may be on the order of the Fayetteville play in Arkansas, with approximately 1.4 million surface acres with shale deposits of an average thickness of 200 feet. North Carolina has three basins with shale potential. The Deep River Basin, the one that is most talked about, has wet gas reserves.

Last year, the General Assembly passed a bill -- over the veto of then Democratic Gov. Beverly Purdue's veto a bill -- that would authorize and legalize hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling. General Assembly ratified the Clean Energy and Economic Security Act, which reorganized the state's Mining Commission as the North Carolina Mining and Energy Commission, and directed the commission and other state regulatory agencies to develop a modern regulatory program for the management of oil and gas activity in the state, including horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing.

Historically, horizontal drilling had been effectively illegal in the state because of fears that landowners might use horizontal drilling to drill into a neighboring property and steal another landowners water supply, said Bill Weatherspoon, executive director of the North Carolina Petroleum Council, a division of the American Petroleum Institute, in an interview with Rigzone. The law, which dated to the 1940s, forbade drilling to vary more than 3 degrees off center when a well was drilled.

The bill will rewrite existing North Carolina oil and gas legislation in part to modernize the tax structure.

"We wanted to give companies an incentive to come earlier rather than later," Newton commented.

The legislation includes a severance tax, which will be 1 percent in the first year of production, 2.5 percent in the second year, and then will go to a floating rate that would adjust with natural gas prices, ranging from 2.5 percent to 6 percent. Energy industry officials, in early discussions with state officials, really like the proposed severance tax, which gives them flexibility, Newton said.

SB 76 will also attempt to create a one stop shop for pulling permits so that companies will not have to go to different agencies. One thing North Carolina officials want to make clear is that oil and gas companies will not have to pay local taxes or impact fees, other than regular property taxes, to ensure that local governments can't use impact fees as a means to create barriers.

"Not having any experience in the oil and gas industry, we get to draw on the experiences of other states that have been in the industry for a long time and to cherrypick the best of the best," Newton said, adding that the bill not only covers regulatory changes for onshore drilling, but changes that could govern offshore drilling down the road.

"We're trying our best to introduce standards and practices the industry finds helpful and familiar."

The state has no horror stories of environmental problems related to oil and gas, and has a clean slate which state officials hope to keep clean through the use of technological standards, said Weatherspoon.

"The state is trying to take a very calm, study-type approach," said Weatherspoon of the two-year timeframe to accomplish the revisioning of rules and regulations before 2015.

While the counties Newton represents are not among the 10 to 12 counties that have shale gas resources, Newton's familiarity with what oil and gas exploration and development have done for other U.S. state economies – and the need to create jobs and new sources of revenue within North Carolina – prompted him to introduce the legislation.

The legislation is also part of Newton's effort to help North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory frame his plans to bringing the oil and gas industry for North Carolina. During his election campaign last fall and his inaugural speech, the newly elected governor expressed his desire to get North Carolina into the energy business.

The new Republican-dominated leadership in the state not only is showing interest in developing the state's onshore shale resource, but its offshore interests as well. McCrory already is working with the governors of South Carolina and Virginia to re-open the Atlantic Outer Continental Shelf for exploratory drilling.

Newton doesn't anticipate the bill not passing, due to the fact that McCrory and North Carolina's General Assembly – with Republicans now controlling both for the first time in more than a century – favor bringing oil and gas development to the state. Newton said he hadn't briefed McCrory on SB 76, but saw no reason to think he wouldn't fully back the legislation.

Other than some coal mining activity, the state has not had a significant oil and gas exploration and production industry. North Carolina has been well-known for its tobacco, textiles and furniture-making industries, but the state's economy has been in transition for the past 50 years, with banking, pharmaceutical and life sciences and transportation now major industries in the state.

To date, 125 oil and gas wells have been drilled in the state, but all were capped and abandoned, said Weatherspoon. However, a discovery in near the central North Carolina town of Sanford in Lee County indicated the state could have shale gas potential.

Some leasing activity offshore North Carolina for exploratory drilling did take place in the 1970s, when Mobile Corp. bid $103 million for one offshore tract 40 miles offshore Cape Hatteras, N.C., Weatherspoon noted. While geologists believe there might be a natural gas play offshore the state, drilling never took place due to political opposition.

The effort to update North Carolina's oil and gas regulations are all about jobs and revenue, said Weatherspoon, noting that the state ranks among the top U.S. states in terms of unemployment.

"Politically, there's strong motivation for state officials to do everything they can to create jobs."

Gov. McCrory has made revitalizing the state's economy his No. 1 priority. With the fifth-highest employment rate in the country, McCrory said he hoped that Republicans and Democrats from all areas of the state can work to help turn North Carolina's economy around. These efforts include better matching the talents and expertise of the state's workforce with opportunities available through educational programs.

In December of last year, North Carolina's unemployment rate rose to 9.2 percent from 9.1 percent in November. The state started 2012 with a 10.2 percent unemployment rate.

While early indicators show the state to have good potential for gas reserves, environmentalists have worked hard to play upon the fear of the unknown, said Newton, who pointed to the lively debate between environmentalists and legislators when the bill was introduced.

Newton expects debate to continue, but also believes that people in the state are hungry for economic growth and jobs, noting that, "The more people learn about it, the more excited they are."

Karen Boman has more than 10 years of experience covering the upstream oil and gas sector. Email Karen at kboman@rigzone.com.

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

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Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Bill Seeks to Lift Ban on Hydraulic Fracturing in North Carolina

A North Carolina state senator has introduced legislation that would lift the state's ban on issuing permits for shale exploration and production in a move to spur economic development within the state.

Senate Bill (SB) 76, the Domestic Energy Jobs Act, would authorize the state's Department of Environment and Natural Resources to issue permits on or after March 1, 2015 for oil and gas exploration and production in North Carolina, including the use of horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing.

