Fractivists’ fear mongering falls flat as county thrives with natural gas development

In the video, a series of “community organizers” dryly read a list of horrors should Cabot be allowed entry.  They claim natural gas development would destroy the rural character of the area, contaminate water supplies, damage roads, discourage tourism and harm property values.  Moreover, methane was touted as a carcinogen although every person and animal is full of this “natural” gas.

OH Fractivist Claims Obliterated with Cold, Hard Facts from NEPA

In December MDN brought you the news that Cabot Oil & Gas is sniffing around Ashland County, OH, with plans to possibly drill in a rock layer even deeper than the Utica Shale (see Cabot O&G Considers Drilling in Ashland County, OH). Cabot’s activity in the area was met with resistance by anti-fossil fuelers. Nothing new about that. What is new, however, is that some of the antis (a handful) in the Ashland area formed a faux landowner coalition, trying to fool landowners into joining them (see Warning to Ohio Residents: Beware Fake Landowner Coalitions). The faux landowner coalition has been busy spreading lies about Cabot, making wild accusations about what will happen if Cabot is allowed to drill in the county. MDN friend (and right arm) Chris Acker, a northeast PA landowner signed with Cabot, has written a guest post/rebuttal that obliterates the lies being spread by Ashland antis. Buckle up, this one will be fun to read!…MDN


Chris Acker

Marcellus Drilling News

Rural Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, is my home and I treasure it deeply.  With a population of only 42,000, the county sits atop one of the world’s most prolific natural gas formations – the Marcellus Shale.

Cabot Oil & Gas has invested billions of dollars here to develop this extraordinary resource.  Astoundingly, production from my county alone could supply the entire needs of France.  Cabot has been here over a decade and I am intimately familiar with the effects of the industry.

Therefore it is disheartening, and frankly, tiresome to hear folks distort the truth about the industry.  Recent nonsense on YouTube by the so-called “Tri-County Landowners Coalition” is a case in point.

In the video, a series of “community organizers” dryly read a list of horrors should Cabot be allowed entry.  They claim natural gas development would destroy the rural character of the areacontaminate water suppliesdamage roadsdiscourage tourism and harm property values.  Moreover, methane was touted as a carcinogen although every person and animal is full of this “natural” gas.

None of these claims is true and we have ten years of reality in Susquehanna County to prove it.  The area is still happily rural, our air and water are clean, our roads are better, tourism is flourishing and property values remain elevated.

For years Cabot held an annual picnic and the last one had a turnout of 9,000 appreciative neighbors along with two protesters.  Part of this appreciation may be due to the $1.5 billion Cabot has paid to local landowners in the from of lease bonuses and royalties on production – production that will continue for decades.  To put this in perspective, $1.5 billion works out on average to $36,000 for each county inhabitant.

The reality is that Cabot and others in Susquehanna County have:

•Created hundreds of new local jobs, lowering the unemployment rate to 4.7%

•Stimulated growth of new and existing manufacturing and service businesses

•Saved numerous family farms essential to our rural character

•Substantially increased local wages

•Paid millions of dollars in impact fees to local government leading to lower property taxes

•Rebuilt hundreds of miles of local roads to better-than-ever condition

•Helped build a brand new state-of-the-art hospital and library

•Endowed a new local technical college with graduates placed in good industry jobs

•Extended new natural gas service to local communities, schools, government buildings and businesses – largely displacing more expensive and dirtier fuel oil

•Spurred construction of new senior housing

•Supported emergency services, multiple charities and natural disaster relief

Read the full article here


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