You’ll really need that water filter now. — Photo by Jeremy Sapienza

It’s boom time for the natural gas industry in the Northeast and recent drilling proposals in the Catskill Mountains could pose a serious threat to our top-rated drinking water supply — that’s the entire city, not just Bushwick.

Rising natural gas prices have put deep, hard-to-get-to gas reserves in the Appalachian Basin back on the drilling radar and energy companies are targeting the Marcellus Shale, a large, underground rock formation full of untapped gas deposits which extends from the Catskills to West Virginia.

The new “gas rush” has drawn strong criticism from environmentalists, who argue drilling near Catskill Mountain State Park would foul up the New York City watershed — the main water source for more than 8 million New Yorkers.

Deborah Goldberg, an attorney for Earthjustice, and environmental law firm, said she is most concerned about recent technological enhancements in gas extraction, specifically horizontal hydraulic fracturing or “hydrofracking,” a method that pumps chemically-treated water into the underground rock deposits to force gases to the surface. Goldberg argues the method could contaminate the region’s aquifers with an array of unknown pollutants.

“Horizontal hydrofracking … will require the use of millions of gallons of water per well,” Goldberg said in her testimony during the New York State Assembly hearing on oil and gas drilling in October. “Mixed into the [injected] water will be friction reducers, oxygen scavengers and other corrosion inhibitors, biocides, surfactants, and scale inhibitors, many of which pose human health hazards.”


A New York DEC map of the Marcellus Shale formation (outlined in brown), a region full of deep natural gas deposits that could attract new drilling operations near Catskill State Park (outlined in blue) and pollute New York City’s main water source (the green area).

DEC Commissioner Pete Grannis also testified during the hearing, where he said hydrofracking takes place well below groundwater zones and should not contaminate any water resources.

“The same geology that has sealed natural gas in the rock for millions of years, together with our strict well casing and cementing requirements, prevents any risk of groundwater contamination from the drilling and fracking operation,” he said. “As a result, the only likely vector for possible threats to groundwater comes from the surface management of the water used in the drilling and fracking operations.”

The DEC is holding a series of public meetings to give residents a chance to comment on the proposed drilling plans — but none of the hearings have been scheduled in New York City! Even worse, the deadline for public comment is December 15.

Here’s your chance to do something: Click here to send an electronic letter to Grannis asking for a public hearing in New York City — home to the majority of people that would be affected by “gas rush” drilling in the Catskills.