What Does Fracking in Oklahoma Have to Do With Florida?
By Chris Cooney, attorney, and Diana Csank, attorney for Sierra Club
At first glance, you wouldn't see the connection between earthquakes in Oklahoma and Florida's electric power supply. But the recent decision by state regulators to allow Florida Power and Light (FPL) to take money from ratepayers for a natural gas fracking project in Oklahoma[1] is just one example of the Sunshine State's profoundly unwise natural gas policies putting profits before people.
FPL's move to frack in Oklahoma couldn't come at a worse time. Fracking's rise in Oklahoma has led to 300 times the number of magnitude 3 or greater earthquakes than there have been historically.[2]
The quakes have already seriously disrupted local communities:
"[W]e met dozens of rural home owners last summer who literally cried telling me their stories — until you are awakened every night for months on end because an earthquake woke you up, you cannot imagine the psychological toll this is taking on our citizens."
—Johnson Bridgwater, Director of the Sierra Club Oklahoma Chapter[3]
Property damage from the earthquakes is also on the rise, including a 5.6 magnitude quake that damaged a church, requiring more than $2 million in repairs.[4]
Moreover, the quakes threaten catastrophic environmental harm, mainly through the inevitable rupture of the storage and transportation infrastructure for hazardous materials.[5]
Cushing, Oklahoma faces a particularly acute threat from earthquakes. Much of this oil hub, with its network of pipes and oil storage tanks, was built in the 1920's, when the hazards of significant earthquakes were not part of safety designs.[6] Because oil prices are currently low, producers have been storing more and more oil in Cushing — approximately 55 million barrels at last count — and a major earthquake nearby could land Cushing in the disastrous ranks of Aliso Canyon and Deepwater Horizon.
The cause of these earthquakes is not in dispute. Even state geologists and the Governor of the traditionally industry friendly state are on the record confirming that the quakes are a result of wastewater injection from drilling and fracking.[7]
Because to date Oklahoma has proposed partial mitigation measures including voluntary compliance by industry, Sierra Club filed a suit in federal court to stop frackers from re-injecting their wastewater in Oklahoma. You can read more about the suit here.
As even Oklahoma is starting to acknowledge and address fracking's hazards, it is time for the Scott Administration and the Florida Legislature to do so. It is time to finally rein in natural gas over-reliance[8] by abandoning the dangerous gambit to open Florida to more fracking, and by taking down barriers to clean energy resources like solar, wind, energy efficiency, and storage at record low prices.
Thankfully, this year, pro-fracking legislation met strong opposition, backed up by nearly 80 local government bans on fracking.[9] Just yesterday, the Florida Senate rejected a bill that would have stripped the power from these same local governments to regulate fracking and conventional oil and gas drilling.[10]
Such pro-fracking policies are particularly unwise when clean energy is so cheap and abundant. We need look no farther than Florida's municipal utilities for evidence; they are adding solar to the grid at five times the speed of the big investor-owned utilities — FPL, Duke, Gulf, and TECO — because solar is so cheap. In fact, last summer, Orlando procured solar for 7 cents/kWh — less than energy from coal and natural gas power plants (8 cents/kWh), and exerting downward pressure on rates (10 cents/kWh).[11]
While there can no longer be any honest dispute about the economic and environmental case for clean energy investments — to be sure, natural gas is far from clean — the costs and risks of using natural gas are only growing. Indeed, less than a year after FPL persuaded state regulators that its Oklahoma project would save Floridians as much as $100 million over 50 years, FPL has revised that down by a half and has given no assurance the project will not end up in the red.[12]
Tallahassee has an even worse record of approving massive, multi-billion dollar natural gas power plants[13] and a so-called hedging program, all of which puts the profits of the state's biggest monopolistic utilities before people. The hedging program alone cost Floridians $6 billion from 2002 up to an including 2015, [14] while insulating those big utilities from the costs and risks of their bad decisions to double down on natural gas. Think of all the solar, wind, energy efficiency and storage we could have bought for $6 billion!
So not only is fracking directly putting lives in danger in Oklahoma and across the Southeast, it's a terrible deal for Florida ratepayers. Fracking needlessly exposes Floridians to higher priced power while also robbing us of the wide-ranging benefits of clean energy resources.
We must not relent in our fight against fracking in Florida!