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Big Oil Eyes Floridas Public Lands, Plans to Drill in the Everglades
David Volz, Earth Island Journal | April 30, 2014 4:26 pm | Comments
Plans to drill for oil close to the Florida Panther National Wildlife Refuge on the western edge of the Everglades have environmentalists worried. A number of companies want to drill and test beneath the Big Cypress National Preserve where prospectors believe significant new oil and gas resources lie buried.
Exploratory operations would involve driving off-road vehicles through wetlands, drilling thousands of holes and setting off dynamite charges. Photo credit: National Park Service
People living near the Florida Panther Wildlife Refuge first learned about these plans when they received a surprise notice in May 2013 advising them about evacuation plans if a gas leak or explosion occurred at the proposed drilling site located less than a mile west of the refuge.
Initially I was concerned about the one well proposed next to the Florida Panther Refuge. There will be a lot of noise and a gigantic construction site for the well next to the pristine wetlands, says Matthew Schwartz, executive director of the South Florida Wildlands Association thats leading a grassroots effort to protect the Everglades from drilling.
{Then} I found out the leasing company had about 115,000 acres and includes most public lands in southeast Florida. Other companies want to come in. A giant swath of land will be turned over to drilling companies. So it is not a pleasant scenario for the future, Schwartz said.
The well next to the panther refuge is only a small part of the 115,000 acres of mineral rights the Dan A. Hughes Company of Beeville, TX, has leased from Collier Resources, the actual owners of more than 800,000 acres of mineral rights in southwest Florida. The lease, that runs for five years and can be extended, includes parts of the Florida Panther Wildlife Refuge, Picayne Strand State Forest, Fakahatchee Strand Preserve State Park, Big Cypress National Preserve, Corkscrew Regional Ecosystem Watershed and the Audubon Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary.
more...
http://ecowatch.com/2014/04/30/big-oil-floridas-public-lands-the-everglades/
louis-t
(23,297 posts)HooptieWagon
(17,064 posts)This is the same company that was already caught injecting pressurized acid into a test well, in violation of their permit. So pretty much everything can go wrong. The potential (probable, if drilling continues) environmental disaster could make the BP Gulf oil spill seem like a paint drop.
sorefeet
(1,241 posts)Florida needs more sink holes. The more stuff you suck out of the earth the more quakes and shifting you will have. Florida is sitting on some pretty thing ground from what I understand. Very shallow water table.