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Ritter to Moffat County: Don't drill, and I mean it
Published August 2, 2007 at midnight
Gov. Bill Ritter today reinforced his opposition to oil and gas drilling in a scenic Northwest Colorado public area.
In a letter faxed to Moffat County commissioners, Ritter said he believes the amount of natural gas under the Vermillion Basin is too small an amount for the area to be disturbed by energy development.
After visiting the basin last month, Ritter asked the federal Bureau of Land Management not to lease the 77,000-acre area for drilling.
The BLM estimates the Vermillion Basin contains only 2 percent of the high potential gas reserves in the overall Little Snake Basin area, the letter states, which is why environmentalists oppose drilling there.
"Because of its limited recoverable gas resources and because of its pristine status as one of Colorados truly special places, we believe the Vermillion Basin should remain off limits for oil and gas drilling during the life of the management plan," Ritter added.
"It is like my way or hit the highway and thats not right," Moffat County Commissioner Saed Tayyara said today.
Ritters July 3 visit and subsequent request angered county commissioners, who say Vermillion Basin contains an estimated $5.85 billion worth of gas, based on production in surrounding areas. Ritter disputes the estimate.
"I disagree with your claim that the Vermillion Basin itself contains natural gas valued at $5.85 billion dollars," the letter states. "The BLM estimates the much larger Little Snake area, including the Vermillion, could contain up to $5.85 billion in gas reserves."
BLM spokeswoman Jaime Gardner said the agency does not have a specific estimate for Vermillion Basin but agreed with the estimate in Ritters letter regarding Little Snake areas reserves.
Moffat Countys three commissioners said Ritter is ignoring their 12 years of planning to put together a drilling plan. The commissioners, all Republican, fired off a letter July 17 to Ritter, a Democrat, raising the same issues.
T. Wright Dickinson, a rancher in Vermillion Basin, said members of
Northwest Colorado Stewardship met several times over the past three
years to discuss drilling. He said most endorse the plan put together
by county, state and federal officials.
That plan would allow drilling on 1 percent of the land, or 770 acres,
at a time. Companies must clean up and revegetate before drilling
further.
"I believe, unequivocally, that a majority of NWCOS members supported the 1 percent drilling plan. Thats how I interpreted the feelings of the group," Dickinson said. "Id hope the governor would take a step back and engage with Moffat County officials and local residents to have a better appreciation of the issue."
Drilling would generate an estimated $731 million for the federal treasury, $366 million for Colorado and $5.7 million annually for 40 years for Moffat County, the commissioners wrote.
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