The lawmakers argue that the proposed BLM rule duplicates “in many aspects, state regulations that already address well-bore integrity and flowback water and require the disclosure of hydraulic fracturing constituents used on Federal public lands. We believe that BLM’s proposed rule will significantly delay oil and gas permitting and in turn discourage oil and gas production on our nation’s public lands.” Indicating “that states are best positioned to regulate hydraulic fracturing,” they questioned whether “BLM’s final rule will provide any meaningful benefits not already provided by public land states…, such as Wyoming, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, and Utah [which] currently enforce their own hydraulic fracturing regulations… [on] private and state lands… [and which] could be applied to Federal public lands with the states’ respective borders.”
Expressing a similar position, in mid-July 2013, Representative Bill Flores (R.-Texas) introduced a bill entitled “Protecting States’ Rights and Preventing Federal Red Tape on American Energy Act” which would bar the DOI from applying its proposed rule in states having their own hydraulic fracturing regulations, regardless of duplication or whether the state rules are more or less restrictive than the proposed rule. See previous blog dated July 25, 2013, “Proposed legislation would allow a state to control hydraulic fracturing on public lands within its borders.”
The proposed BLM rule provides for a variance, deferring to states and tribes that already have regulations in place that meet or exceed the proposed rule. However, the BLM retains the authority to modify the variance, which, according to the Wyoming legislators, would “lead to regulatory uncertainty for oil and gas producers.” The public comment period for the BLM’s proposed rule ends on August 23, 2013.
Expressing a similar position, in mid-July 2013, Representative Bill Flores (R.-Texas) introduced a bill entitled “Protecting States’ Rights and Preventing Federal Red Tape on American Energy Act” which would bar the DOI from applying its proposed rule in states having their own hydraulic fracturing regulations, regardless of duplication or whether the state rules are more or less restrictive than the proposed rule. See previous blog dated July 25, 2013, “Proposed legislation would allow a state to control hydraulic fracturing on public lands within its borders.”
The proposed BLM rule provides for a variance, deferring to states and tribes that already have regulations in place that meet or exceed the proposed rule. However, the BLM retains the authority to modify the variance, which, according to the Wyoming legislators, would “lead to regulatory uncertainty for oil and gas producers.” The public comment period for the BLM’s proposed rule ends on August 23, 2013.
This post was written by Barclay Nicholson (barclay.nicholson@nortonrosefulbright.com or 713.651.3662) from Norton Rose Fulbright's Energy Practice Group.