The bill, introduced into the state's General Assembly earlier this month, also directs North Carolina's Mining and Energy Commission, with the assistance of the state's Department of Environment and Natural Resources, to study development of a comprehensive environmental permit for oil and gas exploration and development activities that involve horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing.

This permit would encompass well construction, siting, and closure requirements, hydraulic fracturing treatments, including subsurface injection of fluids; water quality, and management and regulation of water resources, waste and air emissions.

The Department of Natural Resources will also seek needed approvals from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for a coordinated permitting program to allow a single comprehensive environmental permit for oil and gas exploration and development activities using horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing treatments.

The Mining and Energy Commission will report its findings and recommendations to the Environmental Review Commission and the Joint Legislative Commission on Energy Policy on or before Oct. 1, 2013.

SB 76 would modify appointments to the state's Mining and Energy Commission and modify provisions in the state's Oil and Gas Conservation Act concerning the Mining and Energy Commission's authority to set allowables, or to allocate or pro-rate production.

Additionally, SB 76 would appropriate money from the state's mineral interest fund to the Department of Environment and Natural Resources to operate the Mining and Energy Commission and for related expenditures, and assign future revenue from energy exploration and production to preserve North Carolina's natural resources, cultural heritage and quality of life.

The bill would also:

Eliminate the registration requirements for people conducting landmen activities in the stateEstablish a tax for energy produced from the state's soil and gas waterRepeal outdated oil and gas tax statutes, and authorize suspension of permits for failure to file a return for severance taxesEncourage the Governor to Develop the Regional Interstate Offshore Energy Policy CompactAmend the Energy Policy Act of 1975 and the Energy Policy CouncilDirect the medical care commission to adopt rules authorizing facilities licensed by the Department of Health and Human Services to use compressed natural gas as an emergency fuel

In July 2012, North Carolina's General Assembly ratified the Clean Energy and Economic Security Act, which reorganized the state's Mining Commission as the North Carolina Mining and Energy Commission, and directed the commission and other state regulatory agencies to develop a modern regulatory program for the management of oil and gas activity in the state, including horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing.

This bill also authorized horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing, but prohibited permits for these activities being issued pending subsequent legislative action. This bill also sought to enhance landowner and public protections related to horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing, and called for establishment of a joint legislative commission on energy policy.

The U.S. Geological Survey in 2011 estimated that mean undiscovered natural gas resources of 3,860 billion cubic feet and a mean undiscovered gas liquids resource of 135 million barrels existed in continuous accumulations within five of the U.S. East Coast Mesozoic basins. These basins include the Deep River, Dan River-Danville and Richmond basins within North Carolina's Piedmont Province.

Karen Boman has more than 10 years of experience covering the upstream oil and gas sector. Email Karen at kboman@rigzone.com.

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

View the original article here

Monday, December 10, 2012

South Carolina Voters Want ‘Senator Stephen Colbert’

South Carolina Voters Want ‘Senator Stephen Colbert’ -Truthdig .column > div, .eartotheground > div, .uncovered > div, .report > div, .interview > div, .arts_culture > div, .avbooth > div, .dig > div, .cartoon > div, .podcast > div, .margin {padding: 10px 10px 20px 10px;margin: 0 0 0 0px;border-bottom: 1px dashed #999999;}/*\*//*/ @import "http://www.truthdig.com/?css=home/site_styles_mac.v.1314771156";/**/body div#share_footer {margin-bottom: 30px;}body div#instory_newsletter_signup {margin-top: 30px;}.nav {font-size:90%;} LOGO: Truthdig: Drilling Beneath the Headlines. A Progressive Journal of News and Opinion. Editor, Robert Scheer. Publisher, Zuade Kaufman. December 10, 2012
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 Ear to the Ground South Carolina Voters Want ‘Senator Stephen Colbert’ Email this item Email    Print this item Print   Share this item... Share

Tweet Posted on Dec 10, 2012 colbertnation.com

If South Carolina voters could choose the replacement for outgoing Sen. Jim DeMint, they would pick Comedy Central host Stephen Colbert, a Public Policy Polling survey released Monday reveals. Unfortunately, voters do not get to have their say on who replaces the Republican; that responsibility goes to the state’s governor, fellow GOPer Nikki Haley.

According to poll results, 20 percent of respondents support the late-night comedian’s bid. That put him ahead of Rep. Tim Scott (15 percent), Rep. Trey Gowdy (14 percent) and Jenny Sanford, the ex-wife of former Gov. Mark Sanford (11 percent).

Colbert, a Palmetto State native who has twice mounted a satirical challenge to become the president of South Carolina, has already asked viewers of “The Colbert Report” to push Haley to appoint him to the seat. DeMint is leaving to run the conservative think tank the Heritage Foundation.

Politico:

Colbert mainly benefits from being the favorite of a small number of Democrats and independents in a field of candidates filled with Republicans. Thirty-two percent of voters view him unfavorably, and only 30 percent have a favorable opinion. His support mostly comes from Democrats, 32 percent of whom want to see him in the Senate, and independents, where he gets 28 percent support. Only 6 percent of Republicans would welcome a Colbert appointment.

...With Colbert removed, Jenny Sanford jumps into the lead, with 17 percent support. Scott draws 16 percent and Gowdy draws 12 percent. Former state attorney general Henry McMaster collects 13 percent. Mark Sanford picks up 9 percent.

Haley has said she would appoint someone with views similar to DeMint’s. That should draw cheers from South Carolinians, who approve of DeMint’s performance by a 49 percent to 40 percent margin. Counting only Republicans, Scott draws 25 percent support and Gowdy draws 21 percent in a Colbert-less field.

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—Posted by Tracy Bloom.

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