Gov. Hickenlooper must strike balance between energy development and conservation
{mosads}But we have to get the gas out of the ground in the most responsible way, and to do that we need a governor who equally weighs the concerns of the gas industry with the rest of the state. Today, it is unclear Hickenlooper shows that balance: Around here he’s known for oil and gas industry cheerleading. And, his track record suggests that unlike most westerners, he doesn’t agree that conservation and the outdoors, not just oil and gas, are key foundations of our economy and quality of life. According to the newly released 2013 Colorado College State of the Rockies Conservation in the West bipartisan poll, 70% of Coloradans think that the impact of oil and gas drilling on our land, air and water is a serious problem.
The governor likes to joke that the oil and gas industry and the environmentalists are both mad at him equally, portraying himself as the even-handed moderate. However, his record tells quite a different story. The gas industry claims he’s been a good friend, but the conservation community does not. In fact, during his first year as governor he appeared in promotional ads for the Colorado Oil and Gas Association claiming that neither fracking nor drilling has ever polluted groundwater, despite the fact that his own state regulators directly contradicted that claim. He can’t really believe that, can he? Never ever?
The ordinarily popular governor was met by boos, jeers and shouts during a town hall meeting about an amendment to ban hydraulic fracturing in a Denver suburb. He then sued the same town for upping their oil and gas standards. Three weeks ago a memo mistakenly released by a Chesapeake Energy lobbyist stated, “His relationship to the oil & gas industry is strong and he has been a national leader speaking out against the anti-fracturing forces that have invaded Colorado.” And just a few days ago the Governor was questioned on his coziness with the oil and gas industry that funded his latest pet ballot measure project, Amendment S.
Don’t get me wrong. I am a businessman, a parent of two young children and a Hickenlooper supporter. I don’t completely oppose fracking and I have friends and business colleagues in the gas industry. But it just seems like common sense that drilling and extraction should occur in the most responsible way, to protect the pristine environment that makes Colorado great and undergirds our economy.
Drill rig and well pad setbacks should not be just adequate, but exemplary. There should be strict controls on fugitive methane (a damaging greenhouse pollutant). Standards for regional air quality ought to make us proud. We should be using the best and safest possible technology in every aspect of construction to completion. And, obviously, there are many places that we simply shouldn’t drill.
To keep our economy growing in all sectors — winter tourism alone in Colorado is a $2 billion business that employs almost 40,000 — we need our governor to show the right balance between energy development and conservation. We need him to do it today, before the Senate, in the round.
Schendler is vice president of Sustainability for Aspen Skiing Company.
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