Current:Home > FinanceColorado Court Strikes Down Local Fracking Restrictions -CapitalWay
Colorado Court Strikes Down Local Fracking Restrictions
View
Date:2025-04-18 00:39:48
The Colorado Supreme Court struck down local fracking restrictions in two cities—Longmont, which had passed a ban, and Fort Collins, which had issued a five-year moratorium—issuing a one-two punch to the state’s anti-fracking movement.
Regulators at the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission, not local communities, have the exclusive authority to regulate oil and gas activity in Colorado, the Supreme Court judges ruled Monday.
The Colorado decision echoes a similar ruling from the Ohio Supreme Court last year, which overturned a fracking ban in the town of Munroe Falls.
“This decision fits with the trend across most states, which is for state governments to preempt local control,” said Hannah Wiseman, an environmental law professor at Florida State University. “The exceptions have been New York and Pennsylvania, but most other states in which this issue has arisen have preempted local government, either through legislation or through courts interpreting existing legislation.”
The Colorado Oil and Gas Association (COGA), the state industry trade group that sued both cities, celebrated the news. “This decision sends a strong message to anyone trying to drive this vital industry out of the state that those efforts will not be tolerated,” COGA president Dan Haley said in a statement. “Bans and moratoriums on oil and gas are not a reasonable or responsible way to address local concerns.”
Environmentalists decried the decision and vowed to keep fighting for local control.
“The Colorado Supreme Court’s decision has not only tarnished the scales of justice, it places the citizens of communities at risk from a largely unregulated system of harmful pollution,” Shane Davis, a leading activist in the state, told InsideClimate News in an email.
“It’s beyond comprehension and it’s unconscionable,” Kaye Fissinger, a Longmont resident and activist, told InsideClimate News. “If anyone thinks we are going to lie down and play dead because of this ruling, they’ve got another thing coming.”
Colorado ranks sixth in the nation for natural gas production and seventh in crude oil, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. The state’s energy boom is largely due to the combination of fracking and horizontal drilling to extract previously hard-to-access fossil fuel resources.
With that boom, however, came concerns about how the expansion of oil and gas development would impact public health, the environment, noise pollution, road quality and property values. Longmont, about 15 miles northeast of Boulder, took the bold step of banning hydraulic fracturing and the storage and disposal of fracking-linked waste within its boundaries in 2012. It was quickly sued by the oil and gas industry. In 2013, Fort Collins passed a five-year fracking moratorium and was also served with a lawsuit by the industry.
A Colorado district judge ruled against both communities in 2014. After Longmont and Fort Collins appealed their previous decisions, the state appeals court successfully petitioned the high court to take on the controversial cases.
Fissinger and other activists are now looking to push for local control in a different way: the November ballot. A green group called Coloradans Resisting Extreme Energy Development has proposed two ballot initiatives on fracking. Their first proposal is to amend the state’s constitution to give local communities authority over fossil fuel activities, including the power “to prohibit, limit, or impose moratoriums on oil and gas development.”
Their second proposal seeks to expand the state’s setback rule. Currently, oil and gas operations in the state must be 500 feet away from homes and 1,000 feet away from any hospitals and schools. Activists propose a 2,500-foot separation from those buildings, as well as from bodies of water.
Similar ballot initiative efforts were blocked by a last-minute political deal struck between Democratic Gov. John Hickenlooper and key donors of those campaigns in 2014. Environmentalists are hoping to avoid a repeat.
“If the system won’t protect us and the environment,” Davis said. “We will change the system.”
Correction: An earlier version of this story misidentified Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper as a Republican. He is a Democrat.
veryGood! (19)
Related
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Lawsuit claims Russell Brand sexually assaulted woman on the set of Arthur
- German airport closed after armed man breaches security with his car
- Jalen Milroe stiff-arms Jayden Daniels' Heisman Trophy bid as No. 8 Alabama rolls past LSU
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- A glance at some of Nepal’s deadliest earthquakes
- What time does daylight saving time end? What is it? When to 'fall back' this weekend
- Chiefs want to be ‘world’s team’ by going global with star power and Super Bowl success
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- WWE Crown Jewel results: Matches, highlights from Saudi Arabia; Kairi Sane returns
Ranking
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Moroccan archaeologists unearth new ruins at Chellah, a tourism-friendly ancient port near Rabat
- Highly pathogenic avian flu detected at Alabama chicken farm, nearly 48K birds killed
- Ukrainian war veterans with amputated limbs find freedom in the practice of jiu-jitsu
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- We knew Tommy Tuberville was incompetent, but insulting leader of the Marines is galling
- How Notre Dame blew it against Clemson, lost chance at New Year's Six bowl game
- CB Xavien Howard and LT Terron Armstead active for Dolphins against Chiefs in Germany
Recommendation
Sam Taylor
When Libs of TikTok tweets, threats increasingly follow
Fatal vehicle crash kills 4 in Maryland
No. 6 Texas survives Kansas State with goal-line stand in overtime to stay in Big 12 lead
Sam Taylor
Minneapolis police investigating another fire at a mosque
Blinken meets Palestinian leader in West Bank, stepping up Mideast diplomacy as Gaza war escalates
Phoenix finishes clearing downtown homeless encampment after finding shelter for more than 500