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Archive for the 'Ultra Resources' Tag

Ultra has submitted drilling permits with county

December 1st, 2011, 10:43 am by

While Colorado Springs City Council on Wednesday enacted a six-month moratorium on oil and gas exploration within city limits, Ultra Resources has submitted temporary use permit applications with El Paso County.

Ultra is seeking county approval for three well sites in eastern El Paso County. The company also is getting state approval for the drilling.

The applications are being worked through the county’s permitting system, said Craig Dossey, a county project manager and planner.

Dossey said he does not have a timeline for finalizing the permits. Local temporary use permits usually take 60 to 90 days to process.

It has been estimated that Ultra could receive clearance to begin drilling late this month or early in January.

El Paso County commissioners enacted a four-month temporary suspension on the application process on Sept. 29, to give county officials time to draft land use regulations for the industry, but three weeks later made an exception for Ultra Resources, a Texas-based energy developer with an office in Englewood.

Ultra representatives told commissioners they thought they were in the application process at the time commissioners imposed the moratorium because Ultra had spoken to county staff prior to that.

Ultra wants to test drill  for oil and gas on three well sites on Colorado State Land Board property in El Paso County. Ultra paid $1.67 million in July and August to Denver-based Pine Ridge Oil & Gas LLC for mineral leases on nearly 100,000 acres of land in eastern El Paso County and an exploratory well east of Fountain.

Environmentalists urge city to proceed cautiously with oil drilling

November 14th, 2011, 11:13 am by

Ultra Resources, which wants to do exploratory oil and gas drilling on the Banning Lewis Ranch,  is meeting with Colorado Springs’ Council President Scott Hente and some city staff today in a private meeting, presumably to talk about  de-annexing the land, which the energy developer purchased after the property was auctioned as part of an October 2010 bankruptcy.

Environmentalists have been following the issue closely. A documentary viewing and panel discussion on the controversial mining technique known as fracking, held last Thursday at the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs, drew 150 people.

“If possible, please ask some tough questions about disclosure and the environmental soundness of Ultra’s fracking processes,” Steven Saint-Thomas of the Green Cities Coalition urged city leaders in a Facebook post Monday.

Ultra recently got clearance from El Paso County officials to drill three exploratory wells on Colorado State Land Board property, one of which is near Banning Lewis. The activity could start next month. County commisisoners had suspended issuing new permits for exploratory drilling until late January, saying they needed more time to write land use regulations for the industry. But, three weeks later, on Oct. 20, they made an exception for Ultra.

The reason, said County Commissioner Dennis Hisey, is that an Ultra representative personally contacted him immediately following the Sept. 29 meeting when commissioners enacted the moratorium on new applications, saying the company believed it was already in the process of getting a permit because it had talked with the county’s development services department. After getting more details, Hisey asked that the resolution be changed to accomodate Ultra’s request to  begin drilling before the county’s suspension is lifted.

If the 18,000 acres of Banning Lewis that Ultra owns is de-annexed from the city, the land would fall under the jurisdiction of the county, and Ultra would be subject to the county’s new regulations. A draft copy is available for public review through Nov. 28 on the county’s website, www.elpasoco.com. The regulations are expected to be adopted by the time the moratorium on new applications is lifted in late January.

If Ultra is successful in the de-annexation, which could be settled by a U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Colorado, Ultra also won’t be under the thumb of Colorado Springs Utilities, which would mean it could drill new wells for water needed for exploratory oil and gas drilling and not rely on the city’s water system.  

Ultra since has submitted a court filing in Colorado that essentially restates the disputed issues; the city has until Nov. 30 to respond.