CNX Resources Corporation, Shapiro administration announce transparency initiative
CNX Resources Corporation, together Gov. Josh Shapiro, announced Thursday a new program that increases transparency between the natural gas company and the public.
The state Department of Environmental Protection will work with Canonsburg-based CNX Resources to collect in-depth data on air emissions and water quality, enhance public disclosure of drilling chemicals and expand buffer zones, Shapiro said Thursday, touting the collaboration as the first of its kind.
The initiative comes three years after a grand jury convened by Shapiro, then state attorney general, found that government agencies failed to oversee the fracking industry and protect Pennsylvanians from the industryĢƵ operational risks.
“The grand jury found evidence that the manner in which some other natural gas companies were operating endangered public health and safety,” Shapiro said, noting the grand jurors issued recommendations for improving health and safety. “The grand jurors also laid out a roadmap for lawmakers to follow — eight specific recommendations to hold the industry accountable and better protect the people.”
While the grand juryĢƵ findings have been public knowledge for years, state lawmakers have taken no action to improve natural gas industry safety standards, Shapiro said.
“CNX has agreed to voluntarily abide by many of the recommendations in the grand jury report and to take a series of steps that go even further than what the grand jurors contemplated at the time. This is really an unprecedented level of transparency. CNX, it should be lost on no one, is the first company in Pennsylvania to step up and make these voluntary commitments, but I do hope they will not be the last,” Shapiro said.
Along with publicly releasing a list of all chemicals used in drilling and hydraulic fracturing before they’re used on site, CNX has pledged, at its own expense, to monitor air and water quality, assess the environmental impacts of natural gas extraction, and provide realtime emission facts and data to all stakeholders and other interested parties.
CNX will expand its no-drill zones from 500 to 600 feet, including increasing no-drill zones to 2,500 feet at sensitive sites like near schools and hospitals, while data is being collected. CNX will also work with third party waste haulers to implement additional safety measures for transporting waste from unconventional well sites, and support the DEPĢƵ regulation of gathering lines to inspect for corrosion.
The company has also committed to not hire DEP employees working in offices within CNXĢƵ operating areas for at least two years from the time the employee leaves the department.
The initiative, the first of its kind between a corporation and an administration, met with mixed reviews. Sean Steffee, an executive board member of Boilermakers 154 representing trade unions, said Thursday he supports the joint efforts.
“In 2022, the U.S. consumed 888 billion cubic meters of natural gas for home heating, electricity generation, and Pennsylvania is the leader in electricity generation. ItĢƵ important that we produce natural gas. We have the ability to do it. Our unions have built and maintained natural gas infrastructure throughout Pennsylvania, and these jobs have provided great wages and benefits,” Steffee said. “Pennsylvania is the energy powerhouse, and itĢƵ time to embrace it and not apologize for it, and move forward with cutting-edge technology so we can move forward and do this environmentally friendly.”
David Masur, executive director of PennEnvironment, also applauded Shapiro and CNXĢƵ efforts, though he expressed a desire to ultimately end fracking in the state.
“Poll after poll shows that the policy initiatives being introduced by the Shapiro administration are broadly supported by Pennsylvanians from all walks of life and all stripes. Hopefully, more energy companies come to the table and voluntarily agree with the governorĢƵ team to implement policies we sorely need to protect our communities from the ravages of fracking,” Masur said in a news release. “While the package of just-announced policies are important first steps for reining in fracking pollution, at the end of the day, we must end fracking if we’re going to protect public health and our planet.”
The Center for Coalfield Justice, a nonprofit focused on public and environmental health that advocates for better policies, regulations and oversight of fossil fuel extraction and use in Washington and Greene counties, took a much stronger stance against the efforts of Shapiro and CNX.
“This is not CNXĢƵ hero origin story,” the CCJ said in a news release. “This announcement is too little, too late, and conveniently comes as CNX seeks carte blanche to develop ‘blue’ hydrogen throughout the region as part of the ARCH2 hub.”
Shapiro, CNX and others, however, see the transparency initiative as a bipartisan step toward cleaner energy production.
“We must reject the false choice between protecting jobs and protecting our planet and public health. I believe we can do both here in Pennsylvania. We’ve shown that energy production and environmental protection, they can coexist,” Shapiro said. “We’re putting forth a model of how natural gas in Pennsylvania can be extracted and processed in the most responsible, sustainable way anywhere in the nation.”
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