[CRNMC] Beverly Hills becomes first in California to ban fracking

Steve Scalmanini sscalmanini at yahoo.com
Wed May 7 11:49:57 PDT 2014


Cheers to Jed Clampett & family!

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*Beverly Hills becomes first in California to ban fracking*

By Dana Feldman
May 7, 2014
Reuters

http://news.yahoo.com/beverly-hills-becomes-first-california-ban-fracking-045300285--finance.html 


BEVERLY HILLS, California (Reuters) - City leaders in celebrity-filled Beverly 
Hills voted on Tuesday to ban fracking, becoming the first municipality in 
California to prohibit the controversial technique for extracting natural gas 
and oil from underground rock deposits.

Environmentalists say chemicals used in the process pollute underground water 
supplies and cause other damage.

The unanimous vote by the Beverly Hills city council gives final approval to 
fracking ban, which was given the initial go-ahead by the panel last month. 
Council members, five of whom voted in favor of the ban, did not publicly 
discuss the measure on Tuesday. It will take effect on June 6.

Beverly Hills is one of the nation's most affluent cities and is home to 
numerous luxury retailers, but it is not untouched by the oil industry. Oil 
drilling has for decades occurred at Beverly Hills High School, but the city 
council in 2011 voted to bring that to an end in 2016.

The move to ban fracking was undertaken in a similar spirit, city spokeswoman 
Therese Kosterman said in a phone interview before the final vote.

"It's just the sense that industrial processes such as mining and oil drilling 
really is not appropriate in Beverly Hills," Kosterman said.

No company had put forward any proposals to conduct fracking operations in 
Beverly Hills, she said. But the technique is already employed in nearby oil 
fields elsewhere in Los Angeles County.

The move by Beverly Hills officials follows last year's approval by California 
lawmakers of the state's first regulations on fracking. The law requires oil 
companies to obtain permits for fracking as well as acidizing, the use of 
hydrofluoric acid and other chemicals to dissolve shale rock.

Dave Quast, California director of energy in depth, a research and education 
program of the California Independent Petroleum Association, said in a statement 
that banning fracking threatens the state's energy independence.

"A greater reliance on expensive imported fuel sources would put Southern 
California jobs at risk and could result in higher prices at the pump," Quast said.

Don Drysdale, a spokesman for the California Department of Conservation, said in 
an email that no other community in the state has officially banned fracking.

Los Angeles officials are exploring a possible moratorium on fracking. In other 
parts of the country, New York State has instituted a moratorium on the 
technique, and Illinois last year adopted a strict set of regulations on it.

(Additional reporting by Phil Furey in Beverly Hills, Writing by Alex 
Dobuzinskis; Editing by Michael Perry)

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