State agency could offer public comment period for fracking projects

A rig drilling in the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge. A number of Kenai Peninsula residents advocated for more opportunity to weigh in when companies apply for hydraulic fracturing permits in Alaska. (Image courtesy BLM-Alaska)

The state agency that oversees oil and gas drilling is proposing a ten-day comment period for applications to use hydraulic fracturing on an oil or gas well.

The proposal falls in between what environmental groups and the industry say is sufficient opportunity for public input before a well can be fracked in Alaska.

The Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission (AOGCC) also proposed posting fracking applications on its website, although companies would have the opportunity to redact information deemed confidential.

The commission made the announcement Wednesday in response to a proposal by Cook Inletkeeper, an environmental group. The group says current fracking regulations don’t give the public enough opportunity to weigh in. They had asked for a 30-day comment period and a public hearing when a company applies to frack a well.

Cook Inletkeeper executive director Bob Shavelson said the proposal for a ten-day comment period doesn’t go far enough.

“It’s a good step forward but it’s still a fairly tepid effort to provide real notice and comment opportunities for Alaskans to look at fracking applications that could potentially affect groundwater and salmon streams,” Shavelson said.

An industry group in the state is reacting cautiously to the proposal and is still reviewing it. Joshua Kindred, environmental council for the Alaska Oil and Gas Association, said his initial thoughts are that the regulation could be worse for industry, but he still has concerns.

“This is unnecessary and it doesn’t actually provide remedies. All it does is provide delays and increased costs,” said Kindred. “To be completely candid, this isn’t as onerous as what was originally proposed.”

Whether hydraulic fracturing poses a significant threat to groundwater is hotly debated; the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency recently concluded impacts are possible “under some circumstances.” The industry disputes that conclusion.

A hearing on the commission’s proposal is scheduled for March 23.

Sign up for The Signal

Top Alaska stories delivered to your inbox every week

Site notifications
Update notification options
Subscribe to notifications