New Mexico County Becomes First In Nation To Ban Fracking Over Concern For Water Supply
New Mexico County Becomes First In Nation To Ban Fracking Over Concern For Water Supply
Mora County, a low-income, conservative ranching area in oil-rich New Mexico became the first county in the U.S. to ban hydraulic fracturing last month, the Los Angeles Times reports. Wells are the only source of water for the county's 5,000 residents, so officials are wary of the oil and gas drilling technique that could compromise the groundwater.
"I don't want to destroy our water," Roger Alcon, a 63-year-old resident of Mora County, told the LA Times. "You can't drink oil."
By voting for the ban, landowners opted out of potentially hefty royalty payments from drilling companies. Residents who spoke to the newspaper expressed other concerns:
Sandra Alcon said her neighbors don't care about mineral rights or oil money. They are angry about the way energy companies' "land men" treated them. Residents here are seen as easy marks for hustlers offering little compensation for oil and water rights, she said.
"They know we have a lot of elderly and rural people; some don't speak English," she said. "They don't know that some of us went to college and some of us have the Internet.
"I may look stupid, but I'm not. I know what they are doing."
Meanwhile, the Interior Department is facing more obstacles to finalizing rules for fracking on federal lands, a process which has already been dragged out for over a year. The powerful industry group American Petroleum Institute wants the public comment period for the rules to be quadrupled to 120 days, the Hill reports.
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