Virginia and fracking

Texas-based energy company Shore Exploration and Production Corp plans to frack for oil and gas by 2015 in Virginia's Taylorsville basin, a geological formation running through parts of the Northern Neck and Middle Peninsula.

As of September 2013 the U.S. Forest Service is debating whether to restrict horizontal drilling in Virginia's portion of the George Washington National Forest.

History
A 2012 U.S. Geological Survey assessment released in June 2012 suggests there could be more than 1 trillion cubic feet of natural gas in the Taylorsville basin, a geological formation running through parts of the Northern Neck and Middle Peninsula. The Taylorsville basin dates back about 210 million years to the Mesozoic Era. It’s among several basins extending from offshore, through Virginia’s Coastal Plain, west to the Appalachian Mountains.

In the 1980s Texas-based energy company Shore Exploration and Production Corp partnered with Exxon and Texaco to drill 15 exploratory wells in the Bason by 1989.

Since 2011 and after the advent of fracking, Shore has been securing leases from landowners for mineral rights on more than 80,000 acres in King George, Westmoreland, Caroline, Essex, and King and Queen counties. Shore plans to begin drilling for gas and oil before 2015. Any drilling in the Taylorsville basin would first require state review and permits, and would have added scrutiny because the work would be first of its type along Virginia’s coast, according to the Virginia Gas and Oil Board. Since the work would be in the Chesapeake Bay watershed, an environmental assessment would also be required. Shore said they expect to receive the permits to drill.

George Washington National Forest
As of September 2013 a proposal to restrict horizontal drilling in the George Washington National Forest is being debated by the U.S. Forest Service. A natural gas deposit - an extension of the Marcellus Shale - is believed to underlie approximately half of the national forest, much of it in Virginia. The headwaters within it contribute to the drinking water of at least 30 communities from Washington to Richmond, Virginia, according to the Forest Service.

The Forest Service, part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, proposed drilling limits in 2011 to protect water supplies. The Environmental Protection Agency and the National Park Service also supported the prohibition on horizontal drilling. But the Forest Service and now is reconsidering after gas companies said the ban was unwarranted and would set a bad precedent. The Forest Service is expected to issue a new decision by November 2013.

Land leases
It was reported in October 2013 that Texas energy company Shore Exploration and Production Corp., based in Dallas, which leased tens of thousands of acres east of Fredericksburg, Virginia was planning to begin fracking for gas and oil within 18 months. Since 2011, the company has been securing leases from landowners for mineral rights on more than 80,000 acres in King George, Westmoreland, Caroline, Essex and King and Queen counties.

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 * United States and fracking

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