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The environment desk at Aspen Public Radio covers issues in the Roaring Fork Valley and throughout the state of Colorado including water use and quality, impact of recreation, population growth and oil and gas development. APR’s Environment Reporter is Elizabeth Stewart-Severy.

Advocacy Group Looks To Forest Service Solution

savethethompsondivide.org

Natural Gas drilling in an area near Carbondale known as the Thompson Divide is still a possibility, despite protest from many local residents. The group trying to stop it is hopeful a Forest Service plan, due out later this summer, will prevent future drilling. Aspen Public Radio’s Marci Krivonen reports.

The Oil and Gas Leasing analysis is an update of a 1993 plan that pinpointed where drilling was appropriate on the White River National Forest. The Forest spans more than 2.3 million acres in nine Colorado counties.

The revision considers changesover the last two decades, like improved drilling technology, an increase in the demand for natural gas and an increasing rate of production on lands near the Forest. Factors like roadless areas, land ownership and endangered species also enter into the plan.

The advocacy group the Thompson Divide Coalition is focusing its efforts on the release of the Forest Service analysis. Zane Kessler is the group’s executive director.

"Now we’re really gearing up in anticipation of a forest service decision that has the potential to ensure long term protections for the Thompson Divide area from future leasing."

The Coalition’s goal is to protect the 220,000-plus acres of federal land that cover parts of Pitkin and Garfield counties. Kessler says that acreage is inappropriate for future leasing. That’s the message his group sent to the Forest Service.

"We helped to rally thousands of comments during the last public comment period on the draft environmental impact statement. We are waiting anxiously and hope that the Forest Service decision will protect the area from future leasing."

The Forest Service expects to release a final analysis next month. The plan only examines future oil and gas leasing. A separate report from the Bureau of Land Management looks at existing leases on the Forest. There are 25 of those on the Thompson Divide, which are undeveloped. The BLM will incorporate parts of what the Forest Service comes up with into their own plan. A final BLM analysis is due out in two years.

Besides the Forest Service plan, the Thompson Divide Coalition is also hopeful legislation that protects the area will move through a gridlocked Congress.

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